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Camping in Normandy

54 campsites in France, Normandy for Small Site

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Camping de la Seine
Views of France's most famous river and the wooded hills opposite can be seen from Camping de la Seine, a small riverside campsite tucked away not far from Le Havre. This rural setting has 40 touring pitches, grassy and dotted with fruit trees. The campsite offers spa services, bike hire and a large grassy expanse where youngsters can run around and let off steam. The staff here are keen to ensure a warm welcome and can arrange trips to local attractions and activities. Local farmers occasionally bring fresh local produce to the site.
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Camping Huttopia Les Falaises - Normandie
This cliff top site is for the more adventurous – one has to go out of one’s way to find it. Of the 170 pitches, 72 are for touring; 30 have 10A electricity connections, all are level, clearly marked and separated by bushes. The remaining pitches are occupied by permanent, privately-owned accommodation. The English speaking owners, who purchased this ex-municipal site back in 2002, are really bringing it up to date and the new area is well planned. The owner, along with many sea fishing campers and their boats, are often to be found at sea, catching crabs and other delicacies.
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Camping L'Ésperance
L'Ésperance is in Normandy, Manche, and is located near the beach and the English Channel. It's a perfect place for families with children to enjoy a relaxing vacation. The site has 135 grass pitches, of which 35 are for touring units, and it has a 10-anp hook-up point. Seventy-nine seasonal and 21 mobile homes or chalets are available to hire. The campsite has a landscaped design, with touring pitches delimited by conifer trees. This creates a sense of privacy and seclusion for campers.
Camping de Collignon
Camping de Collignon is only 5 minutes away from the ferry port in Cherbourg. Although it is so close to the port, it is set right by a very nice sandy beach, just behind some grassy dunes. This is site where you can choose a pitch and check in later if the reception is closed. Some pitches are completely private and others in little enclosures of three or four edged by attractive trees and shrubs. There is a small shop in reception where you can order bread for the morning. People staying at the site can also get a free ticket for the municipal pool next door- this is indoor but has a large pool for length swimming as well as paddling pool and a leisure pool with 2 flumes and a spa bath. It takes a couple of minutes’ walk over the grass dunes to get onto the beach where there is a water sports school and a supervised swimming area. The dunes have been developed by the local council as an amenities area with sports courts, fitness equipment and footpaths and this is a nice place for an evening stroll with a view out to sea. The site has 83 touring pitches, some seasonal.
Seasonova Camping Etennemare
This comfortable, neat site is two kilometres from the picturesque harbour and town, 30 km. west of Dieppe. Quietly located, it has 116 pitches of which 49 are available for touring units. The grassy pitches are all on a slight slope, with electricity (6/10A), but there is very little shade. Reception is open all day in July and August, but in low season is closed 12.00-15.00 daily and all day Wednesday: there is a card-operated security barrier. Not far from Fécamp, with its Benedictine Distillery – indeed, the chalky cliffs along this coast were made famous by the many artists and sculptors who visited here in the late 1800s.
Camping le Clos de Balleroy
Camping Le Clos de Balleroy is located just metres away from the name’s sake castle close to D-Day beaches between Bayeux and Saint-Lô. It is set within a magnificent 1.7-hectare park on the edge of Cerisy Forest. The ideal setting for a holiday in the heart of nature close to the Normandy coast. 30 km from Caen and 1 hour 20 minutes from Mont Saint Michel. The site is ideal for visitors to enjoy a relaxing holiday in an oasis of greenery and a friendly atmosphere. The whole family will enjoy the themed evenings and entertainment during the summer months. The site has 59 touring pitches (some seasonal) half of them have electric hook-up point. There are also approx. 50 mobile homes and tents, some available to hire.
Flower Camping le Haut Dick
Le Haut Dick is located at the heart of the south Cotentin peninsula. On the banks of the Haut Dick canal, this is a simple campsite but has a pleasant bar/snack bar and a well maintained sanitary block. It comprises 100 good sized pitches which are flat, grassy and well divided by hedges, 71 for touring, with 10A electricity. The town of Carentan is a ten-minute walk away and features a brand new pool complex. This site is an ideal departure point for visiting the World War Two Landing Beaches and the Marais of the Cotentin Peninsula.
Camping Les Chevaliers de Malte
Camping Les Chevaliers de Malte (The Knights of Malta). Is near Villedieu-les-Poêles, a historic city of bell foundry and copper smithing. The site is proof that a city site can also be very green and doesn't have to be full of asphalt. The 78 spacious grass touring pitches with 8/16-amp hook-up points. The pitches are situated on well-tended lawns and are separated by mature hedging, giving privacy during your stay here. The site also has 18 mobile homes or tipi tents available to hire.
Camping l’Escapade
L’Escapade is in an attractive countryside location in the heart of Normandy, west of Caen and within easy reach of both Ouistreham (Caen) and Cherbourg ferry terminals. The spacious entrance is flanked by an attractive fishing lake and by the smart reception and bar linked by decking and a terrace, with the pool complex beyond. The camping area is at the top of a hill on gently sloping ground. Of the 130 grassy pitches, around 40 are for tourers, all with electricity connections (10A) and water taps to hand. The remainder are occupied by well kept mobile homes, including 38 to rent.
Camping Barre Y Va
Camping Barre Y Va is a gem of a site, close to the riverside town of Caudebec-en-Caux with its attractive promenade and landing stage for the passing cruise ships. Across the road, the River Seine is full of interest with all manner of shipping. Of the 70 pitches, there are 48 for touring spread along the length of the site, divided by small trees and bushes, and with 10A electricity. There is a special gravel area for motorhomes. The owners take great care of their customers and have recently installed a very well designed covered pool complex with slides and jacuzzi chair. The road alongside the site does get busy on week days during the early morning and evening rush hours.
Seasonova Camping Saint-Michel
This delightful, quiet site is located in a peaceful, rural setting, yet is only 8 km. from the busy tourist attraction of Mont Saint-Michel. The site has 100 pitches which include 50 for touring units and 50 for mobile homes to rent. Electricity connections (6/10A) are available to all pitches and many trees and shrubs provide a good amount of shade. A welcoming reception has a terrace overlooking the pool. The site slopes gently down to a small enclosure of farm animals kept to entertain children and adults alike. Here you can meet Nestor and Napoléon, the donkeys, and Linotte the mare, as well as miniature goats, sheep, chickens and ducks. The owners intend to maintain a quiet and peaceful site, hence there are no discos or organised clubs.
Camping de l'Orival
Camping de l'Orival is  a a peaceful site in the Seine-Maritime. It is just five kilometres from a greenway trail that stretches over 45 traffic-free kilometres between Dieppe and Forges Les Eaux. If cycling isn't your thing, don't worry! The campsite is ideally located for exploring Normandy by car. You can reach the coastal towns of Eu and Dieppe in 35 minutes or the historic city of Rouen in 50. Eawy Forest is just a 15-minute drive away for a quieter escape, perfect for leisurely walks and picnics. On-site, there are 82 touring pitches, of which have electric hook-up points available. Pitches are delimited by mature hedging, giving privacy during your stay here, and mature trees are dotted around, giving much-needed shade during the summer. 
Camping Abijune
Camping Abijune is a campsite nestled in the heart of Le Tilleul, Normandy, France and ideally situated just 2.5 kilometres from the charming seaside town of Etretat. The owners, Severine and Guillaume, will be pleased to welcome you to their site, where they aim to create a family atmosphere where good humour, friendliness, respect and quality are of prime importance. The site has a total of 86 pitches. Sixty grass/hardstanding pitches, with 16amp hook-up points, are available for touring units and are delimited by hedges and lined with mature trees offering shade during the summer. The site also has a wide choice of 26 cottages and chalets available to hire. The campsite boasts a range of amenities to keep you entertained and ensure a comfortable stay. Take a refreshing dip in the semi-partially covered pool, perfect for both scenarios of Normandy weather. The kids can also let off steam at the playground. After a day of exploring the surrounding coastline, you can enjoy a bite to eat at the Campsite restaurant, where they hold regular themed dinners (mussels and fries evening,) or you can enjoy international cuisine such as burgers and pizza, which you can also take away back to eat at your pitch.
Camping La Baie des Veys
Camping La Baie des Veys is a 3-star campsite in Sainte-Marie-du-Mont, Normandy, France. It is close to several shops and restaurants and easily accessible to some of the area's most popular attractions, such as Sainte-Mère-Eglise, Saint-Côme-du-Mont, and the D-Day beaches. On-site, there are 58 touring itches with electric hook-up points. All pitches are flat and separated by mature hedging, giving privacy.
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.
Camping le Mont Joli Bois
This is a well-maintained mature site, open for a long season and located 500 metres from the beach, south of the pretty resort of Le Tréport. The 96 pitches (73 for touring) are neat, grassy, and of a good size, most with electrical connections, some with attractive sea views. Around six fully equipped mobile homes are available to rent. In high season a van selling takeaway food visits the site, and several good restaurants and various shops are available in Criel-Sur-Mer, a short walk from the site. On-site leisure facilities include a children’s playground and bouncy castle.
Camping les Rochers des Parcs
Les Rochers des Parcs is a tranquil, natural site located in the lush valley of the River Orne, at the heart of the Suisse Normande. The landscape is undulating, sheltered and in a well preserved environment, which is carefully managed by the owners. There are 90 marked pitches (80-150 m2), 63 for touring, 55 with electricity (6-10A). They are set in a wooded location with varying degrees of shade, and 20 are directly by the river. This is an ideal site for fishermen, and for rock climbing enthusiasts, as there are rock faces close by with a wide range of difficulty levels.
Camping Le Picard
Le Picard campsite is located in Tournières, in the Calvados region in the heart of Normandy. The site is situated right in the centre of the village behind an old farmhouse. The site is small with only 55 grass pitches, 35 of which, with10 amp hook-up point, are available for touring units. Some with hardstanding and some with shade. Don't be put off that this site is small and basic the amenities here are very good with an outdoor heated swimming pool, children's playground and an on-site restaurant. There is a small lake near the site. The site is small and basic, but the service and quality of the amenities are excellent. You can also find a lake on site where you can fish, but you must return your catch to the water. The restaurant here is cosy with a simple menu but offers local cuisine for you to try. There is no on-site shop here, but fresh bread is delivered daily during the high season.
Camping Sous Les Etoiles Normandie
You will receive a warm welcome at this small family-run site in quiet and picturesque countryside. Grouped around a converted farmstead, the 50 touring pitches (all with 6A electricity) are laid out in a manicured lawn garden, set in small groups separated by shrubs and flower borders. The reception is in the old farmhouse where plenty of tourist information is available. A bar and snug have been tastefully created in an outbuilding, and hot bar snacks are served here.

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.