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Camping Normandy // Campsites in Normandy // Alan Rogers

10 campsites in France, Normandy for Eure

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Flower Camping l’Ile des Trois Rois
One hour from Paris, on the banks of the Seine and overlooked by the impressive remains of Château Gaillard (Richard Coeur de Lion), this attractive and spacious ten-hectare site will appeal to couples and young families. The site offers mobile units to rent and touring pitches in separate areas. These are either riverside or in a large central triangle, all very close to the Seine; all pitches are divided by low hedging, and some offer a degree of shade.
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Flower Camping Caravaning des Etangs Risle-Seine
This attractive and well maintained quiet, rural site is well laid out with 51 hedged touring pitches on level grass, 38 with 10A electricity, and 20 with water and wastewater connections also. There is a separate tent field for groups or ‘free’ camping. Fishing and watersports are possible as the site is positioned next to some large lakes. The River Risle runs close to the site too. In Pont-Audemer you will find shops, restaurants and a good swimming complex.
Sites et Paysages Domaine de la Catinière
This is a peaceful, rural site close to the Normandy coast and the pretty harbour town of Honfleur, where you are assured of a friendly welcome from the new resident owners. There are around 130 pitches, 82 for tourers, all with 4/8/13A electricity. Some have shade, while others are more open. There are 30 mobile homes and a thatched cottage to rent. An open field houses tents and other units not requiring electricity. Well fenced streams, popular with young anglers, run through the site. Improvements have not compromised the French atmosphere, and this is an ideal base for exploring this part of Normandy.
Château de Bouafles
Château de Bouafles is a campsite located on the castle grounds in the Eure region in Normandy. There are 25 touring pitches to choose from, separated by high hedges that allow a great deal of privacy. The pitches are partially paved with gravel and grass, and you can choose between well-shaded angles. The Seine also flows along the edge of the camp.
Camping le Bel Air
Le Bel Air is a traditionally laid out site situated on the edge of the Forest of Louviers. The site is just one and a half hours from Paris and half hour from Rouen. The owners are working to establish a very pleasant campsite with a friendly family atmosphere. It has 92 flat, spacious grassy pitches of which 52 are for touring units. The pitches have dividing hedges (rather high) and all have some shade. Electricity (6A) is available throughout. The attractive main building houses a small reception with tourist information.
Camping l’Ile Adeline
Conveniently located just south of Rouen and a short drive from the A13 autoroute, this rural site is situated just 100 m. from the Lac des Deux Amants, which offers a range of outdoor and water-based activities. There are 120 pitches (with 6A electricity) of which 48 are available for touring (some require long cables), the remainder being occupied by mobile homes and seasonal caravans. The grass pitches are generally level and many are partly shaded by mature trees. The life of the site centres around the bar and brasserie, and various activities for adults and children are organised throughout the main season and on popular weekends.
Camping Municipal Saint Paul
The village of Lyons-la-Forêt, with its Mediaeval covered market and magnificently preserved half-timbered buildings, is classified as one of ’les Plus Beaux Villages de France’. Within walking distance of the village, next to the playing field and public pool, this quiet municipal campsite is a delightful and peaceful spot. The site has one hundred level grass and numbered pitches, separated by hedges with various mature trees providing shade.
Camping Saint Nicolas
This lovely site, operated by the municipal authority is located on a forested hillside above the interesting and attractive small town of Le Bec-Hellouin. The town is quite photogenic, has the usual tourist shops, several bars and restaurants and horse-drawn carriage rides. There are about 120 marked grassy pitches, 44 used for seasonal units, leaving about 70 for touring units, all with 10A hookups and some with water taps. There is limited shade from a few mature trees.
Domaine de Marcilly
Just between Ile de France and Normandy, less than an hour’s drive from Paris, Domaine de Marcilly is beautifully located in a 15 hectare park, surrounded by pine, oak and birch trees. Although most pitches are dedicated to mobile homes, this park also welcomes tourers. The pitches are large, level and grassy and separated by hedges. Leisure facilities include a swimming pool and two tennis courts. There are paths and cycle routes through the parkland and surrounding countryside, as well as riding and fishing. The site is well located for exploring the northern Loire Valley and both Chartres and Paris are within easy reach, as are the beautiful gardens of Monet at Giverny.
Camping le Clos Normand
Camping Le Clos Normand is located 5 minutes from exit 25 of the A13 motorway between Paris, Deauville, Rouen, Le Havre and Caen in Bourg Achard. This means it is ideal for those heading south either via Le Mans, Tours and Bordeaux or Chartres, Orleans and Clermont Ferrand. It's good because you can access the site without going through Rouen, by using the A29 and coming over the Pont Brotonne. There is an Intermarche just up the road which also has a 24/7 fuel station. The site has a small bar and snack area by the outdoor swimming pool. The pitches are a nice size and in the main flat some electric hook ups have continental sockets, and some UK sockets. The toilet facility is clean, well looked after but beware as the site follows the French site tradition of not having any toilet roll. The site is calm and quiet at night and has a barrier which needs a code to enter. Ideal for those who want to forget the hectic life of the cities and enjoy the Normandy countryside without being isolated (2 minutes’ walk from the city centre). The site has 55 semi-shaded touring pitches delimited by hedges and they have 6amp hook-up points. There are also 5 mobile homes available to hire.

Normandy

A striking area whose beauty lies not only in the landscape, Normandy is famed for its seafood and Celtic tradition. Certain areas of Normandy remain untouched and wonderfully old fashioned.

Mont St Michel

Just across the Channel, Normandy’s history is inextricably linked with our own in the UK, from 1066 and all that to the Normandy Landings of D-Day in June 1944. Yet, from the stylish seaside resorts to the old half-timbered manor houses surrounded by lush pastures and cider orchards, Normandy still seems largely untouched by the rigours of the modern world.

Laying on the upper edge of France, Normandy has a striking and wonderfully old-fashioned feel characterised by a craggy granite coastline, quiet villages and unspoilt countryside. It’s a place with a noticeable artistic streak: Monet’s garden at Giverny is located here, and the fine Gothic architecture of Rouen Cathedral was the subject of a number of the impressionist’s paintings. Towns such as Honfleur typify the picturesque maritime charm of its ports.

The Manche department is the finger that points across the Channel at Britain, and it stretches from the port of Cherbourg on the tip of the Cotentin peninsula to the Mont St Michel – the most visited site in France – right on the border with Brittany. The granite coastline, sandy coves and the inland bocage, a dense array of hedgerows and trees that so obstructed the Allies in 1944, has changed little in centuries.

A journey through Normandy cannot fail to reveal its significant part in western history. The Bayeux Tapestry depicts the Battle of Hastings and, most famously, its coastline hosts the five beaches onto which the Allied troops landed on D-Day. Caen’s Memorial Museum follows the course of the event and the beaches themselves remain a primary reason for many to visit the region. Even its medieval castle played a part in the Second World War; today, it serves as a museum exhibiting Normandy’s art and history.

Normandy is known as the dairy of France and its dishes often feature cream, butter, and fine cheeses such as Camembert and Pont l’Evêque. The cider route takes in the countryside and pretty villages of the Pays d’Auge, where Calvados, the distinctive apple brandy, and cider are produced.

Normandy Blogs

Seafood of Normandy

Rob Fearn | 20 Feb 2023 | Read time: 4m 38s

Normandy is synonymous with many things: 1066 and all that. The D-Day Landing Beaches. Calvados and orchards. But its seafood is a stand out feature of this slow paced, bucolic region.
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Fishing Nets

The Normandy beaches of D-Day

Ben Tully | 5 Jun 2017 | Read time: 5m 3s

The beaches of Normandy saw the largest seaborne invasion in history - 6th June 1944 or D-Day marked the beginning of the Allied campaign to wrestle occupied Europe from Nazi control
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Normandy Beaches

Commemorating the 80th Anniversary of D-Day - 2024

Rob Fearn | 26 Jun 2023 | Read time: 3m 45s

The 6th of June 2024 will mark the 80th anniversary of D-Day, an opportune time to reflect on the historic events that unfolded along the Normandy coast in the days that followed.
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Normandy Beaches
A REGION OF CONTRASTS
Côte d’Albâtre

A region of contrasts

Normandy has a rich landscape full of variety. Its superb coastline includes the Cotentin Peninsula, the cliffs of the Côte d’Albâtre and the fine beaches and fashionable resorts of the Côte Fleurie. Notable spots include Houlgate with its pretty promenade and vast sandy beach, and Cabourg, a popular resort with large sandy beach and a whiff of Edwardian elegance about it – stroll around the marina admiring the yachts or meander through the formal gardens.

The beaches may be wide and sandy, but the rolling countryside of the interior conceals a wealth of quiet, unassuming villages, ancient market towns and unspoilt countryside calling out for leisurely exploration. Rouen is the largest city, the scene of Joan of Arc’s martyrdom and renowned as the ‘town of a thousand spires’ that inspired the Impressionist painter Monet.

CAMPING IN NORMANDY

Camping in Normandy

A hardy perennial camping destination, Normandy is a convenient entry point to much of France. Many people drive straight through Normandy, chasing the sun (not always successfully!) and ignoring the glories of this fabulous region in their haste.

Campsites in Normandy are family-friendly, with generally spacious grassy pitches and well demarcated with attractive shrubs and tidy hedging. It is not uncommon for campsites to have been established in orchards where an apple tree still remains on each pitch.

Most campers either enjoy the beaches and the historical sights of the region, or are keen outdoor activity fans, enjoying walking, canoeing, cycling along quiet country lanes or playing golf on some of France’s best courses with the lushest and greenest of greens.

GETTING TO NORMANDY

Getting to Normandy

It’s a short hop across the Channel to Normandy. And there are always special prices on certain sailings so do shop around. Brittany Ferries sails from Portsmouth to Cherbourg or Le Havre and Caen, as well as Poole to Cherbourg. Overnight ferry crossings are more expensive, with cabins a popular extra, but you do arrive refreshed. DFDS sails from Newhaven to Dieppe.

PLACES OF INTEREST

Places of interest

Honfleur

Bayeux: Founded by the Romans, sacked by the Vikings, then home to the celebrated 11th century tapestry, 70 metres long and depicting the Norman conquest of England in 1066, Bayeux has endured a troubled history. The town centre is picturesque with narrow cobbled lanes, ancient timbered buildings and a magnificent cathedral. The cemetery on the outskirts, with some 4,648 white headstones, is particularly moving.

Suisse Normande: One of Normandy’s most beautiful regions: a delightful wooded landscape with rocky ravines, trout streams and the greenest of valleys. This is a great area for canoeing and rock climbing, and there are wonderful hiking trails to the south. All very different to the vast beaches of the coast and the sleepy, lush meadows of the interior to the north.

Mont St Michel: A view unchanged for centuries and as you drive around the bay, the mount pops up on the horizon at intervals in a picture-postcard scene that is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Even General Eisenhower mentioned this view in his memoirs. The ancient Benedictine monastery is connected by a causeway, surrounded by salt marshes with grazing sheep at low tide.

Honfleur: A photographer’s dream, and the subject of countless paintings, this is perhaps one of France’s most quaint and photogenic small ports. A fascinating variety of boats moor up in the ancient dock, just yards from wonderful seafood restaurants which fight for the freshest of fish. The high, narrow houses, painted in faded pastel hues, cast their reflection in the water and are the iconic backdrop to a timeless, picturesque scene.

Abbaye aux Hommes, Caen

Caen: Steeped in history, Caen is a bustling university town dominated by the 11th century fortress and Abbaye aux Hommes, an architectural gem built by William the Conqueror. On the outskirts of town the Caen Memorial Museum is a superb reminder of the terrible story of the Battle of Normandy and is a place of solemn pilgrimage for those seeking a better understanding of the events of the D-Day Landings of 1944.

Deauville: With its stylish beach promenade and racy nightlife, not to mention Grand Casino, racecourse and film festival, Deauville has been a magnet for those seeking the high life, sprinkled with a little glamour, since the mid 19th century.

Cherbourg: La Cité de la Mer; Château des Ravalet; Thomas Henry Museum.

Omaha Beach: D-Day beaches; landing site monuments; American cemetery.

Giverny: home of impressionist painter Claude Monet; Monet Museum.

Lisieux: pilgrimage site, shrine of Ste Thérèse.

Rouen: Joan of Arc Museum; Gothic churches, cathedrals, abbey, clock tower.

NORMANDY CUISINE

Normandy cuisine

Camembert

Known as the dairy of France, Normandy’s markets are abundant with rich cream, butter, and fine cheeses such as Camembert and Pont l’Evêque. Voluptuous sauces are typical of the region as are desserts made with orchard fruits like apples, pears and cherries. Fish, and shellfish such as mussels, scallops and oysters, are sensational.

The Saturday market at Bayeux is one of the finest, with countless stalls vying for attention, all offering delectable treats. The many apple orchards are used in producing cider and the well known Calvados, the region’s apple brandy.

Andouillette de Vire: Small chitterling (tripe) sausage.

Barbue au cidre: Brill cooked in cider and Calvados.

Douillon aux pommes à la Normande: Baked apples in pastry.

Escalope (Vallée d’Auge): Veal sautéed and flamed in Calvados with cream and apples.

Teurgoule: Rice pudding with cinnamon.

Tripes à la mode de Caen: Stewed beef tripe with onions, carrots, leeks, garlic, cider and
Calvados.