After my success answering Annec's question, its my turn. However, I’m not clever enough for an ‘½ûÂþÌìÌÃ’ question – so I’ll go for one with a ‘Greek’ connection insteadI’m a ‘sad’ man who likes numbers.
The only problem will be the capacity of the power supply. In Italy, this is often only 3kW [equivalent to 13 amps] so all you have to do is make sure you don't have more than 3000 Watts running at any time.  In practice, this means;-
ditch the electric kettle [it takes almost all of the 3kW]
don't run your electric oven at the same time as the washing machine etc
Its easy peasy really - or you can pay extra for a stronger supply - but that's not very 'Green' is it? ÌýÌý.
What also worked was the 'mark forums read' button that allowed you to avoid having to open a posting just to get it off the 'new' listing. God - how I miss that one! ÌýÌý.
If you look at the 'mappy' website, [or multimap. via michelin etc etc], Â that will give you
approx petrol cots,
autoroute charges,
tunnel costs and
Swiss motorway vignette
Ferry costs vary on route etc - the obvious crossing is Dover to France - costs vary between £60 return [Norfolk Line - weekday] to £200+ [Eurotunnel, P&O, Sea France - peak booking]. From Manchester, the Hull - Rotterdam overnight crossing looks expensive - but it saves about 250 miles driving each way, plus an overnight stop. Driving distance from Rotterdam is similar to that from Calais/Dunkirk Motorways in Belgium are free - so it can pay to pop up from Calais - travel distance increases by about 12 miles only Cheapest petrol is Luxembourg [Belgium route takes you there] -  see -  Overnight stops vary from about £30 a night - Formula 1 up to whatever one wants to pay Allow 400miles/day max driving - so you won't feel completely knacke*red [I try to keep it down to 300 - 350 max] "You pays your money and takes your choice"ÌýÌý.
If you want to see what its like on the autostrada - go to    [scroll down page to see relevant webcams If the road looks busy/stopped at the tunnel - leave the autostrada at the Varenzo exit and drive 'over the top', rather than through the tunnelÌýÌý.
We have a copy of this book in our ½ûÂþÌìÌà place - for friends staying there who don't speak the lingo.  We came across it when it was recommended to our GCSE ½ûÂþÌìÌà evening class. You can see it here  - click the page tags to turn them.ÌýÌý.
Daft as it sounds - one of the easiest options is probably to buy the small car in the UK, insure it with a company that will do extended periods abroad [there are a few] and drive it down - bringing it back once a year to re-tax, insure and [if necessary] MOT itÌýÌý.
There is a through train [mon - fri] from Aulla to Rapallo - leaves 09.20 - arrives 11.00 The only through train back leaves at 20.00 [arriving at Aulla at 21.25 [Both trains stop at other points along the CT] For all other options look at    its the best site for train times  This give plenty of time for 'sightseeing' and walking. For walking suggestions - look at sites such as the ATG and Inntravel websites for their Cinque Terre walking holidays - these will give you an idea of what you could do in a day. The walk along the coast is easier than the 'higher routes', but is full of Americans doing the '5 cities' - [ they don't know where they are - but they just know they've got to do the '5 cities']. Front page of the Forum site today -  Ìý.
Comments posted
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The only problem will be the capacity of the power supply. In Italy, this is often only 3kW [equivalent to 13 amps] so all you have to do is make sure you don't have more than 3000 Watts running at any time.  In practice, this means;-
Its easy peasy really - or you can pay extra for a stronger supply - but that's not very 'Green' is it? ÌýÌý.
What also worked was the 'mark forums read' button that allowed you to avoid having to open a posting just to get it off the 'new' listing. God - how I miss that one! ÌýÌý.
"It feels a little strange and unfamiliar but I'm sure I'll get the hang of it soon"Â Some of us are still struggling
If you look at the 'mappy' website, [or multimap. via michelin etc etc], Â that will give you
Ferry costs vary on route etc - the obvious crossing is Dover to France - costs vary between £60 return [Norfolk Line - weekday] to £200+ [Eurotunnel, P&O, Sea France - peak booking]. From Manchester, the Hull - Rotterdam overnight crossing looks expensive - but it saves about 250 miles driving each way, plus an overnight stop. Driving distance from Rotterdam is similar to that from Calais/Dunkirk Motorways in Belgium are free - so it can pay to pop up from Calais - travel distance increases by about 12 miles only Cheapest petrol is Luxembourg [Belgium route takes you there] -  see -  Overnight stops vary from about £30 a night - Formula 1 up to whatever one wants to pay Allow 400miles/day max driving - so you won't feel completely knacke*red [I try to keep it down to 300 - 350 max] "You pays your money and takes your choice"ÌýÌý.
If you want to see what its like on the autostrada - go to    [scroll down page to see relevant webcams If the road looks busy/stopped at the tunnel - leave the autostrada at the Varenzo exit and drive 'over the top', rather than through the tunnelÌýÌý.
We have a copy of this book in our ½ûÂþÌìÌà place - for friends staying there who don't speak the lingo.  We came across it when it was recommended to our GCSE ½ûÂþÌìÌà evening class. You can see it here  - click the page tags to turn them.ÌýÌý.
Try 'Googling' You get things like   ÌýÌý.
Daft as it sounds - one of the easiest options is probably to buy the small car in the UK, insure it with a company that will do extended periods abroad [there are a few] and drive it down - bringing it back once a year to re-tax, insure and [if necessary] MOT itÌýÌý.
There is a through train [mon - fri] from Aulla to Rapallo - leaves 09.20 - arrives 11.00 The only through train back leaves at 20.00 [arriving at Aulla at 21.25 [Both trains stop at other points along the CT] For all other options look at    its the best site for train times  This give plenty of time for 'sightseeing' and walking. For walking suggestions - look at sites such as the ATG and Inntravel websites for their Cinque Terre walking holidays - these will give you an idea of what you could do in a day. The walk along the coast is easier than the 'higher routes', but is full of Americans doing the '5 cities' - [ they don't know where they are - but they just know they've got to do the '5 cities']. Front page of the Forum site today -  Ìý.