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Destination Angouleme

Categories: 16 Charente, Air, Books Guides Images, France Travel, Maps France, Poitou Charentes, Regions Departements, Road, Train Updated January 27, 2008

angouleme.JPGAngouleme (16 Charentes, Poitou-Charentes) joins an ever growing list of budget airline destinations when Ryanair starts flying to Angouleme’s Brie-Champniers airport from 1 April 2008. This small airport is just about 6km north of the city.
I like Angouleme - it is one of those very French market towns largely without pretension. Its main claim to fame is the annual Bande-Dessine (adult comic story books) Festival, very popular in France.
However to explore its attractions I recommend that you look at the www.viamichelin.co.uk website.I find the site very helpful in planning car trips in France (and the UK) offering a variety of route choices, timings, distances and costs including autoroute tolls. So you can discover that Angouleme is 733km from Calais, a journey taking 6 hours 49 minutes and costing €40.70 in autoroute tolls. By comparison, the journey from Caen (Ouistreham) is 485km, takes 4 hours 56 minutes and costs €21.40.

Ryanair is currently offering midweek flights in June from Stansted to Angouleme for under £44.00 return in June (including taxes and charges).

Alternatively you can reach Angouleme by train (Eurostar to Paris) and TGV to Angouleme which is on the GV Atlantique line to Bordeaux. The cheapest midweek price from London in March is £49.50 one-way, the journey time being about 6 hours.

If you explore the www.viamichelin.co.uk website further and search on the Tourism tab for Angouleme you;ll discover information on the town’s attractions and download some audio tours of some of the main sights!

Stay on a vineyard - Coteaux du Languedoc la Clape

Categories: 11 Aude, Accommodation France, Coteaux du Languedoc, Gites/Villas, Languedoc Roussillon wines, Languedoc-Roussillon, Maps France, Stay on a vineyard, Wines of France Updated May 16, 2007

Gites at Chateau RicardelleChateau Ricardelle produces an excellent range of Coteaux du Languedoc AC la Clape and Vins de Pays d’Oc wines and has some rather classy self-catering accomodation on the vineyard at la Clape between Narbonne (11 Aude, Languedoc-Roussillon) and the Mediterranean coast.

see map

Drive on the right in France!!!

Categories: France Travel, Maps France, Road Updated April 23, 2007

Priorité à Droite For those of us accustomed to driving in France it is easy to forget how strange it seems to be driving on the wrong side of the road! This is especially the case nowadays when the exit from many Cross-Channel ferry ports is straight onto a fast dual carriageway which takes you away from the town - so it can be several hours until you really have to start thinking about navigating things like roundabouts the wrong way round.
The biggest danger is pulling away after a break, like a picnic or a petrol station - especially on quiet roads in the countryside, where the only thing to signal that you are on a foreign road will be that idiot coming towards you on your side of the road, flashing his headlights and gesticulating something about foreigners, which fortunately you cannot understand. I suspect we have all done it. I went one better a few years ago - after a couple of weeks driving around France I drove back (alone) through rural Hampshire, and after a brief stop pulled off onto the wrong side of the road in England!! - very embarassing, but fortunately no damage done except to the nerves of the poor motorist coming the other way! The best thing is to always park or pull-off onto the right-hand side of the road and/or delegate one of your passengers to do a “pre-flight” check at the start of any journey or after a stop!

There is an article in the Telegraph (21 April 07) about the town of Flers (61 Orne, Normandy) where they have put up signs in English reminding drivers to drive on the right! This follows a couple of fatal accidents caused by british motorists, for whom Flers is but an hour or 50 miles south from the ferry terminal at Caen/Ouistreham - and offers a convenient coffee stop after the overnight ferry.

There is plenty for the foreign motorist to be aware of in France - especially the notorious “Priorité à Droite” rules which still apply. especially in towns and rural roads - although fortunately not on autoroutes or other major routes (nor on roundabouts, where the traffic on the roundabout has priority).
The sign at the top of this page is not just a “crossroads” sign as we know it in the UK - it is the sign for a junction (not necessarily a crossroads) where you do not have priority - the vehicle coming from your right has priority!!
On the panel below the two signs on the left indicate that you do have priority - those on the right say you should give priority to traffic coming from the right! If in doubt - be prepared for some sticky moments!
priority or no priority

For more on driving in France see www.frenchduck.co.uk