Marché provençal d’Antibes
Cours Masséna
06600 Antibes
France
Bon Weekend – Sunset in the Centre Region, France
Sunset over a wheat field in the Loiret part the Centre region in France.
Bon Weekend – Café de Flore, Paris
Café de Flore, Paris
172 Boulevard Saint-Germain, 75006 Paris, France
+33 1 45 48 55 26
One of the most beautiful village in France – Saint Cirq Lapopie
France is made of more than 32,000 villages, some are more beautiful than others. The prettiest villages are a part of an association called: “the most beautiful villages in France”. Saint Cirq Lapopie is one of them. It was also voted the favourite French village back in 2012! We visited Saint Cirq Lapopie while traveling on a péniche (houseboat) in the South West of France in the Lot département in the Midi Pyrenees region. Saint Cirq Lapopie is about 30km east of Cahors in the Quercy national park.
Nested atop a cliff, perched 100m above the Lot river, the medieval village architecture is outstanding. The castle ruins built as a fortress dates back from the 12th century onwards and the romanesque church from the 15th century. The houses date back from the 14th century and some were built with part of the castles as the 100 hundred years’ war was raging. Saint Cirq Lapopie has been shared between different feudal families; Lapopie, de Gourdon and de Cardaillac. The village is known for its rich artisans heritage; tanners, wood-turners and cauldron makers.
Many French artists and writers such as Andre Breton and Man Ray took residence in Saint Cirq Lapopie and has many art galleries worth a visit.
Room with a View – Péniche on Lot River in the South West of France
The Lot valley is a beautiful part of France South West in the Midi-Pyrennées region, the Lot takes its name from the snaking river crossing the département (region). The Lot river is bordered by very steep cliffs, plateaux, vineyards, medieval villages, castles and churches. The Lot region is famous for its gastronomy: the foie gras, duck magrets, Cahors wine, cheeses which can be bought in the village markets.
Cruising the canals and rivers of France on a péniche (houseboat) is a wonderful way of discovering France’s rich and diverse countryside. Every year, growing up, my family would hire a péniche in Spring and we would stroll through a canal or a river for a week in different regions of France. France has an amazing network of canals and rivers that are now being almost exclusively geared towards tourism.
As a child, I remember being overwhelmed by the size of the barges compared to our little péniche, we would cross ways or sharing a lock with commercial barges rushing to get their dry goods delivered and speeding through the locks while we were leisurely cruising. I used to love going through the locks opening and closing the gates, filling or emptying the lock to go up or down depending if you were going downstream or upstream (‘avalant’ or ‘montant’ are the French technical terms).
We started off in Luzech to pick up our Péniche and traveled to Larganol, cruising through Cahors and Saint Cirq Lapopie. Life on the péniche is very simple, you basically eat, sleep and cruise on the Péniche. We loaded all our gear on board: food, barbecue as well as our bikes onto the Péniche, so we could go shopping in the nearby village or sometimes ride along the canal towpath. Near the Ganil ecluse (lock) the canal towpath (Chemin de Halage) was carved out of the cliff back in 1845 to let horses go and pull barges. One section of the limestone cliff has been sculpted by Daniel Monnier. You can also swim in the river, near Saint Cirq Lapopie on hot days.
While cruising, you alternate going through towns, small villages, remote areas and going through locks after locks, 31 in total. We moored somewhere different every night on the bank of the canal and cooked the food we bought that morning at the markets. Make sure to check the jour de marché for each town or village, in Cahors the marché is on on Wednesday and Saturdays.
Near Cahors, you can stop by and moor your peniche at the vineyard for wine degustation and buy some ‘Cahors’ wine which marries perfectly with the duck confit that is available everywhere in the region also known as the ‘duck country’.
Bon Weekend – Strawberries at the Marché d’Antibes
Marché provençal d’Antibes
Cours Masséna
06600 Antibes
France
Bon Weekend – L’éclair de Génie, Paris
L’éclair de Génie
14 Rue Pavée, 75004 Paris
France
+33 1 42 77 85 11