Travel to France dilemma

RockinNRollin

RockinNRollin

Where to next?
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I realise variations on this theme have surfaced previously, but pricing seems far more acute these days so trying (and failing) to decide what to do.

Aim: get from Manchester to Bordeaux area as painlessly and ideally fast as possible (noting we have a 4yo on board), circa late May/early June. Costs are in round numbers.

Option 1: via Dover/Calais on Ferry. Cheapest (£300). Involves most driving. 2 hour ferry sailing intervals mean either a very early start for a 10am crossing

Option 2: via Chunnel. Expensive (£500!). Most driving along with option 1. Plenty of departures and a fast crossing, but risk of disruption.

Option 3: Overnight from the south coast (Poole/Portsmouth) to Caen or similar. Expensive (£700). Less miles (on both sides), but Portsmouth/Poole area is no quicker to get to. Questionable if there'd actually be any meaningful sleep by the time we've settled a 4yo who already is going to be disrupted because of boarding at a time he'd normally be fast asleep at (and he has high sleep needs!). Return crossings don't seem to have overnight options, although there's nothing saying we'd have to do the same return route.

Option 4: Early ferry from Poole to Cherbourg, "camp" at the Ferry terminal. £600ish return crossing I think, not sure how safe it is to camp there too. Long-ish crossing.

I keep kicking this around in my head and keep ending up at Dover/Folkestone as the better option and preferably the Chunnel just for the convenience/timing, just conscious that if/when it goes wrong, there's no bail-out.
 
I usually travel from Portsmouth to France because it's nearby. If I was driving from Manchester I would just go to Dover and take the ferry. Then book a campsite near Calais eg

Camping Pommiers Des Trois Pays​

 
We did Dover/calais this year as opposed to the expensive tunnel and wouldn’t hesitate to do the same again. Pay the extra £18 for premium lounge and you get a reasonable meal, free drinks and comfy seats. It is a long way to Bordeaux from there but we found Loire as a nice area to break it up.
 
We travelled from Edinburgh to South of Bordeaux recently via Portsmouth - St Malo. Having previously used ferries on the Dover - Calais crossing, Brittany Ferries was a much more enjoyable experience. The drive from St Malo to Bordeaux was very easy and quick using the toll roads. We’d definitely use this crossing again to visit SW France (but don’t have a child’s needs to take into account) benefiting from a good nights sleep allowing a refreshed start to the journey on arrival in St Malo at 7am.
 
Driving from the north is a real pain. We did Portsmouth-St Malo from Yorkshire with two young kids last year. The 8pm-8am crossing is ideal and the cabin’s comfortable enough to get a reasonable amount of sleep. We were then fresh to get a chunk of distance covered straight from the ferry. To me this beats the hassle of camping in northern France for a night, which is ok if it’s just two of you but for a family trip I could do without all the unpacking/packing.
 
Thanks all. I think on reflection the Chunnel is probably the way to go! Interestingly when I just plugged in the details (and it recognised the Cali as a campervan) the return was now £330! More palatable although it's still slightly ridiculous to be paying £10 a minute for a train journey . . . I suppose it helps keep seawater out of the tunnel . . .
 
Some nice sites near Dover etc to break the journey from Manchester if your not in a hurry
 
Chunnel, all day every day. In, out, on the motorway in minutes and paired with a toll pass is the most stress free and easiest way to France I can imagine. 500 is steep, we just paid 250 return but it was a weekend saver. Don't forget you can get 10% off with CAMC membership. We go 3x a year so pays for the membership very quickly.
 
The Tunnel needs to bring back it's Frequent Traveller scheme. used to be £100 return :)
 
I realise variations on this theme have surfaced previously, but pricing seems far more acute these days so trying (and failing) to decide what to do.

Aim: get from Manchester to Bordeaux area as painlessly and ideally fast as possible (noting we have a 4yo on board), circa late May/early June. Costs are in round numbers.

Option 1: via Dover/Calais on Ferry. Cheapest (£300). Involves most driving. 2 hour ferry sailing intervals mean either a very early start for a 10am crossing

Option 2: via Chunnel. Expensive (£500!). Most driving along with option 1. Plenty of departures and a fast crossing, but risk of disruption.

Option 3: Overnight from the south coast (Poole/Portsmouth) to Caen or similar. Expensive (£700). Less miles (on both sides), but Portsmouth/Poole area is no quicker to get to. Questionable if there'd actually be any meaningful sleep by the time we've settled a 4yo who already is going to be disrupted because of boarding at a time he'd normally be fast asleep at (and he has high sleep needs!). Return crossings don't seem to have overnight options, although there's nothing saying we'd have to do the same return route.

Option 4: Early ferry from Poole to Cherbourg, "camp" at the Ferry terminal. £600ish return crossing I think, not sure how safe it is to camp there too. Long-ish crossing.

I keep kicking this around in my head and keep ending up at Dover/Folkestone as the better option and preferably the Chunnel just for the convenience/timing, just conscious that if/when it goes wrong, there's no bail-out.
Have a look at Newhaven /Dieppe crossing 4 hour sailing ,much better than driving to Dover,we have crossed this way many times.
 
When going to that area in France a few years ago 2 options that were used.

1) Portsmouth to St Malo on the night ferry as it gave day hours to travel to Portsmouth, overnight sleep. early start with mostly Toll free run down on fast route and arrival in time to get settled in during the afternoon. Return on morning sailing after an overnight site stop close to St Malo.

2) P'mouth to Caen afternoon crossing but gets in late and soon stopped for the night in a Service Aire. Not the best option for you with a 4 year old.

I found Poole took quite a bit more driving time to get to/from compared to Portsmouth.

Dover route I found a long drive as going diagonally across France with Tolls to pay plus traffic heavy at times which after unpredictable UK traffic didn't make for a good start to the trip.

Cheaper channel crossings can have additional fuel and toll costs to take into consideration.
 
DFDS Newhaven to Dieppe is very cost effective.

Also why not take the ferry from Portsmouth or Plymouth to Santander or Bilbao? Whilst it may seem expensive, once you've factored in fuel, tolls and overnight stops there's not much in it.
 

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