Sorry to hear of your health troubles. The answer comes down largely to how far you’re willing to travel. You could fly into Prague, for instance, on Friday evening, spend the day there and then get a train to Vienna that evening, flying home from there the next night. You’ll see two truly top tier zoos, but the question is whether 3-4 hours on a train is too long.
Yes I was thinking about the need to cut short the Sunday due to flight schedules. Of the four European trips mentioned in my original post three, Paris, Belgium and Netherlands are possible with Eurostar train. The other one, Berlin, is possible with flights on the big orange plane, EasyJet has a Sunday evening flight Berlin - Liverpool.The trouble with this approach is getting the flight timetables to match your two day break, in a way that allows you to use both days. Especially at weekends, and from the likes of Liverpool or Manchester airports. In reality, if you're lucky, you'll get one full day in situ, despite travelling out Friday and back Sunday. This gets a lot easier during the week when flights to european cities are timed to better use the days, aimed at business travellers, but a bit awkward when leave is limited.
All of that said, its not insurmountable. Many major european cities have more than one collection nearby, so my advice would be to have a look at the timetables, and take it from there.
More than two locations would be too much for me, apart from having to rely on assistance from the railway staff to get my wheelchair on and off trains I get very tired easily. (My need for hospital treatment is due to kidney failure which in most people really drains your energy.)Prague, Plzen and Zlin may also all be doable by train in a long weekend? Might be pushing that one a bit, though.
Yes I was thinking about the need to cut short the Sunday due to flight schedules. Of the four European trips mentioned in my original post three, Paris, Belgium and Netherlands are possible with Eurostar train. The other one, Berlin, is possible with flights on the big orange plane, EasyJet has a Sunday evening flight Berlin - Liverpool.
No, my only need is to be at Wrecsam hospital for 7:30am on the Monday, once my treatment starts I can then go to sleep for three hours until it ends if I wish.There will be budget airline services from most major cities to Manchester Airport on Sunday evenings, because the market for those services is largely holiday travellers, who need to be back at work on Monday morning. I just had a quick look and EasyJet fly from Prague, Vienna, Berlin, Jet2 from Budapest, Flybe from Dusseldorf and Ryanair from Barcelona, all arriving between 9PM and midnight on Sundays. I don't know if that's too late for you, though.
Travelling destroys you at the best of times - there’s nothing worse than being cooped up on planes and trains with awful air conditioning, it is just exhausting.
Without preplanning before leaving the UK it would be difficult to arrange dialysis if stranded. If I was delayed by say 24 hours I would have to 'catch up' by having Tues-Wed-Fri. Last year I was planning a weekend break to north Africa (that never actually happened) and it was agreed in principle that because my blood results have been good since February 2013 I could miss the Monday and do TWF. (If people give up on dialysis, as a couple of friends have, they generally take a week or so to die.)I guess the one thing I'd warn against is the risk of delayed flights. While the UK is part of the EU reciprocal health care arrangements would ensure you could have your dialysis if you were stranded somewhere overnight, but if that is no longer available, what would the impact be if you were, say, delayed by 16 hours?
It’s probably worth noting that I’ve spent the last ten years of my life travelling internationally roughly around eight times per year (not quite frequent flyer status, but not too far off either considering some of my flights tended to have multiple comnections) and to date, I have never once been delayed more than an hour or two, so in my experience severe delays should be extremely rare. In hindsight, I probably shouldn’t post this with my Czech trip less than four weeks away now, as it will probably begin to crumble around me!
Do you use budget airlines, though? Because they have much more frequent delays.
Prague, Plzen and Zlin may also all be doable by train in a long weekend? Might be pushing that one a bit, though.
Thanks.Zlin can be paired with Brno - there is direct coach from Brno to Zlín Zoo.
Prague and Plzen - absolutely 1 hour long journey by train, train departs every two hours, I think.
Combining these two with Zlin - not really doable since Zlin is very hard to get into by a train.
Zlin can be paired with Brno - there is direct coach from Brno to Zlín Zoo.
Other easily reachable pairings in Czech republic: Brno-Hodonin, Brno-Ostrava, Brno-Jihlava, Ústí-Děčín,
I’m going to take a train from Prague to Brno when I visit, which is only a 2 hour 25 minute journey, so I guess it would depend very much on how easily this train journey from Prague to Brno would connect on to the coach journey from Brno to Zlin, and how long it would then take on the coach. Perhaps it could be achieved in an evening, perhaps after Prague Zoo closes at 4pm, it would be possible to travel on to Zlin ready to visit Zlin Zoo the following morning?
When I checked a website it seemed to say it only operates on the Zlin to Brno direction on Fridays?From Brno to Zlin Zoo it´s circa hour and half. HOWEVER...the coach leaves from only once or twice a day I think (in the morning from Brno and it waites in Zlin until evening and then it takes you back to Brno) and it operates only in main season, which means you probably just miss it by a week or two![]()