Hotel in Paris that will Accept a Dog?
#1
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We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder of
the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest to
spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that the
effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten older.)
There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering if someone
here knew of some other hotel that would accept the presence of a dog.
traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder of
the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest to
spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that the
effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten older.)
There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering if someone
here knew of some other hotel that would accept the presence of a dog.
#2
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The Michelin Guide Rouge has a symbol for hotels that exclude dogs
from all or part..Looks like a dog head outline with a slash through
it.
Most of my favorite hotels allow dogs.
Plaza Athenee
Bristol
George V
Crillion
Only the Prince de Galles does not allow dogs.
On Sat, 07 Jun 2003 12:57:49 GMT, ellie
wrote:
>We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
>traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder of
>the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest to
>spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that the
>effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten older.)
>There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering if someone
>here knew of some other hotel that would accept the presence of a dog.
from all or part..Looks like a dog head outline with a slash through
it.
Most of my favorite hotels allow dogs.
Plaza Athenee
Bristol
George V
Crillion
Only the Prince de Galles does not allow dogs.
On Sat, 07 Jun 2003 12:57:49 GMT, ellie
wrote:
>We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
>traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder of
>the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest to
>spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that the
>effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten older.)
>There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering if someone
>here knew of some other hotel that would accept the presence of a dog.
#3
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On Sat, 07 Jun 2003 12:57:49 GMT, in rec.travel.europe, ellie
arranged some electrons, so they looked like this :
... We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
... traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder of
... the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest to
... spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that the
... effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten older.)
... There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering if someone
... here knew of some other hotel that would accept the presence of a dog.
According to my guide, 3 and 4-star hotels are more likely to accept animals.
arranged some electrons, so they looked like this :
... We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
... traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder of
... the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest to
... spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that the
... effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten older.)
... There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering if someone
... here knew of some other hotel that would accept the presence of a dog.
According to my guide, 3 and 4-star hotels are more likely to accept animals.
#4
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ellie wrote in news:3EE1E14F.3020806
@attbi.com:
> We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
> traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder of
> the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest to
> spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that the
> effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten older.)
> There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering if someone
> here knew of some other hotel that would accept the presence of a dog.
>
>
Most hotels in Paris will acept. easiest wayu to find is to go to
www.viamichelin.com and look for the pet symbol.
@attbi.com:
> We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
> traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder of
> the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest to
> spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that the
> effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten older.)
> There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering if someone
> here knew of some other hotel that would accept the presence of a dog.
>
>
Most hotels in Paris will acept. easiest wayu to find is to go to
www.viamichelin.com and look for the pet symbol.
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jcoulter wrote in
news:[email protected]:
> ellie wrote in
> news:3EE1E14F.3020806 @attbi.com:
>
>> We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
>> traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder
>> of the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest
>> to spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that
>> the effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten
>> older.) There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering
>> if someone here knew of some other hotel that would accept the
>> presence of a dog.
>>
>>
>
> Most hotels in Paris will acept. easiest way to find is to go to
> www.viamichelin.com and look for the pet symbol.
oops as gerald pointed out Michelin shows the prohibited symbol which just
goes to show how pet friendly France is!
>
news:[email protected]:
> ellie wrote in
> news:3EE1E14F.3020806 @attbi.com:
>
>> We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
>> traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder
>> of the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest
>> to spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that
>> the effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten
>> older.) There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering
>> if someone here knew of some other hotel that would accept the
>> presence of a dog.
>>
>>
>
> Most hotels in Paris will acept. easiest way to find is to go to
> www.viamichelin.com and look for the pet symbol.
oops as gerald pointed out Michelin shows the prohibited symbol which just
goes to show how pet friendly France is!
>
#6
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"jcoulter" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> jcoulter wrote in
> news:[email protected]:
> > ellie wrote in
> > news:3EE1E14F.3020806 @attbi.com:
> >
> >> We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
> >> traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder
> >> of the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest
> >> to spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that
> >> the effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten
> >> older.) There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering
> >> if someone here knew of some other hotel that would accept the
> >> presence of a dog.
While at the Muguet last September the management asked a man to leave his
dog elsewhere, the reason being that the dog was too big (it was about a 60
pound dog). I gathered from their conversation that a small dog would have
presented no problem. There was, in fact, a resident poodle always in the
lobby. It might, then depend somewhat on the size of your dog. >
news:[email protected]...
> jcoulter wrote in
> news:[email protected]:
> > ellie wrote in
> > news:3EE1E14F.3020806 @attbi.com:
> >
> >> We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
> >> traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder
> >> of the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest
> >> to spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that
> >> the effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten
> >> older.) There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering
> >> if someone here knew of some other hotel that would accept the
> >> presence of a dog.
While at the Muguet last September the management asked a man to leave his
dog elsewhere, the reason being that the dog was too big (it was about a 60
pound dog). I gathered from their conversation that a small dog would have
presented no problem. There was, in fact, a resident poodle always in the
lobby. It might, then depend somewhat on the size of your dog. >
#7
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"pantagruel" wrote
| While at the Muguet last September the management asked a man to leave his
| dog elsewhere, the reason being that the dog was too big (it was about a
60
| pound dog). I gathered from their conversation that a small dog would have
| presented no problem. There was, in fact, a resident poodle always in the
| lobby. It might, then depend somewhat on the size of your dog. >
I heard a story about a hotel that charged (and this will show you how old
the story is) 2/6 or 5/- for dogs "depending on status". Most dog owners
thought their dogs were worthy of paying 5/- for :-)
Owain
| While at the Muguet last September the management asked a man to leave his
| dog elsewhere, the reason being that the dog was too big (it was about a
60
| pound dog). I gathered from their conversation that a small dog would have
| presented no problem. There was, in fact, a resident poodle always in the
| lobby. It might, then depend somewhat on the size of your dog. >
I heard a story about a hotel that charged (and this will show you how old
the story is) 2/6 or 5/- for dogs "depending on status". Most dog owners
thought their dogs were worthy of paying 5/- for :-)
Owain
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"pantagruel" wrote in
news:[email protected]:
>
I gathered from their conversation that a small
> dog would have presented no problem. There was, in fact, a
resident
> poodle always in the lobby. It might, then depend somewhat on
the size
> of your dog. >
and also how well one's dog gets along with the resident dog
lol
>
>
>
news:[email protected]:
>
I gathered from their conversation that a small
> dog would have presented no problem. There was, in fact, a
resident
> poodle always in the lobby. It might, then depend somewhat on
the size
> of your dog. >
and also how well one's dog gets along with the resident dog
lol
>
>
>
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pantagruel wrote:
> "jcoulter" wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>jcoulter wrote in
>>news:[email protected]:
>>>ellie wrote in
>>>news:3EE1E14F.3020806 @attbi.com:
>>>>We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
>>>>traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder
>>>>of the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest
>>>>to spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that
>>>>the effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten
>>>>older.) There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering
>>>>if someone here knew of some other hotel that would accept the
>>>>presence of a dog.
>
>
> While at the Muguet last September the management asked a man to leave his
> dog elsewhere, the reason being that the dog was too big (it was about a 60
> pound dog). I gathered from their conversation that a small dog would have
> presented no problem. There was, in fact, a resident poodle always in the
> lobby. It might, then depend somewhat on the size of your dog. >
>
>
>
By these standards our dog would definitely be considered large; she's a
76-lb (overweight) Dalmatian. Hmmmm. I wonder if hotels that advertise
thenselves as accepting dogs are particular about the size of the dog.
> "jcoulter" wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>jcoulter wrote in
>>news:[email protected]:
>>>ellie wrote in
>>>news:3EE1E14F.3020806 @attbi.com:
>>>>We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
>>>>traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder
>>>>of the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest
>>>>to spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that
>>>>the effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten
>>>>older.) There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering
>>>>if someone here knew of some other hotel that would accept the
>>>>presence of a dog.
>
>
> While at the Muguet last September the management asked a man to leave his
> dog elsewhere, the reason being that the dog was too big (it was about a 60
> pound dog). I gathered from their conversation that a small dog would have
> presented no problem. There was, in fact, a resident poodle always in the
> lobby. It might, then depend somewhat on the size of your dog. >
>
>
>
By these standards our dog would definitely be considered large; she's a
76-lb (overweight) Dalmatian. Hmmmm. I wonder if hotels that advertise
thenselves as accepting dogs are particular about the size of the dog.
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ellie wrote in
news:[email protected]:
>>
>>
>>
>
> By these standards our dog would definitely be considered large; she's
> a 76-lb (overweight) Dalmatian. Hmmmm. I wonder if hotels that
> advertise thenselves as accepting dogs are particular about the size
> of the dog.
>
>
Then again in Bruxelles once I met a man with a Great Dane coming down the
stairs from the upper level of a restaurant.
news:[email protected]:
>>
>>
>>
>
> By these standards our dog would definitely be considered large; she's
> a 76-lb (overweight) Dalmatian. Hmmmm. I wonder if hotels that
> advertise thenselves as accepting dogs are particular about the size
> of the dog.
>
>
Then again in Bruxelles once I met a man with a Great Dane coming down the
stairs from the upper level of a restaurant.
#11
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ellie wrote:
>
> pantagruel wrote:
> > "jcoulter" wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> >
> >>jcoulter wrote in
> >>news:[email protected]:
> >>
> >>
> >>>ellie wrote in
> >>>news:3EE1E14F.3020806 @attbi.com:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
> >>>>traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder
> >>>>of the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest
> >>>>to spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that
> >>>>the effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten
> >>>>older.) There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering
> >>>>if someone here knew of some other hotel that would accept the
> >>>>presence of a dog.
> >>>
> >
> >
> > While at the Muguet last September the management asked a man to leave his
> > dog elsewhere, the reason being that the dog was too big (it was about a 60
> > pound dog). I gathered from their conversation that a small dog would have
> > presented no problem. There was, in fact, a resident poodle always in the
> > lobby. It might, then depend somewhat on the size of your dog. >
> >
> >
> >
>
> By these standards our dog would definitely be considered large; she's a
> 76-lb (overweight) Dalmatian. Hmmmm. I wonder if hotels that advertise
> thenselves as accepting dogs are particular about the size of the dog.
If the hotel has a web-site (or an e-mail address) you might enquire
when you ask about reservations.
>
> pantagruel wrote:
> > "jcoulter" wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> >
> >>jcoulter wrote in
> >>news:[email protected]:
> >>
> >>
> >>>ellie wrote in
> >>>news:3EE1E14F.3020806 @attbi.com:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog. We'll be
> >>>>traveling on the next day and staying at FastHotels for the remainder
> >>>>of the trip to the South, but we're thinking that it would be easiest
> >>>>to spend the first day and night in Paris. (We've both noticed that
> >>>>the effects of jet lag seem to be more extreme as we've gotten
> >>>>older.) There are no FastHotels in Paris itself, so I was wondering
> >>>>if someone here knew of some other hotel that would accept the
> >>>>presence of a dog.
> >>>
> >
> >
> > While at the Muguet last September the management asked a man to leave his
> > dog elsewhere, the reason being that the dog was too big (it was about a 60
> > pound dog). I gathered from their conversation that a small dog would have
> > presented no problem. There was, in fact, a resident poodle always in the
> > lobby. It might, then depend somewhat on the size of your dog. >
> >
> >
> >
>
> By these standards our dog would definitely be considered large; she's a
> 76-lb (overweight) Dalmatian. Hmmmm. I wonder if hotels that advertise
> thenselves as accepting dogs are particular about the size of the dog.
If the hotel has a web-site (or an e-mail address) you might enquire
when you ask about reservations.
#12
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jcoulter wrote:
>
>
> Then again in Bruxelles once I met a man with a Great Dane coming down the
> stairs from the upper level of a restaurant.
But restaurants may be a different matter! (I've seen plenty of large
dogs in restaurants, both in Paris and Bruxelles, but I had the
impression the owners were residents, so hotel policy wasn't a factor.)
>
>
> Then again in Bruxelles once I met a man with a Great Dane coming down the
> stairs from the upper level of a restaurant.
But restaurants may be a different matter! (I've seen plenty of large
dogs in restaurants, both in Paris and Bruxelles, but I had the
impression the owners were residents, so hotel policy wasn't a factor.)
#13
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In article ,
[email protected] (ellie) wrote:
> We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog.
Most require payment in euro, unfortunately.
[email protected] (ellie) wrote:
> We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog.
Most require payment in euro, unfortunately.
#14
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[email protected] wrote:
>
> In article ,
> [email protected] (ellie) wrote:
>
> > We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog.
>
> Most require payment in euro, unfortunately.
Ummm.... I think she meant as a guest, not a commodity.(8->}
>
> In article ,
> [email protected] (ellie) wrote:
>
> > We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog.
>
> Most require payment in euro, unfortunately.
Ummm.... I think she meant as a guest, not a commodity.(8->}
#15
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[email protected] wrote:
> In article ,
> [email protected] (ellie) wrote:
>
>
>>We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog.
>
>
> Most require payment in euro, unfortunately.
8^)
> In article ,
> [email protected] (ellie) wrote:
>
>
>>We're looking for a hotel in Paris that will accept a dog.
>
>
> Most require payment in euro, unfortunately.
8^)