Jump to content

Recommended Posts

The lesser known Cote Vermeille us great. It's on the west side of the southern (Mediterranean) coast. Cheaper, more unspoiled and without the bling of the Cote D'Azur. You'll find a chain of charming coastal harbour towns, little beaches, vinyards and walks into the Pyrenean foothills. And Catalan culture. Get there by flying to Perpignan on a cheapish Ryanair and get the local train or drive south to Collioure (pretty, walking trails above), Porte Vendre ( good food), Banyuls. You can then hop over the border into Spain and check out Cadaques etc. Hotels are rarely more than 90 Euros a night even in peak season. With France May, June, early July amd mid sept to Oct are my favourite times. Would avoid August completely unless you like it busy.
I followed the Loire Valley for a hundred miles or so, nothing planned just cruised along and stopped off at towns cities and villages. I ended up on the Atlantic coast, beautiful! Wonderful countryside! Cities are half empty if you time it with the French national summer holiday.

So many places - I liked the Masdif Central going onto Cantal. The Gorges including the Tarn (less visited) and the Ardeche. Motorbiked around France many years ago and I think we slept on the beach at Banyuls.


Some parts - the SW coast and up towards Nice are frighteningly expensive. A recall motorbiking down South from Le Mans and it was flat, straight and dull. I spend a lot of time in Brittany which is what it is, less 'continental' a little wet but quiet and rugged.


First place I went to is Provence - good in the spring and autumn - quieter and cooler. And Paris - just has a great vibe.


Much of it is a mood thing!

We cruised downn to St Jean de Luz last year for a holiday, best places were:


Maison dans site troglodyte Gennes https://www.airbnb.co.uk/rooms/16278626 - a lovely place to stop on the way

Bois Bourdet http://www.boisbourdet.com/ - a great base for La Rochelle

An apartment right in the centre of Saint Jean de Luz, Airbnb I think.


Seat Jean De Luz is the quieter smaller version of Biarritz , French with a Basque feel about it. Great food, art, beach, walking etc, well worth the drive.


The big sand dune or the Dune du Pilat as the French call it is worth a look.


Take a copy of your driver's license, car registration doc and insurance in the glove box in case the gendarme want to have a look. We were stopped randomly and had a proper telling off for not having the documents.

Oh and for a wonderful meal: La Grenouill?re - https://www.lagrenouillere.fr/ 19 Rue de la Grenouill?re, 62170 La Madelaine-sous-Montreuil, France - upscale and superb.

Only an hour from Calais, and it has sister restaurants, Froggys' Tavern and Antidote for a more down to earth experience, also in Montreuil.


Best ever holiday in France was actually 30 years ago backpacking around youth hostels in Frejus, St Raphael, Le Trayas and Nice but those memories are a bit faded.

In 1983 we stayed near Castillonnes on a farm, south of Bergerac and it was beautiful. I remember being about 3 in another place near quarries close to Brossac somewhere North West of Bergerac. Somewhere by a lake in a chalet. Lots of good caves in this area. That was in 1981 I think. More recently I stayed overnight in Chateauroux on a trip down to Girona. There's a good square in the town for a nice evening of food and drink. You could stop off at Oradour-sur-Glane to see the site of the massacre. I went as a boy and it's still quite harrowing now although the bones in the church have been cleared. I think the roof fell in in the end. There's a good hotel in Carcassonne though probably better to be in town when it's colder as it gets busy and a little trippery. We also stopped at a quiet village called Nancay between Bourges and Orleans. Grand Fougeray is a good (quiet) stop off in Britanny....


More fun driving than train or plane if you ask me, and there are thousands of good places really, where are you planning on going?

And why not make it old school? Ferry from Portsmouth to St Malo. Then drive on to Brittany (Carnac) for some Eurocamp camping, beach and frites by a massive communal swimming pool. Buy some bangers, a flick knife and one of those pens with a stripper on it.

DovertheRoad Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> And why not make it old school? Ferry from

> Portsmouth to St Malo. Then drive on to Brittany

> (Carnac) for some Eurocamp camping, beach and

> frites by a massive communal swimming pool. Buy

> some bangers, a flick knife and one of those pens

> with a stripper on it.


We might have been on the same bus. Whatever happened I am sorry!

DovertheRoad Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> And why not make it old school? Ferry from

> Portsmouth to St Malo. Then drive on to Brittany

> (Carnac) for some Eurocamp camping, beach and

> frites by a massive communal swimming pool. Buy

> some bangers, a flick knife and one of those pens

> with a stripper on it.


The campsite with standing stones within it? Marvellous place. Stayed in a Keycamp static caravan. Roast chicken from the site shop, fresh baguette and croissant with fresh coffee. Lovely.


The Dordogne. Punting through underground lakes and rivers, the Lascaux caves, wine and cheese. Staying in a static in a wood, being surrounded by rabbits every evening, waiting for their share of the salad. Feeding the resident pair of coypu with stale baguette every morning.


Languedoc-Roussillon. Beachside campsite. Trips to Carcassone and Beziers, cruising through the Pyrenees, full of Cathar history. Going down the Vallee de l'Aude, spotting the signs to Rennes le Chateau and driving to the top of a mountain to explore the quiet and dusty village with its now famous church. This was many years before Dan Brown made it famous in The Da Vinci Code and the village was all-but-deserted with one small bookshop selling multi-lingual versions of The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail. Rather different now I suspect.

  • 5 weeks later...

Mark Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> We cruised downn to St Jean de Luz last year for a

> holiday, best places were:

>

> Maison dans site troglodyte Gennes

> https://www.airbnb.co.uk/rooms/16278626 - a lovely

> place to stop on the way

> Bois Bourdet http://www.boisbourdet.com/ - a great

> base for La Rochelle

> An apartment right in the centre of Saint Jean de

> Luz, Airbnb I think.

>

> Seat Jean De Luz is the quieter smaller version of

> Biarritz , French with a Basque feel about it.

> Great food, art, beach, walking etc, well worth

> the drive.

>

> The big sand dune or the Dune du Pilat as the

> French call it is worth a look.

>

> Take a copy of your driver's license, car

> registration doc and insurance in the glove box in

> case the gendarme want to have a look. We were

> stopped randomly and had a proper telling off for

> not having the documents.



Can anyone give me anymore info about La Rochelle area? We're doing a Normandy, Brittany, Dordogne trip this year and will be looking for a coastal stop as part of the holiday. Will obviously look at alternatives if Rochelle isn't a good seaside break.

Just north from La Rochelle is the Vendee region, which has excellent white sandy beaches and pine forests. Directly around La Rochelle It's a bit marshier. Unless of course you go to the Ile de Re which is superb but v pricey and crowded in August. La Rochelle itself is nice for a night or two city break - plenty to see and do with castles, fort, marina with compulsory ice cream parlours etc.
  • 5 weeks later...

SpringTime Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Can anyone give me anymore info about La Rochelle area?


V nice town, but no beach that I can recall.


Les Sables Dolonne, 50 miles up the coast, has an excellent beach and is perfect for families. Royan has a pretty impressive beach too. But both lack the charm of La Rochelle.

Can also HUGELY recommend this restaurant. The area is great but probably not the greatest in France but that restaurant and Montreuil for the weekend? Definitely!


Mark Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Oh and for a wonderful meal: La Grenouill?re -

> https://www.lagrenouillere.fr/ 19 Rue de la

> Grenouill?re, 62170 La Madelaine-sous-Montreuil,

> France - upscale and superb.

> Only an hour from Calais, and it has sister

> restaurants, Froggys' Tavern and Antidote for a

> more down to earth experience, also in Montreuil.

>

> Best ever holiday in France was actually 30 years

> ago backpacking around youth hostels in Frejus, St

> Raphael, Le Trayas and Nice but those memories are

> a bit faded.

malumbu Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Off to Carcassoonne shortly so interested in

> recommendations already made and ones to come.


Not too far from the Pyrenees climbs - Porte de Paliheres and Plateau de Beille would be nearest - both utter bastards - not tempted to take your bike?

Ryanair cancelled the flight to Carcassonne two days before, rebooked with Easyjet to Toulouse which was cancelled on the day, bumned a lift with some others waiting at the customer services queue. A 14 hour drive..... Note Easyjet much more helpful with the claim than Michael O'Leary. Air traffic control strike. France full of it at the moments aas Macron 'modernises' the state


Thanks for the suggestion of the Cathar Castles etc, brilliant and the local gorges. Carcassonne a bit of a disneyland, but good for the day and the art work, works. At this point train strike so had to come back a day early to get return flight so recommend a day in Toulouse. Looking after dogs so didn't do the climbs but have a mate in the foothills who thoroughly recommends.


Going to Finnistere for the tour. Not a lot of mountains there!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • This may be somewhat out of date but virtually no environmental benefit & almost entirely grass... really? https://www.gigl.org.uk/sinc/sobi09/ Description Peckham Rye was established as an open space in the late 19th century and includes several valuable habitat features spread across the park. The park is a Grade II Listed landscape, and has recently been restored with assistance from the Heritage Lottery Fund. A small community garden within the site is managed by the Friends of Peckham Rye. Peckham Rye Park won a Green Flag Award again for 2022. The site is used by the Southwark Health Walks project as part of a Walking the Way to Health (WHI) scheme. Wildlife This large park has several valuable habitat features. The most important of these is the only remaining above-ground section of the River Peck and the most natural stream in the borough. The stream is heavily shaded by native, unmanaged wet woodland dominated by alder, ash and pedunculated oak with a ground cover of pendulous sedge and bramble. Alder dominated woodland is a rare habitat in Southwark. Although somewhat altered with weirs, other artificial structures and ornamental planting, some sections are still in their natural banks and includes yellow flag, watercress, water figwort and cuckooflower. The largest of three ponds supports marginal vegetation including hemp agrimony. A variety of waterfowl nest on the wooded island, including tufted duck, coot, Canada goose and mallard. Substantial flocks of gulls visit the park in winter and bats are likely to forage over the water. Small blocks of predominantly native woodland, mostly on the boundary between the Park and the Common, are dominated by oak and ash with a well-developed understory, but sparse ground flora. Spring bulbs have been planted in previous years. These and several dense shrubberies support a good bird population and small numbers of pipistrelle bats are present. Infrequently mown grassland is located in one large area and was seeded in 2009. It's composition includes giant fescue, ladies bedstraw, meadowsweet, black knapweed and wild carrot. The rest of the park consists of amenity grassland with some fine mature trees.  
    • Same here. Incredibly selfish behaviour. Also illegal.
    • I heard them & our two dogs were extremely upset by it..  bad enough during the evenings but at least can have music on to dilute the noise!   Some people have literally zero thoughts for others!! 
    • I have signed that petition.  Someone was letting off loud fireworks at about 3 am this morning. They woke me up.   I don’t know where they were exactly but it sounded like they were in the vicinity of Dog Kennel Hill.    
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...