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Camping in Burgundy

16 campsites in France, Burgundy for Nièvre

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Camping des Bains
You are assured of a warm welcome at this attractive family run site, situated within walking distance of the village, in an area of rolling countryside, woodland, rivers and country villages and ideal for walking or cycling. The spacious 130 level grassed pitches (6A electricity, long leads advised) are mostly separated by hedges, with mature trees offering varying amounts of shade. Adjacent to the site there is a thermal spa with opportunities to ‘take the waters’ during a three-day session or a full blown cure of three weeks! Reception has details. There is an excellent restaurant almost opposite the campsite entrance and a casino in the village.
Terracamps Camping de Nevers
On the banks of the Loire in Nevers, facing the cathedral and the Palais des Ducs across the river, this site has just 73 pitches. The area nearest the river is for tents and the terraces above for touring pitches, mainly grass but five hardstandings; there are 25 pitches with electricity (6/10A). The pitches are quite tight but larger units can be accommodated on the lower terrace. This site is ideal for those who enjoy being able to wander into town or as a base to explore the region with its famous Burgundy wines of Sancerre and Pouilly Fumé.
l’Etang de la Fougeraie
This is a tranquil and spacious campsite laid out on a hillside deep in the Parc Naturel Régional du Morvan, with views over their lake, across the valley and surrounding hills. The spring water lake is ideal for fishing and swimming. There is a small bar and restaurant serving good quality regional meals and a well-stocked shop with local produce. There are 81 terraced pitches, with 63 for touring, 58 with electricity (10/16A). Recent renovations have included redesigned, level pitches overlooking the lake, fewer steep paths, a new heated, outdoor pool and heated sanitary block. L’Etang de la Fougeraie is a place where you can sit back and relax after a day exploring the surrounding peaceful countryside lying within the Parc du Morvan.
Camping de l’Etang du Merle
Le Merle is a low cost woodland site located on the edge of the Morvan Nature park. There are 59 pitches here with 43 for touring and all have 6/10A electricity. The irregular shaped, slightly sloping and uneven pitches are laid out naturally under mainly silver birch trees, which give pleasant dappled shade. The site is on the banks of a small lake and the adjacent watersports centre, open in July and August, has pedaloes, bikes and canoes for hire. The snack bar and bar overlook the small swimming pool, paddling pool and lake. Twin-axle caravans are not accepted. Rock pegs are essential.
Camping et Chalets Plage des Settons
 Camping La Plage des Settons is in the heart of the French countryside, located in Montsauche-les-Settons, Burgundy/Nièvre, embodies everything you dream of in a French campsite. Imagine a peaceful, natural haven with well-maintained facilities, all with spectacular lakeside scenery.
Camping les Mésanges
This rural haven is located in the heart of the beautiful Morvan national park. It's just 100 metres from the tranquil Lac des Settons, with its own beach and water-based activities, as well as walking and cycling. This attractive and carefully landscaped site has its own well-stocked fish pond with a few pitches along its bank. There are 100 spacious pitches (100-200 sq.m.), all for touring, set among leafy trees and neatly trimmed hedges that provide shade. One side of the site has an open area, ideal for small groups of campers. All have 10-16A electricity and access to water.
Camping Municipal de la Saulaie
Camping Municipal de la Saulaie is on an island close to the left bank of the Loire, near the village which is located on the right bank. It is used by many for one night on route to the south but a longer stay would allow visitors to undertake hiking or cycling trips along the river. There is a municipal heated outdoor swimming pool. The quite pleasant town is a fifteen minutes’ walk across the bridge and is quite pleasant with ancient houses along the way. You will also find bars, restaurants and shops. If you visit the town and fancy something special to BBQ. butcher in the town square is recommended. On the other riverbank there is a continuous dyke that runs for miles. It has a good tarmac cycle track running on top, giving excellent views of the wide river and sandbanks and accompanying wildlife. The site has 100 grass pitches of which 94 are four touring units with 10amp hook-up point (some are subject to reversed polarity). There are 6 mobile homes and tents available to hire
Camping de Decize
Previously known as Camping les Halles, this is a very friendly site with 78 touring pitches in an area of 1.8 hectares. Fishing enthusiasts can enjoy their passion from a waterside pitch. 12 fully-equipped mobile homes are also available for hire. You can enjoy a pleasant stay in the heart of nature, while still close to the town centre. The site lies on the banks of the River Loire in the town of Decize. It is located between the Aquatic Sports Centre and the leisure park, which has a large play area, electric boat hire, a mini-golf course and the municipal swimming pool.
Camping Municipal le Malaga
Camping Municipal le Malaga is nestled in the Loire Valley Nature Reserve, in the heart of a 3-hectare park, bordered by the Loire, the last wild river in Europe, and close to the famous Pouilly vineyards. Ideally located halfway between the source of the Loire and its mouth. Whilst here you could try the internationally renowned Pouilly Fumé and Pouilly sur Loire wines. Visit the Pouilly Fumé Tower where you will discover an inventive scenography to better understand the vineyard, the work of the winegrowers and the secrets of Pouilly Fumé, without forgetting the superb "Cave aux Arômes", guided tours of the vineyard and cellar visits. Nature activities could include Rabaska canoe trips on the Loire with the Pavillon du Milieu de Loire team. Near the site is a playground that will delight your children. The proximity of the village with its shops, restaurants and amenities will help facilitate your stay. The site has 100 touring pitches with 15-amp hook-up point. There are also 5 Tepees available to hire.
Camping le Manoir de Bezolle
From the terraces of Le Manoir de Bezolle, you can admire the peaceful hills of the Morvan Natural Park, which give all their charm to Burgundy, ideally positioned at the crossroads of 4 large cities, Dijon, Auxerre, Bourges, Macon, and only 3 hours from Paris. This superb, landscaped site will be the ideal starting point to discover what the Morvan and Burgundy offer.
Camping la Forêt du Morvan
A very spacious, isolated, rural family run site offering families a real back-to-basics experience. The access road is steep and narrow, caravans and motorhomes over 6 m. are not accepted. There are 25 large uneven pitches, 12 having 3A electricity (long leads essential). The pitches are scattered over large sloping meadows giving wonderful views over the surrounding fields and hills, but access for motorhomes and caravans over the grass may be difficult. Well water is used for drinking but it is only available in the main buildings. There are two small lakes, one quite deep, which can be used for bathing and fishing. Torches are essential.
Camping les Soulins
Camping Les Soulins is situated in Burgundy three kilometres from Corancy and looks out over Lac de Pannecière which in turn means you have access to a lake beach. A stay on this site will provide you with all sorts of outdoor activities to fill your days with around the Morvan Regional Natural Park. This part of France is packed with places to go hiking, biking, horse riding and canoeing among spectacular scenery. When you are ready to venture out there are hiking maps on site. You can also hire kayaks, paddleboards and electric bikes. The baker comes every morning in July and August and Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday in May, June and September. The bar is open from 1st of May until the 15th of September. The 47 grass/hardstanding pitches are shaded by trees and have space to hang hammocks or spread your meals out on picnic tables. 31 are for use by touring units, 11 seasonal and 4 Yurts available to hire.
Camping les Genêts du Morvan
Les Genêts du Morvan is a small, comfortable site with just 50 pitches under the same ownership as Camping l’Etang de la Fougeraie. It can be found between the region’s two largest lakes: Lac de Pannecière and Lac des Settons. The pitches are large and have 10A electricity. There are also some fully equipped mobile homes for rent. On-site amenities include a small swimming pool with a sunbathing terrace, a convivial snack bar and a small but well-stocked shop. There are many excellent footpaths in the vicinity, and the site’s friendly owners will be pleased to recommend routes.
Domaine de la Gagère Centre de Vacances Naturiste
At this secluded and attractive naturist campsite, you will receive a warm welcome from the enthusiastic owners, Floor and Tim. The site is spacious and well equipped with good sized, level, grassy touring pitches, some shaded and some open. Many are arranged in groups around three sides of a rectangle, between hedges. Electricity (4-10A) is supplied to all pitches, four of which are fully serviced. There are plenty of water points.
Camping de l’Etang du Goulot
Camping de l'Etang du Goulot is a campsite in Lormes, Nièvre close to a sandy beach. It is also on a lake and there is a fenced area where you can swim and walk. The site has pitches with and without shade. The Dutch owners Claudine and Maurice will give you a warm welcome and are justifiably proud of their site. Supermarket and village within walking distance. Lormes is a thriving French town with a lot of culture and nature around it. Here you will also find a bakery, butcher and restaurants. In the area you can practice all kinds of sports. For children there are go-karts, a mini golf, a trampoline, and a mini playground. Drive up to the church in the village and enjoy the view. This is a beautiful area with nice villages, towns, forests, waterfalls and lakes. The site has 63 grass touring pitches with hook-up point 16amp and 7 mobile homes, chalets and lodge tents available to hire.
Les Roulottes du Bazois
A delightful small park with a difference, du Bazois has just 11 tastefully decorated and well appointed Romany-style caravans for up to five people, plus three static Bengali tents. They are individually laid out on grassy pitches and separated by flowering shrubs and trees. One caravan is specially designed for with accessible facilities, sleeps three people and has its own wheelchair lift. Although there are very few facilities on site, it is situated in the heart of the village, within a couple of hundred metres from the main shops.

Burgundy

Burgundy is a wonderfully evocative region offering breathtaking châteaux and cathedrals, rolling hills and heady mountain views, vineyards and superlative cuisine, not to mention of course, a wide variety of world-renowned wines.

Dijon

In the rich heartland of France, Burgundy was once a powerful independent state and important religious centre. Its golden age is reflected in the area’s magnificent art and architecture: the grand palaces and art collections of Dijon, the great pilgrimage church of Vézelay, the Cistercian Abbaye de Fontenay and the evocative abbey remains at Cluny, once the most powerful monastery in Europe.

However, Burgundy is best known for its wine, including some of the world’s finest, notably from the great vineyards of the Côte d’Or and Chablis, and also for its sublime cuisine. You’ll also notice how driving through the country villages is like reading a wine merchant’s list with plenty of opportunities for tasting and choosing your wine. The area is criss-crossed by navigable waterways and includes the Parc Régional du Morvan; good walking country amidst lush, rolling wooded landscape.

A LITTLE HISTORY

A little history

Its name was derived form a tribe of invaders, the Burgunds, from the shores of the Baltic. The Romans introduced the vine to the province, as they did to Bordeaux, thus instigating a centuries-old wine rivalry between the two regions.

Burgundy has always been a corridor for the great movements of population flowing through it from north to south and east to west. It was, and is, a region of transition. Dijon, Avallon and Auxerre belong, in their urban style as well as the minds of their inhabitants, to the Frankish north. In the southerly Mâconnais and Charollais you come across the influences of the south, in the architecture, the way of life, the climate and the flora. The watershed between the rivers that flow into the Atlantic, such as the Loire and Seine, and those that flow into the Mediterranean, such as the Saône and the Rhône, runs straight through Burgundy.

The golden era of Burgundy has always been regarded as between the 11th and 15th centuries. This was a time of magnificent monasteries and learning, bringing with that immense power and wealth. Abbeys at Vézelay and Fontenay are recognised as UNESCO World Heritage Sites and Cluny was once the largest Christian place of worship in the known world.

GEOGRAPHY OF BURGANDY
Noyers-sur-Serein

Geography of Burgundy

Burgundy’s River Saône meanders gracefully through a rolling landscape of green and gold, studded with castles, mosaic roofs and Romanesque churches. Famous for its wines, the region displays neat rows of vines that flourish in the long, warm summers and produce the fruit that becomes such favourites as Chablis, Meursault and Gevrey-Chambertin. Scattered between are picturesque timbered villages like Noyers-sur-Serein where geraniums spill from pots and pretty squares buzz with the activity of shoppers and artists.

Once central to Burgundy’s prosperity, the canals that lace the terrain fell into decline with the construction of the railways. Today, they’re popular with tourists who want to explore the region – a cruise in a barge is the perfect initiation to the Burgundian way of life: slow, relaxed and enjoyable. Back on dry land, the Morvan Forest is the crowning glory of the Bourgogne for nature lovers. Home to over 150 species of birds, a multitude of tree species and mammals such as badgers, deer and boar, it’s a beautiful place to while away the day.

Camping in Burgundy

Burgundy is a great choice for a camping holiday, partly because it is not a big camping destination. That probably needs a little clarification: Burgundy is a fabulous place, make no mistake, it’s just not full of large campsites bursting at the seams with tour operators and crowds piling into the swimming pool complex.

This is mainly due to the lack of a coastline, of course, but Burgundy has plenty on offer for camping holidaymakers. If you like your campsites more restrained, more low key, more tucked away, then it has some gems for you. A high proportion of Burgundy campsites are small to medium in size – a human scale where you will generally get to know the owners, not just the receptionist.

For many, it is a convenient overnight stop while heading south to the south of France coast (or heading north to catch a ferry). But stray away from the A6 autoroute du soleil and wander down the sleepy country lanes and you’ll find restful campsites with decent facilities and friendly welcomes.

Pitches tend to be grassy, great for those camping with tents, and there’s usually woodland around, and plenty of empty fields where you can stroll and the kids can explore. A short drive will take you inevitably to local castles, places of interest, bustling market towns, animal parks and the like, as well as the big-name must-sees like Beaune.

There are great days out in the vast Morvan regional park or along the slow-moving waters of the rivers and canals. Take a boat trip and let the day slip by. Then by night enjoy the fabulous food and wine. Touring caravanners and motorhomers alike value the campsite restaurants you’ll often find on the Burgundy campsites. When the gastronomic heritage is this strong, you’ll rarely be disappointed!

The wines of Burgundy

So great is the importance of Burgundian wine (its history, viticulture, vinification, diversity and terroir) that the whole region’s vineyards are recognised by UNESCO as having World Heritage status. Burgundy is synonymous with truly great wine, notably from the sublime vineyards of the Côte d’Or, between Dijon and Santenay. Here the Côte de Nuits produces, arguably, the best reds and the Côte de Beaune the best whites. Other illustrious names include Mâconnais, Chalonnais, Beaujolais and Chablis of course, as well as the Yonne, Saône et Loire and Nièvre.

PLACES OF INTEREST

Places of interest

Cluny Abbey

Cluny: Cluny Abbey was important in medieval times and its influence radiated out over the Christian West and stamped its mark, theologically, culturally and politically, upon the entire Middle Ages. Such was Cluny’s power that it eventually became the overlord of over 1,450 monasteries, many in Britain. Cluny even became a driving force behind the Crusades and the Reconquista in Spain and Portugal.

Vézelay Abbey: This Benedictine monastery, south of Auxerre, is held up as a fine example of Romanesque architecture and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1979. It perches on a tiny hilltop topped off by its wonderful basilica while a bucolic scene lies all around with vineyards, sunflowers and grazing cows.

Fontenay Abbey: Dating from 1118, this is one of the oldest Cistercian abbeys in Europe, set in a peaceful, rural location in a wooded valley. Fascinating for its history but also the barrel-ceilinged monks’ dormitory and the ancient forge which was one of Europe’s earliest, complete with a working replica of the 13th-century hydraulic hammer.

Château de Sully: This grand Renaissance castle sits grandly surrounded by an elegant moat that casts a fine reflection of the structure on a still day. With beautiful proportions and lovely grounds to explore, it’s a popular destination. Do try the chardonnay white wines and pinot noir reds, produced on the estate.

Auxerre: A town founded by the Romans, Auxerre is famous for its Chablis, one of the world’s great white wines. It’s also renowned for its cathedral with the extraordinary stained glass windows and the Saint Germain abbey.

Mâcon: A quiet, flourishing town on the west bank of the Seine. The town is traversed by a 14th-century bridge at one point and there are broad quays and ancient wine cellars, reflecting its importance as the commercial hub of the Mâconnais wine region.

Dijon: One of the principal towns of Burgundy, its historic capital and was once one of the leading centres in Europe for philosophy, art and culture. Foodies will note that it is famed also for its mustard and classic aperitif, the Kir or Kir Royale.

Hospices de Beaune: Founded in the mid 15th century as a hospital for the poor, this gorgeous Gothic building is renowned for its delicate turrets, and multi-coloured roof tiles. The Grande Salle is spectacular and the 18th-century pharmacy is intriguing.

Joigny: Medieval town.

Paray-le-Monial: Romanesque basilica; pilgrimage centre.

Sens: Historic buildings; museum with fine Gallo-Roman collections

Vézelay: Fortified medieval hillside.

CUISINE OF THE REGION

Cuisine of the region

Boeuf Bourguignon

Notoriously rich and decadent, Burgundian cuisine is usually full of flavour, quality and – inevitably – cholesterol when it comes to creamy sauces and cheese-based dishes. Many dishes call for wine and use fine, local ingredients such as Charolais beef, Bresse poultry, snails, truffles and mushrooms. The river fish is superb and, courtesy of Burgundy’s location, Alpine and Provençal influences are never far away. Here are a few classics you might come across during your travels.

Boeuf Bourguignon: A classic dish of tender beef slowly braised in a red wine sauce.

Garbure: A heavy winter soup of pork, cabbage, beans and sausage – perfect on colder nights.

Jambon persillé: Ham flavoured with parsley and with its own jelly.

Meurette: Eggs (or sometimes fish) cooked with a red wine sauce with small onions.

Gougère: cheese pastry based on Gruyère.

Matelote: freshwater fish soup, usually based on a red wine sauce.