These are on my mind at the moment as we will have some
friends visiting us this year.
St Tropez from the park below the Citadel. |
I want to show them something impressive, but also take them
to off-the-beaten track places that few Aussie tourists see.
The five trips I would suggest are unmissable include:
- St Tropez.An absolute ‘must’. Just because it is so iconic – with its Haute Couture boutiques, tiny galleries, the high view over the town from the Citadel, Le Senequier (for a coffee and patisserie and to watch the glamourous world go by), the wonderful Musée Anonciade, the port with its fabulous yachts and the artists lining the seafront, the market at the Place du Lices under the shady plane trees – and just the wonderful feel of strolling the narrow streets. You don’t need a car to get there. A bus takes you from Les Arcs-Draguignan station to Ste Maxime, then take one of the speedy Les Bateaux Verts to cross the gulf to St Tropez.
A round trip taking in Port Grimaud – Grimaud – La Garde Freinet.
A bridge arches over a canal in Port Grimaud. |
Port
Grimaud, at the far western end of the Golfe
de St Tropez, is France’s answer to Venice – though this town is modern
(built in the 1960s) – and well worth a walk or a canal trip through the
streets.
From there, climb into the foothills of Les Maures to the original town of Grimaud – once owned by the Grimaldi
family (of Monaco) with its ruined chateau above, a functional windmill with
canvas sails, and exquisite hillside village.
Then back home, high across Les Maures to the hilltop town of La Garde Freinet and the BEST ice creams
in Var! You can climb to the old fort above the town and gaze down on the
terracotta roofs, or wander among the enchanting little boutiques, before
travelling through spectacular scenery on your way back home.
The Gorge of Verdon. |
The Gorges of Verdon.
Dubbed the Grand Canyon of Europe, (but
nothing like the American one), it is special in its own way.
The sheer
limestone cliffs either side of the Verdon River, splits the Var from the Haute Alpes. The river feeds out to the vast Lake Ste
Croix at the western end of the gorge, where you can hire boats.
Drive along the lip of the gorge on roads
with hairpin bends and high bridges that seemingly float in space. You can stop
for a break at a restaurant where the balcony juts out high above the canyon,
or clamber down steep steps to the river below with its cool waters and smooth
river stones.
It’s necessary to drive, but on the way you
pass through some beautiful Provenҫal
hilltop towns, which are well worth a short stop to explore.
Cotignac.
A view of La Motte, one of our local towns. |
A beautiful and typical Var town nestled below
high, bare cliffs.
It has a flourishing weekly market and a long town square
surrounded by interesting shops and restaurants.
You can walk up high above the
town for some incredible views across the countryside.
I could equally have suggested towns like:
Salernes – famous for its distinctive
enamelled tiles;
Lorgues – with its
grand church in the centre and brilliant market;
or La Motte – with its expensive and delicious rosé, the deep river
gorge that divides the town in two and its narrow streets that wind up high above the town centre.
A round trip taking in Ste Maxime – Les Issambres – St Aygulf – Roquebrune-sur-Argens.
Summer art market in the centre of Roquebrune-sur-Argens. |
A heady drive along the coastal road – the
turquoise Mediterranean on one side and a hillside dotted with ochre and
terracotta houses nestled among low trees on the other – makes you feel like a
1950s movie star.
You can browse the seafront market at Ste Maxime, or pull over and take a dip from the white sands that
stretch along the bay below Les Issambres
and St Aygulf, then turn inland
towards the giant red rock and pull up at Roquebrune-sur-Argens
for the twilight art and craft market and enjoy a meal at my favourite
restaurant – or one of the many others than open on a warm, summer evening.
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