1 hr 41 min

Lisbon City Walk Spain & Portugal Audio Tours

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For the latest version of this audio tour, download the (free!) Rick Steves' Audio Europe™ App — available for Apple and Android. Learn more at https://www.ricksteves.com/watch-read-listen/audio/audio-europe From the mosaic-covered streets of the Baixa neighborhood, we’ll ride a funicular up to the back-alley Bairro Alto neighborhood. We’ll enjoy great views, port wine, salt cod, and classic coffee.

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Checking In with Lisbon

Lisbon feels to me like Europe’s San Francisco with rattling trolleys, a famous suspension bridge, a heritage dominated by a horrific earthquake (1755), and lots of fog. I’m kicking off my two months of spring research here–and I’ve hit the ground running to be sure everything in my Rick Steves Portugal guidebook is up-to-date for the 2015 edition.

Rua Augusta: The triumphal arch that serves as a gateway to the city is now open for visitors, affording a grand view down the main drag, Rua Augusta.  As can be seen from the top of the arch, the center of town was rebuilt in a strict grid plan after the earthquake/tsunami/fire of 1755 left Lisbon a smoldering pile of rubble.

4 Replies to “Checking In with Lisbon”

Do you realize that the comments displayed under the pictures are cut off on the right side? This is happening in the Portugal post, but has happened in other posts as well. I am viewing on an iPad. Please fix. I do not want to miss a word of Rick’s commentary.

Glad to read your trip to Portugal, another place we are considering for 2015, like to read all there is for a two week trip.

Jealousy! Lisbon is one of my favorite cities. I hope the Bom Jardin (the best chicken) isn’t the eating place that’s closed.

Which favorite restaurant went out of business? I’m going to Lisbon this weekend, with my Rick Steves’ Guidebook in hand!

Comments are closed.

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Lisbon Itinerary

So here's what we are planning to do while in Lisbon next month. The rest of our trip is in Andalucía but we will start our journey in Portugal. We will have two small children with us in a small double stroller. They are 3 years old and 13 months old. They are fairly good with traveling and won't need to nap back in the room or anything. Anything we should add or consider?

Wednesday, May 14 - Lisbon

Arrive at Lisbon Airport - 08:50 am

Take Aerobus to hotel to drop off luggage

Get lunch/snack

Rick Steves Neighborhood Walk - Barrio Alto and Chiado (includes Port Wine Institute, Sao Roque Church - Mass at 12:30?)

Grocery store stop

Back to room to nap

Haunted Lisbon Tour - 9 to 10:30

Thursday, May 15 - Lisbon (Get 72 hour Lisbon Card)

Walking tour at 10 (Either Free Chillout Tour or Best of Lisbon Walk with Inside Lisbon) - which would you recommend?

Gulbenkian Museum

Fado? - is there somewhere to see fado where we can take the kids? They generally like stuff like this and would probably be ok. We took my daughter to see flamenco in Madrid before she was 2 and she loved it.

Friday, May 16 - Lisbon

Day trip to Sintra

Take train at 8:31 or 8:46? (Rick suggests arriving in Sintra around 9:15 or 9:30) - use Lisbon Card (free)

Pick up free map at TI in train station or in Museo Regional building one block off main square

Take Bus 434 - 5 euros for the loop all day; first bus leaves at 10:15 or 9:45 am

Visit in this order:

Pena Palace

Moorish Castle (picnic lunch?)

Quinta de Regielara

Back to train station and on to Lisbon

Saturday, May 17 - Lisbon

To Belem: Buses 714 and 728 or Trolley 15E (Rick prefers)

National Coach Museum

Belem Tower

Monastery of San Jeronimo

National Museum of Ancient Art

Cathedral; Mass at Cathedral at 6:30

Sunday, May 18 - Lisbon-Faro-Seville

Train to Faro: 8:31 to 11:24 (22,20 euro or special rate - 13,50 euro if you book more than 5 days in advance) Kids are free according to people on tripadvisor

*Store luggage in train station on Platform 1 while exploring Faro

Explore Faro

Bus from Faro to Seville - http://www.eva-bus.com/

15:35 to 20:15 (18 euros or half 9 euro) Kids are free according to people on tripadvisor

Before you get your heart set on going to all the places you list, check every single one to be sure that 1) kids the ages of yours are allowed at all, and 2) strollers are allowed. We spent a week in Lisbon, did a lot of the stuff you mention and saw no kids that age anywhere except at a kids' procession we lucked into at the chapel in the Tile Museum. Even then, the kids in the procession were school age and there were very few kids under the age of five in the audience.

In fact, we saw no kids in strollers anywhere. It may have been the times we were out or where we went. Hopefully others will report the opposite.

Also please be aware that Lisbon is very hilly, maybe more than San Francisco kind of hilly. That's why there are elevators up to the top of the hills.

About the Fado. We went two nights to two totally different places: Sr. Fado in the Alfama district where we stayed and Sr. Vinho on the totally opposite side of town. The latter is much more formal than the former which is quite small. Both were great. We saw no children of any age at either place the nights we were there.

Finally, based on our experience, I think you are trying to do too much in too little time.

This will be our 4th trip to Europe and every single time, people say we have too much planned, and we almost always still end up doing most, if not all, of what we have planned. This is just a tentative itinerary. If we get there and we don't have time to see all of it, then we'll drop something . Last time we went, I got sick in Vienna and we had to cross a few things off our list, so we can be flexible when we need to be.

I have done lots of research on each place we are hoping to see and I've seen nothing about kids not being allowed, nor have we ever had any trouble bringing our daughter to any of the places we wanted to visit the last time we were in Europe. That being said, we have never been to Portugal, so I guess anything is possible! Most of the places actually list that kids under a certain age are free, so I took that to be a sign that they were allowed in. If strollers aren't allowed, I have a baby carrier to wear the baby and my husband can carry our daughter and she can walk part of the way. Definitely something to be aware of, though.

Thanks for the tips! If we get to the Moorish castle and it seems like too much for a stroller, etc., then we will skip it! The toddler will also be in the stroller so I'm not worrying about her wandering too much. Also, my husband is training for a Tough Mudder (some big tough-guy competition) the weekend after we get back from Europe, so I told him pushing and carrying the kids/stroller up and down stuff will be his training...lol. If we come to something that doesn't look feasible, then we'll just skip it. I also have a carrier to put the baby in if need be and my husband can carry our daughter, as long as there is a place to leave the stroller at the entrance.

The only real reason we're going to the carriage museum is that it is part of the card and we thought our daughter might like it (she's into princesses lately), but I can see how it wouldn't be too exciting!

I will certainly look into adding St. George and a ferry ride. Sometimes when we get to our destination, things look more interesting than in the books (or less interesting), and we have been known to change plans at the last minute. We just like to have a plan in place so we don't have to spend each night in the room/apartment figuring out where we're going the next day and how much cash we need....

I agree with the comments on this thread, but I think the itinerary will be a lot for little ones. Since children can be an unknown variable when it comes to how much can be done in a day, it might be useful to make a list of at least 1-2 must sees in a day and a list of perhaps 1-2 secondaries to fit in if the time permits.. Even as an adult who travels regularly, going with that plan has worked for me for more than ten years.

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The Rick Steves guide to life

Travel mogul. philanthropist. legal weed champion. the real rick steves is so much more complex than who you see on tv..

rick steves lisbon walking tour map

EDMONDS, Wash. — At first glance, it is hard to tell that Rick Steves is protesting.

In the center of his hometown, America’s favorite travel host is perched on the edge of a fountain roundabout engaging in some friendly civil disobedience. As cars circle the intersection, Steves smiles and waves, looking more like an Elf on a Shelf than an angry picketer. This is his way of reminding people he wishes they’d stop driving here.

Steves’s family moved to Edmonds when he was 12, and the 68-year-old is still happy to call it home. Rather than relocate to his beloved Europe, he dreams of bringing some European sensibilities to the edge of the Puget Sound, less than 20 miles north of Seattle.

When he’s not traveling around Europe, writing about Europe or running his multimillion dollar European tour company, the prolific TV host and author likes to squeeze in some local activism. The roundabout routine is his push to block off Edmonds’s very American Main Street for pedestrians. If you squint at it, you can see what Steves sees: this would be the perfect place for a lively town square.

“I like a lot of things about Europe but I love the urban energy of Europe. I love the piazza,” Steves said in a wistful tone you might recognize from PBS. “We don’t have a piazza.”

Unfortunately for Steves, the voting majority of the city does not love the idea of parking their SUVs farther away to shop. So despite his Boy Scout enthusiasm, the most famous man in Edmonds must keep up the perch-and-wave. This is not his only crusade.

Spend any amount of time with Steves, and you’ll encounter a total ham who loves a zany bit. But if you ask him about serious issues like car-free zones, he’ll bring up other causes that are dear to him: affordable housing, supporting the arts, creating senior centers for the elderly to age with dignity.

He’s anti-Trump and pro-cannabis. He does not care if that is bad for business.

The average Rick Steves fan has likely missed this side of him. On TV they see an always-sunny history lover who makes going abroad feel approachable for the average American. That’s an incomplete picture, like thinking you know Paris because you’ve seen the Eiffel Tower on YouTube.

Meet him in Edmonds, and he’ll fill in the rest.

It may look like a lot of gallivanting, but being Rick Steves takes a lot of work.

He spends three months of the year overseas, researching, writing, recording, refining tours, updating guidebooks. If he’s not planning or producing content, he’s often doing promotional events across the United States. This year Steves is celebrating the 40th edition of his first book, “Europe Through the Back Door.” Over the course of his career, he’s built a privately held company that generates $120 million in revenue a year, published 110 books, filmed 12 seasons of “Rick Steves’ Europe” and produced more than 750 podcast episodes.

“It’s just like coordinating a three-ring circus,” Steves said.

That is: really fun, sort of exhilarating and extremely complicated. To pull this off, Steves does not observe the French 35-hour workweek. He’s a workhorse with a reputation for keeping a frenetic pace year-round.

“It’s more of an American work culture,” Amy Duncan, Steves’s communications director, told me. “He’s an unapologetic capitalist but he is also a socialist.”

He makes enough money to fly first class, but he only sits in economy, claiming he doesn’t mind being cramped.

“It never occurred to me that I’m suffering,” he said. “As long as I’ve got an aisle and a seat that reclines, I’m happy.”

Actually, Steves believes airlines should only have one class. It’s part of his egalitarian worldview. He’s also anti-points and anti-miles, refusing to sign up for airline loyalty programs because he believes they bully us into complicating our lives.

Steves also enforces a self-imposed “ carbon tax ” on his tour company, which takes more than 30,000 people to Europe annually. For every customer, Steves invests $30 to atone for emissions created by their flights between the United States and Europe. Last year, that added up to $1 million donated to a portfolio of organizations, Steves said.

“I don’t need to be a slave to the quarterly profit statement. I want to be around and profitable in 10 years from now in a world that you can travel in that’s stable,” Steves said. “This is a smart investment and it’s an ethical expense that I should pay for.”

Rick Steves will tell you he’s motivated by making money; the more he can earn, the more good he can do with it.

“Vicarious consumption, that’s one of my things,” Steves said.

After amassing a windfall from the 2001 George W. Bush tax cuts for high earners, Rick Steves donated $1 million to support the local symphony and performing arts center. In 2005, he used retirement savings to buy a 24-unit apartment complex for the local YWCA’s use as transitional housing for women and children. He figured he’d eventually sell the complex and live on the earnings. About a decade later, he changed his mind and donated the complex valued at $4 million.

He also gave more than $4 million to help build the Edmonds Waterfront Center, a vibrant gathering place for seniors where his daughter had her wedding in 2021. And he gave another $2 million for a similar center in the nearby city of Lynnwood, which broke ground in mid-April .

“Rick puts his money where his mouth is,” said Nancy Leson, a former Seattle Times food critic who used to let Steves’s daughter babysit her son. She’s appreciated his regular presence in the community, like hosting events for local politics at his house and shopping at the farmers market .

“He changed travel,” local resident Karen Howe said on her way into the Waterfront Center with a friend. She’s used Steves’s guidebooks for years. “He’s introduced us to places that most of us would never think of going.”

Rick Steves hasn’t won his piazza battle, but he has brought European touches to Edmonds. At the Rick Steves’ Europe headquarters, there’s an E.U. flag hanging from the mocha brick facade. And gargoyles that drain rainwater, just like at the Notre Dame cathedral.

“Gargoyles scare away evil spirits,” Steves points out, unable to suppress his inner tour guide.

Here Steves employs more than 100 people: editors, audio producers, tour specialists and cartographers such as Dave Hoerlein, his first employee. That’s excluding the fleet of guides and drivers he contracts across the pond to shepherd tour customers.

Inside, he bounds through a maze of cubicles, his neck craned forward, always at an eager pace. His 6-foot frame appears leaner than previous seasons of his life, but his signature look is familiar. No, not khakis and a button-down. That’s vintage Rick. These days, he wears dark jeans and a button-down, plus a thin scarf and leather sneakers.

During a day of meetings, Steves’s fjord-blue eyes lit up at the minutia of the business. He went over new maps with Hoerlein. He and longtime co-author Cameron Hewitt addressed problems like finding a “less glitzy” stop on the Amalfi Coast that’s not Sorrento. They discussed whether a place is worth visiting after it’s gotten too popular, and Steves indulged in some gallows humor.

“It’s going to be like holding the corpse of a loved one who just died,” he said.

His critics argue the “Rick Steves Effect” can turn a charming village, restaurant or museum into a tourist magnet. Matthew Kepnes, the travel writer behind the blog Nomadic Matt , points to the Swiss town Zermatt, which he says Steves put on the map, and has since dealt with overtourism . You’re bound to bump into groups with Rick Steves guidebooks in Italy’s increasingly crowded Cinque Terre.

Whether Steves is actually to blame for changing a place is up for debate. There are plenty of destinations he’s covered that haven’t been inundated with swarms of Americans (see also: Gdańsk).

Steves says he assesses whether a place wants tourism, if it can handle it gracefully. If they don’t or can’t, he may mention it but not promote it.

He has faith — maybe too much — that his clients share his values.

“Does [my work] change the personality of a town? It can. Am I a dramatic impact on Europe? No,” he said.

“There’s a handful of places I really promote aggressively that I’ve had a serious impact on, but otherwise ... my travelers are the kind of people that take only pictures and leave only footprints ... they’re good travelers.”

You don’t have to spend much time in Edmonds to see why Rick Steves never considered leaving.

The city — population roughly 42,000 — sits on a majestic inlet. You can get to a major international airport in about an hour. The community is so courteous, it has an “umbrella share” program in case people forget their own on a rainy day. As Steves walks around town, he greets people by name. He lives within walking distance to both his favorite diner and a pétanque court, the French answer to Italian bocce. He plays bongos at his church on Sundays.

In 1967, Richard “Dick” Steves moved the family here because he was worried about Rick Junior.

“I was hanging out with dangerous kids and going down the wrong trail,” Steves said. Seriously.

His dad, an Army veteran, got by in the upscale suburb as a piano technician and importer. When Steves was 14, his parents dragged him on a work trip to Europe to visit piano factories; it was a radical experience that sparked his lifelong passion for travel.

Back in Edmonds, Steves started teaching piano, eventually turning his savings into trips abroad of his own — not only to Europe, but Turkey, Nepal, Afghanistan. He went to college nearby, earning degrees in European history and business from the University of Washington, where he played in the Husky Marching Band.

After graduation, Steves figured he could keep up his routine: give piano lessons during the school year, then travel during the summer. He started teaching travel classes in the same recital hall where his piano students performed. This was back when there was no internet and few guidebooks to consult for trip planning.

The classes were a hit. At 25, Steves turned his lecture materials into a 180-page book, and self-published “Europe Through the Back Door,” in 1980.

Four years later, he hosted his first European minibus tour group, serving as both bus driver and guide.

His businesses have evolved — his bus tours now take up to 28 travelers, a number Steves says is a sweet spot between making the tour more affordable yet enjoyable for customers and profitable for the company. But his mission has remained the same: to be the best resource for European travel and help Americans travel better.

“I just focus on that and I love it,” he said. “It takes my life out of balance — which is not good — but it lets me do a lot of stuff that I believe in and that’s good.”

Steves has been open about the challenges of being a travel mogul. As he built his empire, he was also raising a family. Being “married” to both took a toll. In 2010, Steves and his wife, Anne, divorced after 25 years of marriage.

Up the hill from his junior high, Rick Steves’s modest beige home offers a window into his many lives. There are family photos on the walls, from older relatives to his baby grandson, Atlas. He hosts political fundraisers on the sprawling deck. A painting of Kerala, India, nods to one of his favorite countries (people forget Steves did four editions of “Asia Through the Back Door”).

Next to his grand piano, there’s a stuffed creature that Steves calls his “Silver Fox” baring its teeth and wearing novelty sunglasses with cannabis leaves on the lenses — a nod to two of his interests: taxidermy and marijuana activism.

“It’s the civil liberties … it’s the racism … everything about it is wrong,” he said of keeping weed illegal.

As for the toothy fox, Steves doesn’t do typical souvenirs anymore, but he makes an exception for stuffed animals.

“The wooden shoes and the pewter Viking ships are so obvious,” he said. “I like to do something a little more organic and a little more striking and it takes me back there — I like it.”

He’s a very good piano player. He can also play the sousaphone and the trumpet — which he did regularly during the pandemic, performing taps for his neighbors at sunset.

Covid-19 was a nightmare for the travel business, but a miracle for Rick Steves’s love life.

After running in the same social circles for years, he and Shelley Bryan Wee, a prominent local bishop, started dating at the end of 2019. They had a lot in common. Both are progressive Lutherans. Both are divorced with adult children. But neither worked a typical 9-to-5, and one of them spent three months of the year in Europe.

Then lockdown happened. Steves, who couldn’t remember if he’d ever had dinner in the same place 10 nights in a row, spent 100 nights at the same table with Wee. It solidified their relationship.

“Shelley is a constant,” Steves said. He still struggles with the balancing act between work and love.

When the stars align and they’re both in Edmonds, Wee cooks, and Steves plays sous chef. They walk Jackson, Wee’s labradoodle, creating their own version of the passeggiata, Italy’s traditional evening stroll. They play table tennis before dinner.

When the world reopened, they started traveling together. They’ve made time for a few big vacations: a trip to Morocco, where they were caught in a windstorm that blew the windows out of their car; a luxury barge cruise through Burgundy, France, “that was embarrassingly expensive,” Steves confessed, followed by a week hiking in the Swiss Alps; and another hiking trip between remote lodges on Mont Blanc.

Before their first trip, Steves edited the contents of Wee’s suitcase, because packing light is part of his philosophy.

“What do you say?” she asked. “You’re talking to Rick Steves.”

Editing by Gabe Hiatt. Additional editing by Amanda Finnegan. Design editing by Christine Ashack. Photo editing by Lauren Bulbin. Videos by Monica Rodman. Senior video producer: Nicki DeMarco. Design by Katty Huertas. Copy editing by Jamie Zega.

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rick steves lisbon walking tour map

IMAGES

  1. Lisbon walking tour map

    rick steves lisbon walking tour map

  2. Self Guided Walking Tour Itineraries for 3 Days in Lisbon

    rick steves lisbon walking tour map

  3. Lisbon

    rick steves lisbon walking tour map

  4. Walk Your Way Through Lisbon

    rick steves lisbon walking tour map

  5. The Best of Portugal Tour

    rick steves lisbon walking tour map

  6. Rick Steves Snapshot Lisbon (Rick Steves), 5th Edition / AvaxHome

    rick steves lisbon walking tour map

VIDEO

  1. Greece Travel Skills

  2. Rick Steves' Europe Preview: French Alps and Lyon

  3. LISBON Portugal

  4. Lisbon Walking Tour: The Best Way to See the City

  5. The Smartest Way to Travel is with a Guidebook

  6. Amazing Lisbon Portugal 🇵🇹 Walking Tour

COMMENTS

  1. PDF AI Lisbon City Walk

    This map is excerpted from the guidebook Rick Steves' Portugal by Rick Steves. Published by Avalon Travel Publishing, available at www.ricksteves.com. Restauradores Martim ... q Lisbon City Walk w Tour Begins—Praça do Comércio e r From Rua Augusta to ça da Figueira t Praça da Figueira ... AT-Lis-LisbonCityWalk-Map.indd ...

  2. Portugal Itinerary: Where to Go in Portugal by Rick Steves

    Find out where to go in Portugal and how to plan your best two-week trip with Rick Steves' recommendations. See his top picks for Lisbon, Sintra, Algarve, Coimbra, Évora, Nazaré, Porto and more.

  3. Lisbon

    Lisbon, built with the riches of Portugal's New World discoveries, has a rustic charm. We'll remember great navigators, eat lots of cod, enjoy pastries hot out of the oven, stroll the city's back lanes and its reinvigorated waterfront, marvel at an exquisite church built with spice taxes, and enjoy some soulful fado music. Then we'll side-trip to Sintra to explore the fanciful castles of ...

  4. Lisbon, Portugal: Old World Neighborhoods

    The Alfama and Bairro Alto neighborhoods in Lisbon are two of the city's most characteristic and charming districts. While new affluence and tourism is bring...

  5. Spain & Portugal Audio Tours: Lisbon City Walk on Apple Podcasts

    ‎Show Spain & Portugal Audio Tours, Ep Lisbon City Walk - Mar 1, 2017

  6. Travel Talk Video: Lisbon

    In this travel talk, Rick Steves' Europe travel expert Rich Earl offers advice on visiting the bustling Portuguese capital. Rich introduces Lisbon's neighborhoods, Manueline architecture, and top sights, from the Gulbenkian Museum to the Jerónimos Monastery in the neighborhood of Belém (also famous for its custard tart). Then we'll side-trip to nearby sights: the palaces and castles of ...

  7. Lisbon City Walk

    Lisbon City Walk. 1 Mar 2017 · Rick Steves Spain & Portugal Audio Tours. 01:41:09. From the mosaic-covered streets of the Baixa neighborhood, we'll ride a funicular up to the back-alley Bairro Alto neighborhood. We'll enjoy great views, port wine, salt cod, and classic coffee. Don't forget to download the PDF companion map at https://www ...

  8. Lisbon

    I spend about a third of each year in Europe. And every year, a highlight is actually taking a Rick Steves tour. This year, my pick was the Heart of Portugal in 12 Days — and I had a blast.. For our tour company, Rick Steves' Europe Tours, 2018 has been the best year yet — with 28,000 travelers (and counting) joining us on over 1,000 departures.

  9. Lisbon walking tours

    Lisbon walking tours. Aside from the Rick Steves walking tour, has anyone done some walking tours in Lisbon. I will be staying in the Alfama. Thank you, A few years ago we did a walking tour of Lisbon with Inside Lisbon tours. We enjoyed it. Lisbon is hilly so be prepared although at one point we did go uphill on a tram.

  10. Checking In with Lisbon

    Posted on April 18, 2014 January 5, 2018 by Rick Steves Checking In with Lisbon Lisbon feels to me like Europe's San Francisco with rattling trolleys, a famous suspension bridge, a heritage dominated by a horrific earthquake (1755), and lots of fog.

  11. Lisbon Guidebook

    Snapshot: Lisbon. Share. $14.99. Just what you need for the best of Lisbon and nearby Sintra. In-depth, Rick-tested advice on Lisbon's best sights, hotels, restaurants, and nightlife. Great self-guided walks and tours. Easy-to-read maps. Shipping & Returns.

  12. Evolving Lisbon by Rick Steves

    Evolving Lisbon. By Rick Steves. Lisbon's hilly Alfama district is a jumble of whitewashed houses overlooking the yawning mouth of the Tejo River. (photo: Cameron Hewitt) Trolleys provide a scenic tour of the city as well as practical transportation. (photo: Dominic Bonuccelli) Portugal's capital city of Lisbon feels to me like Europe's San ...

  13. Lisbon Walking tour recommendations

    Lisbon Walking tour recommendations. Hello, my husband and I will be in Lisbon, starting March 20, 2024 and we would like to do a walking tour of the city with a knowledgeable local guide. We were in Lisbon last spring and used Rick's audio walking tour which was a great introduction to the city but we are ready for a more in-depth tour.

  14. Lisbon Walking Tours by City Hall

    I read that Lisbon's City Hall has a variety of free themed walking tours. Has anyone done one? ... Lisbon Walking Tours by City Hall. Jump to bottom. Posted by Cindy (Honolulu) on 03/07/09 12:57 AM. ... ©2024 Rick Steves' Europe, Inc. | CST# 2086743 | ...

  15. Lisbon Itinerary

    Rick Steves Neighborhood Walk - Barrio Alto and Chiado (includes Port Wine Institute, Sao Roque Church - Mass at 12:30?) ... Dinner. Haunted Lisbon Tour - 9 to 10:30. Thursday, May 15 - Lisbon (Get 72 hour Lisbon Card) Morning: Walking tour at 10 (Either Free Chillout Tour or Best of Lisbon Walk with Inside Lisbon) - which would you recommend ...

  16. A Lisbon Food Tour and Portuguese Taste Treats

    It's a secret — proudly kept since 1837. Stopping here is a ritual for me with every visit to Lisbon. Portugal comes with lots of unique taste treats. And, hopping into a rickety old trolley, you can enjoy many of them — from "in cod we trust" to its beloved custard pies — by visiting its traditional shops and colorful market halls.

  17. Rick Steves's rules for Lisbon: Stay up late and immerse yourself in

    Rick Steves is an guide book author, travel guide and activist. His latest book, "For the Love of Europe: My Favorite Places, People, and Stories," is a collection of 100 essays from his ...

  18. The Rick Steves guide to life

    After amassing a windfall from the 2001 George W. Bush tax cuts for high earners, Rick Steves donated $1 million to support the local symphony and performing arts center. In 2005, he used ...