I am going to France this weekend for ten days visiting the Christmas market at Strasbourg.
The recent events in Paris have made me a little apprehensive.
If my trip had not been arranged for the last four months, I would not be going.
Of course we should not let the terrorist intimidate and frighten us, but I will no doubt feel a bit vulnerable on the ferry and around the market.
Would you go?
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Also, statistically, the car journey down is more risky.
Don't lose out on your holiday. Live your life with the freedom terrorists dont want people to have.
Enjoy Strasbourg, the events of last Friday were clearly planned in advance, so it's most unlikely France will be attacked again in the near future
As a matter of interest, how are are you getting there? Are you flying into Strasbourg (or somewhere else)? Or taking the train (TV), via Paris (Eurostar)? Or some other route?
''As beautiful as ever. It's fine. Never know anything out of the ordinary, except the mini supermarket below the apartment had a security guard checking all bags"
I'd go, I'd also go to Paris right now if I'd had a trip planned.
Also, if you don't go it is what the terrorist wants and then they start to win. Go and have a great trip.
Viva la France et bon voyage.
We have been looking forward to this trip for a while.
Thanks to all for your excellent comments and encouragement.
One Charlton family.
Ten days at a christmas market? How big is this place?!
Cross Dover Dunkirk ferry in motorhome Sunday.
Travel during daylight Monday, Tuesday arrive Wednesday.
Sight-see Thursday, Christmas market Saturday/ Sunday or maybe train to Basel.
Return to U.k. on Wednesday.
Would I go to Sharm or elsewhere in North Africa? 100% no.
Like many of us having lived in London throughout the Troubles I've been close enough to have my own near misses, hear the explosions and see the dreadful aftermath. Everyone makes their own choices and has their acceptable level of risk and it would be fully understandable if others decided they were not comfortable continuing.
But for me it was never an issue that I would continue trying to live and work as normally as possible and as society doing so was as close to a metaphorical 'feck off!' as we can collectively muster.
Frankly I'd rather be in France.