lang rouss 1 haut languedoc v1 m56577569830523114


© Lonely Planet Publications
138
Haut-Languedoc
Haut-Languedoc, high or upper Languedoc, is indeed just that. Deeper inland, it s also nearer
the clouds and a whole world away from the busy coastal corridor of Bas-Languedoc. Much
is green, cloaked in pine forest and chestnut woods. On the high limestone plateaus, by
contrast, thin grasses whisper in the wind, offering sparse sustenance to the flocks of sheep
that are likely to be your only companions.
Two splendid parks offer protection and nurturing to these lands, much abused in the past
by overlogging. Within the Parc National des Cévennes, over 2000 plant species thrive, and
deer, beavers and vultures, long absent from the park, have been successfully reintroduced.
Vistas are broad on the high plateaus of the Parc Naturel Régional des Grands Causses. Water,
percolating through the soft rock over millennia, has honeycombed the hills with underground
caverns and natural galleries. Splitting plateau from plateau are three gorges, sliced through
by the rivers that give these sheer clefts their names: the Tarn, Jonte and Dourbie.
Two human achievements stand out, one prehistoric, the other strictly contemporary.
Little-visited Cham des Bondons has Europe s second-largest concentration of menhirs 
more than 150 of them, heaved into place around 4000 years ago by sheer muscle. In our
own day, the Pont de Millau road bridge, slung like a gossamer thread across the wide Tarn
Valley, is both a technological miracle and a dazzling 21st-century icon.
Haut-Languedoc is shared between LozÅre, France s least-populated département, the
western, wilder part of the Gard  and, in this chapter, a fragment of Aveyron that belongs
here, both culturally and geographically.
HIGHLIGHTS
Hire a donkey and walk a stage or two of the

Robert Louis Stevenson trail (p146)
Survey 13 départements from the tower of

the observatory atop Mont Aigoual (p149)
Follow the spectacular Corniche des

Cévennes route from St-Jean du Gard to
Point
Florac (p150)
Sublime Corniche des
Cévennes
Fly over the Pont de Millau (p166) in an

Aven Armand
ultralite plane
Mont Aigoual
Millau
Drop into the cool of one of Haut-

Languedoc s many caverns, such as
Aven Armand (p152)
Get butterflies looking down at the Gorges

du Tarn from Point Sublime (p154)
Thrill at a glimpse of the rare Przewalski s horse or takh (p153)

HAUT-LANGUEDOC
lonelyplanet.com MENDE & AROUND " " Mende 139
0 20 km
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
0 10 miles
St-Chély
d'Apcher Réserve
St-Alban-sur- de Bisons
d'Europe
Limagnole Grandrieu
Baraque de
Le Viala
Bouviers
D7 Ste-Eulalie
Langogne
en Margeride
Aumont-
Serverette
Aubrac
LA MARGERIDE
Roc de
St-Amans
Peyre
(1179m)
D253
D806
Ste-Lucie
Loups du
Gévaudan La Bastide
AUBRAC Wolf Reserve Puylaurent
LE GÉVAUDAN
D809
Marvejols
Chabrits Mende
Le Monastier
D25
Lanuéjols Le Bleynard
Brenoux
Altier
D41
Z È
N106 Villeforte
Col de
t L
Montmirat Cham des
Sauveterre
Bondons
Le Pont
Ispagnac
Ste-Énimie de Montvert
A75
Quézac
E11 Bédoues
Gorges
CocurÅs Parc
Point
Château du Tarn D998
Florac National
Sublime
Castelbouc
de la Cazez
des Cévennes
Castagnol
La Salle
D15
Prunet
D995
La MalÅne D986
St-Laurent
Chaos de
Les Vignes
de TrÅves D128
Nîmes D59
Racoules
le Vieux Vallées
Vebron
D63 Cévenoles
Takh Horse
Château de Hyelzas
Reserve
D907
Aven
St-Léons Peyrelade Boyne La Grand'Combe
St-Martin
Le Truel
Armand Fraissinet
D996 de Lansuscle
de Fourques
Dargilan
D906
Le Rozier
Meyrueis
Ribevenes
D911 Gorges
Cabrillac
de la Jonte
Cendras
Chaos de
Mt Aigoual
Montpellier- o
D986 (1567m) Mialet
le-Vieux AlÅs
Col de la Prat Peyrot
Millau
Abîme de St-Jean
Parc Naturel
SerreyrÅde
Pont
Bramabiau du Gard
Régional des
de Millau
L'Espérou
Valleraugue Générargues
Creissels Grands Causses
R Anduze
Nant
Pont de
La Cavalerie
D999 l'Hérault
St-Jean
Ste-Eulalie
Le Vigan Sumene
du Bruel
de Cernon
Roquefort St-Hippolyte
Canaules-et-
Durfort
du Fort
Cézas Argentieres
St-Affrique D561 D277
D999
Viala du
Pas de Jaux D23 La Cadiere
centre is ringed by a one-way road that acts
MENDE & AROUND
as something of a cordon sanitaire, leaving the
old quarter almost traffic-free.
It s wild country, here at the northern tip
of Haut-Languedoc  fitting territory for
Information
both a wolf and a bison reserve. The grassy
Comité Départemental du Tourisme (%04 66 65
moors of Aubrac, punctuated by outcrops
60 00; www.lozere-tourisme.com; 14 blvd Henri Bourillon;
of black basalt, give way to the high plateau
h8.30am-noon & 1.30-5.30pm Mon-Thu, 8.30am-
of La Margeride, where the winter winds
noon & 1-4.30pm Fri) Tourist information for the LozÅre
howl and flurry the snow. And haunting all,
département.
to this day, is the dark legend of the Beast
Salle Antirouille (place du Foirail; per hr Ź 1.60; h2pm
of Gévaudan&
or 3pm-8pm Tue-Fri, 9am-noon & 2-5pm Sat) Internet
access. Free wi-fi.
MENDE
pop 12,600 Post Office (6 blvd Soubeyran)
Mende, a quiet little place straddling the Tourist Office (%04 66 94 00 23; www.ot-mende
River Lot, is the capital of LozÅre, France s .fr; place du Foirail; h9am-12.30pm & 2-7pm Mon-Sat,
least-populous département. Its oval-shaped 10am-noon & 2-4pm Sun Jul & Aug, 9am-noon & 2-6pm
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
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140 MENDE & AROUND " " Mende lonelyplanet.com
FESTIVALS & EVENTS  HAUT-LANGUEDOC
May October
Festival Nature More than 500 events  guided walks, exhibitions, lectures, demonstrations 

organised by the Parc National des Cévennes throughout its domain.
July
Jazz festival A week-long wail in Millau around mid-July.

Marvejols en ScÅne Marvejols hosts three days of street theatre and music in the second half

of July.
August
Journée des Bergers Shepherds and sheepdog demonstrations, plus a local produce market

in Florac, on a weekend early in the month.
Pétanque World Series Held mid-month for five days in Millau, the world series 16 competi-

tions (including just two for women in this male-dominated sport) attract more than 10,000
players and over twice as many spectators.
Grandes Fętes de Mende Mende s big annual bash: four days around 20 August with a

procession, fireworks and lots of other jollification.
November
Concours de la Soupe Florac s three days of fun  street concerts, bands, children s activities

and more  built around its Soup Challenge on the nearest weekend to All Saints Day
(1 November).
Mon-Fri, 9am-noon Sat Sep-Jun) Free wi-fi, which extends The dark interior makes the pincushion
to the café terrace nearby. panes of the 17th-century rose window at
the west end positively glow, but you ll have
Sights to peer hard to make out detail on the eight
fine 18th-century Aubusson tapestries, hung
CATHÉDRALE NOTRE DAME
high above the nave, that illustrate the life of
Mende s twin-towered cathedral (place Urbain V;
the Virgin.
h9am-7.30pm), visible for miles around, seems
disproportionately large for such a small town.
The statue beneath its main portal hints why. OTHER SIGHTS
It represents Pope Urbain V, born in nearby One pleasant feature of Mende on a hot day is
Grizac, who remembered the land of his birth its spurting fountains, more than 15 of them,
and, from distant Rome, gave orders for its bringing sweet water to the city. What s less
construction in the 14th century. evident is the long-established network of
The cathedral briefly boasted the largest underground channels, leading the off-flow
church bell ever cast. In 1512, the bell, all 25 from the surrounding hills into the River Lot.
tonnes of it, was hauled to the top of the newly Several resurface and swirl into the Lavoir de la
completed steeple.  Non Pareille , it was called, CalquiÅre (rue d Angiran), where the town s tanners
The Unrivalled One. It swung and clanged for used to wash their hides.
only 67 years. On Christmas Eve 1579, while The Tour des Pénitents, once one of around
the Catholic faithful were attending mass, the 15 similar towers, is all that remains of the
Huguenots captured Mende, slaughtered most 12th-century ramparts that encircled the
of the congregation, hacked loose the bell, town. Reconstructed after the Hundred Years
then melted it down to make cannons. They War, they survived until 1768 when, follow-
spared nothing but the clanger, which itself ing an outbreak of plague some years earlier,
weighs in at a hefty 470kg and is displayed just they were pulled down  so that the air might
to the left of the west-end entrance. circulate more freely .
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
lonelyplanet.com MENDE & AROUND " " Mende 141
0 200 m
MENDE 0 0.1 miles
To Pont Notre
Dame (300m)
Cinéma
To Train Station
Trianon
16
(800m)
9
13
11
To PlanÅte Deux Roues (200m)
R
14
La SafraniÅre (4.5km):
Florac (35km)
6
19 18
Pl Charles
de Gaulle
d
15
Hôtel de Ville
8
5
17
R de la JarretiÅre
Pl Urbain V
Palais de
Justice 7
ac
1
2
12
10
Pl du 4
Forail
3
To Mimat Aventures
(3.5km)
EATING
INFORMATION Lavoir de la CalquiÅre.........................6 C2 Boulangerie Kermes..........................12 C3
Comité Départemental du Tourisme...1 B3 Statue of Pope Urbain V.....................7 B3 Boulangerie Pons..............................13 B2
Post Office.........................................2 C3 Tour des Pénitents.............................8 C2 Boulangerie Pâtisserie Hédricourt......14 C2
Salle Antirouille..................................3 C3 La Formagerie..................................15 C2
16
Tourist Office.....................................4 C3 SLEEPING Le Mazel........................................... B1
Hôtel de France..................................9 C1 Le Rachas.........................................17 A2
SIGHTS & ACTIVITIES Hôtel le Commerce..........................10 C3 Pâtisserie Majorel.............................18 C2
Cathédrale Notre Dame.....................5 B2 Les Loges du France.........................11 C2 Restaurant Les Voûtes...................... 19 B2
Pont Notre Dame was for centuries the only Montée Jalabert recalls the victory in 1995
bridge that spanned the River Lot. The fine of ace French racing cyclist Laurent Jalabert,
humpback, double-arched creation you who pounded up the mountain to take that
see today was built after the original was day s leg (it was 14 July, France s national
comprehensively wrecked during the Wars day) of the Tour de France. Get a card from
of Religion. the tourist office, punch it in the control box
just beside the office, then again at the col to
Activities register your finishing time, and drop your
Recently, and to its credit, Mende has intro- card in the box there. Back home, wait for
duced several fresh outdoor initiatives. the postman to bring your diploma. Anyone
Mimat Aventures (%04 66 45 00 24; adult/child up can sign on simply for the fun of competing
to/over 1.5m Ź 19/12/16; h9.30am-7.30pm early Jul-late against themselves, while perhaps fantasis-
Aug, 2-7pm Sat & Sun Apr-early Jul & late Aug-Sep), high ing about leading the peloton home, like
upon Causse de Mende, which looms above Jalabert, at the end of a gruelling stage. The
town to the south, is a treetop adventure park climb s a mere 3.1km in length but, with an
with 76 aerial activities for all ages. Here, too, average incline of 10%, it s guaranteed to
you can rent mountain bikes. make you sweat.
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
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142 MENDE & AROUND " " Mende Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels
PlanÅte Deux Roues (%04 66 49 17 00; 5 av du Pont
CROQUANTS DE MENDE
Roupt) hires out tourers and mountain bikes for
Ź 10/16/36 per half-/full day/three days. Should
You ll only come across these finger-shaped
you wish to share the burden or haul the kids,
biscuits in Mende. Crunchy with both al-
it can also rent you a tandem or trailer.
monds and hazelnuts, they travel well (if
Altogether less gruelling and also for free,
you have the will power not to nibble
a signed 4.5km interpretive walking trail
your way through them) and make for
leads from the entrance to Mimat Aventures
a tempting snack. Two long-established
through forest and open land along the Causse
makers are Boulangerie Pâtisserie Héd-
de Mende.
ricourt (%04 66 65 31 37; 13 rue Droite), and
Pâtisserie Majorel (%04 66 65 17 85; 2 rue
Sleeping & Eating
de la République; hTue-Sun, closed 1-15 Feb, 1-15
Hôtel Le Commerce (%04 66 65 13 73; www.lecommerce
Jul, 1-21 Sep), founded in 1901, specialising
-mende.com in French; 2 blvd Henri Bourillon; s/d/tr Ź 41/51/55;
in handmade chocolates, ice creams and
hclosed 2 weeks Apr & 2 weeks Oct; n) Opposite other sweet and sticky confections, and
place du Foirail on the busy ring road, this
still baking croquants according to great-
agreeably labyrinthine hotel, run by the same
granddad s recipe.
family for three generations, has 10 impec-
cable rooms. The owner is an ale fanatic and
splendid setting, deep in the vaults of an
its popular bar carries a great range of beers,
ex-convent. Run by three brothers, it of-
on draught and in bottle.
fers salads big enough to fill a fruit bowl
Hôtel de France (%04 66 65 00 04; www.hotelde
(Ź 8.60 to Ź 9.70), pizzas (Ź 8 to Ź 10) and grills
france-mende.com in French; 9 blvd Lucien Arnault; d Ź 58-75;
(Ź 12.50 to Ź 14), all to eat in or take away. It
hmid-Jan Dec; i) Most rooms at this one-
time coaching inn (whose owner speaks ex- also does a great all-on-one-plate lunchtime
special (Ź 12.50).
cellent English) have sweeping views over
La SafraniÅre (%04 66 49 31 54; Chabrits; menus
the valley and gardens below. Rooms 1 to 3,
Ź 22-46; hlunch & dinner Tue-Sat & lunch Sun) The
8 and 10 are large, with separate toilet and
decor s strictly and strikingly contemporary 
gleaming bathroom. For families, a duplex
slim, wrought-iron chairs, fresh flowers and
(Ź 93 to Ź 123) stretches beneath the eaves.
plants, jute floor covering and original art-
Barely a minute away, the annexe, Les Loges
du France, a recently refurbished 16th-cen- work around the walls  in this converted
farmhouse. In the kitchen, the young chef,
tury mansion, has four equally attractive
returning to his roots and the family land,
rooms (Ź 85 to Ź 88). The hotel also runs a
prepares creative, visually attractive dishes,
first-class restaurant (menus Ź 28 to Ź 31;
while his wife maintains the friendly ambi-
open lunch and dinner Sunday to Friday
ence up front. Sip an aperitif or linger over
and dinner Saturday).
a coffee outside beneath a canopy of tan-
Le Rachas (%04 66 65 12 62; 5 av Foch; menus Ź 13;
gled vines, watched over by a quirky sculp-
hMon-Sat) This popular, no-frills restaurant
ture of recycled scrap iron. La SafraniÅre
serves wholesome, family fare. It s nothing
fancy: the table coverings are of custard- is on the outskirts of Mende in the suburb
of Chabrits.
yellow plastic and the soup tureen gets passed
from guest to guest, but so many locals can t
SELF-CATERING
be wrong&
Mende is particularly well endowed with deli-
Le Mazel (%04 66 65 05 33; 25 rue du CollÅge;
menus Ź 15.50-28, mains Ź 9-17; hlunch & dinner Wed- catessens, traditional grocers and patisseries.
La Fromagerie (30b rue Soubeyran) Overlooked by
Sun, lunch Mon mid-Mar mid-Nov) This restaurant,
the buttresses of the cathedral s east end, La
with its stylish decor  don t be deterred by
Fromagerie makes its own ewes -milk cheeses.
the bleakly modern surroundings  serves
up mainly local cuisine, imaginatively pre- Also called Au Sourire de la CrémiÅre, it has
an impressive range of cheeses, jams, regional
pared. A recognised gourmet venue, it offers
meats and pâtés.
exceptional value.
Boulangerie Kermes (3 rue Soubeyran) and
Restaurant Les Voûtes (%04 66 49 00 05; 13 rue
Boulangerie Pons (31 rue Notre Dame) are a pair of
d Aigues-Passes; menus Ź 21; hdaily Jun-Aug, Mon-Sat
classic bakers and cake makers.
Sep-May, closed 15-30 Sep) This restaurant has a
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
lonelyplanet.com MENDE & AROUND " " Loups du Gévaudan 143
Saturday is market day, when stalls sell-
RÉSERVE DE BISONS D EUROPE
ing produce from the farms around take over
Near the small village of Ste-Eulalie-en-
Place Urbain V.
Margeride, this bison reserve (%04 66 31 40
40; www.bisoneurope.com in French; h10am-6pm mid-
Getting There & Away
Jun mid-Sep, to 5pm or 6pm rest of yr) was established
Buses leave from the train station and most
with 25 European bison transferred from the
pass by place du Foirail, beside the tourist
Bialowieza forest in Poland.
office. On weekdays there s one bus daily to
Within their 200-hectare reserve, the bison,
Rodez (%04 66 65 19 88; Ź 13.20, 3½ hours)
now numbering around 40, roam freely.
and at least two to Le Puy-en-Velay (Ź 17, two
Visitors, by contrast, must follow a 50-minute
hours). Northbound, two SNCF buses run
guided tour, either by horse-drawn carriage
daily to/from Clermont-Ferrand in the Massif
(adult/child aged three to 11/child under
Central (Ź 28.80, three hours).
three Ź 12/6.50/free) or, in winter, by sledge
The train station is about 1km north of
(Ź 14.50/8/free). From mid-June to September,
town across the River Lot. There are three
you can follow a self-guided 1km walking path
trains daily to AlÅs (Ź 16.20, 2½ hours) and up
(adult/child aged five to 11/child under five
to five trains or buses daily run westwards to
Ź 6/4/free) around the periphery.
Marvejols (Ź 6.30, 50 minutes).
MARVEJOLS
LOUPS DU GÉVAUDAN pop 6000
Wolves once prowled freely through the Indeed Marvejols is yet another town that
LozÅre forests, but today you ll see them suffered severely during the distant Wars of
only at Loups du Gévaudan (%04 66 32 09 22; www Religion. But whereas Mende was pillaged by
.loupsdugevaudan.com in French; adult/child Ź 7/4; h10am- the Protestant forces of the fanatical Captain
7pm Jun-Aug, to 5pm or 6pm Feb-May & Sep-Dec), about Merle, it was the equally ruthless Catholic
10km north of Marvejols. The park sustains troops of Admiral Joyeuse who, in 1586,
around 100 Mongolian, Canadian, Siberian torched the town as a reprisal for its accept-
and Polish wolves, plus, as of 2008, a small pack ance of the Protestant  heresy .
of Arctic wolves, all living in semi-freedom. Today Marvejols, summertime excepted,
A thoughtful exhibition details the myths, is a sleepy sort of place, a centre for the sur-
black propaganda and persecution that these rounding agricultural communities. The
magnificent animals have endured over the interesting part lies within its car-free old
centuries. Interpretive panels are in French quarter, defined by three fine city gates:
and English, and there s an informative the main Porte du Soubeyran, the Porte du
booklet in English included with the entry Théron and the Porte Chanelles. The latter
fee, an element of which helps to sustain the two these days house flats within their side
larger scientific observation park (closed to towers, and there s even a laundrette within
the public). Porte Chanelles. The main street, rue de la
THE BEAST OF GÉVAUDAN
For three long, terrifying years, between 1764 and 1767, a wild beast preyed upon flocks and
solitary travellers in the Gévaudan, above Mende. Parish records tell how it killed close on 100
people and  particularly chilling, this  devoured most of their corpses after first decapitating
them. Others were wrenched by friends from the jaws of the beast and survived.
Hysteria prevailed. Three teams of hunters, each with several hundred beaters, tried to elimi-
nate the monster. Several wolves, everyone s bęte noire, were killed, and the biggest, culled in
1765 by a certain Antoine (who claimed the substantial reward on offer) was declared to be
The Beast.
Despite this confident pronouncement, The Beast continued to kill. Local marksman Jean
Chastel shot a particularly burly wolf on 19 June 1767. And the killings ceased. But to this day,
rumours still insinuate themselves. Perhaps a sadist in wolf s clothing, never apprehended (most
of the victims were shepherds and shepherdesses)? Just possibly a scourge from on high, sent
to punish sinners, as the Bishop of Mende proclaimed? No one will ever know&
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
144 MENDE & AROUND " " Lanuéjols lonelyplanet.com
DISCOVERING AUBRAC & LA MARGERIDE
This day drive (145km including detours) is one of contrasts. The grasslands and basalt of Aubrac
give way to the high plateau of La Margeride, one of the least populated and most isolated parts
of France, with its granite outcrops, little-penetrated pine forests and lonely meadows. There s
plenty of open countryside, ranging from gentle to spectacular, a couple of small towns, and
close encounters with both wolves and European bison.
Leaving Mende, follow signs for Marvejols (p143). Having explored its historic centre (half an
hour should be fine), leave town by the D809, signed Aumont-Aubrac, then turn right after 8km
onto the D253 to reach the Loups du Gévaudan (p143) wolf reserve 3km later. You ll need at
least an hour  more if you want to explore the museum area in depth.
Return to the D809 and continue straight as it nears an A75 motorway entry point. Soon after,
turn right for an 8km round-trip detour to Roc de Peyre (1179m), a volcanic plug more typical
of the Massif Central to the north. You ll easily spot this lone protuberance by the white cross
and communications antenna at its summit. Climb the 76 steps up to the orientation table for
a magnificent 360-degree panorama.
Back on the D809, drive through Aumont-Aubrac and stay with signs for St-Alban-sur-Limagnole,
13km beyond. The road runs briefly beside water meadows for what s just about the first flat
stretch of this up-and-down day.
Stop briefly in St-Alban-sur-Limagnole to visit its lovely Romanesque parish church with its
triple-arched bell tower, typical of La Margeride and the Auvergne to the north. Like Aumont-
Aubrac, the village is a way stage on the Chemins de St Jacques route to Santiago de Compostela
in Spain. You ll probably see pilgrims bearing staff and scallop shell, now three days out from Le
Puy, France s main departure point.
Walk up to the restored Renaissance chateau (which these days houses the small tourist of-
fice) and go into its resplendent inner courtyard. This, like so many public buildings hereabouts,
both sacred and secular, is adorned with mottled pink granite, hewn from local quarries. During
WWII, the village, because of its remoteness, was a place of refuge and retreat for maquisards,
resistance fighters, including the poet Paul Éluard.
From St-Alban, pass through Ste-Eulalie-en-Margeride, following signs for the Réserve de Bisons
d Europe (p143), where bisons freely roam.
Return to Ste-Eulalie and turn left onto the D7, signed Le Viala. At an X-junction, go straight
over to stay with the D7 and follow signs for Serverette, where you turn left with the D806.
In the village of St-Amans, look out on the left for a bright-yellow sign, Ferme de Fiougage
(%04 66 47 34 65; adult/child Ź 3.20/2.60; h2-7pm daily Jul & Aug, Sat & Sun only Sep-Nov & Feb-Jun). Follow
the road for 2.5km to this working farm that raises deer and sheep and has a small exhibition
about sheep farming and the wool trade.
Go back to the D806 and turn left to return to Mende.
République, becoming rue Jean Roujon, slices struck deep local chords. A striking presence in
north south. place Soubeyran, his interpretation of beloved
Marvejols helpful Tourist Office (%04 66 32 02 benefactor Henri IV portrays the king as a spin-
14; www.ville-marvejols.fr; h9am-noon & 2-7pm Mon-Sat, dly being with elongated legs and fingers, at the
10am-noon & 4-6pm Sun Jul & Aug, 9am-noon & 2.30-6pm same time supremely human, yet regal.
Tue-Fri, 9am-noon & 2-5.30pm Sat rest of yr) is beside Auricoste s other haunting legacy to the
Porte du Soubeyran, the main gate into the town is his menacing BÄ™te du Gévaudan (see
old quarter. Up high above the entrance to this p143) in place des Cordeliers. Fangs bared,
venerable portal, an inscription recalls how genitals swinging, crouched low and poised
King Henri IV, local hero to this day, ordered to pounce, it may prowl around your dreams
the town s reconstruction after the destructive for a day or two&
mayhem of the Wars of Religion.
The town s near-contemporary hero is LANUÉJOLS
sculptor Emmanuel Auricoste (1908 55), who At the entrance to the village of Lanuéjols,
fashioned in the 1950s two striking works that 12km southeast of Mende, there s a large 2nd-
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
lonelyplanet.com PARC NATIONAL DES CÉVENNES " " Florac 145
century mausoleum temple, sunk down be- of which have been snapped up by wealthy
neath the level of the land today. It was erected Parisians and foreigners.
in memory of the two sons of a certain Lucius
Julius Bassianus, a rich Gallo-Roman land- Activities
owner, farmer for sure and probably owner
The small resort of Prat Peyrot (%04 67 73 19
of the iron ore and lead mines that were ex- 80), high up on the southern flank of Mont
ploited nearby. The temple stands proud and
Aigoual, has 14 short downhill runs and
well preserved amid the remnants of a later
seven cross-country ski trails varying in
4th- and 5th-century necropolis.
length between 5km and 15km. Mont LozÅre
Also worth a brief visit is the simple
too has plenty of cross-country ski poten-
Romanesque parish church with its cleanly
tial. Donkey treks are popular in the park in
proportioned choir and apsidal chapels. Its
warmer months. There is 600km of donkey-
graveyard is a mirror image across the centu- and horse-riding trails, and 200km is marked
ries of the mausoleum site below. Here, simple
out for mountain-bike enthusiasts.
graves cluster around the church while grander,
An equally well-developed network of trails
more portentous family tombs sit separately.
makes the park a walking paradise year-round.
To get there, leave Mende by rue des Écoles,
It s criss-crossed by a dozen GR (grande ran-
beside the tourist office, signed Causse de
donnée) trails, and there are over 20 shorter
Mende, and follow the D25 to Brenoux. Turn
signposted walks lasting between two and
left on the D41 to reach Lanuéjols after 3km.
seven hours.
Florac s Maison du Parc (p146) has a dozen
excellent wallets (Ź 5 each) describing circular
PARC NATIONAL DES
walks from various starting points within the
park. Ask about its Festival Nature, a summer-
CÉVENNES
time mix of outdoor activities, lectures and
field trips.
Drier, hotter and in general leafier than the
Auvergne to its north, the Cévennes region FLORAC
pop 2000
has more in common with Mediterranean
Florac, 79km northwest of AlÅs and 38km
lands. Dotted with isolated hamlets, the park
southeast of Mende, has no great attractions
harbours a huge diversity of fauna and flora
of its own. Its strength is as a base for explor-
(an astounding 2250 plant species have been
ing the Parc National des Cévennes and the
logged). Animals such as red deer, beavers and
upper reaches of the Gorges du Tarn. Lively
vultures, long gone from the park, have been
in summer and moribund for most of the rest
successfully reintroduced. The park covers
of the year, it s draped along the west bank
four main areas: Mont LozÅre, Mont Aigoual,
of the River Tarnon, one of the tributaries of
the Vallées Cévenoles (Cévennes Valleys), and
the Tarn, with the sheer cliffs of the Causse
much of the Causse Méjean (p152).
Méjean looming 1000m overhead.
The best overall map of the park is the IGN s
Through Florac too flows the slim Pęcher
Parc National des Cévennes at 1:100,000.
stream, another tributary of the Tarn, that
bears off-flow from the Causse Méjean.
History
Between the two cascades as it tumbles
Nowadays also recognised as a Unesco
through town, fat, protected trout laze and
World Biosphere Reserve, the 910-sq-km
steady themselves against the current.
Parc National des Cévennes is the largest of
France s national parks. It was created in 1970
to bring ecological stability to an area that,
Information
because of religious and later economic up- Florac Cyber Café (12 rue Armand Jullié; per half-hr/hr Ź 3/4;
heavals, had long had a destabilising human
h10am-8.30pm Jul & Aug, 2.30-8.30pm Sun & Mon, 10am-
presence. Population influxes, which saw the
noon & 2.30-8.30pm Tue-Sat Sep-Jun) Internet access.
destruction of forests for logging and pasture,
Laundrette (11 rue du Pęcher; h8.30am-7.30pm)
were followed by mass desertions as people
Tourist Office (%04 66 45 01 14; www.mescevennes
gave up the fight against the inhospitable
.com in French; 33 av Jean Monestier; h9am-12.30pm
climate and terrain. Emigration led to the
& 1.30-7pm daily Jul & Aug, 9am-noon & 2-6pm Mon-Sat
abandonment of hamlets and farms, many
Sep-Jun)
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
146 PARC NATIONAL DES CÉVENNES " " Florac Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels
TRAVELS WITH A DONKEY
The Cévennes were even wilder and more untamed back in October 1878, when Scottish writer
Robert Louis Stevenson crossed them with only a donkey, Modestine, for company.
 I was looked upon with contempt, like a man who should project a journey to the moon, but
yet with a respectful interest, like one setting forth for the inclement Pole, Stevenson wrote in
his Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes.
Accompanied by the wayward Modestine, bought for 65 francs and a glass of brandy, Stevenson
took a respectable 12 days to travel the 232km on foot (Modestine carried his gear) from Le
Monastier-sur-Gazelle, southeast of Le Puy-en-Velay, to St-Jean du Gard, west of AlÅs. Afterwards,
he sold his ass  and wept.
The Stevenson trail, first retraced and marked with the cross of St Andrew by a Scottish woman
in 1978, is nowadays designated the GR70.
Whether you re swaying on a donkey or simply walking, you ll find The Robert Louis Stevenson
Trail by Alan Castle an excellent, practical, well-informed companion. Consult too www.chemin
-stevenson.org and pick up the free pamphlet Sur Le Chemin de Robert Louis Stevenson (On The
Robert Louis Stevenson Trail), stocked by tourist offices, which has a comprehensive list of ac-
commodation en route.
@nomade.fr) in St-Martin de Lansuscle. Typical
Activities
prices are Ź 45 per day and Ź 210 to Ź 275 per
The tourist office has details of a whole sum-
week, and both outfits can reserve accommo-
mer s worth of outdoor activities (see also
dation for you along a route they ll be happy
p145). For information on the park s rich
to advise you about. Though each is outside
walking potential, call by the well-resourced
Florac, they ll transport the dumb creatures
Maison du Parc National des Cévennes (%04 66 49 53
to town or to a place of your choosing for a
01; www.cevennes-parcnational.fr; h9am-6.30pm Jul & Aug,
fee (around Ź 1 per kilometre).
9.30am-12.15pm & 1.30-5.30pm daily Easter-Jun, Sep & Oct,
Mon-Fri only Nov-Easter). It occupies the handsome,
restored 17th-century Château de Florac, OTHER ACTIVITIES
stocks an English version of the guidebook Cévennes Évasion (%04 66 45 18 31; www.cevennes-evasion
Parc National des Cévennes (Ź 15) and has a .com in French; 5 place Boyer) rents mountain bikes
splendidly informative interactive exhibition (ad- for Ź 13/19 per half-/full day and furnishes rid-
mission free), Passagers du Paysage, with captions, ers with handy colour route maps. In summer,
a recorded commentary in English (delivered, it ll haul you for free (minimum five people;
alas, by a couple of morose, monotone native usually achieved on a summer s day) up to
speakers) and a 15-minute slide show. the Causse Méjean, from where you can whiz
effortlessly back down. The team also arranges
caving, rock-climbing and canyon-clambering
DONKEY TREKS
expeditions (trust these guys; they hung the
Why not follow the lead of Robert Louis
fireworks up high for the spectacular opening-
Stevenson and hire a pack animal? Several
and closing-ceremony pyrotechnics at the
companies that operate around Florac are in
Athens Olympics). They also run guided and
the donkey business. They include Gentiâne
independent walking holidays, where your
(%04 66 41 04 16; http://anegenti.free.fr) in Castagnol
accommodation is pre-booked and your lug-
and Tramontane (%04 66 45 92 44; chantal.tramontane
gage transported onwards daily.
LOOKING FOR THE BIG FOOT
Sleeping
Dinosaurs roamed the Cévennes millennia Florac has a pair of quality municipal riverside
before today s trekkers left their bootprints. camp sites.
Beside the village church in St-Laurent de Camping La TiÅre (%04 66 45 04 02; mairie@ville
TrÅves, 9km south of Florac, a short, 400m -florac.fr; site & 2 people Ź 10; hJul & Aug) Just south of
round-trip leads past sets of dinosaur foot- town, and considerably smaller and simpler
prints to a lovely vista beyond. than the other camping ground, Camping La
TiÅre is open only in high season, but it s an
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels PARC NATIONAL DES CÉVENNES " " Florac 147
JEAN-CHRISTOPHE BARTHES
In the 1990s, Jean-Christophe Barthes left his native Montpellier and bought himself 70 hectares
of hillside and a seriously ruined farm whose buildings had languished unused since WWII.
After 10 years hard labour, he now runs a successful organic farm that s all but self-sufficient.
He gestures to the dinner table, groaning with sausages fat and thin; cylindrical tomme cheeses,
tiny pélardons and stout nameless ones furry with mould; pâtés; honey; jams; and a wonderful
concoction of beans, chestnuts and yet more sausage.  Only the wine isn t mine, he grins.
He shrugs off all the reconstruction.  Yes, there are the buildings, he says.  But what makes me
even prouder is the way I ve given new life to the land  terrain that had deteriorated into scrub
and wilderness without the presence of animals and regular cropping for hay.  And the return
of the swallows too, he muses.  At first just one or two and now a colony of annual nesters.
No animals means no flies and no dinner for the swallows.  The more the flies, the more these
graceful swallows, he grins.
His goats give the milk that makes the cheese. He feeds the litres of whey runoff from the
cheesemaking to his pigs, who finish up as truncheons of sausage hanging like stalactites in his
cavernous storeroom. The cows?  I have the space so why not? , he shrugs. And his bees busy
themselves all alone and independently.
Nowadays it s not enough to be simply a farmer. With his boundless energy and infectious
ready smile, Jean-Christophe runs a splendid chambre d hôte (below), together with a gîte d étape
for hikers walking the GR70 trail that passes nearby. He sells his produce in nearby markets and
is a leading light in the local farmers association. In summer, he arranges group visits to watch
the milking of the goats and then follow them to pasture. On summer evenings, he puts on din-
ners of goat kid, roasted on a spit in the huge hearth of his equally grandly proportioned dining
room. And somehow, some time, he manages to sleep, though you wonder how&
attractive option. Plots are demarcated by ma- and accompanied by as much wine as you
ture hedges and it too is right beside a river  wish. Arrive by 6pm and you can watch the
the Tarnon, which flows into the Tarn. goats being milked. You re lulled to sleep by a
Camping Le Pont du Tarn (%04 66 45 18 26; www silence few city dwellers ever experience, bro-
.campingpontdutarn.com; site & 2 people Ź 14; hApr mid- ken only by the soft clop-a-lop of cow bells.
Oct; s) To the north, beside the D998 and Linger a little next morning and you can see
2km from Florac, this large, attractive camp the cheese being made. Ask Jean-Christophe
site is shaded by plane, lime, maple and ash to show you the dinosaur footprint and be
trees. There s a snack bar and you can swim sure to reserve  by phone, since there s no
either in the pool or the River Tarn, which email link from the website.
flows right by. Auberge Cévenole (%04 66 45 11 80, 06 32 72 71 98;
La Carline (%04 66 45 24 54; lagrave.alain@wanadoo La Salle Prunet; r Ź 43, with shared bathroom Ź 33; hmid-
.fr; 18 rue du Pęcher; per person Ź 13; hEaster-Oct) This Feb mid-Nov) The welcome s particularly warm
luxury gîte d étape (walkers accommoda- at this small eight-room hotel, set back from
tion) is, understandably, a trekkers favourite, the N106 in the hamlet of La Salle Prunet, 4km
though you don t have to be a hiker to enjoy southeast of Florac. Rooms are excellent value.
its comforts. Within an 18th-century town If en-suite facilities aren t important to you,
house, it has self-catering facilities. All rooms take a peek at the three particularly attrac-
have corridor bathrooms, and there s a pair of tive 2nd-floor rooms, snug beneath the roof.
cosy doubles on the top floor. Between them, mother and son run a splendid
La Ferme de la Borie (%04 66 45 10 90;
o restaurant (lunch menu Ź 12.50, other menus
www.encevennes.com in French; incl breakfast s Ź 22-29, d Ź 20 to Ź 24; open lunch and dinner daily July
Ź 35-44; hMar-Nov) You ll be bowled over by and August, lunch and dinner Tuesday to
the sheer enthusiasm and joie de vivre of Saturday and lunch Sunday mid-February to
host Jean-Christophe Barthes. And you ll June and September to mid-November).
groan contentedly as you head to bed after a Hôtel Les Gorges du Tarn (%04 66 45 00 63; www
blowout dinner of produce from his organic .hotel-gorgesdutarn.com; 48 rue du Pęcher; d Ź 45-60; hEaster-
farm, preceded by an aperitif on the terrace Oct; p) Free wi-fi and parking. Most rooms
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
148 PARC NATIONAL DES CÉVENNES " " Mont LozÅre lonelyplanet.com
in both the main building and annexe of this
Grand Hôtel du Parc restaurant (%04 66 45 03 05;
26-room Logis de France, set back from a quiet
www.grandhotelduparc.fr; 47 av Jean Monestier; menus
street, have been recently renovated and are
Ź 19-28, mains Ź 9-14.50)
bright as a new pin. Studios (doubles/triples/
L Adonis (%04 66 45 00 63; 48 rue du Pęcher; menus
quads Ź 60/70/80) on the top floor of the annexe
Ź 17-44, mains Ź 17-20;hlunch & dinner Thu-Tue, lunch
sleep up to four and have a large working sur- Wed) Restaurant of Hôtel Les Gorges du Tarn.
face plus fridge and self-catering facilities. The
hotel also has an excellent restaurant (right).
Shopping
Grand Hôtel du Parc (%04 66 45 03 05; www.grandho
Chez les Paysans (%04 66 31 22 07; square Maury)
telduparc.fr; 47 av Jean Monestier; r Ź 50-70; hmid-Mar mid- Affiliated to the Boutiques Paysannes move-
Nov; s) The 55 rooms of this venerable hotel
ment (p95), Chez les Paysans has a wonderful
are divided between two wings  the older one
selection of local produce, all brought in by
with its classic wooden shutters and the new,
small farmers in the area.
faced in attractive local stonework. Grand
Maison du Pays Cévenol (%04 66 45 15 67; 3 rue du
indeed, this hotel sits in its own extensive
Pęcher; hMay-Dec) Another gastronomic treas-
grounds with a pool, a terrace and delightful,
ure trove, this place sells local specialities in-
well-tended gardens shaded by mature cedars.
cluding liqueurs, jams, pélardon cheese and
It also runs a creditable restaurant.
chestnuts in all their guises.
Atelier du Sucre et de la Châtaigne (%04 66 45 28
Eating
41; 64 av Jean Monestier) The Atelier du Sucre also
In summer L Esplanade, a shady, pedestrian- specialises in homemade goodies, based in
ised avenue, becomes one long dining area
particular upon chestnut flour and honey.
where you can eat well and economically at
one of the restaurant terraces.
Getting There & Away
Chez Les Paysans (%04 66 31 22 07; square Maury;
It s a serious pain without your own vehicle.
menus Ź 12-16, mains around Ź 10; hdaily) At this res- One Transports Reilhes (%04 66 45 00 18, 06 60 58
taurant and delicatessen, you can sample fresh,
58 10) minibus runs to/from AlÅs (Ź 13.50, 1ź
very reasonably priced fare either inside or
hours) Monday to Saturday, leaving from the
on its vine-shaded terrace in the sure knowl- old railway station at 9am.
edge that you re eating produce that has been
sourced locally.
MONT LOZÈRE
La Source du Pęcher (%04 66 45 03 01; 1 rue de Remuret;
The Mont LozÅre range, in the park s northern
menus Ź 18-38; hApr-Oct) With a wonderful open-air
sector, is of tough, impenetrable granite, from
terrace, perched above the little River Pęcher, La
which the rainfall sluices in small streams. It s
Source is very good and oh, how it knows and
the source of the River Tarn, which flows in its
shows it (just look at the ostentatious display
early stages through the spectacular Gorges
of medallions and shields from gastronomic
du Tarn (p153). Shrouded in cloud and ice in
bodies  most of them none too fresh, it must
winter, bright with bloom in springtime, Mont
be said  that fringe the door). This said, you ll
LozÅre is a summertime delight of heather,
eat very well indeed, if you can stomach a little
blueberries and flowing streams. Its grasslands,
ritual humiliation from the prickly owner. He
strewn with rock fields and hefty boulders, re-
won t take reservations, so arrive early.
vealed by erosion, provide fodder for the sheep
La Lozerette (%04 66 45 06 04; www.lalozerette.com in
that graze the slopes in the warmer months.
French; CocurÅs; menus Ź 18.50-48, mains Ź 13.50-17; hlunch
& dinner Thu-Mon, dinner Wed Easter-Oct) You won t be
Le Pont de Montvert
serenaded by La Cigale au Violon (Cicada with pop 300
Violin), the quirky wooden statue that graces An attractive 20km drive northeastwards
the dining room. But you will enjoy cool jazz from Florac, following the upper reaches
trilling in the background, delicate cuisine, of the River Tarn, brings you to Le Pont de
attractively presented, and attentive service at Montvert. It s a pretty little village of grey
this hotel, a mere 5.5km northeast of Florac granite houses whose two sections, on each
along the D998. La Lozerette also has a hand- side of the river, are connected by a narrow
ful of attractive rooms (Ź 51 to Ź 78). 17th-century humpback bridge.
Florac also has two impressive hotel The national park s Musée du Mont LozÅre
restaurants: (%04 66 45 80 73; incl audioguide adult/6-18yr/under
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
lonelyplanet.com PARC NATIONAL DES CÉVENNES " " Mont Aigoual 149
LES AGNEAUX DE PARCOURS
If you re in the Parc National des Cévennes during the right months of the year and if you hit upon
the right restaurant, you can enjoy some of the sweetest, tenderest lamb you ve ever tasted.
To label a lamb agneau de parcours, the farmer must conform to strict conditions laid down
in the park s  agricultural charter . The animal must be raised within the boundaries of the park
and fed entirely on cereals or chestnuts grown within its limits. Only lambs born between January
and May qualify, provided that they ve been put out to grass for at least three months. They re
slaughtered when they re between 3.5 and 10 months old and weigh from 14kg to 21kg. So
there s no temptation to slip you a joint of something different, participating farmers undertake
to sell exclusively agneaux de parcours during the permitted period, July to December.
Even more prized  and costly  is the agneau de lait, a suckling lamb. Only on sale from late
April to the end of June, 95% of its food intake must be its mother s milk, supplemented in the
second and last month of its life with hay or organic cereals and concentrates.
Park offices carry a leaflet listing farmers that raise agneaux de parcours and restaurants where
you can be sure to find their meat.
6yr Ź 3.50/2.50/free; h10.30am-12.30pm & 2.30-6.30pm
MONT AIGOUAL
Jun-Sep, 3-6pm Apr, May & Oct) is within a quite
On a clear day, the panorama from the sum-
hideous hexagonal concrete structure that s
mit of Mont Aigoual (1567m) will linger on
set apart from the village. It s an intriguing
the retina for ages. On the very best days, the
record of the tough rural life that was peo- eye sweeps over 13 départements, from the
ple s lot until very recently. It s quite visual,
Alps to the Mediterranean and south to the
with plenty of tools, artefacts and displays
Pyrenees. But do check the weather forecast
featuring full-size mannequins, and it s very
first. Year-round, you re likely to experience
well documented in French  no bad thing,
buffeting winds. Gusts can tear across at more
since the English audioguide commentary
than 250km/h and every month has more
is excruciating.
than 20 days when winds exceed 60km/h. The
mountain s also wet, soaking up more than
La Cham des Bondons
2m of precipitation every year. The summit is
Here, at La Cham des Bondons (cham means
an invigorating experience at any time, but the
plateau in Occitan), strewn over an area of
air is at its clearest in winter, when the snow
around 10 sq km, is France and Europe s
falls heavy and lingers late. Summer days, by
second-largest concentration of menhirs.
contrast, are often hazy.
They re exceeded in number only by those of
It s easy to understand why the meteorolog-
Carnac, in Brittany. But unlike Carnac, which
ical station at the summit, embattled against
swarms with visitors in summer, here you ll
the elements and over a century old, was built
find yourself almost alone among these pil- like a fortress  though the decidedly super-
lars, chiselled from blocks of granite. Erected
fluous crenellations are a bit over the top!
between 2500 and 1800 BC, some are more
Climb the iron spiral staircase to the roof of
than 5m tall. Were they part of a religious,
the tower, the tip-top point, where there s an
maybe solar cult? Phallic earth symbols? Or,
orientation table.
then again, simply landmarks?
Within the main building there s an exten-
At the southern limit of the menhir fields
sive free exhibition (%04 67 82 60 01; www.aigoual
are Les Puechs, round and symmetrical as a
.asso.fr; admission free; h10am-7pm Jul & Aug, 10am-1pm
pair of breasts. Local legend has it that they
& 2-6pm May, Jun & Sep). It s fascinating stuff where
were clods of mud that Gargantua, Rabelais
you can learn about cloud formation, weather
larger-than-life hero, scraped from his
prediction, the mountain around the calendar
boots. It s well worth climbing the evident
and much, much more. Captions are only in
path to one of the summits for a superb
French, but the majority of the exhibition is
wraparound view.
highly visual.
To reach La Cham des Bondons from
If the wind allows, spread your picnic at
Florac, take the N106, direction Mende, then
the table beside a signpost where three long-
turn eastwards at Col de Montmirat.
distance trails intersect and thread like modern
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
150 PARC NATUREL RÉGIONAL DES GRANDS CAUSSES lonelyplanet.com
lay lines: the GR6, which runs from the Alps
h9.30am-6.30pm Jul & Aug, 10am-6pm mid-Mar Jun &
to the Atlantic; the GR7, running from the
Sep, 11am-5pm Oct) has been carved by the River
Vosges mountains on France s border with
Bonheur, which here rejoins the outside world
Germany to Andorra in the Pyrenees and on
after coursing through the mountain for more
into Spain; and the short (all is relative) 78km,
than 700m. A guided 45-minute visit takes in
six-day GR66, also called the Tour du Mont
the spectacular, noisy waterfall (bramabiau in
Aigoual, that runs around the mountain.
the local patois means the oxen that low) as
The best way to savour the many facets of
the river meets daylight again, bursting out of
Mont Aigoual is to take the Sentier des 4000
l Alcôve, a rocky cirque. You re then led into a
Marches, a satisfying 22km, eight-hour hike
high gallery, where a second waterfall rushes.
from the village of Valleraugue, on the south
A narrow walkway more than 20m above the
side of the mountain. This signed out-and-back
river leads you through other, less dramatic
trail leads in turn through oak forest, chestnut
chambers, then out into the daylight and a
groves, beech wood and, up above the treeline,
superb view of the Bonheur as it flows freely
subalpine meadow. From here until the sum- again. It s a fairly constant 8°C deep inside,
mit, it offers a constant sweeping panorama
so do pack a sweater.
until you again plunge into woodland.
These days, Mont Aigoual and the neigh- VALLÉES CÉVENOLES
bouring Montagne du Lingas have a thick
The Vallées Cévenoles, the park s most east-
skirt of beech trees, thanks to a successful
erly area, extend into the neighbouring dépar-
reforestation program that counteracted years
tement of Gard. Their arid south-facing slopes
of uncontrolled logging.
are clad predominantly in holm oak and gar-
Altogether less strenuous, the Sentier des
rigue, typical Mediterranean scrub and heath-
Botanistes, a 1.5km circuit that begins well
land. On other shadier, more gentle slopes
below the summit on the south side, also gives
sweet chestnuts, first planted in the Middle
great views. It looks down upon the Hort de
Ages and staple of the local diet until quite
Dieu, a modest-looking arboretum that, nev- recently, flourish, together with indigenous
ertheless, had huge importance in the early
beech woods and conifer plantations.
20th century, when it was the base for ex- This eastern approach is the most spec-
periments researching the optimum methods
tacular way to enter the park, following the
of reforestation.
Corniche des Cévennes, a road that winds along
At Col de la SerreyrÅde, 7km from the sum- jagged ridges and above plunging ravines for
mit on the southern slopes, Maison de l Aigoual
56km, from St-Jean du Gard to Florac.
(%04 67 82 64 67; www.causses-aigoual-cevennes.org in
French; h9.30am-7.30pm Jul & Aug, 9.30am-12.30pm or
1pm & 2-5pm or 6pm Wed-Mon Sep-Jun) is well endowed
PARC NATUREL
with general information about the Parc
National des Cévennes, including walking
RÉGIONAL DES GRANDS
and mountain-biking opportunities. Beside
it, there s a delightfully cool drinking foun- CAUSSES
tain and Terres d Aigoual (%04 67 82 65 39; www
.terres-aigoual.com in French; hTue-Sun), a member of
The Grands Causses, the Massif Central s
the Boutiques Paysannes cooperative (p95),
most southerly expression, are mainly high,
which sells a superb range of local specialities
limestone plateau. Scorched in summer
direct from the producer.
and windswept in winter, the stony surface
If your itinerary takes you southwards,
holds little moisture. The least dribble filters
continuing down through the Cévennes
through the soft, porous rock to emerge in
Méridionales and the town of Le Vigan will
the valleys at its feet. Beneath the plateaus
bring you to the spectacular natural site of the
lies an underground world, scoured out by
Cirque de Navacelles (p112).
the waters over millennia, whose caves and
fissures make it ideal for cavers. Sheep graz-
Abîme de Bramabiau
ing remains the dominant economic activity.
Just off the D986 on the northern flank of
Much of the milk that the ewes produce is sent
Mont Aigoual, the Abîme de Bramabiau (%04 67
to Roquefort for processing into the famous
82 60 78; adult/13-16yr/6-12yr/under 6yr Ź 7.50/5/3.50/free;
blue-veined King of Cheeses.
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
lonelyplanet.com PARC NATUREL RÉGIONAL DES GRANDS CAUSSES " " Meyrueis 151
CHESTNUT: THE ALL-PURPOSE TREE
In the Cévennes, the chestnut tree (known as l arbre Ä… pain, or bread tree) was the staple food
of many Auvergnat families. The nuts were eaten raw, roasted and dried, or ground into flour.
Blended with milk or wine, chestnuts were the essence of bajanat, a nourishing soup. Part of
the harvest would feed the pigs, while the leaves of pruned twigs and branches provided fod-
der for sheep and goats.
Harvested at ground level with small forks  of chestnut wood, of course  the prickly husks
(called hÅrissons, or hedgehogs) were removed by being trampled upon in spiky boots. Nowadays,
they re the favourite food of the Cévennes wild boars and still feature in a number of local
sauces and desserts.
Nothing was wasted. Sections of hollowed-out trunk would serve as beehives, and smaller
branches would be woven into baskets while larger ones were whittled into stakes for fencing
or used to build trellises. The wood, hard and resistant to parasites, was used for rafters, rakes
and household furniture  everything from, quite literally, the cradle to the coffin.
To learn lots more about the importance of the chestnut to the Cévennes, take a look at
http://chemins-chataigne.com.
The Rivers Tarn, Jonte and Dourbie have verge. There s an ample choice of both res-
sliced deep gorges through the 5000-sq-km taurants and hotels overlooking the Bétuzon,
plateau, creating four causses ( plateaus in where you can dine or drink on terraces bright
the local patois): Sauveterre, Méjean, Noir and with flowers.
Larzac, each different in its delicate geological The Tourist Office (%04 66 45 60 33; www.meyrueis
forms. One resembles a dark lunar surface, -office-tourisme.com; quai Sully; h9am-1pm & 2-8pm Jul &
another s like a Scottish moor covered with Aug, 9.30am-noon & 3-6pm Mon-Fri Sep-May) is in Tour
the thinnest layer of grass, while the next is de l Horloge, one of the last surviving vestiges
gentler and more fertile. But all are eerie and of the medieval ramparts that once ran beside
empty except for the occasional shepherd and the Bétuzon.
his flock  and all offer great walking and There s a small farmers market every
mountain biking. Wednesday. From mid-June to mid-September
The park was created in 1995 and embraces it s held on place André Chamson; the rest of
nearly 100 communes with a total population the year it s on Quai Sully.
of around 65,000 souls  though you ll ask
yourself where they ve all got to. Millau, at Activities
its heart, is a good base for venturing into Anatole Rando Ane (%04 66 45 66 48; www.ane
this wild area. To stay at the very centre of the -et-rando.com; Ribevenes; hApr-Oct) is beside the
causses, Meyrueis is your best choice. River BrÅze, 3km upstream from Meyrueis.
It hires donkeys (per day/three days/week
Information Ź 41/105/210) for walks in the Cévennes, rang-
Parc Naturel Régional des Grands Causses ing from a day to a week or more, with or
office (%05 65 61 35 50; www.parc-grands-causses without a guide.
.fr in French; 71 blvd de l Ayrolle, Millau; h9am-noon or A host of outdoor activities, including
12.30pm & 2-5pm or 6pm Mon-Fri) caving, climbing, canoeing and guided walk-
ing and mountain-bike tours, are run by
Fremyc (%04 66 45 65 37; www.nature-cevennes.com
MEYRUEIS
pop 1100 in French). Biking options include being driven
You ll find water just about everywhere you to the summit of Mont Aigoual (p149), then
turn in this pretty little village (elevation coasting down alone and at your own pace
705m), at the confluence of the Rivers Jonte, (half-/full day Ź 29/38). It also rents out
BrÅze and Bétuzon. At the head of the spec- bikes (per half-/full/three days Ź 17/26/57).
tacular Gorges de la Jonte, Meyrueis (pro- In July and August, you ll find Frédérique
nounced may-rue-ees) also marks a meeting or Michaël (hence the name) promoting
of a craggier kind, where the Causse Méjean, their services at a stand beside the tourist
Causse Noir and Massif de l Aigoual all con- office.
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
152 PARC NATUREL RÉGIONAL DES GRANDS CAUSSES " " Causse Méjean lonelyplanet.com
of the 12th-century Benedictine monastery
Sleeping & Eating
that originally stood here.
Since Meyrueis is popular in equal measure
In culinary terms, there s little to choose
with walkers, cyclists and visitors to the nearby
between the restaurants, independent and
attractions, we give you a full range of accom-
attached to hotels, that border the Bétuzon.
modation options.
This said, L Aven Gourmand (%04 66 45 56 05; place
Gîte la Draille (%04 66 45 65 37; www.nature
Sully; menus Ź 16.50-26, mains Ź 10-14; hlunch & dinner
-cevennes.com in French; 465 rte de Florac; half-board dm Ź 29,
Fri-Wed) stands out for its position, whether
per person d Ź 39; hmid-Mar mid-Nov) This modern
you stop by for a crępe (Ź 4.50 to Ź 8.50) or
stone building on the outskirts of the village
a full meal. Eat inside, at the coveted tables
is a popular rendezvous for walkers and cy-
directly above the river or on the slim terrace
clists. It s run by the Fremyc duo (see p151),
that runs beside it.
who can give you plenty of advice about local
biking and hiking opportunities. There s a bar
Getting There & Away
with a wood-burning stove for colder nights
On weekdays, one daily bus (Ź 7.40, one
and, for summer evenings, a broad terrace
hour 20 minutes), run by Kaolis (%05 65 61
with views over the valley below.
30 88), makes the trip between Meyrueis
Hôtel Family (%04 66 45 60 02; www.hotel-family
and Millau.
.com in French; quai Sully; r Ź 39-49; pnas) Free
wi-fi and parking. This spick and span hotel,
originally three separate houses, has been CAUSSE MÉJEAN
run by the Julien family for four generations. The Causse Méjean, tallest of the four causses,
The 48 bedrooms, though on the small side, averages 950m in height. Defined to the north
couldn t be trimmer and the welcome s par- by the Gorges du Tarn and, southwards, by the
ticularly warm. A stag s head peers down in Gorges de la Jonte, it looms over Florac on its
the pleasant top-floor lounge with its deep, eastern flank. It s the most barren, isolated
comfy chairs. Across the river and accessed by and little populated, with only 1.4 inhabit-
its own wooden bridge, there s a leafy garden ants per square kilometre, who survive from
and a large pool. The restaurant (lunch menu cattle rearing and tourism. It s a land of poor
Ź 12.50, other menus Ź 22 to Ź 27), open to all, pasture where crops grow only in occasional
is equally bright and cheerful. fertile dips and bowls, known locally as do-
Hôtel Saint-Sauveur (%04 66 45 40 42; www.hotel lines. Streams, where they occur, gurgle down
stsauveur.com; place Jean Séquier; r Ź 44-57; hMar-Nov) into the limestone through sinkholes, funnels
In this imposing former hôtel particulier, or and fissures. Such a combination of water
urban mansion, constructed in the 18th cen- and limestone has created some breathtaking
tury, rooms are comfortable and well priced. underground scenery.
Its terrace, overseeing the street and river
below, is shaded by a venerable, century-old Aven Armand
sycamore. If no one s at reception, contact The spectacular cavern (%04 66 45 61 31; www.aven
Hôtel Sully, next door. -armand.com; adult/16-20yr/5-15yr/under 5yr Ź 8.50/7/5.80/
Hôtel Restaurant Château d Ayres (%04 66 45 60 free; h9.30am-6pm Jul & Aug, 9.30am or 10am-noon &
10; www.chateau-d-ayres.com; r from Ź 124; hmid-Feb Dec; 1.30-5pm or 6pm Mar-Jun & Sep mid-Nov) of Aven
Armand, on the plateau s southwestern side,
ns) If you re seeking true tranquillity, this
magnificent hotel, set in an 18th-century cha- was scoured out of the mountain around
teau, won t disappoint. It s surrounded by 6 four million years ago. The slow drip, drip of
hectares of wooded grounds (in which you can water, rich in limestone deposits, over the last
canter; guests can hire horses). The 29 rooms 250,000 years has created a bristling subter-
are exquisitely and individually furnished ranean forest of stalactites and stalagmites.
with antique pieces. Choose the Blanche de Discovered in 1897 by the eponymous Louis
Castille room in one of the twin towers and Armand, who lowered himself down through
you ll be sleeping where Général de Gaulle the one natural entrance high in the chasm s
more than once stayed. The three intimate ceiling, it s nowadays reached by a funicular
dining rooms of its gourmet restaurant (lunch railway that drops 60 vertical metres. Within
menu Ź 22, other menus Ź 31 to Ź 47, mains an area that exceeds that of Notre Dame, the
Ź 19 to Ź 38), hung with tapestries and graced world s greatest concentration of stalagmites,
with monumental fireplaces, are the vestiges 80% of them still growing, rear like piles of
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
lonelyplanet.com PARC NATUREL RÉGIONAL DES GRANDS CAUSSES " " Gorges du Tarn 153
TAKH
Up high on the Causse Méjean is the nearest that France can approximate to the steppes of
Mongolia. Where thin grass ripples in the chill winds, the first element in an experiment in
rescue and rehabilitation is taking place. Here, roaming free within an extensive enclosed area,
live chevaux de Przewalski, the descendants of a species of horse that was reduced at one time
to only 13 living beings. Never domesticated, they were wiped out in their native Mongolia half
a century ago. You can spot them at a distance year-round, while in summer TAKH, the not-
for-profit association responsible for their revival in the Cévennes, runs an information centre
(%04 66 45 64 43; www.takh.org; hJul & Aug). The organisation s title adopts the horse s Mongolian
name  altogether easier on the tongue than  Przewalski s horse (the species is named after the
Russian geographer and explorer who was the first to describe it; it s also sometimes called, with
less precision, the Asian, or Mongolian, wild horse).
Horses and centre are 18km from Meyrueis. Take the D986, direction Mende, and turn right after
10km onto the D63 at the Aven Armand crossroads. If you want to push on, it s an exhilarating drive
onwards to Florac along the high plateau northeastwards, as you continue along the D63.
pancakes, while relatively younger stalactites one s free. At the Col de Perjoret, 12km east
stab dagger-like from the ceiling. Among of Meyrueis on the D996, take the narrow,
them is the world s tallest, at 30m  though signed, blacktop track to the left. After 3km,
there are stories of a 32m-high rival, still to turn left for the hamlet of l Hom, from where
be verified, in Slovenia. you can ramble and scramble among these
Guided visits, lasting about 45 minutes contorted, pitted dolomite shapes, left stand-
(there s an accompanying information sheet ing when the limestone that once enclosed
in English) head underground about every them weathered away.
20 minutes. Thrill seekers can sign on (in ad-
vance) for a roped descent through Armand s GORGES DU TARN
original hole in the roof (Ź 45 per person; Though all three of the gorges that slice
Friday evening, July and August only). through the causses (Tarn, Jonte and Dourbie)
A combination ticket (adult/16-20yr/5-15 yr/under 5yr are spectacular, the Gorges du Tarn are mark-
Ź 11.80/9.30/7.80/free) also includes admission to edly the most awe-inspiring. Until the con-
the Chaos de Montpellier-le-Vieux (p155). struction of the road in 1905, the only way
to move through them was by boat. The at-
Ferme Caussenarde d Autrefois tractive stone houses and hamlets that cling
In the hamlet of Hyelzas, at the end of the to their slopes, once tumbling and neglected,
road, 4km beyond Aven Armand, this clus- have now been restored and given a new life,
ter of 18th- and 19th-century farm buildings thanks to tourism.
(%04 66 45 65 25; www.ferme-caussenarde.com; Hyelzas; From the village of Ispagnac, 9km north-
adult/7-14yr/under 7yr Ź 5.20/2.15/free; h10am-7pm Jul & west of Florac, the gorge winds southwest-
Aug, 10am-noon & 2-6pm Apr-Jun & Sep) overlooks the wards for about 50km, ending just north of
Gorges de la Jonte. Uninhabited from 1946 Millau. En route are two villages: medieval Ste-
until their recent renovation, they illustrate Énimie (a good base for canoeing and walk-
the tough peasant life of the causses. Some ing along the gorges) and, 13km downstream,
may find the place oversentimental and sim- La MalÅne, smaller but equally attractive and
plistic, but what s undeniable is that it s helped with the same opportunities for outdoor fun.
to regenerate a hamlet that was dying and The gorge, 400m to 600m deep, marks
that now boasts a cheesemaker, a gîte d étape the boundary between the Causse Méjean
and a baker. to its south and the Causse de Sauveterre to
the north. From these plateaus, the canyon
Chaos de Nîmes-le-Vieux below looks like a white, limestone abyss,
This extended jumble of rocks and pinnacles has its green waters dotted here and there with
nothing to do with Nîmes, just as Montpellier- bright canoes and kayaks. In summer the
le-Vieux (p155) has only its name in common riverside road (the D907bis) is often jammed
with Montpellier. The difference is that this with cars, buses and caravans: every sum-
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
154 PARC NATUREL RÉGIONAL DES GRANDS CAUSSES " " Gorges du Tarn lonelyplanet.com
mer s day, well over 2500 vehicles grind Less strenuously, there are well over a dozen
through Ste-Énimie. circular, signposted day and half-day walks in
For a truly magnificent bird s-eye vista, the stretch between Ispagnac and La MalÅne.
make a 12km detour along the D995, which ADN La Cazelle (%04 66 48 46 05; www.lacazelle.com
climbs steeply from the pretty hamlet of Les in French), in Ste-Énimie, rents out mountain
Vignes near the gorge s southern end, up to bikes (per half-/full day Ź 12/20).
the viewpoint at Point Sublime.
Sleeping & Eating
Camping Les Gorges du Tarn (%04 66 48 59 38; fax 04
Activities
66 48 59 37; 2 people, tent & car Ź 8.20; hEaster mid-Nov;
CANOEING
Riding the River Tarn is at its best in high s) About 800m upstream from Ste-Énimie,
this, the cheapest of the several riverside camp
summer, when the river is usually low and the
sites, also hires out canoes and kayaks.
descent a languid trip over mostly calm water.
Two splendid chambres d hôtes lie at each
You can get as far as the impassable Pas de
Soucy, a barrier of boulders about 9km down- end of the Gorges du Tarn.
La Pause (%05 65 62 63 06; www.hebergement-gorges
river from La MalÅne. Downstream from here,
dutarn.com; rte de Capluc, Le Rozier; d/tr/ste incl breakfast
there are further canoeing possibilities.
The Ste-Énimie tourist office carries in- Ź 46/63/90; s) At the southern end, in the vil-
formation on the veritable flotilla of com- lage of Le Rozier, where the River Jonte flows
into the Tarn, La Pause has three tastefully
panies offering canoe and kayak descents.
furnished rooms decorated in attractive colours
Some of these:
with impeccable bathrooms, plus a couple of
ADN La Cazelle (%04 66 48 46 05; www.lacazelle.com
suites sleeping three or four. The larger suite
in French) In Ste-Énimie.
has two interconnecting rooms, ideal for a fam-
Canoë 2000 (%04 66 48 57 71; www.canoe2000.fr) In
ily. From the small pool and terrace there s
Ste-Énimie and La MalÅne.
a plunging view over the green valley to the
Au Moulin de la MalÅne (%04 66 48 51 14; www
hamlet of Peyreleau. At breakfast, jams  fig,
.canoeblanc.com) In La MalÅne.
quince, cherry and more  are all made by your
Locanoë (%04 66 48 55 57; www.gorges-du-tarn.fr in
hostess, Pierrette Espinasse. To get there, turn
French) In Castelbouc and Ste-Énimie.
left, signed Capluc, after the village church.
La Maison de Marius (%04 66 44 25 05; www.mai
Typical trips and tariffs for canoe and kayak
sondemarius.info; 8 rue Pontet, Quézac; r incl breakfast Ź 50-
descents:
80; hMar-Oct) At the gorge s northern limit, in
Castelbouc Ste-Énimie Ź 14 7km 2hr the hamlet of Quézac, near Ispagnac, Dany
Ste-Énimie La MalÅne Ź 19 13km 3½hr Méjean runs a rural chambre d hôte in the vil-
Castelbouc La MalÅne Ź 22 20km 1 day lage of her birth. Each delightful room has its
Ste-Énimie Les Baumes Basses Ź 23 22km 1 day
own character: Montagne, huge, all checks and
stripes with a giant bathtub; Le Toit (the roof)
If you d rather someone else did the hard work,
with an even larger bathtub of Roman propor-
spend a lazy, effortless hour with Les Bateliers
tions, an integrated salon and beds that rise at
de la MalÅne (%04 66 48 51 10; hApr-Oct), who, for
the touch of a button; and La Lucerne, equally
Ź 19.50/9.75 per adult/child under 10, will punt
large and a special bargain at Ź 50. And you ve
you down an 8km stretch of the gorge, leaving
never tasted sweeter water, drawn from the
from La MalÅne, then drive you back.
nearby mineral springs. To get there, skirt the
village (its main street is unidirectional against
WALKING & CYCLING you) and follow signs from the church.
The Sentier de la Vallée du Tarn trail, blazed Château de la Caze (%04 66 48 51 01; www.chateaude
in yellow and green, runs for around 250km, lacaze.com; d Ź 118-166, ste from Ź 180; hEaster mid-Nov)
from Le Pont de Montvert on Mont LozÅre, This fairy-tale 15th-century castle, overlook-
down the gorge and all the way to Albi, near ing the River Tarn between Ste-Énimie and La
Toulouse. The GR60 follows an old drovers MalÅne, is a fabulous top-end option. Rooms
route, winding down from the Causse de are the last word in luxury, and it boasts a re-
Sauveterre to Ste-Énimie, crossing the bridge nowned gourmet restaurant. In the annexe 
and continuing southwards up to the Causse less romantic but equally comfortable  all
Méjean in the direction of Mont Aigoual. rooms are suites, three have ample balconies,
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
lonelyplanet.com PARC NATUREL RÉGIONAL DES GRANDS CAUSSES " " Causse de Sauveterre 155
and toilet, shower and bathtub are all separate. earth is cultivated, creating irregular, intri-
It s essential to reserve. cately patterned wheat fields.
The causse takes its name from the village
Ste-Énimie of Sauveterre, a pretty little place of stone
pop 500
houses and shepherds huts at the causse s
Ste-Énimie, 27km from Florac and 56km
eastern edge, above Ste-Énimie.
from Millau, tumbles like an avalanche of
The least arid of the plateaus, it has three
grey-brown stone, blending into the steep,
distinct zones: the Causse du Massegros,
once-terraced slope behind it. Long isolated,
around 750m high, a land of bare pasture
it s now a prized destination for day visitors
and sparse pine forests; the Causse Boisé, in
from Millau, Mende and Florac and a popular
the centre and rising up to 1000m, more un-
starting or finishing point for canoe or kayak
dulating with spiky rocks and cleft by rocky
descents of the Tarn.
gulches whose waters flow into the Tarn and
Ste-Énimie s Tourist Office (%04 66 48 53 44; www
Lot; and the Causse Pelé in the east, bare,
.gorgesdutarn.net in French; h9am-1pm & 2-7pm Mon-Sat,
rocky and exceeding 1100m in places.
9.30am-12.30pm Sun Jul & Aug, 9.30am-12.30pm & 2-5.30pm
Mon-Fri Oct-Easter, 9.30am-12.30pm & 2-6pm Mon-Sat Easter-Jun
CAUSSE NOIR
& Sep) is 100m north of the bridge. It stocks maps
The Causse Noir, about 200 sq km in area, is
and walking guides, including IGN Top 25 map
the smallest of the causses. Its name, the  Black
No 2640OT, Gorges du Tarn. There s also a
Causse , harks back to an earlier time when
small seasonal annexe (h10am-12.30pm & 2-6pm Sun- the plateau was almost entirely covered by
Thu Jul & Aug, 10am-12.30pm & 2-5pm Mon-Fr mid-May Jun &
pine forest. It s here in particular that you ll
1-15 Sep) beside the bridge in La MalÅne.
come across fields of limestone, eroded and
Highlights of Ste-Énimie s small, cobbled
weathered into fantastical shapes.
old quarter, where most houses have been re- Rising immediately east of Millau, it s
pointed and restored, are the 12th-century
defined by the Gorges de la Dourbie on its
Romanesque church and the Halle aux Blés,
southern side and drops steeply to the Gorges
where cereal crops brought down from the
de la Jonte at its northern limit.
high causses were bartered for wine, fresh fruit
and walnut oil.
Chaos de Montpellier-le-Vieux
Lying 18km northeast of Millau, Chaos de
Château de Peyrelade
Montpellier-le-Vieux (%05 65 60 66 30; adult/5-15yr/
A short distance west of the confluence of
under 5yr Ź 5.30/3.80/free; h9.30am-6pm or 7pm Apr mid-
the Rivers Tarn and Jonte, the romantic ruin
Nov) is a wide area of jagged rocks above the
you ll spy high above the valley is the Château
Gorges de la Dourbie. Water erosion has cre-
de Peyrelade (%for information 05 65 59 74 28; adult/
ated more than 120 hectares of tortured lime-
8-12yr/under 8yr Ź 3.50/1.50/free; h10am-6pm Jul & Aug,
stone formations with fanciful names such as
2.30-6pm Sun-Fri 15-30 Jun & 1-15 Sep). Destroyed in
the Sphinx and the Elephant. Three trails, last-
1663 by order of Cardinal Richelieu, like so
ing one to three hours, cover the site, as does a
many bastions of regional power in Languedoc,
tourist train (adult/5-15 yr/under 5yr Ź 3.40/2.40/free).
its oldest parts date from the 11th century.
If you re here outside official opening
Even if the chateau isn t open, the panorama
times, there s nothing to stop you wandering
of the Tarn valley and causses make worthwhile
around freely.
the 1.25km drive along a narrow track between
cherry trees, up above the village of Boyne.
CAUSSE DU LARZAC
The Causse du Larzac (800m to 1000m) is
CAUSSE DE SAUVETERRE
the largest of the four causses. It s an endless
The Causse de Sauveterre falls precipitously 
sweep of distant horizons and rocky steppes.
near-vertically in places  to the Gorges du
On them perch medieval villages such as for-
Tarn on its eastern flank. It s the northern- tified Ste-Eulalie de Cernon, long the capital of
most of the causses, dropping more gently
the Larzac région, and La Cavalerie, both built
to the valley of the River Lot, which marks
by the Knights Templar, a religious military
its limit in that direction. Dotted with a few
order that distinguished itself during the cru-
compact, isolated farms that resemble forti- sades. For more on the causse and its villages,
fied villages, its every potential patch of fertile
see p167.
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
156 MILLAU & AROUND " " Millau lonelyplanet.com
and culturally. Famous within France for
GORGES DE LA JONTE
glove-making, it s also the main centre for the
The Gorges de la Jonte, 15km long, cleave
Parc Naturel Régional des Grands Causses and
east west from Meyrueis to Le Rozier, sepa-
a take-off point for hiking and other outdoor
rating in dramatic fashion Causse Noir from
activities  particularly hang-gliding and pa-
Causse Méjean. They re much more lightly
ragliding, exploiting the uplifting thermals.
trafficked  though busy enough in summer
 than the more famous Gorges du Tarn.
Information
ABCD PC (cnr rue Droite & rue Solignac; per hr Ź 3;
Dargilan
h10am-7pm Mon-Sat Jul & Aug, 10am-12.15pm &
Just south of the gorge is this cave (%04 66 2-7pm Mon-Fri, 1-7pm Sat Sep-Jun) Internet access.
45 60 20; www.grotte-dargilan.com; adult/6-18yr/under 6yr Cyber Espace (%05 65 59 83 30; 2 rue du Barry; per
Ź 8.50/5.80/free; h10am-6.30pm Jul & Aug, 10am-noon & hr Ź 3; h3-7pm Mon, 10am-noon & 2-7pm Tue-Sat)
2-4.30pm or 5.30pm Easter-Jun, Sep & Oct). Even larger Internet access.
than Aven Armand, it s less visited but just Laundrette (14 av Gambetta; h7am-9pm)
as spectacular. The expanse is known as La Main Post Office (12 av Alfred Merle)
Grotte Rose, the Pink Cave, because of the Parc Naturel Régional des Grands Causses
dominant shade of its variegated natural col- office (%05 65 61 35 50; www.parc-grands-causses
ouring. The culminating point of the one- .fr in French; 71 blvd de l Ayrolle, Millau; h9am-noon or
hour, 1km tour through this vast chasm, 12.30pm & 2-5pm or 6pm Mon-Fri)
largest in the Cévennes, is the sudden, daz- Tourist Office (%05 65 60 02 42; www.ot-millau.fr; 1
zling exit onto a ledge with a dizzying view place du Beffroi; h9am-7pm Jul & Aug, 9am-12.30pm &
of the Gorges de la Jonte way below. 2-6.30pm Easter-Jun & Sep; closed Sun Oct-Easter)
Sights
BelvédÅre des Vautours
The 42m-tall beffroi (belfry; rue Droite; adult/under
This vulture viewing point (%05 65 62 69 69;
18yr Ź 3/free; h10am-noon & 2-6pm mid-Jun Sep) has a
www.vautours-lozere.com in French; adult/5-12yr/under
square base dating from the 12th century and
5yr Ź 6.50/3/free; h10am-7pm Jul & Aug, to 6pm Tue-Sun
tapers into a 17th-century octagonal tower,
Apr-Jun, Sep & Oct) is just west of Le Truel on
from where there s a great overview of town.
the D996. Reintroduced in 1970 after hav-
Musée de Millau (%05 65 59 01 08; place Maréchal
ing all but disappeared locally, the vultures
Foch; adult/19-25yr/under 19yr Ź 5/3.70/free; h10am-6pm
now freely wheel and plane in the causses
Jul & Aug, 10am-noon & 2-6pm May, Jun & Sep, 10am-noon
skies and nest high in the sheer cliffs on the
& 2-6pm Mon-Sat Oct-Apr) has a rich collection of
opposite side of the valley.
fossils, including mammoth molars and a 4m-
The viewing point  look down, too, for
long, near-intact skeleton of a prehistoric ma-
a great perspective on the valley bottom
rine reptile from the Causse du Larzac. In the
below  has an impressive multimedia ex-
basement is a huge array of plates and vases
hibition, including live video transmission
from La Graufesenque (p165). Also in the base-
from the nesting sites. It also organises half-
ment, look out for the plomb du Larzac, a 1st-
day birding walks (adult/5-12yr/under 5yr Ź 7/3.50/free)
century talisman made of lead and designed to
to the surrounding gorges. Reservations
counter evil spells. The 1st-floor leather and
are required.
glove section illustrates Millau s tanneries and
their products through the ages with a video,
machinery and plenty of samples.
MILLAU & AROUND
A combined ticket (Ź 7) includes admission
to La Graufesenque archaeological site, at the
MILLAU confluence of the Rivers Tarn and Dourbie. To
pop 21,900
really explore Millau, invest in a passe patri-
Millau (pronounced mee-yo) squeezes be-
moine (Ź 12), which gives access to Millau s
tween the Causses Noir and du Larzac near
museum, La Graufesenque, Le Beffroi, La
the spot where the Rivers Tarn and Dourbie
Halle Viaduc and a couple of other town
join each other. Though falling just over the
sights.
border into the Midi-Pyrénées département
of Aveyron, it s tied to Languedoc historically Continued on page 165
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
lonelyplanet.com MILLAU & AROUND " " Millau 165
Continued from page 156
major bridges linked by a piece of sentimental,
sci-fi hokum, is less than thrilling.
At the confluence of the Rivers Tarn and The Pont de Millau, slung across the wide
Dourbie, La Graufesenque (%05 65 60 11 37; av Louis Tarn Valley to link the Causses du Larzac
Balsan; adult/19-25yr/under 19yr Ź 4/2.70/free; h10am- and Rouge, takes the breath away. Designed
12.30pm & 2.30-7pm Tue-Sun Jul & Aug, 10am-noon & 2- by the British architect Sir Norman Foster, it
5pm or 6pm Sep-Jun) was in its time the largest carries more than 4.5 million vehicles each
pottery workshop in the western Roman year. It s a true work of industrial art and
Empire. Wares fired here have been found as an amazing feat of engineering. Only seven
far away as Yemen, Mauritania and northern pylons, hollow and seemingly slim as nee-
England. After watching a 10-minute video, dles, support 2.5km of four-lane motorway.
walk the perimeter of the excavated area (it s Rising to 343m above the valley bottom,
estimated that around 80% still lies under it ranks among the tallest road bridges in
the soil), guided by the booklet in English the world.
lent to you at reception. It s quite legitimate More than three years in construction
to pick up a shard or two as souvenirs from and costing in excess of Ź 400 million, it
the pile of discarded fragments. Their rarity gobbled up 127,000 cu metres of concrete,
value is low, however; a team of around 19,000 tonnes of reinforcing steel and 5000
500 potters worked to shape the 10,000 to tonnes of cables and stays. Yet despite these
40,000 pots that were crammed into the kiln heavyweight superlatives, it still looks like a
for each firing. Several million were turned gossamer thread. Far from detracting from
out during La Graufesenque s heyday, which the charms of the hitherto unspoilt coun-
lasted barely a century and came to a swift tryside around the town of Millau, this
end, once the kilns had devoured the woods vital link in the A75 motorway is a true
and forests for miles around. 21st-century icon.
In the 1960s, there were around 80 glove- Viaduc Espace Info (%05 65 58 80 65; admission free;
making companies, big and small, in Millau.
h10am-7pm Apr-Oct, 10am-5pm Nov-Mar), at ground
Causse Gantier (%05 65 60 03 05; blvd des GantiÅres; level beneath the bridge, tells the story of
admission free; h9.30am-12.30pm & 2-7pm Mon-Sat), its construction through a variety of media.
in business for over a century and crafting For those who want to get even closer, it ar-
gloves for fashion houses such as Chanel and ranges one-hour guided visits (adult/6-17yr/under
HermÅs, continues that tradition. Beware: 6yr Ź 5.50/3/free) four times daily.
nearly all 20 members of Millau s Collectif
du Cuir, its leather association, import their Activities
leather goods and trade on their past reputa- HANG-GLIDING & PARAGLIDING
tions and (no longer so good) names. But Several outfits run introductory courses
buy here, at its shop, and you can be certain (around Ź 325 for five days) and tandem flights
your gloves were made by the craftspeople (Ź 55 to Ź 70). Two long-established players:
you see before you or by their colleagues in Horizon (%05 65 59 78 60; www.horizon-millau.com
the workshop upstairs, who between them in French; 6 place Lucien Grégoire) Also offers caving,
fashion more than 25,000 pairs each year.
Whether you slip on a glove or not, this ar-
OF GLOVES & CHEESE
chitecturally pleasing new building merits a
visit to watch craftfolk at work, learn about Why was this smallish provincial town, far
a skilled trade and savour the antique ma- from the sea and any significant communi-
chinery on display. cation route, once the world s largest maker
At street level at the Millau Halle Viaduc (%05 of gloves? And why are gloves and cheese
65 60 95 05; www.millau-halle-viaduc.com; place de la Capelle; so symbiotically linked?
adult/child Ź 4/3; h10am-7pm or 8pm Apr-Oct, 10am-12.30pm It s the sheep, those poor exploited sheep,
& 2-6pm Nov-Mar), there s a small free exhibition their milk taken for Roquefort cheese and
with video clips and multilingual text about their lambs, known locally as regords, killed
Millau, the Grands Causses and the Pont de soon after birth for their soft skins, which,
Millau. Down below, the theme is bridges, tanned and transformed, would grace the
physical and metaphorical, around the world. hands of ladies around the world.
The 20-minute video, with shots of the world s
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
166 MILLAU & AROUND " " Millau Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON THE PONT
You don t have to have a vehicle to visit the Pont de Millau.
An open-top, bright-yellow bus (%05 65 61 20 77; adult/6-12yr/under 6yr Ź 10/6/free) with guide
leaves place de la Capelle at least hourly between 9am and 5pm. During the one- to 1¾-hour
tour, there s an introductory video, you see the bridge from below and enjoy the perhaps dubious
advantage of being  the only ones privileged to drive along the former site tracks .
For a leisurely glide along the Tarn Valley, including an original, crane-your-neck perspective
of the Pont de Millau from below, take a one- to 1½-hour boat trip with Bateliers du Viaduc
(%05 65 60 17 91; www.bateliersduviaduc.com in French; Creissels; adult/6-12yr/under 6yr Ź 19.50/12.50/9.50;
hhourly from 9am Apr-Oct). Reserve by phone or at the information booth as you enter the village
of Creissels, 2km south of Millau.
For an even more original angle with the thrill of the wind in your hair, Millau ULM (%06 85 74 81 74:
www.millau-ulm.com in French) will fly you above the bridge in an ultralite plane (Ź 85 per half-hour).
canyon descents, rock climbing and Naturaventure, a of the Tarn, this friendly gîte is open year-round.
multiadventure trail. On foot, follow the river upstream. If you re
Roc et Canyon (%05 65 61 17 77; www.roc-et driving, turn left (east) after Pont du Larzac.
-canyon.com in French; 55 av Jean JaurÅs) In summer it s Hôtel La Capelle (%05 65 60 14 72; www.hotel-millau
based beside Pont Cureplat. Also offers caving, rock climb- -capelle.com; 7 place de la Capelle; r Ź 45-48, with shared bathroom
ing, canyon descents, rafting and bungee jumping. Ź 30; pna) Free wi-fi; ample free parking in
the square below the hotel. In the converted
ROCK CLIMBING wing of a one-time leather factory, La Capelle
The 50m- to 200m-high cliffs of the Gorges is a great budget choice. The hotel s large terrace
de la Jonte are an internationally renowned with views towards the Causse Noir makes for a
venue for climbers of all levels. Both Horizon perfect breakfast spot. All rooms with bathroom
and Roc et Canyon (see p165) offer moni- overlook the Causse and have separate toilet.
tored climbs and can put you in touch with Some have air con (Ź 5 supplement).
local climbers. Hôtel des Causses (%05 65 60 03 19; www.hotel
-des-causses.com; 56 av Jean JaurÅs; d Ź 50-60, tr Ź 65-75;
WALKING & CYCLING
p) Parking Ź 7. This 19-room hotel offers
Pick up a copy of Les Belles Balades de l Aveyron a friendly welcome and comfortable, well-
(Ź 8), on sale at the tourist office. You can maintained rooms. A Logis de France with
navigate by the explicit maps even if you don t double glazing throughout, it also has a good
read French. It describes 22 walks around restaurant (see p168).
Millau, the Gorges du Tarn and the Grands Hôtel Emma Calvé (%05 65 60 13 49; www.millau
Causses, all waymarked and varying from -hotel-emmacalve.com in French; 28 av Jean JaurÅs; r Ź 51-73;
1½ to six hours. It also details 10 mountain- p) Parking Ź 10. The 13 rooms of the Emma
bike and 10 tourer routes. Calvé (named after the French soprano who
If you re after more demanding trekking, spent her last years in this former bourgeois
the GR62 crosses the Causse Noir, passing the mansion), all repainted recently in a variety
Chaos de Montpellier-le-Vieux before wind- of hues (corridors are a rather bilious green),
ing down to Millau, while the GR71 and its offer plenty of variety. Four in a small annexe
spurs thread across the Causse du Larzac, (Ź 63) give directly onto the rear patio, where
passing through its Templar villages. there s plenty of greenery. Room 8 (Ź 73) has
its own spacious enclosed verandah overlook-
Sleeping ing the patio. Room 4, large and the original
Camping des Deux RiviÅres (%05 65 60 00 27; camping owner s chapel, has charming leaded, stained-
.deux-rivieres@wanadoo.fr; 61 av de l Aigoual; site & 2 people glass windows that diffuse the light.
Ź 14; hApr-Oct) Just over Pont de Cureplat, this Cévenol Hôtel (%05 65 60 74 44; www.cevenol-hotel.fr
is the closest of several huge riverside camp in French; 115 rue Rajol; d/tr Ź 62/72; pnas) Free
sites beside the east bank of the River Tarn. parking. On the fringe of town, this modern
Gîte de la Maladerie (%05 65 60 41 84; chemin de la concrete block with its uninspiring exterior is
Graufesenque; dm Ź 13) In grounds on the south bank considerably more cosy within. Its 42 rooms 
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels MILLAU & AROUND " " Millau 167
two with disabled access  are spacious (ask garden. There s an excellent restaurant (p168)
for one facing south with views over the and a terrace offering great views.
causses). Bathrooms, all renovated in 2008,
have a particularly large shower area. Eating
Château de Creissels (%05 65 60 16 59; www.chateau Bar du Tour de Ville (%05 65 60 07 05; 7 blvd Richard; menus
-de-creissels.com; r new wing Ź 63-72, old wing Ź 79-97; hApr- Ź 13) Earthy, noisy and popular, this family-run
Oct) In the village of Creissels, 2km southwest bar-restaurant (ebullient Dad up front, hair
of Millau on the D992 and well signed, this blow-dried and paunch oozing over his belt,
castle has a split personality. Rooms in the mum in the kitchen and two daughters serving)
old 12th-century tower breathe history, while attracts all sorts: workers, families and intel-
those in the larger, more modern 20th-century lectuals. They come to enjoy the two excellent-
wings have balconies overlooking the large value and unchanging three-course menus, one
THE CAUSSE DU LARZAC CIRCUIT
On this spectacular 140km, circular, Millau-based route, you ll learn all about sheep and Roquefort,
France s favourite cheese, visit three classic Templar villages, trundle along a revived railway line,
understand why water matters so much in the Cévennes and head home along the twisting
Gorges de la Dourbie. Should you choose to linger en route, there s a warmly recommended
chambre d hôte towards the end of the day.
Leave Millau by the D992, which becomes the D999. Around 3km beyond St-Affrique (p170),
at Pastoralia, the sheep, without whom there d be no Roquefort, are queens, and children can
pet their lambs.
Retrace the route as far as the turn-off for Roquefort (p169). Allow time to visit a cave where the
cheeses are matured. In the village, fork left on the D23, signed Ste-Eulalie, to drop steeply to the
Cernon Valley, then climb equally vertiginously to the Causse du Larzac. Look out for the typical
lavognes, small, carefully constructed, stone-lined reservoirs that retain the rainwater. After 11km,
make a brief stop in Viala du Pas de Jaux to visit its fortified, 30m-tall, commanding Templar
tower (admission free; h10am-7pm Jul & Aug, 10am-noon & 2-6pm Apr-Jun, Sep & Oct), built around 1430
to serve as a granary and place of refuge during the Hundred Years War.
Here, you could pick up an audiopass (Ź 16) that includes audioguide rental and entry to
historical sights in Viala du Pas de Jaux, Ste-Eulalie de Cernon, La Cavalerie, and a couple of
other Templar sites.
After 4km, turn left on the D561, detouring right at the railway viaduct 1.5km from Ste-Eulalie
de Cernon (p170) to take a leisurely pedal on its Vélorail du Larzac, an even more relaxing trip
on its train touristique or a heart-stopping bungee jump from the viaduct itself.
About 2km beyond Ste-Eulalie, take the D277 and, after rejoining the D999, reach La Cavalerie.
Founded by the Templars, this fortified village was for centuries a resting point for travellers mak-
ing their way over the lonely Larzac plain. Its still largely intact defensive walls were constructed
by the Knights Hospitaliers.
Continue along the D999 for a further 15km (taking care not to stray left off the road and
into a military firing range) as far as Nant with its two splendid bridges, an attractive early-18th-
century covered market and the 12th-century abbey church of St Pierre, notable for its finely
chiselled geometric capitols.
Here, you can either head for home or continue along one of the relatively broad, cultivated
stretches of the Gorges de la Dourbie for 7km to St-Jean du Bruel (p170).
In Nant, if it s getting late, you might think seriously of overnighting at Chambre d Hôte
Lou Damadou (%05 65 62 26 73, 06 76 01 60 23; www.gites-nant.com; rue Damade; r incl breakfast Ź 55).
Catherine and Thierry Schreiber have renovated with great taste three town houses along a quiet
pedestrian street, plus another large room in their own home. Each room is a fetching blend
of contemporary touches and comfort that supplement the original floor tiles and preserved
wooden beams. Each house has self-catering facilities.
Otherwise, follow the road to Millau (32km from Nant) through the steep and spectacular
Gorges de la Dourbie for a fittingly dramatic conclusion to the day.
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
168 MILLAU & AROUND " " Millau lonelyplanet.com
with moules farcies Ä… la SÅtoise (stuffed mussels in the oven with Roquefort cheese, followed
in a tomato sauce) and the other with trenels, by the marmite du pÄ™cheur Ä… ma façon, of
little steaming packets of boiled tripe tied with salmon, perch and red mullet, prawns and
string and a local speciality. Both menus include scallops gratiné.
a quarter-litre of red wine, served in the jug. Two good hotel restaurants:
Auberge de la Borie Blanque (%05 65 60 85 88; rte Hôtel des Causses restaurant (%05 65 60 03 19;
de Cahors; menus Ź 14-25, mains Ź 9-15; hlunch & dinner www.hotel-des-causses.com; 56 av Jean JaurÅs; menus
Tue-Thu & Sat, lunch Fri & Sun) In a vaulted former Ź 16-26; hlunch & dinner Mon-Thu, lunch Fri) Has a pair
wine cellar about 3km outside Millau on the of enticing regional menus and several hearty dishes from
Cahors road, this traditional restaurant with the Lyon area, the chef-owner s home town.
a couple of wagon wheels and a yoke on the Château de Creissels restaurant (%05 65 60 16
ceiling plays the rustic card (a pity, though, 59; www.chateau-de-creissels.com; menus Ź 24-50, mains
those skeins of fairy lights). The cuisine, by Ź 16-20) For classic French cuisine. The menu du marché
contrast, has superb taste. For starters, try the changes daily. Lamb lovers will enjoy the menu autour de
foie frais de canard poÄ™lé aux pommes, cubes l agneau des Grands Causses (Ź 32) with two meat courses of
of apple and duck liver, crispy on the outside tender local lamb, ewes -milk cheese and panacotta, also
and melting in the mouth once you bite in. made from ewes milk.
Discerning folk from Millau make their way
out here in numbers, so be sure to reserve, SELF-CATERING
even midweek. In summer there s a delightful There are markets each Wednesday and
outdoor terrace. Friday morning in place du Maréchal Foch,
Le Square (%05 65 61 26 00; 10 rue St-Martin; menus place Emma Calvé and the covered market at
Ź 18-27, mains Ź 15-20; hlunch & dinner Thu-Mon, lunch place des Halles.
Tue May mid-Mar) It s essential to book at this
intimate, highly regarded restaurant with its Shopping
excellent-value four-course menus and pleas- L Atelier du Gantier (21 rue Droite) A wonderful little
ant contemporary decor. shop that sells gloves and only gloves of the
Capion (%05 65 60 00 91; 3 rue J-F Alméras; lunch softest leather. Hit the right moment and you
menu Ź 13.50, other menus Ź 19-38, mains Ź 14-18; hlunch can see staff sewing away at a trio of vintage
& dinner Thu-Mon, lunch Tue, closed 1-21 Jul) Peer into Singer machines.
the kitchen to see the young team at work Les Vitrines du Terroir (17 blvd de l Ayrolle) and
as you walk past on the way to the freshly Le Buron (18 rue Droite) are delightfully rich
decorated main dining room. Portions are and pungent fromageries selling local spe-
tasty and plentiful  none more so than the cialities including Roquefort and Pérail du
trolley of tempting homemade desserts and Larzac cheeses.
the rich cheese platter (where, of course,
Roquefort stars). Getting There & Away
La Mangeoire (%05 65 60 13 16; 8 blvd de la Capelle; The bus station (www.gareroutieredemillau.com in
menus Ź 19.50-46; hlunch & dinner Tue-Sun, closed dinner French) is beside the train station; its informa-
Sun Nov-Apr) Millau s oldest restaurant, in the tion office (%05 65 59 89 33) is inside. There are
vaults beneath the former city walls, serves two buses daily to Albi (Ź 17, 2¾ hours), one
delightful, mainly regional dishes. Its pride is of which continues to Toulouse (Ź 26, four
the open wood-fire barbecue. In winter, spits hours), and up to eight daily services to/from
pierce wild game such as hare and partridge. Montpellier (Ź 17.70, 1¾ hours) and Rodez
Year-round, meat and fish (Ź 13 to Ź 18) are (Ź 12.50, 1½ hours).
sizzled to perfection. Train connections from Millau include
La Marmite du PÄ™cheur (%05 65 61 20 44; 14-16 Béziers (Ź 16.80, 1¾ hours, two to three daily),
blvd de la Capelle; lunch menu Ź 14.50, other menus Ź 19.50- plus Montpellier (Ź 24.30, 1¾ hours, one daily)
55, mains around Ź 20; hlunch & dinner Wed-Mon Jul-Sep, and Rodez (Ź 11.30, 1½ hours, five daily).
Thu-Mon Oct-Jun) A few doors from La Mangeoire
and run by an engaging young couple, La
Getting Around
Marmite is also attractively vaulted and has
Cycles Arturi (%05 65 60 28 23; 2 rue du Barry; hMon-
hearty regional menus within much the same
Sat Jul & Aug, Tue-Sat Sep-Jun) rents city bikes for
price range. Try the chef s own creation, oeufs
Ź 9/12 per half-/full day and mountain bikes
Ä… la cocotte au Roquefort, three eggs baked
for Ź 11/15.
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
lonelyplanet.com MILLAU & AROUND " " Roquefor t 169
VINCENT COMBES
Vincent Combes directs Le Vieux Berger, smallest of the seven remaining Roquefort cheesemakers.
Young, lithe and a keen mountain biker, he s the third member of his family to run this small
concern, established by his grandfather in 1923.
It s this family-scale nature of the enterprise that he stresses when asked what differentiates
his concern from the giants, such as Le Papillon and La Société. Mind you, all is relative; currently
enjoying around 0.6% of the global market, Le Vieux Berger turns out an impressive 165 tonnes
or so of Roquefort each year.
Vincent describes himself as an artisan fromager, a craftsman among cheesemakers. Sixteen
suppliers provide the ewes milk for his dairy, near the town of Rodez.  We know each of our
farmers and their milk comes to us, fresh and directly, he says with pride. There s no instant
production here. The curds and whey are heated gently and cooled correspondingly slowly.  We re
a small team, only nine of us, and every stage of the cheesemaking is undertaken by hand  the
pouring into moulds, salting with special coarse salt and the turning of the cheeses  five times
a day, one by one, during the early maturing.
 Don t think that the process is over, once my cheeses leave us , he stresses.  If you and I
buy identical bottles of wine, same vintage, same year, and each keep them in our cellars, the
taste will be subtly different once we uncork them. So, if you re lucky enough to come across
Le Vieux Berger in some specialist cheese shop or delicatessen, treat it with the tender loving
care it merits.
You ll find Le Vieux Berger for sale in Roquefort. Vincent talks with enthusiasm of the small
exhibition centre and sales outlet on av du Combalou that, at the time of writing, was due to
open in early 2009. Because of the extra care that goes into the production, you ll pay more for
your cheese, but it will be money well spent. But don t count on picking up some for the folks
back home; the temptation to nibble your way through your pack will almost certainly be far
too great&
in French; 8 rue de la Fontaine; h9am-6.30pm Jul & Aug,
ROQUEFORT
pop 700 9.30-11.30am & 1.30-4.30pm or 5.30pm Sep-Jun) are free
There s only one reason to visit Roquefort- and last 45 minutes to one hour, including a
sur-Soulzon, which is little more than a steep 15-minute film. Its shop and showroom, the
single street and rather a dour sort of place. starting point, are on the main road beside
But gosh, it s a powerful one. In the heart of the village church.
Parc Naturel Régional des Grands Causses and For a more rapid appreciation of the
25km southwest of Millau, Roquefort turns Roquefort-making process, call by the
ewes milk into France s most famous cheese. showroom and sales outlet of Gabriel Coulet
Its steep, narrow streets lead to the cool natu- (%05 65 59 90 21; www.gabriel-coulet.fr; admission free;
ral caves, where seven producers ripen 22,000
h9.30am-6pm or 7pm Jun-Aug, 9.30am-noon & 1.30-
tonnes of Roquefort cheese every year. 5pm Sep-May). Here, you can descend into the
Two of those producers offer tours of their vaulted, penicillin-streaked caves below the
caves, while a third has a smaller self-guided shop, wander at your own pace and take in
visit to a show cave. the 10-minute video.
La Société (%05 65 58 54 38; www.roquefort-societe Between mid-June and mid-September, you
.com) has one-hour guided tours (adult/under 16yr can also visit some of the farms in the Roquefort
Ź 3/free; h9.30am-6.30pm mid-Jul & Aug, core hr 9.30am- catchment area that produce ewes milk. For
noon & 1.30-5pm rest of yr) that include a fairly fee- details, contact the Tourist Office (%05 65 58 56
ble sound-and-light show and a sampling 00; www.roquefort.com; h9am-7pm daily Jul & Aug, to 6pm
of the three varieties the company makes. Mon-Sat Apr-Jun, Sep & Oct, 10am-5pm Mon-Sat Nov-Mar).
Established in 1842, it s the largest Roquefort Roquefort s a parking nightmare. There s
producer, churning out 70% of the world s limited space beside the entrance to La Société s
supply, over 30% of which is exported. reception point. Better for all to leave your
Tours of the equally pungent caves of Le vehicle beside the tourist office at the main,
Papillon (%05 65 58 50 08; www.roquefort-papillon.com western entry to the village and walk in.
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C
170 MILLAU & AROUND " " St-Affrique lonelyplanet.com
THE KING OF CHEESES
The mouldy blue-green veins that run through Roquefort are, in fact, the spores of microscopic
mushrooms, cultivated on leavened bread.
The cheeses are ripened in natural caves, enlarged and gouged from the mountainside. Here,
where the humidity s near maximum and the temperature a constant 10°C, draughts of air flow
through the fleurines, natural clefts and chimneys, encouraging the blue Penicillium roqueforti to
eat its way through the white cheese curds.
Made exclusively from ewes milk (the prized local Lacaune ewe expresses around 200L of
milk during her lactation period), Roquefort is one of France s priciest and most noble cheeses.
In 1407 Charles VI granted exclusive Roquefort cheesemaking rights to the villagers, while in
the 17th century the Sovereign Court of the Parliament of Toulouse imposed severe penalties
on fraudulent cheesemakers trading under the Roquefort name.
every 2hr 8am-8pm Easter-Oct) is based at the former
ST-AFFRIQUE
village station, 1.5km south of Ste-Eulalie.
At Pastoralia (%05 65 98 10 23; www.pastoralia.com in
You can trundle along a restored railway line
French; adult/6-12yr/under 6yr Ź 4.50/3.20/free, 2 adults & 2
(7km out and back) on a pedalled contraption
children Ź 15; h10am-6pm Jul & Aug, 10am-noon & 2-6pm
(children under 12 ride for free if accompa-
daily Jun, Mon-Fri Sep & Oct), 3km west of St-Affrique,
nied by two paying adults). Alternatively, hop
you re in a truly rural milieu  even down
aboard one of the open-topped wooden car-
to the giant dung heap  surrounded by the
riages of the train touristique (adult/5-14yr/under 5yr
experimental farm of the adjacent agricultural
Ź 14/5/free; hdepartures every 2hr 9am-7pm Jul & Aug, 2-3
training school. In a former stable, Pastoralia
times daily May, Jun, Sep & Oct) for a 16km round-trip.
tells the story of the 800,000 ewes who graze
Ring to reserve and bring cash; since there s
the high plateaus, producing nearly 200 mil-
no mains electricity they can t process credit
lion litres of milk annually, over half of which
cards. Allow two hours whichever mode you
is turned into Roquefort and other regional
choose. Canny visitors pay a supplementary
cheeses. There are interactive panels with
Ź 2 to go by vélorail on the outward, downhill
English translation, and a 10-minute film,
leg and return by train.
and in summer you can feed the sheep.
For a real adrenalin rush, jump off the
Hôtel le Moderne (%05 65 49 20 44; www.lemoderne
viaduct where the railway line crosses the
.com; s Ź 40-49, d Ź 50-78; hmid-Jan mid-Dec; n) Free
D561. In July and August from 4pm each
wi-fi. The 27 rooms, some with separate toilet
Wednesday and from 2pm each Saturday,
and bathroom, are impeccable at this friendly
Antipodes (%05 65 60 72 03; www.antipodes-millau.com
hotel near St-Affrique s former train station.
in French) will, for Ź 35, harness you for a bungee
The groaning cheese trolley at its impressive
jump and give you a push.
restaurant (two-/three-course lunch menu
Ź 15/18.50, other menus Ź 22 to Ź 56, mains
ST-JEAN DU BRUEL
Ź 15 to Ź 21) bears no less than 13 kinds of
In addition to a fine bridge spanning the River
Roquefort cheese, a couple of them organic.
Dourbie, the village s main attraction is Noria
STE-EULALIE DE CERNON (%05 65 62 20 32; www.noria-espacedeleau.com; rue du
A sleepy little spot outside summer, Ste-Eulalie Moulin; adult/child 5-12yr/student/child under 5yr Ź 7/4/5/free,
was in its time the site of the Commanderie 2 adults & 2 children Ź 20; h10am-7pm Jul & Aug, 1.30-6pm
(admission Ź 2.50, with audioguide Ź 4) of the Knights Tue-Sun Apr-Jun & Sep-Oct). Noria, meaning water-
Templar and later, the Knights Hospitalier. wheel, is a revived mill, originally constructed
Added to and modified over the centuries, it in the 13th century. Today, a wooden water
served as each order s fortified regional head- mill turns and, for six months of the year,
quarters. Opening hours are as for the tourist when the Dourbie s flow is strong enough,
information point (%05 65 62 79 98; h10am-7pm turbines produce enough electricity to power
Jul & Aug, 10am-noon & 2-6pm Easter-Jun, Sep & Oct) at a small village.
its entrance. But Noria s remit is much wider, inviting you
Vélorail du Larzac (%05 65 58 72 10, 06 81 66 63 49; through games (there are even water-tasting
www.veloraildularzac.com in French; adult Ź 14; hdepartures sessions), machines, models and interactive
HAUT-LANGUEDOC
© Lonely Planet Publications
lonelyplanet.com MILLAU & AROUND " " Micropolis 171
panels to reflect upon water in the widest about insect life, all compellingly presented,
sense, its origins and uses and the threats to seem equally tall but all are true. Broadening
its future availability. its focus, Micropolis newest gallery illustrates
the theme of biodiversity and human impact
MICROPOLIS from tropical forest to torrid desert and in
 La Cité des Insectes (Insect City), Micropolis temperate climates nearer home. Captions
(%05 65 58 50 50; www.micropolis.biz; adult/5-14yr/under are in French and English. Allow a good 1½
5yr Ź 11.10/7.45/free; h10am-6pm Jul & Aug, to 4pm or 5pm hours, perhaps rounding off with a meal at
daily Apr-Jun, Tue-Sun Sep mid-Nov, Wed-Sun mid-Feb Mar) the pleasant, reasonably priced restaurant (mains
is outside the village of St-Léons, off the D911 Ź 11.50-13.50; hnoon-4.30 daily Jul & Aug, noon-3pm daily
19km northwest of Millau. Apr-Jun, Tue-Sun Sep mid-Nov, Wed-Sun mid-Feb Mar) 
Ever felt small? This mind-boggling high- try its planche aux gourmands (Ź 12.60), a tray
tech experience happens in a building where with main course, dessert and four side dishes
grass grows 6m high. The swarms of facts of local specialities.
© Lonely Planet Publications. To make it easier for you to use, access to this chapter is not digitally
restricted. In return, we think it s fair to ask you to use it for personal, non-commercial purposes
only. In other words, please don t upload this chapter to a peer-to-peer site, mass email it to
everyone you know, or resell it. See the terms and conditions on our site for a longer way of saying
the above -  Do the right thing with our content.
H A U T - L A N G U E D O C


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