Local Attractions
Les Bruyères
is ideally placed for many of the attractions in Normandy.
The Côte
Fleurie offers miles of sandy beaches from Deauville / Trouville to Cabourg,
a little over an hour away.
To the west
of the Côte Fleurie is the Côte de Nacre where the D Day landings took place
in June 1944. There is a D Day museum in Arromanches-Les-Bains.
Castles
Canon,
Crevecoeur-en-Auge, Coupesarte, Chateau
d’O, St Germain-de-Livet, Vendeuvre.
Falaise – Castle where William the
Conqueror was born in 1027.
Bayeux – Home of the Bayeux
Tapestry.
Argentan – A delightful market
town. It was once an English possession and it was from there that the
assassins of Archbishop Thomas Becket set out to Canterbury in 1170.
Markets
St Pierre-sur-Dives – Small market
town with 11th/12th century market hall which opens
every Monday.
Vimoutiers – Monday afternoons.
Livarot – Thursday mornings.
Lisieux – Saturday mornings.
Golf
There are
courses near Lisieux and on the coast.
Tennis
There are tennis courts in Livarot
and Vimoutiers.
Food
Tradition has it that you should eat
duck in Rouen, tripe in Caen and in La Ferté-Macé, leg of lamb from the salt
meadows of Mont-St-Michel Bay and an omelette in Mont-St-Michel. Try also
Dieppe sole, chicken from the Auge Valley, Vire chitterlings, black pudding
from Montagne-au-Perche and white pudding from Avranches.
Camembert
Normandy
is Camembert country. Camembert was invented in 1785 by the farmer Marie
Harel with the help of a non-juring priest whom she was hiding. It was put
into boxes as of 1890 by Georges Leroy. He worked for a sawmill and had the
idea of solving the problem of transporting the cheese by attaching two thin
circular pieces of poplar with a long shaving of this same wood and fixing
them with small clips.
Camembert
was now set to conquer the world. Its reputation is such that at the council
of Rome in 1961, the Bishop of Sées, who was having some difficulty
explaining where his diocese was to his colleagues, told them that he was
also the Bishop of Camembert; at which he received warm greetings from all
the prelates.
Pont-l'Évêque
and Livarot
Today the
reputation of Normandy relies on more than one cheese. Pont-l'Évêque and
Livarot reign alongside the king, Camembert, at last crowned with the
Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée (AOC) label to protect it from poor
imitations. These other two Pays d'Auge products require more milk and take
longer to mature than Camembert.
Pont
l'Évêque is older than Livarot, being a direct descendant of the "cherub".
However, during the 19th century Livarot was such a great popular success
that it was nicknamed the "worker's meat" before becoming the famous
"colonel" thanks to the five stripes of reed which came to be wrapped around
it.
The Pays d'Auge Cider Route
This
signposted tourist circuit, off the main road network, links the villages of
Cambremer, Beuvron-en-Auge, Bonnebosq and Beaufour-Druval. For those who
wish to familiarise themselves with the gastronomic heritage of the region,
follow the Route du Cidre signposts bearing a picture of an apple. It is
accessible from the N13 and N175 roads. The farms indicated by a white,
blue-edged signpost showing an apple, open their doors to visitors wishing
an in-depth visit to their cellars and a tasting of their vintages.
A Pays d'Auge
Route du Cidre leaflet is available from Cambremer Tourist Information
Office. Tel: (+33) 231 63 08 87.
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