Hi sweetrunninggir
Wife and travelled into Italy this year with our long twin axle van. We took the route recommended by Rostrevor, he helped us a LOT last year in suggesting this route. We went Dover to Dunkerque - brand new boat and very cheap arriving at 6.00am We then slept in the for a couple of hours in a aire (services) near Lisle, we had been delayed on the way down and not had a night at a campsite near Dover as originally planned.
We then made excellent time on the suggested autoroute through France, Belgium, Luxembourg and back into France. We got to south of Nancy by late evening and stayed, free, in another aire surrounded by friendly European lorry drivers. Lots of people worry about staying in aires but we've been doing it for years without problems. It means that we can drive until we run out of energy and then stop without having to looking for a campsite or bothering to unhitch and hitch up again.
The next day we travelled on over the Col de Boussang. It was a lovely scenic route and NOT very steep as gradients were acheived by long hairpins - our 4x4 coped easily. The N66 is, obviously, slower than the autoroutes but it made a pleasant break from autoroute driving and was a good single-carriageway road.
We then stayed for a few days at Camping de Acascias in Cernay. This was a pleasant site in this lovely little French town and interestingly next a stork reservation. The site was large with lots of room and a very friendly and helpful warden and wife.
We then drove on through France and into Switzerland at Basle.. I was surprised to hear of the queues for vignette. We just drove in and parked up the carpark while buying the vignettes in the office with a credit card and that was on a the last Friday in July!! A bit pricey but c'est la vie, the autoroute up to that point had been free. I would, however, REPEAT THE WARNING, about entering Switzerland from Germany rather than France. We missed that warning in our route planning and wished we hadn't. Basle was horrendous with lots of road works and diversions. What was particularly worrying was that some of the diversions split the traffic into cars and HGV/Coaches. With our long outfit we were not sure which route to take. We mainly opted for the car route and got through okay although there were several narrow bits and scary contraflows through tunnels. We are hoping to go to Italy by this route again next year and we will DEFINITELY be going via Germany and avoidling Basle City centre!!
The route through Switzerland is stunningly beautiful with super motorway. Hard to concentrate on driving because of the lovely views. The route does include some tunnels - I don't particularly like tunnels but survived. We didn't stop in Switzerland on this occasion. If you fancy doing so I would really recommend the area near Interlaken, we stayed at Brienz a few years back and had a superb holiday. There a couple of campsites at Brienz which are smaller and quieter than the busier ones in Interlaken itself. We had a pitch RIGHT ON the lakeside of the Brienzersee - but I digress.
We travelled from Cernay and right through Switzerland in a day. We arrived at the southern side of Switzerland on a Friday evening. We had not intended to arrive then but had been delayed in Cernay by a damaged tyre. The queues for the San Gotthard Pass were pretty awful so we opted for the pass. It wasn't too bad. Lots of long hairpins, a long flat stretch on top and then a very long descent again using lots of hairpin bends. On the descent I used engine braking on our autobox Monterey and by the far side the engine was really cool - I was worried that there was something wrong as the temp guage was so LOW. We tried sleeping in the services immmediately after the pass but it was very busy and noisy and so we drove on into Italy in the dark and snatched a few hours sleep on way down at another services. We then drove on to our first booked site at Camping La Riva on Lake Como but that's another story. After a couple of weeks at La Riva We then went down to Camping Cavallino on the Jesolo Peninsula, booked en-route the day before, and stayed there for another couple of glorious weeks. We alternated between days on the adjacent beach on the Adriatic and trips into nearby Venice.
On the way home we varied the route only a little. We went through the Gotthard Tunnel. I set the mileometer to zero, put my new favourite CD - Johny Cash's "My Mother's Hymnbook" on the CD, said a prayer and gritted my teeth. I counted off the miles on the mileometer - it was 11 to the other side and again survived.
On the way home we did not go via the Col de Boussang but drove further north on the motorway before turning west before repeating our route through Luxembourg and Belgium. Unfortunately we never made Dunkerque under our own steam as the car broked down BIG TIME just in Belguim. After a week's enforced stay at Camping Chenefleur in Belguim, very pleasant site in other circumstances, we came home by hire car and the car and caravan followed MUCH LATER on a car transporter but that's another story.
We hope to be back in Italy next by roughly the same route, better route around Basle.
Hope this helps - my advice GO FOR IT.
Tim
------------- Tim and Cary
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