Edinburgh to Barcelona.
My other half hates flying too but trip to the Docs for a few Valium and jobs a good un.
Often quoted that flying is the safest form of transport- whatever you decide hope you have a good honeymoon and fingers crossed for test on Monday. Keith
Often quoted that flying is the safest form of transport- whatever you decide hope you have a good honeymoon and fingers crossed for test on Monday. Keith
2015 Lotus Evora
2022 Polestar 2 LRSM Plus
2023 Skoda Kodiaq Sportline
2022 Polestar 2 LRSM Plus
2023 Skoda Kodiaq Sportline
Here are the various driving times involved.....exclujding stops.
Edinburgh to London:
7 hours
London to Dover:
90 minutes
Calis to Paris (may miss this step via Eurostar):
2.5 hours
Paris to barcelona:
8.5 hours
Leave on Sunday around 3.30pm, would ideally like to be in Barcelona at the very latest on Tuesday morning, however I do not want to be driving after midnight on any day if I can help it.
Gary.
Off to check calculator!!!
Edinburgh to London:
7 hours
London to Dover:
90 minutes
Calis to Paris (may miss this step via Eurostar):
2.5 hours
Paris to barcelona:
8.5 hours
Leave on Sunday around 3.30pm, would ideally like to be in Barcelona at the very latest on Tuesday morning, however I do not want to be driving after midnight on any day if I can help it.
Gary.
Off to check calculator!!!

I think you're being a bit optimistic with you're timings. I'm over in Paris reasonably often with work and the motorways tend to be pretty busy. Just getting round Paris could take you a good few hours and playing with the trucks in an Elise could be an experience. Taking the car into the centre is another thing entirely - lane discipline doesn't seem to apply and your average Parisian car tends to have at least 1 dent in it. If you're determined to do it I'd factor in an overnight stop in Paris and book a hotel in advance as they tend to be busy.EliseR wrote:Here are the various driving times involved.....exclujding stops.
Edinburgh to London:
7 hours
London to Dover:
90 minutes
Calis to Paris (may miss this step via Eurostar):
2.5 hours
Paris to barcelona:
8.5 hours
Leave on Sunday around 3.30pm, would ideally like to be in Barcelona at the very latest on Tuesday morning, however I do not want to be driving after midnight on any day if I can help it.
Gary.
Off to check calculator!!!
GaryEliseR wrote:Current plans if I do drive will roughly be:j2 lot wrote: My advise would be to save the road trip for another time
Leave Edinburgh sunday aftenoon.
Arrive in London around midnight.
Have breaky on London.
Drive onto EUROSTAR and get off in either Calais, or Paris (preferred).
Depending on what time we finish in Paris, either attempt to make Barcelona in time for bed, or concede defeat and get half way there, sleep in a B and B and continue on in the morning.
All dpendent on me passing my test!![]()
I did a three week tour round Europe in my old Punto (France, Switzerland, Italy, Austria and Germany) with Skye and it can be tough going covering large mileage. As Neil said travelling at night is a good way but can be hard going if only one driver (Good luck with test). Longest run we did was from Austria leaving about midday to Nurburg then up to Calais for the early hours of the morning. In fact was about the only time we were on European motorways during the 3 weeks. In France we had kept off motorways enroute to Switzerland. Cheaper, more scenic but SLOW.
The Calais to Paris journey is boring so probably worth getting Eurostar right to Paris. Paris can be quite a challenge to an experienced driver let alone anybody not used to driving on the continent. It was about my first time driving on the right and my biggest challenge was driving around the Arc De Truimph and getting out the other end in one piece. But after that everything else is easy.
Loads of great advice in posts so don't rush in and think about it. I planned for quite abit in adavnce and was glad I did as it turned out a great holiday and not a mile after mile slog. I have some Europe Rough Guide books you are welcome to borrow.
On costs don't forget wear and tear. When I had my Elise my tyre costs alone matched my fuel costs. Worth thinking about every time you top up with petrol

Biggest help to me was a GPS as Skye is not that good at map reading


Good luck to you and Claire.
Vauxhall Astra 1.4 Sports Hatch - not as slow as my old Corsa 
BMW R1200GS - Fast as F@ck spec - 0-60 in 3.2 secs

BMW R1200GS - Fast as F@ck spec - 0-60 in 3.2 secs
Thanks for the advice, really taking it all on board. I will wait until I pass or fail before really planning things.Skyenet wrote:GaryEliseR wrote:Current plans if I do drive will roughly be:j2 lot wrote: My advise would be to save the road trip for another time
Leave Edinburgh sunday aftenoon.
Arrive in London around midnight.
Have breaky on London.
Drive onto EUROSTAR and get off in either Calais, or Paris (preferred).
Depending on what time we finish in Paris, either attempt to make Barcelona in time for bed, or concede defeat and get half way there, sleep in a B and B and continue on in the morning.
All dpendent on me passing my test!![]()
I did a three week tour round Europe in my old Punto (France, Switzerland, Italy, Austria and Germany) with Skye and it can be tough going covering large mileage. As Neil said travelling at night is a good way but can be hard going if only one driver (Good luck with test). Longest run we did was from Austria leaving about midday to Nurburg then up to Calais for the early hours of the morning. In fact was about the only time we were on European motorways during the 3 weeks. In France we had kept off motorways enroute to Switzerland. Cheaper, more scenic but SLOW.
The Calais to Paris journey is boring so probably worth getting Eurostar right to Paris. Paris can be quite a challenge to an experienced driver let alone anybody not used to driving on the continent. It was about my first time driving on the right and my biggest challenge was driving around the Arc De Truimph and getting out the other end in one piece. But after that everything else is easy.
Loads of great advice in posts so don't rush in and think about it. I planned for quite abit in adavnce and was glad I did as it turned out a great holiday and not a mile after mile slog. I have some Europe Rough Guide books you are welcome to borrow.
On costs don't forget wear and tear. When I had my Elise my tyre costs alone matched my fuel costs. Worth thinking about every time you top up with petrol![]()
Biggest help to me was a GPS as Skye is not that good at map readingThough it was hard pushed in Paris in all the tunnels and then froze at one stage
![]()
Good luck to you and Claire.
G.
Eurostar to Paris? That means you are not taking the car after all? Only Le Shuttle transports cars to France, and it terminates at Calais (last I heard!)
http://www.rathmhor.com | Coaching, training, consultancy
Unlikely . . . but . . . bang somewhere at the side of an autoroute ? . . . much more likely . . .<skitzo>
The other alternative is to bite the bullet, and come down with a bang somewhere over the English channel. No ta.
</skitzo>
I've fallen asleep at the wheel when I was younger and thought I could not die . . . I was wrong . . .
Fd
I did that during a weekend trip from Faslane to Portsmouth and back. Woke up just as an artic took the wing mirror off my hire car.fd wrote:
I've fallen asleep at the wheel when I was younger and thought I could not die . . . I was wrong . . .
Fd




Vauxhall Astra 1.4 Sports Hatch - not as slow as my old Corsa 
BMW R1200GS - Fast as F@ck spec - 0-60 in 3.2 secs

BMW R1200GS - Fast as F@ck spec - 0-60 in 3.2 secs
It varies. Some package it as a selling point, others you have to specifically arrange.X7LDA wrote:maybe a silly question but do most standard insurance policies cover travelling outside the UK?
In all cases they usually want to know the dates you are going abroad though so be sure to advise them.
http://www.rathmhor.com | Coaching, training, consultancy