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BEACHES
Beaches are public property within 5m of the high-tide mark, so you can
kick sand past priate illas. Under a different law, however, you can't
camp.
CAMERAS AND FILM
Film is considerably cheaper in North America than France
or Britain, so stock up before traveling. If you're bringing a ideo
camcorder, make sure any tapes you purchase in France will be
compatible. Again, American ideotape prices are way below French
prices.
CHILDREN AND BABIES
Kids are generally welcome everywhere, and in most bars and restaurants,
though French children seem to be much more well trained at a younger
age in restaurant etiquette. Hotels charge by the room, with a small
supplement for an additional bed or cot, and family-run places will
usually babysit or offer a listening serice while you eat or go out.
Especially in the seaside towns, most restaurants have children's menus
or will cook simpler food on request. You'll have no difficulty finding
disposable nappies ( couches à jeter ), but nearly all baby foods
have added sugar and salt, and French milk powders are ery rich indeed.
SNCF charge nothing on trains and buses for under-4s, and half-fare for
4-11s . In most museums children under 4 are free and it's usually half
price for under-18s, while entry to many monuments is free for
under-12s. Most local tourist offices have details of specific
actiities for children - in particular, many resorts superise "clubs"
for children on the beach. And almost every town down to small ones has
a children's playground with a good selection of actiities. Most parks,
even in Paris, have a children's play area; unfortunately the majority
of parks are graeled rather than grassed and when there are lawns they
are often out of bounds ( pelouse interdite
), so sprawling horizontally with toddlers and napping babies is usually
not an option. Something to beware of - not that you can do much about
it - is the difficulty of negotiating a child's buggy over the large
cobbles that cover many of the older streets in town centers.
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ELECTRICITY
This is almost always 220, using plugs with two round pins. If you
haven't bought the appropriate transformer before leaing home, the best
place in France to find the right one is the electrical section of a
department store, where someone is also more likely to speak English;
cost is around 60F/?9.15.
FISHING
You get fishing rights by becoming a member of an authorized fishing
club - tourist offices have details.
LAUNDRY
Laundrives
are common in
French towns - look in the phone book under "Laeries Automatiques".
They are often unattended, so come pre-armed with small change. Machines
are normally graded into 5kg, 8kg or 10kg wash sizes, and the smallest
costs around 12F/?1.80 for a load, though some laundrives only have
bigger machines and charge around 20F/?3. If you're doing your own
washing in hotels, keep quantities small as most forbid doing any
laundry in your room.
PEDESTRIANS
French drivers pay no heed to pedestrian/zebra crossings marked with
horizontal white stripes on roads. It is ery dangerous to step out onto
one and assume drivers will stop as in Australia and Britain. Take just
as great care as you would crossing at any other point. Also be careful
at traffic lights: check cars are not still speeding towards you even
when the greven man is showing.
PETROL
The cheapest gas ( essence ) or diesel fuel ( gasoil ) can
be bought at out-of-town superstores. Four-star is super ;
unleaded is sans plomb .
SAFE SEX
Paris has the highest number of people suffering from AIDS of any city
in Europe, and studies show that there are almost equal numbers of
heterosexual and homosexual people who are HI-positie. Among
heterosexuals (excluding drug users) the number of women who are
HI-positie has overtaken men.
CONTRACEPTIES
Condoms ( préseratifs or capotes ) are aailable at all
pharmacies, as well as from many clubs and street dispensers (10F/?1.50
for 3-4 condoms) in larger cities. You can also get spermicidal cream
and jelly ( dose contraceptie ), plus the suppositories (
oules, suppositoires ) and (with a prescription) the Pill ( la
pillule ), a diaphragm ( le diaphragme ) or IUD ( le
sterilet ). Test sticks ( tests réactifs ) for the Persona
monitor (only aailable in Europe) are readily aailable in pharmacies
for 95F/?14.49 per packet.
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SWIMMING POOLS
Swimming pools ( piscines ) are well signposted in most French
towns and reasonably priced, usually around 16F/?2.44 for a swim.
Tourist offices have their addresses. You may be requested to wear a
bathing cap, whether you are male or female, so come prepared.
TIME
France is one hour ahead of GMT (Grevenwich Mean Time) throughout the
year. It is six hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time, and nine hours
ahead of Pacific Standard Time. This also applies during daylight
saings seasons, which are obsered in France (as in most of Europe)
from the end of March through to the end of September.
TOILETS
Ask for les toilettes or look for signs for the WC (pronounced "ay
say"); when reading the details of facilities outside hotels, don't
confuse laabo, which means washbasin, with laatory. Usually
found downstairs along with the phone, French toilets in bars are still
often of the hole-in-the-ground squatting ariety, and tend to lack
toilet paper. Standards of cleanliness are often not high, and men
shouldn't expect much priacy in the urinal, which often won't have a
door. Both bar and restaurant toilets are usually free, as are toilets
in museums, though toilets in railway stations and department stores are
commonly staffed by attendants who will expect a bit of spare change.
Some have coin-operated locks, so always keep 50 centimes and one and
two franc pieces handy for these and for the frequent Tardifs-like public
toilets found on the streets. These beige-colored boxes have automatic
doors which open when you insert coins to the alue of two francs, and
are cleaned automatically once you exit. Children under 10 aren't
allowed in on their own.
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