
How far can we go on the old hippy trail? Overland from Leeds to Georgia
'I think this is as far as we can go,' I say, glancing down at the military post, barely 100 metres from the Zakagori Fortress, the forced endpoint of our day hike through the Truso valley in northern Georgia. Beyond the fortress lies disputed land, a seemingly endless expanse of yellowing pastures swelling beneath ice-capped peaks, where only a few wandering sheep dare to roam. Just beyond our line of sight is Russia.
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We started our hike with a bumpy taxi ride to the abandoned village of Kvemo Okrokana, not far from our guesthouse in the town of Kazbegi. But in truth, our adventure began six weeks earlier at Leeds train station. From there, we hopped between trains, night buses and marshrutki (shared taxis) to reach this remote eastern edge of Europe.
The idea took shape a few months previously, when my partner and I quit our jobs, put our possessions in storage and began planning a year of travel. Overlanding had always been something I romanticised. I'd heard stories from family friends about jumping on a bus in London, winding through Yugoslavia, Iran and Afghanistan and India before alighting in Kathmandu. I wondered, in the 21st century, how far we could go without having to catch a plane?
On a map of Europe, I trace all the land routes we can take. We decide to seek the sun, travelling by train to Venice, before continuing east.
We book our train to London, then face our first hiccup: we're on a tight budget and Eurostar tickets in late August are almost £200 each. So instead, we book a £34 night bus from London to Brussels. And so, a couple of weeks later we find ourselves wandering through an empty park in the Belgium capital at 6am, wearing our backpacks, feeling the weight of our decision.
It's an anti-climactic beginning. We can't check into our hostel for hours and only have a day to see the city. We wander sleepily through a free walking tour, spend our dinner budget on chocolate-smothered waffles, and settle into a local bar for the evening. The next day we take local trains into Germany, then a Nightjet rail service from Stuttgart to Venice.
We cross the Ponte della Libertà on to the islands of the historical centre as the sun rises, arriving in an almost deserted Venice. Light glints off weathered gondolas as we take in the stillness from the famous Ponte dell'Accademia. We have three days in the city and no desire to catch up on sleep. We swap train travel for the vaporetto water bus, stretch our legs walking around the tiny island of Sant'Elena, and sit on canal-side walls ordering cicchetti (small Venetian plates) and spritz. It feels as though the holiday has finally begun.
After racing through costly western Europe, it's blissful to arrive in the Balkans. The next few weeks are coloured with late-summer sun, Slovenian lake swims and daily flakey burek (pastries). We do a day hike in the Julian Alps, stopping at a mountain hut for a divine plate of sweet cheese and berry dumplings.
As we venture deeper into eastern Europe, there's less information online about cross-country travel routes, so we navigate schedules and language barriers at bustling transport hubs instead. At Belgrade station, we book a bed on the Montenegro Express night train to Bar, on the Adriatic coast of southern Montenegro. It takes 11 hours, costs about £20 and is as gorgeous as a night train gets. Despite the two chain-smoking babushkas on the bunks below us, we sleep, waking to the train winding through the Dinaric Alps at sunrise. I watch from bed as soft light spills into rocky, desolate valleys, brightening from blue to bronze.
Stari Bar, a few miles inland, gives us our first taste of Montenegro. For breakfast – fresh pomegranate juice and priganice, a Montenegrin fried bread served with seeded jams and crumbly sweet cheese. The views from the town's old fortress are even more delicious. Montenegro has few train lines, so we hire a car to make the most of our time on the coast, and take a detour north. We navigate all 16 hairpin bends of the Kotor Serpentine Road for one of the best views of our whole trip, and dive into the bay by the azure-fringed village of Rose.
Back in Bar, we catch buses to Shkodër, where a grand new mosque behind the bus stop heralds our arrival in Albania, our first Muslim-majority country. We spend our time here in the mountains, hiking a gruelling but spectacular section of the Peaks of the Balkans trail between Valbonë and Theth. We rest in Theth on a homestay-farm, Bujtina Zemra Tradites, and enjoy the evening antics of the owners rounding up escaped sheep while we feast on pickled green tomatoes, white cheese and fresh kulaç soda bread. Life is slow and repetitive in these mountains, but it's the rest we need before our next leg.
The lessons of the London-to-Brussels night bus are a distant memory by the time we arrive in Albania's capital, Tirana, and book a 9pm journey to North Macedonia. A family has already made a bed in our seats when we board, and we awkwardly ask them to move. North Macedonia's capital, Skopje, is reminiscent of a mini-Istanbul – defined by minarets, Turkish coffee shops and bazaars. Another bus takes us to Bulgaria's capital, Sofia, with its jaw-dropping churches, rattling trams, and candlelit bars. From there, we board a night train to Istanbul. It's a city I'm familiar with, and I delight in showing my partner the best spots for a menemen (Turkish scrambled eggs) breakfast, and the views from the Süleymaniye Mosque for lunch.
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Compared with the relatively small nations of Europe, Turkey seems like a daunting land to cross. A bullet train takes us to the capital, Ankara, followed by the blissfully slow and scenic 22-hour Doğu Express to eastern Turkey. A handful of other overlanders half-fill the sleeper carriage.
A Swiss couple are heading to Georgia on holiday, opting for trains instead of a flight. A veteran traveller tells me he's going all the way to Singapore. I dive into the details – has he found a route we didn't look at? He admits he'll need to take a short flight into Russia or Azerbaijan. But, for the moment, we are all heading the same way – to the Georgian border.
What should have been an easy hop from Erzurum to the border turns into one of the most arduous days of the trip. The bus is stuck behind a landslide, and only after hours of clearing the road are we waved through past fallen rocks. At the border, we are pushed and shoved through passport control, alongside hundreds of young Turks heading to Batumi for a weekend of partying, then we run to catch the last minibus into the city.
We had crossed into Asia back at the Bosphorus strait, in Istanbul, but Georgia feels like stepping back into the Soviet-sprinkled culture of the Balkans. In Kutaisi, our homestay host, Giorgi, sits us down with glasses of Georgian wine and spends a few hours trying to persuade us his country invented the stuff. Not only is the wine fantastic, the food is also a wonderful surprise. We feast daily on adjarian khachapuri – a boat-shape bread filled with melted cheese, butter and an egg, alongside piles of crushed walnut salads.
After hiking through the valleys surrounding Mount Kazbek, we hurtle back down the mountain by marshrutka minibus to our last stop – Georgia's capital. Tbilisi is a blend of crumbling faded glory and refreshing modern cool. This is the far edge of Europe and it's clear from the pro-EU, anti-Russian graffiti that there is division – a detail I looked back on when the protests erupted following elections in October 2024.
By now, we know Georgia is our last country. Since the pandemic, the Azerbaijan land border has been closed, with no clear reopening date. Russia is red-listed by the Foreign Office, meaning even if we got the hard-to-obtain visa, we wouldn't be covered by travel insurance. We could dip south to Armenia, but it would leave us surrounded by closed borders and fewer flight options. This is as far as we can go.
For over 3,000 miles, we embraced the freedom of the road and rails. Some of the most memorable moments of the journey – those divine dumplings at a mountain hut in Slovenia; that glorious night train ride from Serbia to Montenegro; the hike through Albania's stretch of the Balkan peaks – were experiences I might never have encountered without the spirit of overlanding. It invites you to linger, guides you to unexpected places, and encourages you to heed the advice of local people and fellow travellers. Perhaps one day a hippy trail-style bus from London to Kathmandu will once again be an option, but for now, we board a plane to Nepal's capital where a new adventure awaits.
The writer used the Man in Seat 61 website for planning and Omio for booking transport between cities, and the blog Wander-Lush as a resource for travelling in the Balkans and Georgia

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2 days ago
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Times
3 days ago
- Times
25 of the most tempting weekends in Europe — all reached by train
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I've brought lavish train picnics on board when travelling with my children to Disneyland Paris, travelled back with several bottles of fizz from the Champagne region and lugged home a pharmacy-load of French face cream from Lille. The main Eurostar destinations of Brussels and Amsterdam and spots across France feature on this list, but we've also included some lesser-visited places in western Europe to inspire you to venture beyond those cities, plus some further afield where the journey crossing countries is all part of the holiday. Times given are all from London, using the quickest available route without including any connections. You'll be surprised how far you can go. Though ham sandwiches are strictly optional. This article contains affiliate links that can earn us revenue Time 3 hours 42 minutesNormandy is an hour and a half west of Paris and an easily reached gateway to rural France ( Mortagne au Perche, in Orne, is a postcard-pretty market town with café-lined medieval streets and a 16th-century convent inside the 161-acre Perche Regional Nature Park, which has hiking trails and horse riding (£13 for half an hour; Boudin noir — a French black pudding and the local speciality — can be tried at La Brasserie (mains from £10; Place du Général de Gaulle). Stay in the old quarter in Trama en Perche, an upmarket four-room guesthouse which opened in April in a tastefully refurbished 18th-century B&B doubles from £142, two-night minimum ( Take the train to L'Aigle via Paris Time 6 hours 30 minutesDevote the whole weekend to slow travel with a cycling tour of the Côtes du Rhône in southern France, available until October. Starting in the Provençal village of Mazan, half an hour northeast of Avignon and nearly three hours south of Paris ( you'll pedal past vineyards, olive groves and fortress ruins, covering about 20 miles a day, as well as stopping in Châteauneuf du Pape to sample some of the region's famous red wine. After two nights in four-star castle hotels en route, you'll spend a final night at Crillon le Brave, a five-star hilltop hotel with traditional red floor tiles, vineyard views and a spa in vaulted 18th-century stables. Details Three nights' half-board from £1,115pp, including bike rental and luggage transfers ( Take the train to Avignon via Paris Time 3 hours, 30 minutesRaise a glass on the Eurostar as you whizz towards Paris, then onwards by TGV to the Champagne region for a weekend of fizz, in celebration of the area's ten years on the Unesco list ( It is packed with wine houses, vineyards and snug tasting bars for all-day sampling, from big names such as Taittinger with its historic cellars (£34; to the one-woman operation Baillette-Prudhomme (from £13; The harvest begins in late August, so you may witness it firsthand or even join in the grape-picking. The contemporary Royal Champagne hotel and spa is drop-dead gorgeous, with rooms overlooking the Marne Valley, ebikes to borrow and 900 champagnes on the B&B doubles from £535 ( Take the train to Épernay via Paris Time 1 hour 22 minutesYou'll barely have time to wolf down breakfast on the Eurostar before you pull into Lille in northern France. The Lille3000 arts festival, held every three years, runs until November and includes citywide cultural events, parades and performances, plus an exclusive exhibition of works from Paris's Pompidou Centre while it is closed for a five-year renovation ( Lille has the country's largest range of craft breweries and first brewery tourism agency, which offers tastings and even a beer-themed treasure hunt (£24; The four-star Grand Hôtel Bellevue is a 15-minute walk from the Eurostar terminal and the only hotel with a view of the Grand Two nights' room only from £334pp, including train travel ( Time 2 hours 40 minutesFor no-holds-barred opulence it is hard to beat the Palace of Versailles, which hosts musical fountain shows in its gardens every Saturday evening throughout summer (£27, until Oct 31; and is only a 20-minute train ride from Paris by the local TER train ( Blow the budget by staying at Le Grand Contrôle, a residence commissioned by Louis XIV and the only hotel in the grounds of the palace. It has 14 extravagant rooms furnished with authentic antiques, views over the Orangery gardens and a restaurant from Alain Ducasse. Stays include private after-hours tours of the château and its grounds, butler service and boat rides on Versailles' Grand B&B doubles from £1,708, including afternoon tea, minibar, butler service, boat use and daily tours of the Château de Versailles ( Take the train to Versailles-Chantiers via Paris Time 2 hours, 20 minutesJust an hour southwest of Lille by the regional TER train ( pretty Amiens has the largest gothic cathedral in France, a medieval centre, riverside restaurants and remarkable floating gardens, cultivated since the Middle Ages, that can be toured by traditional boat between April and October (£8; Visit Jules Verne's former home (£3; the first purpose-built museum in France at the Musée de Picardie (£8; or pick up local specialities including duck pâté and Amiens macarons at the Saturday market. The historic Hotel le Prieuré is a 15-minute walk from the station and has cathedral views, bikes to rent and a hidden courtyard. Details B&B doubles from £102, including half bottle of champagne ( Take the train to Amiens via Lille Time 5 hours, 20 minutesLaunched in mid-June, a new four-times-daily high-speed service from Paris to Marseilles from Trenitalia will have you sunbathing by the Med in no time, losing just an hour with the time difference ( France's oldest city has a thriving port, the 5th-century Abbey of St Victor, a clutch of Michelin-starred restaurants and Notre Dame du Mont, voted the world's coolest neighbourhood last year by Time Out. Over summer, there's a free programme of events across the city including a daily craft market in Canebière, late-night museum openings and weekly concerts on a floating stage in the port (until Sep 14; Book into the chic, all-white Les Bords De Mer for its rooftop pool, sea views and direct access to the sandy Catalans Room-only doubles from £160 ( Take the train to Marseilles via Paris Time 4 hours 45 minutesJust two hours southeast of Paris, Lyons has two rivers, a thriving art scene and France's largest urban park, with its own lake, botanical garden and zoo. The city is planning a giant free party this summer with more than 200 citywide cultural events including open-air cinema screenings, giant picnics and dance performances (Jul 8-Aug 31; For the first time, it will also offer free access to three air-conditioned museums and keep parks open until midnight during any heatwaves. Stay at the hip Hotel Chromatics, which has Scandi-sleek rooms, a California-inspired restaurant and a heritage listed street art faç Two nights' room only from £257pp, including train travel ( Time 4 hours 19 minutesEurostar reinstated its direct London to Amsterdam route this year in time for the city's 750th anniversary, operating at least 11 trains a day ( To mark the same birthday, Amsterdam's highest rooftop garden opened in May on the NEMO Science Museum (free; and a temporary platform on the medieval Nieuwe Kerk offers skyline views until November 2 (£13; Stay at the Rosewood Amsterdam, which opened in May in the former Palace of Justice in the Unesco-listed Canal District. It has a lavish spa with an indoor pool, a hip cocktail bar and elegant rooms in silver-grey with pale-oak Room-only doubles from £798 ( Take the train to Amsterdam Time 4 hours 44 minutesCanalside cafés, cycle paths and castles make this studenty city, 25 minutes south of Amsterdam by train, an underrated weekend treat. Stroll the cobbled streets of the old town, lined with gabled houses; climb 465 steps up the medieval Dom Tower (£12; explore the canals by kayak (£8 an hour; and hire a bike (£10 for three hours; to head to the Landgoed Rhijnauwen forest or the fairytale 19th-century Castle de Haar, with its moat and parkland (£7; Stay at the boutique Eye hotel, a converted 17th-century eye hospital with exposed beams, quirky artwork and an industrial feel. Details Two nights' B&B from £471pp, including train travel ( Time 3 hours 13 minutes Already connected by Eurostar, a new hourly high-speed service between Brussels and Rotterdam launched in December, making this cool Dutch city a weekend break no-brainer. In summer there are urban beaches, river cruises, waterfront bars and various lively festivals, including the free Caribbean street-party Rotterdam Summer Carnival (late Jul; and the foodie music festival CuliNesse (£37 for a one-day ticket, Aug 28-30; Take a bike tour to explore (£38; or see the city from its canals by renting a paddleboard (£13 for one hour; The nautical-themed Le Marin Hotel Rotterdam City is a ten-minute walk from the train station. Details Room-only doubles from £76 ( Take the train to Rotterdam via Brussels • 15 of the best things to do in Rotterdam Time 4 hours 28 minutesSlightly more than two hours northeast of Paris's Gare de l'Est by high-speed railway, Luxembourg City is easy to reach ( It has a Unesco-listed old town, ruined fortresses, seven world-class museums within a mile radius and free public transport. Go in August to witness both its Summer in the City festival, including free concerts, open-air plays and film screenings ( and the ten-acre Schueberfouer funfair (free, Aug 22-Sep 10; Stay opposite the train station at the Marriott Hotel Alfa, which opened last year in a 1930s building with art deco styling. It has a French brasserie and rooms with herringbone wooden floors, contemporary hanging lights and chic grey marble bathrooms. Details Room-only doubles from £176 ( Take the train to Luxembourg City via Paris Time 9 hours 11 minutesAfter a two-year closure caused by landslide damage, the direct seven-hour Paris to Milan route reopened in April, making travelling to Italy in a day (just) possible by train ( or Owned by the fashion house Ferragamo, Portrait Milano is a stylish special-occasion stay within Europe's oldest seminary, with a boutique-lined piazza and a swimming pool under a 16th-century vaulted ceiling. Look over the rooftops from the cathedral's terrace (from £13; then walk to the Naviglio district for a canal-side aperitivo. See another side of the city on a street-art tour (£41; or take a sun-soaked day trip to Lake Como, including a boat cruise (£86; Room-only doubles from £759 ( Take the train to Milan via Paris • Read more on Milan Time 3 hours 17 minutesOften overlooked for its better-known neighbour, Brussels, this port city makes a great weekend break with impressive museums, a trendy waterfront and open-air markets — plus you'll arrive into a station that's voted one of the world's most beautiful, either by regional train ( or on Eurostar ( Explore the busy port on a boat tour (£17; or visit the diamond museum DIVA (£10; Three-hour beer-themed walking tours reveal the city's boozy history (£38; or go for the free food and beer festival Bolleskesfeest (Aug 22-24; Botanic Sanctuary Antwerp is in a 13th-century monastery and has five restaurants with four Michelin stars, an apothecary and a 1,000 sq m spa. Details B&B doubles from £385 ( Take the train to Antwerp via Brussels Time 2 hours 2 minutesWith its high-end chocolatiers, antique markets and one of the most spectacular baroque squares in Europe, Brussels is more than just the home of the EU headquarters, and can be reached directly from London on Eurostar. Quirky attractions include a comic-strip mural trail, the world's largest art deco church and a new museum dedicated to Belgian fries (£12; Make the most of sunny days in the Bois de la Cambre park, with its forest trails, free-roaming deer and café only accessible by boat (£1 return; or in the city's alfresco bars including Rooftop 58, Europe's largest rooftop terrace ( The traditional Le Plaza Brussels is 15 minutes' walk from the Grand Two nights' room only from £307pp, including train travel ( Time 2 hours 49 minutesPop-up summer bars, lake swimming and open-air cultural events make this lesser-visited Flemish city in Belgium a surprisingly summery getaway, and it is only half an hour by train from Brussels. Time your visit to coincide with the Gent Jazz Festival (July 4-19, prices vary; or Bijloke Wonderland for free concerts and theatre shows (Aug 21-31; Or head to Blaarmeersen Sports and Recreation Park for kayaking, fishing and a sandy beach (£1; The best seasonal bars include Baraboire, in a converted American school bus (until Aug 31; Keiskantstraat), while the 40-room family-run Harmony hotel has its own waterfront terrace and an outdoor pool. Details Three nights' B&B from £568pp, including train travel and private car transfers ( • The lively overlooked alternative to Amsterdam — just two hours away by train Time 3 hours Known as the Venice of the north, Bruges is a Unesco-listed medieval city of gabled houses, baroque churches and cobbled squares an hour from Brussels on a regional train. Follow one of the free self-guided walks on the Visit Bruges app, then take in citywide views from the 13th-century Belfry or slink down pretty canals on a boat tour (£13; Try Belgium's famous beers on a brewery tour (£13; or enjoy a drink alfresco at one of Bruges' pop-up summer bars, including the Night with its beach area, food trucks and fairy-lit terrace (until August 22; The traditional Hotel Acacia is less than 20 minutes' walk from the station, close to the central Market Two nights' B&B from £378pp, including train travel ( Time 3 hours 10 minutesThere's history round every corner in Aachen, close to Germany's border with Belgium and an hour's train from Brussels. The Roman spa city with healing thermal waters was Emperor Charlemagne's 9th-century capital and hosted every German coronation for nearly 600 years. The Unesco-listed cathedral dates to the 9th century (free; while the Centre Charlemagne museum charts the city's extraordinary past (£8; Take a dip in the thermal baths (£15; and stock up on Printen gingerbread souvenirs at Nobis Printen ( The minimalist INNSiDE Aachen hotel is a ten-minute walk from the cathedral and has a rooftop restaurant with city views. Details Two nights' B&B from £377pp, including train travel ( Time 4 hoursBest known for its Christmas markets, Cologne is also a delight in summer with its riverside walks, Unesco-listed gothic cathedral and riverside beach clubs, and is less than two hours by train from Brussels. Saunter along the banks of the Rhine or take a boat trip (£15; then wander the 11.5-hectare Flora Park with its botanical garden and water-lily pond (free; The best spots for sundowners include the km 689 Cologne Beach Club with its white sand and cathedral views (free entry; and Blackfoot Beach for stand-up paddleboarding and barbecues (SUP rental £15 an hour; The five-star Excelsior Ernst is opposite the railway station and has a Michelin-starred Asian Three nights' B&B from £978pp, including train travel ( Time 10 hours, 20 minutesA high-speed train linking Paris and Berlin launched late last year and runs once daily in each direction, on a route that whizzes through Champagne's vineyards and the Vosges mountains in France then along the Spree River in Germany ( Tour the five museums on Museum Island, which celebrates its 200th anniversary this year (day tickets £20; or try city-centre swimming at Ku'damm Beach on Halensee Lake. During summer, the 519-acre Tiergarten Park has boat rentals, shady picnic spots and a lakeside beer garden strung with fairy lights. Stay at the Radisson Collection Hotel Berlin, which reopened in February after a two-year closure and is a five-minute stroll from Museum Island. Details Room-only doubles from £120 ( Take the train to Berlin via Paris • Berlin, Germany travel guide | The Times and The Sunday Times Time 5 hours 20 minutes No city does summer quite like Basel, three hours from Paris by TGV. Bathing in the historic fountains of the 15th-century old town is a long-standing tradition, as is floating two miles down the Rhine with your belongings in a colourful waterproof bag called a Wickelfisch (£9 for 24-hour rental from the tourist office; There's a three-mile sculpture trail between Switzerland and Germany, 40 museums and galleries, and open-air film screenings during August in the historic Münsterplatz courtyard (£14; Stay a ten-minute walk from the Rhine in Aparthotel Adagia Basel City, which has modern apartments with kitchenettes and a communal gym. Details Two nights' B&B from £880pp, including train travel ( Time 5 hours 38 minutesOnce the Alpine skiing season is over, Geneva shifts its focus to its 45-mile-long lake, which has watersports, beaches and alfresco bars, and is just over three hours by high-speed train from Paris ( Try windsurfing (£29 an hour; cruise across the lake on a belle époque steamer (£17; or head to Geneva Plage to take a dip (£6; There are also hiking trails just outside the city, or you can join a tuk-tuk tour of local vineyards (£343 for up to four people; Ruby Claire Hotel Geneva is steps from the waterfront and has two roof terraces for drinks on warm Room-only doubles from £249 ( Take the train to Geneva via Paris Time 10 hoursWhizz through France on high-speed TGV from Paris and you'll be in Spain by dinner. You can book up to 11 months ahead for a table at three-Michelin-star El Celler de Can Roca, run by the three Roca brothers 15 minutes from town ( or waltz straight into Rocambolesc, a gelateria from the youngest sibling Jordi ( Burn it off by strolling the medieval city walls, signing up for a walking tour of Game of Thrones filming locations (£25; or hiring a bike to explore the foothills of the Pyrenees (£67; Stay in the 19th-century Hotel Peninsular, less than ten minutes' walk from the city walls. Details Four nights' B&B from £1,085pp, including train travel and private transfers ( Time 9 hours 10 minutesSit back and watch France's Rhône Valley and the Pyrenees fly by on a high-speed double-decker TGV from Paris, which runs up to four times a day and takes less than seven hours, so you'll be sipping sangria come sundown ( Go for the free week-long La Fiesta de Gracia's street parties and food stalls (Aug 15-21; for open-air cinema screenings and live music at Sala Montjuic (£6; Jun 27-Aug 6; or to lounge on Sant Sebastia beach, in walking distance of the city centre. Moxy Barcelona opened late last year and is right next to the main train station, with a rooftop pool and burger-serving Room-only doubles from £170 ( Take the train to Barcelona via Paris • 22 of the best things to do in Barcelona Time 15 hoursIt's not the quickest journey, but if you travel overnight each way, Prague is doable in a long weekend on the direct thrice-weekly sleeper train from Brussels that launched last year ( Almanac X Alcron Prague is ten minutes' walk from the station and has a new package to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the passenger train this year, including a picnic for the return journey and extras like silk sleep masks. The Old Town is on the doorstep with its new Mucha Museum that showcases the work of the Czech painter Alphonse Mucha (£10; or walk half an hour to Letna Park for the Letni Letna circus and theatre festival (prices vary, Aug 13-31; Details Two nights' B&B from £620 for two, including one dinner and a train picnic ( Take the train to Prague via Brussels • 15 of the best hotels in Prague


The Guardian
4 days ago
- The Guardian
Jess Cartner-Morley on fashion: travel trousers – the gateway drug to smart comfy dressing
Forget smart casual. These days it's smart comfy that I want. Smart casual was about making smart clothes look more relaxed; smart comfy is about making them feel more relaxed. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more. Smart comfy might not sound all that different to smart casual, but it is nothing short of a whole new perspective on getting dressed. Smart casual was about how to look smart, without looking stuffy. It was about how you looked to other people, more than how you felt in yourself. The goal was to appear chill, not to feel chill. Smart comfy starts from the opposite direction. It is about clothes that look polished, but don't have any hard edges. The gateway drug that got me hooked, and that I can see on the street is doing the same for others, is a pair of travel trousers. If you don't get the point of smart comfy yet, then I suspect you will when you get your first pair. Do you have them already? Travel trousers present as semi-formal trousers. They have the silhouette and detailing of trousers you might wear to the office with a shirt. The waistband doesn't look elasticated (although it might be, more of which later) but instead has a button fastening, or belt loops, or both. They are not tight like leggings, but neither are they just shapeless, like tracksuit trousers. They drape. The fabric, too, is important. Not the traditional smart kind that demands you stay pert and upright to avoid the creases and bags that come with sitting down, but also nothing fluffy or fleecy or pyjama-adjacent. The new generation of technical fabrics can pass for silk or wool blend, but have the zero-crease factor of Lycra. The travel trouser is a wardrobe category that didn't exist a year or two ago. It is happening right now, and soon it will be everywhere. It has legs, because it does what successful products in all categories do. It solves a real-life problem. That real-life problem being: sometimes we spend hours sitting down – on a plane or a train, or at a desk, on the sofa – and then need to be presentable enough to be public-facing, whether that's presenting to a board or doing school pick-up. In travel trousers you can sit down, even nap, without your clothes digging in or getting too hot or otherwise getting on your nerves, and then you can stand up and not look like a crumpled slob. I bought my Lululemon Daydrift High-Rise trousers (pictured) on a recommendation, because I was looking for trousers comfortable enough to wear on a long journey but nice enough to wear to work straight off the train or plane. They do that job perfectly, but it turns out I wear them all the time. They are blissfully comfortable. The waistband has concealed elastic inside which has a drawstring to adjust the size, so they stretch with you, and you don't need to wear a belt unless you want to. You can throw them in the washing machine, they dry super fast and don't need ironing. They aren't cheap – £118 at full price – but they genuinely pass as dressy, which makes them feel worth it. Lululemon are best known for making leggings you see in the fancier kind of yoga class. Athleisure brands are leading the market on the travel trouser, which makes sense: like I said, smart comfy is about feel first and foremost. Lots of people recommend Vuori's Villa trousers (£130), which are similar to Lululemon's Daydrift, although if I'm being picky I would point out that the elastic isn't hidden on the rear view of the Villa, so you need a belt or untucked top to make them look polished. For a less expensive option, good old Uniqlo now appear to be getting in on the act, with a new style of Smart Wide Trousers (£34.90) available from the end of June. Trousers that are comfortable enough to curl up in, but smart enough to pass when you need to look snappy. That feel like athleisure, but present as tailoring. It's like a cheat code to life! The era of smart comfy has arrived. Main image Model: Jen at Milk Management. Hair and makeup: Delilah Blakeney using Olaplex and MAC. Jacket, £109.99 and top, £35.99, both Mango. Trousers, £118, Lululemon. Earrings, £39, Ottoman Hands. Sandals, £149, AllSaints. Suitcase, £395, Carl Frederick