lang rouss 1 roussillon v1 m56577569830523118


© Lonely Planet Publications
210
Roussillon
Often called French Catalonia, Roussillon sits on Spain s doorstep at the eastern end of the
Pyrenees. It is an extreme land, kept in check by the Tramontana, a violent wind that howls
down from the mountains, bone chilling in winter and strong enough to flip over a caravan
and make kite-surfers fly in summer. Local lore says it only stays in three-day periods.
Indeed, there s endless lore in this impassioned, sun-blazed land that for centuries was
part of Catalonia (officially only the semiautonomous region in northeast Spain now). French
on paper, yes, but its soul remains staunchly Catalan: sangria-fuelled fiestas and flamboyant
corridas (bullfights) are as common as muck in this earthy land where the highest mountain
peak, Canigou (2784m), is religiously revered as king by Catalans on both sides of the border.
Sardanes folk dances and the Catalan language thrive, nowhere more so than in Perpignan,
the region s only city and capital of the Pyrénées-Orientales département, where university
students can study in Catalan.
Roussillon s proximity to Spain makes it easy to reach, budget-airline travellers flying into
the Spanish airport of Girona, 95km south, as well as Perpignan, Nîmes and Béziers Agde.
Once you re in situ, the kaleidoscope of scapes is magnificent: be it uncovering exquisite
Romanesque chapel art in the Tech (Vallespir), Conflent (Tęt) and Agly Valleys that spill from the
Pyrenees to the Mediterranean; tasting wine in vineyards propped up by drystone walls along
the picturesque Côte Vermeille; hiking up north to 12th-century fortress ruins in cowboy Cathar
country (p196); communing with nature in the Parc Naturel Régional des Pyrénées Catalanes;
or simply playing bum in the beach resorts east of Perpignan, this region has it all.
HIGHLIGHTS
Cap
Wake up to birdsong and the call of the wild

Leucate
in a forest tree house near Prats de Molló
(p228)
Walk through chestnut and beech woods to

Mont
Romanesque Abbaye St-Martin du Canigou Côte
Louis
Vallée du Conflent Vermeille
Font
(p233); lunch afterwards on the lawn in
Romeu
Abbaye St-Martin
Casteil
du Canigou
Casteil (p232)
Prats de Molló
Watch mountain villages and mind-blowing

scenery flash by aboard the canary-yellow
Train Jaune (p232), Vallée du Conflent
See the sun make fire and learn about solar

energy in Font Romeu (p234) and Mont Louis (p233)
Plummet from Banyuls vines up high down to Collioure to follow Fauvist footsteps along the

Côte Vermeille (p221)
Tuck into a polystyrene platter of shellfish in a fisherman s mas on Cap Leucate (p220)

ROUSSILLON
lonelyplanet.com PERPIGNAN & AROUND " " Perpignan 211
right as the capital of the kingdom of Mallorca
PERPIGNAN & AROUND
from 1278 to 1344, a Mediterranean force that
stretched northwards as far as Montpellier
In the 18th century traveller Henry Swinburne
and included the Balearic Islands, it again fell
summarised the capital of Roussillon  an
under alien Aragonese rule for much of the
area of 4116 sq km populated by 422,000
late Middle Ages.
today  as a  villainous ugly town . Yet stroll
In 1640 the Catalans on both sides of the
its vibrant maze of old-town streets ablaze
Pyrenees revolted against the Castilian kings
with the souls of silversmiths, soap makers,
in distant Madrid, who had engulfed Aragon.
drapers and the myriad other traditional me-
Perpignan endured a two-year siege, only re-
dieval trades evoked in the very street signs
lieved with the support of the French to the
you see and you ll be reluctant to agree.
north. Peace came in 1659 with the Treaty of
There is ample to entertain around the city:
the Pyrenees, defining the border between
a wealth of vineyards (west), a finely sculpted
Spain and France once and for all and ceding
Romanesque cathedral in Elne (south) and,
Roussillon (until then the northern section of
heading east to the sea, a nature trail around a
Catalonia) to the French, much to the indig-
lake. Or trip it north past magnificent fortresses
nation of the locals.
and oyster beds to Cap Leucate (p220).
The Maître de Cabestany (p40 ) whose
Orientation
skilled hand sculpted some of Languedoc s
Two rivers flow through Perpignan: the Tęt
finest Romanesque works originated from
and its tributary, the murky Basse, banked
Cabestany, 5km southeast of Perpignan. Learn
with trim gardens. Place de la Loge and place
more at its didactic Centre de Sculpture Romane
de la République, fringed by cafés, sit at the
(%04 68 08 51 31; Parc Guilhem; adult/12-18yr Ź 3/1;
heart of the pedestrian old town.
h10am-12.30pm & 1.30-6.30pm Tue-Sun May-Sep, to 6pm
Oct-Apr) , which encourages sculpture lovers to
Information
have a good feel.
Comité Départemental du Tourisme (%04 68 51
52 53; www.cdt-66.com; 16 av des Palmiers; h9am-
PERPIGNAN 12.30pm & 1.30-6pm Mon-Fri) Tourist information on the
pop 115,000
Pyrénées-Orientales département.
As much Catalan as it is French, Perpignan 
Espace Palmarium (%04 68 86 08 51; place Arago;
PerpinyÄ… in Catalan  is a vibrant city with
h10am-7pm Mon-Sat mid-Jun mid-Sep, to 6pm Mon-
bags of character. Fiestas are in its blood and
Sat mid-Sep mid-Jun) Tourist-office information point and
its population is a mixed one: Iberia flows in
billetterie (box office), open until 10pm Thursday during July
the veins of the descendants of the thousands
and August s Les Jeudis d Été (see the boxed text p215).
of refugees who fled over the mountains at the
Laverie Foch (23 rue du Maréchal Foch; h7am-
end of the Spanish Civil War, while many other
8.30pm) Laundrette.
families, Arabs and displaced French settlers
Librairie Chapitre (%04 68 51 74 58; 10-12 rue du
alike, trace their recent origins to Algeria.
Docteur Pous) This bookshop stocks maps, and walking and
The TGV speeds into Perpignan in 2009,
cycling guides.
placing the city a mere 45-minute train ride
Net & Games (%04 68 35 14 93; 45bis av du Général
from Barcelona. In 2011 the curtain opens on
Leclerc; per hr Ź 3; h1pm-1am Mon-Sat, to 8pm Sun
Jean Nouvel s Théâtre de l Archipel, a cutting-
Jul & Aug, 8am-1am Mon-Fri, 1pm-1am Sat, 1-8pm Sun
edge piece of urban architecture  in crude
Sep-May) Internet access.
terms, imagine an amber-red bubble protrud-
Tourist Office (%04 68 66 30 30; www.perpignan
ing from a concrete block  inspired by 17th-
tourisme.com; place Armand Lanoux; h9am-7pm
century garnets, dug from the nearby Pyrenees
Mon-Sat, 10am-4pm Sun mid-Jun mid-Sep; 9am-6pm
and crafted onto gold by Perpignan jewellers.
Mon-Sat, 10am-1pm Sun mid-Sep mid-Jun) In the Palais
des CongrÅs, off promenade des Platanes.
History
Perpignan s relatively modern history was Sights
for a long time closely bound with events PLACE DE LA LOGE
over the Pyrenees in present-day Spain. In This old-town square abuzz with café ter-
1172 it came under the control of the realm of races shelters three prized stone structures:
Catalonia-Aragon. After flourishing in its own 14th-century Loge de Mer, rebuilt during the
R O U S S I L L O N
ROUSSI LLON
0 20 km
ROUSSILLON 0 10 miles
Luc Étang de
sur Lapalme
Arques
Aude
Couiza
D42
Espéraza
Serres
Le Franqui
Puivert
D611
Rennes-le- Rennes-
D900
Cap Leucate
les-Bains
Château
D118
Centre
Bugarach
Tuchan Conchylicole
Soulatgé
Château de
Quillan
CubiÅres-sur- Peyrepertuse
D14
Cinoble D14
Duilhac Port-Leucate
Vingrau
Belviane-et-Cavirac
Cucugnan Château Forteresse
Étang de
St-Martin D627
Gorges D7
de Quéribus de Salses
Leucate
de Lys
de Galamus
D12
D19
Maury A9
Port BarcarÅs
Tautavel
D117 St-Paul de
Axat
Fenouillet Vallée Château
de l Agly de Jau
Cases
Estagel Torreilles Plage
de Pene Rivesaltes
Le Bousquet
Escouloubre Peyrestortes
Ax-les- Rouze Roquefort
Thermes de Sault
Sournia
Mijanes
Escouloubre-
D22 Perpignan
les-Bains
Canet-en-
Vallée
Millas
Canet Plage
Site des Roussillon
de la
Castellane Orgues
D14 Cabestany Étang de
Ille-sur-Tęt
N20 Mosset Canet et de
Lac de
St-Nazaire
Vallée D612
D615
du ConflentVinça
D16 D124 D11
D900
Puyvalador Molitg- Eus
D81A
Saileilles
Vinça
les-Bains
Allénya
Marquixanes
Prades Thuir St-Cyprien
St-Cyprien
FormiguÅres Abbaye Plage
Los Masos Finestret Castelnou
St-Michel
Terrats
Prieuré de D612 D22
de Cuxa Ste-Colombe
Elne
D118 Villefranche Villerach Serrabone
de la D81
D914
de Conflent Commanderie
Les Angles Boule
D24 D13
D27
d'Amont
Lac des D615
Cornelia
Pic Boullouses
Fillols Baillestavy
D32
St-Genis-des- ArgelÅs- ArgelÅs
Carlit Olette de Conflent
Llauro
Vernet- sur-Mer Plage
Fontaines
D60
La Bastide
les-Bains Valmanya St-Marsal D14
ThuÅs- N116
Oms D13
Le Villelongue
Pla da BarrÅs Abbaye St-Martin
Carança
Chalet Cap Béar
Taulis Boulou dels Monts SorÅde Collioure
du Canigou
Font Romeu Mont Louis Refuge des VivÅs
Casteil Port Vendres
Cortalets D615 Laroque
Montesquieu Paulilles
Odeillo des AlbÅres
Col de Mollò
Col de Jou D618
Vallée du Tech des AlbÅres
PlanÅs Côte
Pic du (Vallespir) St-Martin Tour Madeloc
Vermeille
Maureillas
Canigou de Fenollar D86
Puig Neulos
E9 Latour SPAIN las Lillas
Céret
Chalet Refuge
de Carol Arles- Le Perthus
de Mariailles
Amélie- Fort de Banyuls-
Saillagouse
Llívia sur-Tech
Gorges
les-Bains Bellegarde sur-Mer
Llo de la Fou
Gorges
A9
CerbÅre
Mas Pagris
PuigcerdÄ… du SÅgre
Err
Cantallops
Portbou
La Preste- D115
les-Bains
La Jonquera Colera
D115A
Prats
SPAIN
de Molló
S P A I N
212
R O U S S I L L O N
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Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels PERPIGNAN & AROUND " " Perpignan 213
Renaissance, was Perpignan s stock exchange and Child in the chapel of Nostra Senyora dels
and later maritime tribunal. Between it and Correchs in the north aisle.
the Palais de la Députation, former local parlia-
ment seat, is the Hôtel de Ville (town hall) with Sleeping
its typical red-brick and smooth pebble facade. Auberge de Jeunesse (%04 68 34 63 32; perpignan
The three bronze arms that protrude from its @fuaj.org; allée Marc Pierre; B&B Ź 14.50; hMar mid-Nov)
upper facade represent the electoral classes in Perpignan s HI-affiliated youth hostel, north
medieval Perpignan society  the bourgeoisie of Parc de la PépiniÅre, is a welcoming place
and traders; the merchants, drapers, doctors with a kitchen for self-caterers.
and lawyers; and the gardeners and artisans. Hôtel Avenir (%04 68 34 20 30; 11 rue de l Avenir;
Then of course there was the miserable rest, s/d with shared bathroom from Ź 18/20.50, d with shower
poor and with no voice. Ź 30, with toilet & shower Ź 35) Several rooms have
a small balcony and each is uniquely and
LE CASTILLET charmingly decorated. There s also a delight-
Once a prison, this 14th-century red-brick ful 2nd-floor terrace.
town gate  from which the yellow-and-red Hôtel de La Loge (%04 68 34 41 02; www.hoteldelaloge
striped Roussillon flag always flies  is the .fr; 1 rue des Fabriques Nabot; s Ź 44, d Ź 48-62; a) Disregard
only vestige of military engineer Vauban s for- the gruff owner; the bedrooms are rather more
tified town walls. Beneath the arch there is a pleasant, though their furniture varies from
model of the city as it was in 1686, and on the attractive and antique to flea market. Of the
opposite wall a plaque remembers Languedoc more expensive air-con rooms, 106 and 206
Protestants deported to Catholic Perpignan overlook people-busy place de la Loge.
between 1703 and 1712 during the Camisard Hôtel de France (%04 68 34 92 81; 26 quai Sadi Carnot;
revolt (p94). d Ź 55-140, Dalí suite Ź 200) Orson Welles, Edith Piaf,
Inside is Casa Païral (%04 68 35 42 05; place Antoine de St-Éxupéry and Catalan painter
de Verdun; adult/under 18yr Ź 4/free; h11am-6.30pm Salvador Dalí (p216) were regulars at this
Wed-Mon May-Sep, 10.30am-5.30pm Wed-Mon Oct-Apr), riverside building dating to 1833. The decor
a folklore museum housing bits and pieces is tired (understatement), but if you re keen
of anything and everything Catalan: tra- to experience the same lurid pea-green floral
ditional bonnets, lace mantillas, an entire carpet, unicorn bathroom tiles etc as Dalí, you
17th-century kitchen& can: ask for suite 218.
Le Crocodile Rouge (%06 08 66 44 72, 09 71 29 77 59;
PALAIS DES ROIS DE MAJORQUE lecrocodilerouge@hotmail.com; 14 impasse des Cardeurs; s/d incl
Sitting on a small hill, the Palais des Rois de breakfast Ź 65/75) This three-room B&B at the end of
Majorque (Palace of the Kings of Mallorca; %04 68 34 48 an old-town alley has style. Turn a blind eye to
29; entrance on rue des Archers; adult/student/child Ź 4/2/2; the public areas yet to be renovated and admire
instead the age-old red-brick arch preserved in
h10am-6pm Jun-Sep, 9am-5pm Oct-May) is a symbol
of Perpignan s medieval splendour. The palace the contemporary Japanese-styled courtyard
was built in 1276 for the ruler of the newly garden, or the kitsch plastic red-crocodile car-
founded kingdom and was once surrounded pet coating the steep, narrow staircase.
by extensive fig and olive groves and a hunting Park Hôtel Best Western (%04 68 35 14 14; www
reserve (both lost once Vauban s formidable .parkhotel-fr.com; 18 blvd Jean Bourrat; d from Ź 80; nai)
citadel walls enclosed the palace). Each of this pleasant hotel s rooms is engagingly
furnished; the largest face a park. Well-reputed
CATHÉDRALE ST-JEAN chef Alexander Klimenko cooks up wonders
Topped by a wrought-iron bell cage, Cathédrale in the hotel restaurant, Le Chap (otherwise
St-Jean (place Gambetta; admission free; h7.30am-7pm known as Le Chapon Fin  The Fine Capon).
Tue-Sun, 7.30am-noon & 3-7pm Mon), begun in 1324 Hôtel New Christina (%04 68 35 12 21; www
and completed in 1509, has a facade of red .hotel-newchristina.com; 51 cours Lassus; d Ź 103; as)
brick and smooth, zigzagging river stones. Rooms wear blue and beige, and bathrooms
The cavernous single nave is marked by the sport tub and separate toilet cubicle. Those
fine carving and relative sobriety of its Catalan at the front overlook a public park, and the
altarpiece (closed for restoration until 2010). outdoor pool up on the roof allegedly boasts
For centuries, Perpignan believers have vener- Perpignan s only jacuzzi. Off-season rates are
ated the engagingly naive statue of the Virgin a particular bargain.
R O U S S I L L O N
214 PERPIGNAN & AROUND " " Perpignan lonelyplanet.com
he
19
18
(15km)
0.2 miles
o
300 m
10
To Canet-Plage
Pl de la
27
8
a
R des Grandes
Fabriques
République
Fab
Couverte
Pl de la
ROUSSILLON
20
12
Loge
Pl des Poilus
22
25
0
100 m
JaurÅs
Pl Jean
9
17
Promenade
des Platanes
16
Pl de Verdun
21
des
Fab Nadal
Palais
CongrÅs
2
Pl
Arago
e
6
11
0
0
7
Pl
Peri
Gabriel
Pl DesprÅs
Pl
Gambetta
13
Citadel
Pl de la
26
24
République
Loge
Pl de la
e
28
Verdun
Pl
Jean
JaurÅs
23
Pl de la
Résistance
Pl de
Pont
Joffre
Pl
Arago
3
Pl
Peri
r
See Enlargement
Gabriel
31
4
30
Payra
5
Pl Jean
29
1
Pl de
Catalogne
27
15
Parc
PépiniÅre
14
DRINKING
Républic Café...........................
F4
To Airport (5km)
6
8
24
25
26
10
18
19
20
Train
Station
Tourisme...............................
1
C2
EATING
Al TrÅs.....................................
21
F4
Casa Sansa..............................
22
F3
ENTERTAINMENT
La Galinette..............................
23
D1
Cinéma Castillet.......................
28
D2
La Passerelle..............................
E1
Laurens'O.................................
F4
TRANSPORT
Le Chapon Fin.......................(see 20)
Bus Station...............................
29
C2
Le France...............................(see 10)
CTPM Bus Information Kiosk...
30
C2
Les Antiquaires.........................
E3
Vélostation (Cycle Hire)...........
31
D3
INFORMATION
ComitÅ Départemental du
Espace Palmarium......................
2
E4
Laverie Foch..............................
3
D3
Librairie Chapitre........................
4
C2
Net & Games.............................
5
C2
Tourist Office..............................
F1
SIGHTS & ACTIVITIES
Casa Païral...............................(see 9)
Cathédrale St-Jean.....................
7
E2
Hôtel de Ville..............................
F3
Le Castillet.................................
9
F3
Loge de Mer.............................
F3
Palais de Justice.......................
11
E4
de la
Palais de la Députation............
12
F4
Palais des Rois de Majorque.....
13
E4
SLEEPING
Auberge de Jeunesse................
14
B2
Hôtel Avenir.............................
15
B3
Hôtel de France.......................
16
F3
Hôtel de La Loge.....................
17
F3
Hôtel New Christina..................
F1
Le Crocodile Rouge..................
F3
Park Hotel Best Western...........
F2
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lonelyplanet.com PERPIGNAN & AROUND " " Festivals & Events  Rousillon 215
FESTIVALS & EVENTS  ROUSSILLON
February
Fęte de l Ours (http://feteours.free.fr) Centuries-old Festival of the Bear (see p55); Prats de Molló,

Arles-sur-Tech and elsewhere in the Tech Valley, around 2 February.
March & April
Procession de la Sanch On Good Friday barefoot penitents wearing caperutxa (traditional

hooded robes) parade silently through the old city of Perpignan.
May
FÄ™te de la Cerise and Céret de Bandas A 200-piece brass band opens Céret s famous Cherry

Festival, late May.
June
Fęte de la St-Jean Traditional folk dances and merrymaking mark the summer solstice on

23 June across the region; bonfires are lit in Perpignan and a  sacred flame is brought down
from the Pic du Canigou.
Festival Nature Green activities galore, including thematic walks (birds of prey, mountain

flora etc), kids insect-discovery outings, bird-watching workshops et al, in the region s many
nature reserves (www.catalanes.reserves-naturelles.org), June to September.
July
Les Querencias Two-day music festival with lots of flamenco and staunchly Catalan sounds,

Céret, early July.
Elne Piano Fortissimo (www.elne-piano-fortissimo.fr) Three-day festival showcasing some of the

world s best young pianists in Elne cathedral.
Festival de Sardanes Céret s four-day sardane festival is a prime chance to watch Catalan folk

dance and lap up traditional folk music.
Féria Céret de Toros (www.feriadeceret.com) A running of the bulls opens four days of corridas

(bullflights) and novilladas, folk music, dance and fireworks in Céret.
July & August
Festival International des Arts The old village of St-Cyprien enjoys an abundance of

classical-music concerts during this summertime festival.
Festival International de Musiques et des Arts de la Rue Free theatre, dance, music and

other street entertainment every Thursday evening, Perpignan (also known as Les Jeudis
d Été, or the Thursdays of summer).
Le Babau de Rivesaltes Carnival-like parade headed by a fierce, fanged monster (half dragon,

half iguana) weaves through the streets of Rivesaltes, 1 August.
September
Fęte de la Figue Fig festival, Banyuls-sur-Mer, mid-September.

Marché Médiéval Perpignan pulls on tights and wimples for the city s Medieval Market.

Musique en Catalogne Romane (www.musiquecatalogneromane.fr) Month-long music concert

bringing chamber-music concerts to and around Perpignan.
October
FÄ™te du Vin A barrel of the year s new wine is borne to Cathédrale St-Jean, Perpignan, to be

blessed at this wine festival, third weekend of the month.
R O U S S I L L O N
216 PERPIGNAN & AROUND " " Perpignan lonelyplanet.com
The attractive marine decor hints at the riches
Eating
within the kitchen: La Passerelle is the restau-
The old town is a warren of eating opportuni-
rant in Perpignan for Mediterranean fish, fresh
ties: stroll, get lost and follow your nose.
and without a hint of freezer or fish farm.
Laurens O (%04 68 34 66 66; 5 place des Poilus; mains
Al TrÅs (%04 68 34 88 39; 3 rue de la Poissonnerie;
Ź 16-20; hlunch & dinner Tue-Sat) This modern locale
2-course lunch menu Ź 13, mains Ź 20-26; hlunch & dinner
with striped tablecloths and orange and black
Tue-Sun) At this stylish place with roughly plas-
decor offers innovative Mediterranean cook-
tered oxblood walls and vast, carved wooden
ing. Its distinctly Italian flavour is garnished
bar that could double as an altar, you ll ap-
with a creative French twist and the odd spot
preciate the freshness of the ingredients and
of Thai.
innovative cuisine.
Casa Sansa (%04 68 34 21 84; http://casa-sansa.fr;
La Galinette (%04 68 35 00 90; 23 rue Jean Payra;
entrances 2 rue Fabrique Nadal & rue Fabrique Couverte; menus
lunch menu Ź 17, mains Ź 28-30; hlunch & dinner Tue-Sat) In
Ź 19-29, mains Ź 16-23; hlunch & dinner) Here s another
an elegant setting La Galinette serves refined
highly popular spot  or rather two places
cuisine, delicately confectioned desserts and
stuck together. Choose the older, more south-
an ample selection of regional wines. For a
erly one, its walls dating to 1816, scarcely vis-
frisson of the unexpected, go for the menu
ible beneath photos of the famous who have
confiance fish menu (Ź 50) and let the chef
savoured its fine Catalan cuisine.
select the best the sea washes up that day.
Le France (%04 68 51 61 71; 1 place de la Loge; pizzas
Ź 10-15, pasta Ź 17, starters/mains Ź 10/25; h10am-11pm)
SELF-CATERING
This people-busy venue awash with fami-
A morning fruit and vegetable market (hTue-
lies, couples etc harmoniously inserts the
Sun) fills place de la République; Saturday is
ultramodern within the historical setting of
organic day.
Perpignan s old stock exchange. Tapas and
Short rue Paratilla is dubbed rue des Épices
pizza rule the culinary roost.
(Spice St) for its shops selling dried fruit,
Les Antiquaires (%04 68 34 06 58; place DesprÅs;
herbs, jams, hams, cheeses and more. Epicerie
menus Ź 24-43, mains Ź 16-25; hlunch & dinner Tue-Sat,
Sala (hTue-Sat & morning Sun), run by the same
lunch Sun) Cuisine is as traditional, reliable and
family at No 1 since 1913, is famed.
mature as the clientele and splendid line of
vintage bottles above the fireplace. Portions,
from the 50g pack of butter placed before you Drinking
to the three huge dollops of chocolate mousse Most cafés are as hot for sinking sundown-
for dessert, are mightily generous. ers and cocktails come dark as they are for
La Passerelle (%04 68 51 30 65; 1 cours Palmarole; menus breakfast or morning coffee; those on place
Ź 30-60, mains Ź 19-24; hlunch & dinner Tue-Sat, dinner Mon) Arago get jam-packed.
DALÍ S TRAIN OF THOUGHT
You may choose to dissent from Salvador Dalí s no-doubt chemically induced claim that
Perpignan train station (opposite)  a building the Catalan surrealist painter (1904 89) subse-
quently immortalized on canvas  is the centre of the universe. Dalí was visiting the capital of
French Catalonia in 1965, so the story goes, when he experienced an epiphany.  Suddenly before
me, everything appeared with the clarity of lightning, he wrote.  I found myself in the centre of
the universe. Dalí went on to describe this nondescript place as  la source d illuminations and
 la cathédrale d intuitions  no doubt putting a smile on the faces of local tourism authorities
and most Perpignanais.
Dalí was a frequent visitor to Perpignan between 1950 and 1972. His chosen abode was Hôtel
de France (p213) where, as the owner proudly explains, the artist would arrive from Spain laden
with unsigned canvases. In the sanctuary of the hotel drawing room, free from the greedy tax-
levying eyes of customs officials, he signed his paintings before shipping them onwards with the
SNCF. B&W photos in the hotel lobby show the eccentric artist with signature handlebar moustache
lounging in the brown leather chair  still there  he always sat in. He slept in suite 218.
Dedicated Dalí fans note: the Dalí Theatre Museum (Teatra-Museu Dalí; www.salvador-dali.org) and
jewel gallery (Dalí Joies) in Figueras, Spain, is an easy-peasy 60km drive from Perpignan.
ROUSSILLON
lonelyplanet.com PERPIGNAN & AROUND " " Perpignan 217
CAR & MOTORCYCLE
ORGANIC SHOP, DRINK, EAT, SLEEP Car-rental agencies at the airport:
Avis (%04 68 61 58 97)
Organic farming is a growing movement in
Budget (%04 68 56 95 95)
green Roussillon. Track down bio (organic)
viticulturists, cheese makers, fruit and veg-
TRAIN
etable farms, olive oils, restaurants, shops
From Perpignan train station (blvd du Conflent),
and even B&Bs on organic farms with Bio
trains cross the Pyrenees to Barcelona (Ź 34
66 (www.bio66.com).
direct, twice daily; Ź 18 changing at CerbÅre,
at least three daily). There are also frequent
services to Montpellier (Ź 21.60, 1¾ hours)
Républic Café (%04 68 51 11 64; 2 place de la
via Narbonne (Ź 9.90, 45 minutes) and Béziers
République; 8-2am Tue-Sat, 8am-2pm Sun) Its terrace
(Ź 13.10, one hour). For Carcassonne (Ź 17.20,
on place de la République is the first to fill.
1½ hours), change in Narbonne. Up to nine
But it is the wacky Gaudí-inspired interior, all
TGVs daily run to Paris Gare de Lyon (Ź 105,
sinuous shapes and white ceramic fragments,
five hours).
that really thrills. The bar, built from typical
Closer to home is CerbÅre (Ź 7.20, 40 min-
red brick, is easy to spot: its sun-faded wooden
utes, around 15 daily) via Collioure (Ź 5), Port
shutters are painted a heavenly kitsch violet.
Vendres (Ź 5.50) and Banyuls (Ź 6.30).
Entertainment
Getting Around
The tourist office publishes the free monthly
TO/FROM THE AIRPORT
L Agenda guide to exhibitions and cultural
Navettes Aéroport (airport shuttles; %04 68 55 68 00;
events. Monthly So Aware and Le Bizz, out
adult/student Ź 4.50/3) runs to/from the airport and
every two months, are tap-ins to the club
town, stopping at the train station and run-
scene and nightlife  tame in town but sizzling
ning via place Catalogne and the bus station.
hot on the coast in trendy Torreilles (p219).
Timetables coincide with arrivals/departures;
Cinéma Castillet (%08 92 68 01 29; 1 blvd Wilson)
journey time is 15 minutes.
This magnificent movie palace (1911) with
exuberant neobaroque facade and lateral walls
BICYCLE
punctuated with Art Nouveau stained glass
Rent wheels from Vélostation (%04 68 35 45 82;
and sculptured ceramic is a sight to behold.
rue du Docteur Zamenhof; Ź 1.50/3 per half-/full day; h24hr),
on the 1st floor beneath street level of Parking
Getting There & Away
Arago. Bring your passport.
AIR
Send an SMS to %41230 or connect to
Aéroport International Perpignan Rivesaltes
wap.bip-perpignan.fr and get a user code on
(%04 68 52 60 70) is 5km northwest of town
the spot, valid for seven days, for the city s
in Rivesaltes.
self-service bike-rental scheme BIP! (%0800
200 307; www.bip-perpignan.fr; formule liberté first hr Ź 1,
BUS
then Ź 2/hr). Some 150 bikes are stationed at 15
From the bus station (%04 68 35 29 02; av du Général
Leclerc), Les Courriers Catalans (%04 68 55 68 00) serv- points in town.
ices the Côte Vermeille via Elne (20 minutes)
and ArgelÅs-sur-Mer (35 to 40 minutes), run- BUS
Get schedules and tickets (single/return
ning at least seven buses Monday to Saturday
(three Sunday) to/from Collioure (50 min- Ź 1.10/2, one-day pass/10-ticket carnet
utes), Port Vendres (one hour), Banyuls-sur- Ź 4.10/7.80) for city buses at CTPM (%04 68 61 01
13; 27 blvd Clemenceau; h7.30am-12.30pm & 1.30-6.30pm
Mer (1ź hours) and CerbÅre (1¾ hours). For
Mon-Fri, 9am-noon & 2.30-5pm Sat).
current timetables and fares, surf www.cg66.fr
Covered in cheerful polka dots, Le P tit
(in French) and follow the  transports links.
Bus is a free hop-on, hop-off minibus that
Of the eight daily buses along the Tęt Valley
plies a circular route around town; buses 1
to Prades (one hour) and Villefranche (1ź
and 2 serve the train station.
hours), four continue to Vernet-les-Bains
(1½ hours).
Frequent buses run up the Tech Valley to TAXI
Céret (50 minutes). Ring Accueil Perpignan Taxis (%04 68 35 15 15).
R O U S S I L L O N
218 PERPIGNAN & AROUND " " Étang de Canet et de St-Nazaire lonelyplanet.com
and gold-stone affair with twin-belled turret
ÉTANG DE CANET ET DE ST-NAZAIRE
and soulful classical-music concerts (p215).
Some 10km east of Perpignan lounges this
St-Cyprien Plage (spot the brightly painted
lake, whose abundant bird life can be discov-
water tower neon-lit at night!), 3km east, is a
ered along a 2km walking trail that passes re-
family resort with its bouncy trampolines and
constructed fishermen s huts at the Village des
funfair amusements on and around the sand.
Pecheurs (%04 68 52 36 78; admission free; h9.30am-
Boats bob in the marina and holiday homes
12.30pm & 2.30-5.30pm daily Jun-Sep). Hire binocu-
squat on the quays at the port, where fisher-
lars and buy tickets for two-hour guided tours
men sell their catch at 8am. The Compagne
(adult/under 7yr Ź 3/free; h10am Tue & Thu) in the first
Maritime Roussillon CroisiÅres (%04 68 21 44 91; www
hut. Other huts are used to store fishermen s
.roussillon-croisieres.com; quai Arthur Rimbaud) runs boat
funnel nets.
trips along the coast to the Côte Vermeille
Opposite, there s not a tourist kiosk in sight 
(p221), but what really rocks are its DJ-fuelled
just loads of kites pirouetting in the sky  on
boat parties (per person Ź 15-50; www.myspace.com/boat
the beautiful sandy beach that sits on the other
parties2008; h7pm-5am Sat Jul mid-Sep).
side of the D81A. Dunes and a cycling path
The Tourist Office (%04 68 21 01 33; www.tourisme
protect it from the road and winds rip across
-saint-cyprien.com; quai Arthur Rimbaud; h9am-8pm daily
it most days, making it a local kite- and wind-
Jul & Aug, 9am-noon & 2-6pm Mon-Sat, 10.30am-noon & 3-
surfing mecca. Camping Mar Estang (%04 68 80
5pm Sun Oct-Apr, 9am-noon & 2-6pm daily Jun & Sep) is at
35 53; www.marestang.com; rte de St-Cyprien; 2 adults, tent
the port end of the prom.
& car low/high season Ź 16/32; hApr mid-Sep) is handy
Quai Arthur Rimbaud is lined with eat-
for those keen to pitch up here.
ing options, including contemporary Bonafice
Avoid Canet Plage, Perpignan s nearest
Coquillage (%04 68 82 57 62; quai Arthur Rimbaud;
beach resort on the lake s northern shore,
which serves seafood
if you don t like concrete blocks or putrid- hlunch & dinner daily),
platters sourced locally to eat in at bar stools
coloured ice cream. Brash, loud and hot with
or to take away.
sweet kiosks, knock-off designer clothes shops
In St-Cyprien village La Cabana (%04 68 37
and fast-food outlets, its only redeeming fea-
01 14; www.lacabana.fr; 37 av du Roussillon; starters Ź 8-10,
ture is its long, wide, sandy beach and an
mains Ź 13-18; hdinner daily), near the art museum,
aquarium that younger children might like.
is the spot to eat grilled fish, swill sangria,
The Tourist Office (%04 68 86 72 00; www.ot-canet.fr;
munch tapas and jive to live bands.
place Méditerranée; h9am-7pm daily Jun-Sep, 9am-noon &
2-6pm Mon-Sat, 10am-noon & 3-5pm Sun Oct-May), just off
ELNE
the busy seafront, has all the bumf.
Some 3km west of St-Cyprien village is this
Inland snoozes Canet-en-Roussillon, a vil-
7th-century bishopric, capital of Roussillon
lage with fenced-off chateau ruins and a red-
from 568 until 1602, when ecclesiastical
brick church with turreted clock tower and
power shifted to Perpignan. Once fortified,
peaceful garden. Restaurant Vigatane (%04
its 12th-century walls were dismantled under
68 73 16 30; 2 rue des Remparts; starters/mains Ź 13/25;
Louis XIV in 1672, rendering the village
hdinner Mon-Sat, lunch & dinner Sun), next to the
the harmoniously quiet place it is today. In
ruins, is a busy year-round venue with its
July and August sardanes (p39) spill across
decking terrace, interior strung with garlic,
its squares.
and tasty Catalan kitchen. (A vigatane is a
Three itineraries guide visitors along the
Catalan espadrille.)
medieval ramparts, past Aristide Maillol s
ST-CYPRIEN moving sculpture of Pomona (the Roman
This inland village, 20km southeast of goddess of fruit) on the Monument aux Morts,
Perpignan, is peaceful. Its flowery place de la to the Cathédrale Ste-Eulalie et Ste-Julie (place de
République hosts a rainbow of sun-bleached la Cathédrale), consecrated in 1069. Its 12th- to
wooden shutters and the Centre d Art Moderne 14th-century blue-veined marble cloître (cloister;
(%04 68 21 06 96; www.collectionsdesaintcyprien.com;
%04 68 22 70 90; adult/12-18yr Ź 5/2; h9.30am-6.45pm
place de la République; adult/12-18yr/under 18yr Ź 6/4/free, Jun-Sep, 9.30am-noon & 2-4.45pm Nov-Mar, 9.30am-5.45pm
audioguide Ź 2; h10am-noon & 3-7pm daily Jul & Aug), Apr-May & Oct) is among Roussillon s finest ex-
tucked beneath a pergola of lilac blossoms in amples of Romanesque and Gothic sculpture.
one corner. Afterwards, meander to Église de Admission includes entry to the art museum
St-Cyprien (place de l Église), a striking red-brick opposite, Musée Terrus (3 rue Porte Balaguer; adult/
ROUSSILLON
Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels PERPIGNAN & AROUND " " Les Aspres 219
INSIDE INFORMATION
If you want to know le people places to eat, drink and party, head straight for the golden sands
of Torreilles Plage, Perpignan s hottest address, 20km east of the city. Top dog is Plage Sud s
Zaza Club (%04 68 59 21 45; starters/mains Ź 8-12/11-22; h11am-2am mid-Jun mid-Sep), which, with
its retro 1950s-style lighting and St-Tropezian sofas on the sand, is the place to dine n drink
with the local jet set and bourgeoisie. Reservations are essential at weekends and it doesn t
take credit cards. Entering Torreilles Plage, cross the roundabout and almost immediately turn
right at the minigolf and follow the road  700m surfaced, 1.3km dirt track through La RibÅre
nature reserve  to the sand.
A short walk north is Plage Centrale s La Baraquette (%04 68 28 25 27; starters/mains Ź 8-12/25), a
hip  driftwood dining venue that serves chilled wine in trendy  plastic bag coolers and fabulous
seafood spiced with a generous creative twist. Parillade royale (a platter of different grilled fish)
is the dish to order. Again, cash only.
To sleep nearby, consider a mobile home or tent pitch at one of the many camp sites in Torreilles
Plage, such as beachside Cap-sur-les-Dunes (%04 68 28 38 29; www.lesdunes.net; 2 adults, tent & car
Ź 14.50-29; ps); or splurge at La Vieille Demeure (%04 68 28 45 71; www.la-vieille-demeure.com;
4 rue de Llobet; d Ź 75-180; hEaster-Oct), a heavenly B&B in Torreilles village with an interior-courtyard
citrus garden quite intoxicating in scent.
town, is known for byrrh, a sweet red-wine and
12-18yr Ź 2.50/1.20; h9.30am-7pm Jun-Sep, 9.30am-noon
quinine-water mix that originated as a medici-
& 2-5pm Nov-Mar, to 6pm Apr-May & Oct), where works
nal drink and now serves as an aperitif.
by local painter Étienne Terrus (1857 1922)
Tasting completes cellar tours at Caves Byrrh
and his Fauvist mates hang.
(%04 68 53 05 42; www.byrrh.com; 6 blvd Violet; adult/under
The Tourist Office (%04 68 22 05 07; www.ot-elne
18yr Ź 2/free; h10-11.45am & 2-6.45pm Jul & Aug, 9-11.45am
.fr; place St-Jordi; h9am-7pm Mon-Fri, 9am-noon & 2-6pm
& 2.30-5.45pm Apr-Jun, Sep & Oct, 10.45am-3.30pm Tue-Sun
Sat & Sun Jul & Aug, 9.30am-noon & 2-5pm Mon-Fri Sep-May
Nov-Mar), opposite the Tourist Office (%04 68
plus 9.30am-noon Sat Jun & Sep) has information on
53 45 86; blvd Violet; h10am-noon & 3-7pm Mon-Sat,
guided tours and the summer piano festival
3-6pm Sun). Taste local wine over very well-
(p215) that fills the cathedral to bursting.
cooked cuisine at busy bistro La Casa DaLie (%04
68 53 03 92; www.casa-dalie.fr; 21 blvd de la République; menus
Sleeping & Eating
Ź 21-43; hlunch & dinner Thu-Tue).
Au Remp Arts (%04 68 22 31 95; www.remparts.fr; 3-5
place Colonel Roger; d Ź 60/75) Free wi-fi. This cham- For the full monty, motor 2km south to Ste-
Colombe de la Commanderie (population 550), a
bre d hôte, one of several in Elne, is known
bijou village of golden stone surrounded by
as much for its table d hôte (menus Ź 18 to
vines. Delve into viticulture traditions prac-
Ź 29)  think restaurant rather than someone s
home  as for its comfortable rooms overlook- tised by four generations of winemakers at
the Domaine des Trois Colombes in its small eco-
ing a quiet square. French speakers won t be
musée (place de la Majorque; admission free; h9am-1pm
able to resist ordering un pipi d ange (we won t
& 3-6pm May-Oct, 10am-noon & 2-5pm Oct-Apr). In the
translate it!) as an aperitif.
village, Peu del Causse (%04 68 53 42 47; 6 Carrer del
Hôtel Cara-Sol (%04 68 22 10 42; www.hotel-carasol
Canigo; s/d/tr/q incl breakfast Ź 58/68/83/98; hFeb-Oct) is
.com; 10 blvd Illibéris; d Ź 85-100; a) Free wi-fi. Elne s
a beautiful five-room chambre d hôte with
only hotel, part of the quality-guaranteed
an idyllic secret garden slumbering behind
Logis de France umbrella, is a picture-postcard
stone walls.
maison de village with a sweeping panorama
Yet more vineyards picturesquely unfold
from some rooms and its atmospheric terrace
around Castelnou (population 330), a chateau-
across the quiet street.
capped pile of golden-stone houses, flower-
LES ASPRES laced porches, cobbled lanes and summer
Inland from Perpignan, cork and fruit trees, craft markets, 6km west of Thuir. Munch
scrubby garrigue and vines signal the lower spiced gingerbread warm from the oven at
reaches of the Massif du Canigou known as honey makers Les Delices Ä… la Ruche (%04 68 54
Les Aspres. Thuir (population 7430), its main 43 81; place au Village); visit the medieval chateau
R O U S S I L L O N
220 NORTH TO CAP LEUCATE lonelyplanet.com
HIGH-FLYER JOHN PENDRY
With two world-champion titles under his belt and a growing family under his wing, John Pendry
stopped flying competitively in 1999  although just how firmly his feet have been planted on
the ground since is another matter altogether. As a mad-passionate, extraordinarily talented
paraglider turned kite-surfer living a whisker away from one of the world s windiest spots, he
can, should he want to, fly sky-high most days of the year.
 In La Franqui there are 250 days of the year with wind of at least force 4  the minimum required
for windsurfing. And for kite-surfing you can get on the water with just force 2 or 3& , explained the
British ex-champ, who runs the Adreneline kite-surfing and windsurfing school in La Franqui with his
French wife, Dominique. When they met he was hang-gliding world champion (1985) and paragliding
world champion (1997); she was the physiotherapist for the French hang-gliding team.
John grew up near Brighton, later lived on the Isle of Wight and has called this windy wedge
of Roussillon home since 1994. Coincidentally, Dominique hails from near here, but what clinched
it for the dynamic couple was the Mondial du Vent (www.mondial-du-vent.com).
 It s a huge event, it attracts 120,000 people or so and really puts the place on the map, said
John about France s biggest kite-surfing competition. Held over nine days in April, the prestigious
competition dots La Franqui s sky with wind-whipped kites masterly kept in check by the world s
best surfers. It is one of the few competitions to combine kite-surfing and windsurfing.
So what else makes La Franqui so great, and which wind is best?  It s a village with a huge
beach, relatively undeveloped, and with more wind than anywhere else in the world. The Marin
is smoother and the Tramontana gustier, too gusty for many people, but living here you soon
get used to it, said La Franqui s highest flyer with mischievous glee.
Miserably, part of the camp remains a deten-
(%04 68 53 22 91; http://chateau.castelnou.chez-alice.fr;
adult/10-18yr Ź 4.50/3.20; h10am-7pm Jul & Aug, 11am- tion centre for illegal immigrants.
Some 5km further north looms the impos-
5pm or 6pm rest of yr); lunch on grilled snails and
ing 15th-century Forteresse de Salses (%04 68 38
unparalleled vistas at L Hostal (%04 68 53 45 42;
60 13; adult/under 18yr Ź 6.50/free; h9.30am-7pm Jun-Sep,
www.restaurant-roussillon.com; 13 Carrer Na Patora; menus
10am-12.15pm & 2-5pm Oct-May); contemporary art
Ź 23-49.50; hlunch & dinner Tue-Sun Apr-Aug, reservations
installations represent war.
required Sep-Mar); and sleep beneath a fig tree
Substantially sweeter is the syrupy Muscat
at chambre d hôte Le Figuera (%04 68 53 18 42;
that comes from vineyards around Rivesaltes
www.la-figuera.com; 3 Carrer de la Font d Avall; s/d/tr incl
(population 8500), 10km north of Perpignan.
breakfast Ź 70/80/105).
A generous sprinkling of cellars on av Ledru
Rollin near the Tourist Office (%04 68 64 04 04;
NORTH TO CAP LEUCATE h10am-noon & 3-7pm Mon-Sat) offers tastings, and
Domaine Cazes (%04 68 64 08 26; 4 rue Francisco Ferrer;
Clear the built-up maze of dual carriageway www.cazes-rivesaltes.com; hcellar 8am-noon & 2-6.30pm
and motorway that spaghettis around the Mon-Sat, lunch Jul & Aug) is a great spot to taste
airport north of Perpignan and you might organic wine over a tapas lunch platter (Ź 25
just spot a vineyard& or a sign pointing to to Ź 38 including wine). Start with an amber-
the forthcoming memorial museum (open- coloured AOC Rivesaltes Ambré as aperitif.
ing 2010) by Ä… la mode French architect Rudy Afterwards, flop on the only stretch of nat-
Ricciotti at Camp de Rivesaltes, northwest of ural beach at Torreilles Plage (p219), 15km east
exit 41 on the A9. Between 1939 and 1970 in the heart of nature reserve La RibÅre.
some 80,000 people passed through the in- Come dusk the edgiest spot on the coast
ternment camp  Spanish refugees fleeing bristles with business: on the northern
the Franco dictatorship in 1940, Jews en shore of the Étang de Leucate, a lagoon strad-
route to Auschwitz during WWII, German dling Roussillon and neighbouring Aude
soldiers and other prisoners of war in 1945, in Languedoc, is the Centre Conchylicole , a
and thousands of Algerians seeking refuge shanty town of 40 mas (fishermen shacks
from their war-torn country in the 1960s, the with corrugated-iron roofs) where shellfish
last of whom did not leave until the 1970s. producers sell their wares fresh from Cap
ROUSSILLON
lonelyplanet.com CÔTE VERMEILLE " " Collioure 221
Leucate  myriad oysters, mussels, clams, dynamite in the 19th century, is stunning.
sea urchins, pearly-pink tellines and other For cyclists and motorists there is the coastal
shellfish savouring their final moments in corniche (D914) or the nail-biting high road
racks of bubbling sea water. Rive gauche huts (p223) that careers mercilessly up to the me-
have plastic tables in the evening sun; those dieval Tour Madeloc (652m), one of many
on the right bank have seating inside. Count warning towers built in the Catalonian hills
on Ź 0.80/4.60 for a glass/bottle of local dry in the 13th century. Views  if you dare take
Muscat, Ź 2.50 for six oysters and Ź 13.20 for your eye off the road  are explosive.
a 36-piece mixed platter served on a poly- Buses to/from Perpignan (p217) serve the
styrene plate. Most open 8.30am to 1pm and length of the coast, and trains stop in Banyuls-
4pm to 8pm daily. sur-Mer and CerbÅre, the changing point for
To hit one of France s windiest coastal spots, trains to Spain.
continue a couple of kilometres north along the
D627 and turn east along the D42 to La Franqui, COLLIOURE
pop 2750
an unspoilt hamlet with a vast sandy beach, a
Swamped in summer and dead in winter,
big cliff and mountains of space to sail and
Collioure lost its traditional village life years
surf. The char Ä… voile (sand yacht) beach-sailing
ago, but none of its natural charm. With
school (http://cercledevoile.free.fr in French) is wedged
its pink-domed church tower, this old fish-
on the sea next to Camping des Coussoules (%04
68 45 74 93; chemin des Coussoules; 2 adults, tent & car Ź 8.30- ing village, where boats bob against houses
washed in soft pastel colours, is Languedoc-
15.50; h8am-9pm mid-May mid-Sep); and Adreneline
Roussillon s St-Tropez. It found fame in the
(%04 68 45 74 60; www.adrenaline-kitesurf.com; 19 av de la
early 20th century when Fauvist artists Henri
Méditerranée; per 3/6/18hr incl equipment Ź 140/250/590) is
Matisse and André Derain, and later Picasso
among the country s best kite-surfing schools.
and Braque, came here, drawn by its seductive
Along the prom, the Tourist Office (%04 68 40 91
landscape and matchless light.
31) can tell you about some wild walks on the
An artistic reputation of sorts remains: over
windswept cape and its lagoons.
30 galleries and workshops are packed into the
old fishing quarter known as Le Moré and a
generous dose of street artists paint tourist
CÔTE VERMEILLE
portraits on the quays. Dining is touristy 
Overwhelmingly picturesque and reasonably plenty of sausage and pommes frites  but
quiet compared to hot spots elsewhere on the the age-old Collioure culinary products of
Med, the Vermilion Coast is a gem. Stretching wine and anchovies (p222) remain first-class.
from Collioure to CerbÅre on the Spanish Lunch done, a get-away-from-it-all coastal
border, it lurches perilously around rocky path (p222) beckons.
coves and small ports against a backdrop of
pea-green vineyards and Pyrenees foothills Information
diving into the sea. Tourist Office (%04 68 82 15 47; place du 18 Juin; www
Strolling along its coastal path on a sunny .collioure.com; h9am-8pm Mon-Sat, 10am-6pm Sun Jul &
day is uplifting: the chunk from the Cap Béar Aug, 9am-noon & 2-7pm Mon-Sat Apr-Jun & Sep, 9am-noon
lighthouse to Paulilles, where women made & 2-6pm Mon-Sat Oct-Mar)
THE FAUVISM TRAIL
 No sky in all France is bluer than that of Collioure. I only have to close the shutters of my
room and there before me are all the colours of the Mediterranean. So effused Henri Matisse
(1869 1954), doyen of les Fauves (the Wild Animals), who worked with pure colour, filling their
canvases with firm lines and stripes, rectangles and bright splashes.
The Chemin du Fauvisme (Fauvism Trail) is a walking trail around Collioure that takes you by
20 reproductions of works that Matisse and his younger colleague André Derain painted in 1905;
in August of that year Derain left, but Matisse remained for a further 12-odd years. Buy the French-
language guide booklet (Ź 5.50) from the tourist office and DIY or sign up for a 1½-hour guided
tour at the Espace Fauve (%04 68 98 07 16; www.collioure.net; quai de l Amirauté; adult/child Ź 6/5).
R O U S S I L L O N
222 CÔTE VERMEILLE " " Collioure Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels
impressionist Ukrainian painter who per-
Sights & Activities
suaded the town to create the museum in
Across the creek is Château Royal (%04 68 82
1934. Its garden is perfect for picnicking,
06 43; adult/child Ź 4/2; h10am-5.15pm Jun-Sep, 9am-
as is the olive grove that staggers uphill be-
4.15pm Oct-May), a waterfront fortress built
hind it to the Moulin de la Cortina (admission free;
between 1276 and 1344 as the summer resi-
dence of the kings of Mallorca. In the 17th h10am-12.30pm Wed & Sun Apr-Sep). The restored
14th-century windmill is used in December
century Vauban added its towering defen-
to grind some of the black olives harvested
sive walls and rebuilt the 14th-century Fort
from the village s 1500 olive trees; 8kg are
Miradou (closed).
needed for 1L of oil.
At the northern end of the harbour, the
Paths run in both directions along the
medieval belfry of Église Notre Dame des Anges
coast; the westbound one was closed in 2008.
(h9am-noon & 2-6pm) once doubled as a light-
Yellow markers flag the eastbound Sentier de
house, although its pink dome  the signature
la Mauresque that twists past craggy coves to
feature of Collioure s skyline (view it from six
Port Vendres (2.5km). Pick it up 500m east
gold picture frames dotted around the bay) 
of the village on the D14 next to the Centre
wasn t added until 1810. A stone walkway
Air Mer Soleil bus stop.
links the church with tiny Chapelle St-Vincent
Collioure s bijou beaches suit all tastes:
(1701), dedicated to the town s patron saint,
sandy Plage du Boutigue with its kid-friendly
celebrated each year on 17 August.
shallows in the bay; pebbly, café-fronted Plage
Away from the busy waterfront, dip into
Boromar opposite the old town; and shingly
local viticulture at Le Dominicain (%04 68 82 05
Plage St-Vincent between Église Notre Dame
63; www.dominicain.com; place Orphila; h8am-noon &
des Anges and Chapelle St-Vincent. CIP
1.30-7pm Mon-Fri, 9am-noon & 3-7pm Sat, 10am-noon &
Collioure (%04 68 82 07 16; www.cip-collioure.com; rue de
3-7pm Sun, shorter hr Mon-Sat off season), the place
la Tour d Auvergne), across from Plage du Boutigue,
to taste and buy wine by 160 local vign-
organises snorkelling and diving.
erons. Twice-weekly guided tours (Ź 1) shed
light on the building s history  the 13th-
Sleeping
century church of a Dominican convent
Accommodation is seasonal, most places
until the Revolution and subsequently an
opening April to November.
artillery depot.
Ermitage Notre Dame de Consolation (%04 68 82 17
Uphill, the Musée d Art Moderne (%04 68 82
66; http://ermitage.consolation.free.fr; rte de Tour de Madeloc;
10 19; rte de Port Vendres; adult/12-18yr Ź 2/1.50; h10am-
d with shared/private bathroom Ź 45/55; hApr-Oct) Out of
noon & 2-6pm Jun-Sep, closed Tue Oct-May) showcases a
town on the high road (opposite), this leafy
small collection of 20th-century and contem-
stone property with centuries of history and
porary canvases, including some Collioure
a 13th-century chapel is a gem. Its 10 rooms
scenes by Jean Peské (1870 1949), the post-
SOMETHING FISHY
No Catalan kitchen cupboard is complete without a jar of Collioure anchovies. Canned, bottled,
fresh, pickled, creamed, salted or marinated in oil, these tiny blue fish are something special. Their
flesh is so delicate they can t be processed mechanically. So, even today, women still skilfully
process anchovies by hand. First, these anchoieuses rub the anchovies with salt to maintain their
sheen. Then, once the fish are degutted, they arrange them layer by layer like bicycle spokes,
and sprinkle on mountains more salt, in plastic barrels. The barrels are then topped by a heavy
stone so the fish font le sang (literally  bleed , losing a lot of their liquid). After three months,
each fillet is rinsed, dried on absorbent paper, then marinated in oil. Then, after another brief
saline bath, they re packed into cans or jars.
Only two of some 30 salting plants remain. At the atelier (workshop) turned eco-musée (eco-
museum) of Anchois Desclaux (%04 68 82 05 25; www.anchoisdesclaux.com; 3 rte d ArgelÅs; h9am-
noon & 2-7pm), taste, buy, watch a 15-minute video and gawk at the deft way the anchoieuses
work. Nearby, Anchois Roque (%04 68 82 04 99; www.anchois-roque.com; 17 rte d ArgelÅs; h8am-
noon & 2-6.30pm) invites the curious to watch, sample and buy: Alphonse Roque started out as a
tonnelier-saleur (wet cooper and salter) in Collioure five generations back, in 1870.
ROUSSILLON
Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels CÔTE VERMEILLE " " Por t Vendres 223
THE HIGH ROAD
One of Languedoc-Roussillon s most dramatic drives, the D86 links Collioure and Port Vendres
with Banyuls-sur-Mer (18km and 16km respectively). Either approach  the roads from Collioure
and Port Vendres meet on the Col de Molló (231m), just east of the medieval Tour Madeloc
(652m)  is unforgettable, and it only gets better as the road, scarcely more than a single-lane
track with the odd bay for cars to pass, climbs above vineyards, almond and fig groves, through
scrub and past bare schist outcrops, to a top-of-the-world position way above the coastline. To
see the gravity-defying drystone walls of the much-applauded Banyuls vineyards from a seagull s
perspective, follow this road.
The D86 is well signposted and easy to pick up from the southern end of Collioure. In Port
Vendres, head 500m south out of the village along the D914 and immediately after the Cave
Tambour wine-producer s booth  easily spotted with its metres-high green wine bottle (don t
call by; you ll need to keep your faculties sharp!)  turn right at a sharp bend onto the single-
track D86, simply signed Madeloc and Circuit du Vignoble. In Banyuls-sur-Mer, head inland from
the Hôtel de Ville roundabout on the seafront along av du Général de Gaulle and follow the
Tour de Madeloc signs.
are faintly monastic but comfortable; walks
Eating
through vines and olive groves abound; and
Eating opportunities jostle for space in the
anyone can picnic (Ź 1 per person) in the her-
old-town maze and the length of blvd du
mitage s cool, shady courtyard or lunch lightly
Boramar, where a fishy lunch menu costs Ź 15
in its alfresco café. The open-air music concerts
to Ź 20. A market fills the quays Wednesday
it hosts on Thursdays in summer are fabulous.
and Sunday morning; and La Cuisine (rue de la Tour
Find it amid trees, 2.5km from Collioure; the
d Auvergne; prepared dishes Ź 12-28/kg), tucked down
last 800m off the D86 is a dirt track.
the lane opposite the round stone tower in the
Hôtel Les Caranques (%04 68 82 06 68; www.les
bay, cooks up fantastic homemade dishes 
-caranques.com; rte de Port Vendres; d with sink Ź 45, with
everything from fresh squid to lamb tagine 
bathroom Ź 71-80; hApr mid-Oct) Perfectly set across
to take away. Luxury picnic fodder!
the bay with chateau views, the outlook of this
La Voile de Neptune (%04 68 82 02 27; www.lenep
20-room hotel, a 600m walk uphill from the
tune-collioure.com; rte de Port Vendres; starters/mains Ź 10/25;
village, is splendid. Every room has sea-facing
hFeb-Nov) Tuck into tasty salads (Ź 13) and
balcony, furnishings are simple but stylish, and
enjoy a perfect chateau view at Neptune s
there are plenty of tree-shaded areas to lap up
Sail, the affordable arm of chef Jean-Claude
the swoon-worthy views. Unfortunately, the
Mourlane s adjoining Michelin-starred res-
couple who ve run Les Caranques since 1960
taurant, Le Neptune (menus Ź 38 and Ź 54).
are retiring, meaning change is in the air.
Look for the sails fluttering in the bay.
Le Relais des Trois Mas (%04 68 82 05 07; www.relais
destroismas.com; rte de Port Vendres; d Ź 160-290; hFeb-Nov;
Getting Around
This four-star choice shares the
psai) April to November, an electric tourist train
same gorgeous view as its more affordable
(%06 15 15 66 04; adult/under 12yr Ź 6.50/4.50) yo-yoes
neighbour. Think a collection of traditional
between Collioure and Port Vendres, and
painted cottages squatting between rocks and
boat shuttles (%06 84 37 47 44; adult/child Ź 8/5) run
terraced garden  a viewpoint Scottish archi-
to/from ArgelÅs-sur-Mer.
tect and designer Charles Rennie Mackintosh,
Trem Bike (%04 68 82 59 77; 5 rue de la Tour
among others, caught on canvas. Menus at the
d Auvergne; h8.30am-12.30pm & 1.30-6 or 7pm) rents
hotel s restaurant are Ź 37, Ź 57 and Ź 85.
bicycles (Ź 18 per day).
Also recommended:
Hôtel Boramar (%04 68 82 07 06; 19 rue Jean Bart;
PORT VENDRES
d Ź 57-76, q Ź 72; hApr-Nov) By the beach in the bay, pop 5900
with chateau and church view. Roussillon s only natural harbour and deep-
Hôtel Triton (%04 68 98 39 39; 21 rue Jean Bart; water port has been exploited since Greek
d Ź 55-90, tr/q Ź 90/95; a) The Boramar s waterside mariners roamed the rocky coastline. Until
neighbour, open year-round. the independence of France s North African
R O U S S I L L O N
224 CÔTE VERMEILLE " " Paulilles lonelyplanet.com
territories in the 1960s, it was an important Equally unforgettable is the feast of local
port linking them with the mainland and it re- produce, red-pepper chutney, aubergine cav-
mains a significant cargo and fishing harbour. iar and chocolate ginger mousse, served al-
From fishermen selling sardines at the criée fresco at Les Clos de Paulilles (%04 68 98 07 58; www
aux poissons (fish market) to sky-high cranes .clos-de-paulilles.com; menu incl wine & coffee Ź 39; hdinner
shunting containers of fresh fruit  220,000 Mon-Sat, lunch & dinner Sun late May-Sep), a drop-dead-
tonnes in 2006  from cargo vessels into cold gorgeous wine estate overlooking the Baie de
storage at the state-of-the-art fruit terminal, Paulilles. The farm s one fixed menu includes
partly powered by solar energy, Port Vendres coffee and its own wine, which you can taste
is one busy place. From 2009 a new quay large and buy daily from 10am. Coming from Port
enough for 155m-long vessels to dock will see Vendres, drive beneath the rail line and it s
yet more cargo pile into this port. on the left.
Among the various artists to paint here was Tumble out of bed, onto the beach, and
Scottish architect and watercolourist Charles believe you re in paradise at Domaine de Valcros
Rennie Mackintosh (1868 1928)  best (%04 68 82 04 27, 06 85 87 14 23; www.domainedevalcros
known for his chair design  who wintered .com; d incl breakfast Ź 80-85), a chambre d hôte on the
here in 1925 and 1926. Ask at the Tourist Office same estate as Les Clos de Paulilles.
(%04 68 82 07 54; 1 quai François Joly; www.port-vendres
.com; h9am-7.30pm Jul & Aug, 9am-12.30pm & 2-5.30pm or BANYULS-SUR-MER
pop 5000
6.30pm Mon-Sat Sep-Jun) for the brochure mapping
Pebbly beach Banyuls, 6km south of Paulilles,
a trail around town past 16 reproductions of
is synonymous with wine, notably its dessert
his watercolours and the Musée Charles Rennie
wine made from grapes grown in terraced
Mackintosh (%04 68 82 22 26; Jardin du Dôme; admission
vineyards propped up by drystone walls.
free; h4-6pm Mon-Fri).
From Port Vendres a coastal path saun- Several wine producers in town offer dégus-
tation (tasting), but most are a short drive
ters 4km east past the commercial port and
from the seafront.
metal lighthouse (1848) on La Môle to Cap
Domaine Cave Berta Maillol (%04 68 88 36 96;
Béar, flagged with a brick lighthouse (1905).
www.bertamaillol.com; 17 av de la République), in an en-
From here, it continues 4km south to Paulilles
chanting old villa opposite the Tourist Office
(see below).
(%04 68 88 31 58; www.banyuls-sur-mer.com; av de la
République; h8.30am-8pm Jul & Aug, 9am-noon & 2-6pm
PAULILLES
Mon-Sat Sep-Jun), is a waterfront cellar. Nearby,
Brilliant vermilion rocks, terraced vines and
the 35m-tall red-brick chimney of a 19th- wine at Domaine Le Casot des Mailloles (%04 68
88 52 52; 17 av du Puig del Mas) is 100% organic. The
century dynamite factory keep watch over
much-advertised Cellier des Templiers (%04 68
the Baie de Paulilles, a gorgeous creek with
98 36 92; www.banyuls.com; rte du Mas Reig), 1.75km
shingle-sand beaches 4km north of Banyuls.
Despite the obvious risks involved in mak- inland, runs cellar tours preceded by a 15-
minute video (you ll come to loathe its pos-
ing and handling high explosives, working
at the Alfred Nobel designed factory, op- turing chef).
At the seafront s southern end, by the pleas-
erational from 1870 to 1984, was paradise
ure port, is the Laboratoire Arago (%04 68 88 73 39;
(with a price). Its 800-odd workers got free
adult/6-12yr Ź 4.60/2.30; h10.30am-1pm & 2-9pm Jul & Aug,
housing, schooling for their kids and so on.
10am-noon & 2-6.30pm Sep-Jun), the oceanographic
Learn more about their perilous lives and the
research station of Paris Université Pierre et
30 explosions that left 50 dead in the course
of a century through fascinating B&W pho- Marie Curie, which has an aquarium display-
ing local marine life. Look for the world s first
tographs with detailed captions (in English)
underwater photographs, taken at Banyuls in
displayed in the factory director s old house
at the Site de Paulilles (%04 68 95 23 40; admis- 1894 by French botanist Louis Bouton.
Nearby, La Jeune Fille Allongées (The
sion free; h9am-8pm Jun-Sep, shorter hours rest of yr,
Young Girl Lying Down; 1921), lounging
free 1½-hr guided tours 11am & 2pm Tue-Thu, Sat & Sun).
A stroll between pines, banana trees and in- in bronze between blossoms, is the work
of Banyuls sculptor Aristide Maillol (p41),
dustrial remnants around the 32.5-hectare,
whose family home, 4km inland, houses the
carefully thought-out site to Plage de l Usine
lovely Musée Maillol (%04 68 88 57 11; rte des Mas;
is an emotive experience.
ROUSSILLON
Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels MASSIF DES ALBÈRES 225
THE LAST PORT OF CALL
Spain s Portbou, 1km from the Spanish French border and 5km south of CerbÅre, was the last
port of call for exiled German-Jewish philosopher Walter Benjamin (1892 1940), who overdosed
on morphine in the pretty port in 1940 after fleeing German-occupied Paris, his home since 1933.
His body was buried in a Catholic cemetery atop a cliff, marked today by Passage (1990 94), a
memorial to the 20th-century philosopher in the dramatic form of a bronze-covered staircase
plunging to the sea. Tel Aviv sculptor Dani Karavan is the artist.
From the waterfront El Passeig de la Sardana, turn right along Avinguda de Barcelona, then left
following the Memorial W Benjamin sign. At the end of the street, hike up the steps, turn left at the
top and follow the white wall uphill along Pujada del Mirador to the cemetery and memorial.
disproportionately large arches of its railway
adult/7-14yr Ź 3.50/2.50; h10am-noon & 2-7pm May-Sep,
line and Gare Internationale that lurches high
to 5pm Oct-Apr).
above the waterfront, CerbÅre is nonetheless
Water-sports enthusiasts can explore the
a pretty place, with its pastel-coloured houses
big blue with diving school Aqua Blue Plongée
clustered around a small pebbled cove.
(%04 68 88 17 35; 5 quai Georges Petit). Snorkelling
outings (Ź 13 to Ź 28) and dives involve marvel- About 2.5km north on the D914 is the turn-
off for the Sentier de Sous Marin (admission free;
ling at aquatic flora and fauna in the Reserve
Marine de CerbÅre-Banyuls, a nearby marine hnoon-6pm Jul & Aug), a 500m underwater trail
reserve. Gen up with the 25-minute docu- that takes snorkellers around five buoys bear-
ing underwater information panels on aquatic
mentary shown at its Point Information (%04
marine flora and fauna in the Reserve Marine
68 88 56 87; h10.30am-12.30pm & 4.30-6.30pm Jul & Aug),
de CerbÅre-Banyuls. Snorkel, mask and fins can
by the water opposite quay E at the pleasure
be rented (until 5pm) for Ź 5 (Ź 7 with hi-tech
port. Its neighbour, Aleoutes Kayak Mer (%04
underwater FM commentary!) from the kiosk
68 88 34 25; www.kayakmer.net), opposite quay C,
on pebbly Plage de Peyfrefite. Addicted? Hook
arranges sea-kayaking outings  including at
up for day dives with picnic lunch at Plongée
sunset and camping overnight  to explore
Cap CerbÅre (%06 80 13 83 77; www.capcerbere.com), a
this rocky coastline s enchanting nooks, coves
school on the same beach.
and crannies.
In CerbÅre La Dorade (%04 68 88 41 93; www
.hotel-ladorade.com; Front de Mer; d Ź 49-59; hApr-Sep)
Sleeping & Eating
cooks up simple rooms and some great fish,
Pedestrian rue St-Pierre, the main old-town
snails, codfish-stuffed peppers and other
artery, is prime terrain for simple dining Ä… la
Catalan dishes (menus Ź 19.50 and Ź 23) in a
Catalane: grab six oysters, a crab or anchovies
series of terraced seafront houses.
and a glass of white (Ź 10 to Ź 12) standing up
at local fishmonger Poissonnerie Còte Vermeille
at No 6, or tapas at Casa Miguel (%04 68 88 31 06;
MASSIF DES ALBÈRES
3 rue St-Pierre; menus Ź 22; hlunch & dinner daily).
El Llagut (%04 68 88 03 12; av du Fontaulé; d Ź 62-72;
Snug against the Spanish border is this massif,
a) Offering a place to eat (Al Fanal; lunch
menu Ź 18 to Ź 21, dinner menu Ź 28; open a protected area where one of France s most
lunch and dinner April to mid-October, lunch rare and endangered species, the Hermann
and dinner Friday to Tuesday mid-October tortoise, defies extinction in thick cork oak
to March) as well as a nautical ambience, this forest. For eagle-eye views of his green habi-
sea-facing hotel with salmon-pink facade has tat, head to Fort de Bellegarde (%04 68 83 60 15;
been around since the 1950s  spot the B&W adult/6-12yr Ź 3/2; h10.30am-6.30pm Jun-Sep), a for-
photo outside. Cuisine is wholly regional. tress whose sheer size dwarfs you. The origi-
nal 14th-century hilltop chateau was built on
CERBÈRE the southern fringe of Le Perthus (population
Hurtling south towards Spain amid the same 620), almost abutting the French Spanish
grandiose panorama of rocky coves and border (marked today by Catalan architect
rampant vines is this small seaside village, Ricardo Bofill s pyramid portraying the two
4km north of the border. Dominated by the Catalonias) and rebuilt by Vauban in 1679.
R O U S S I L L O N
226 VALLÉE DU TECH " " Céret Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels
The fort s free summertime open-air jazz con- Sunday October to April), a lovely wine list
certs and its mighty 360-degree outlook across and stylish loft rooms up top.
the Spanish plains, the Massif du Canigou L Hostalet de VivÅs (%04 68 83 05 52; www.hostalet
and the AlbÅres crashing towards the sea are -vives.com; menus Ź 21.50 & Ź 33; hlunch & dinner Thu-
remarkable in equal measure. Tue mid-Jun mid-Sep, lunch & dinner Thu-Mon rest of yr) A
In Maureillas la Illas (population 2280), 8km local institution packed at weekends, this old-
northwest, learn what happens to cork oak fashioned inn in a 12th-century stone house
bark, harvested every 15 years, at the Musée in VivÅs cooks up 100% Catalan cuisine. Its
du LiÅge (%04 68 83 15 41; av Maréchal Joffre; free ad- boles de picolat (spicy meatballs) and crÅme
mission; h10.30am-noon & 3.30-7pm mid-Jun mid-Sep, Catalane served in half a melon are famed.
2-5pm rest of yr). Or study cork oak trees in their Warning: portions are mammoth  hence,
natural environment, either along marked perhaps, its B&B rooms (doubles low/high
walking paths in the village of VivÅs (popula- season Ź 60/75) in the village!
tion 130), home to the Institut Méditérranéen du
LiÅge (Mediterranean Cork Institute; %04 68 83 39 83; www
VALLÉE DU TECH
.institutduliege.com; 23 rte du LiÅge); or on an almond
farm in Laroque des AlbÅres (population 1940).
France s southernmost valley, also called
Passion of Christine Llense, whose father
Vallespir, cruises towards the Med along the
planted 21 hectares of almond trees in 1982,
course of the River Tech, tracking in tandem
the Maison de l Amande (%04 68 89 11 53; av des Mas
the parallel Tęt (north) and border with
Catalans; h10am-noon & 3-7pm May-Sep) is inspir-
Spain (about 15km south as the crow flies).
ing to visit any time of year. The trees, with
Somehow the rooftops in this steamy Catalan
delicate rose-white blossom in late February
valley burn a fiercer red than elsewhere, its
or early March, are ripe for harvesting fresh
people needing no excuse to dance a spon-
green almonds in July, and weighed down
taneous sardane. In February, as hibernat-
with dry almonds to harvest at the end of
ing bears wake up, animal furs are pulled out
August or early September. Pick your own and
and faces are painted black during the Fęte
buy almond oil, flour and other farm-made
de l Ours (p55).
products in the farm shop.
Up to 12 daily buses run the length of the
Bijou chapels sprinkle the massif s heavily
valley to/from Perpignan.
forested slopes, including Église St-Martin de
Fenollar (%04 68 87 73 82; adult/8-15yr Ź 3/1; h10am-
CÉRET
noon & 3-7pm mid-Jun mid-Sep, 2-5pm Wed-Mon rest of yr),
pop 7600
southwest of Le Boulou, signposted 300m off
Firmly Catalan and famous for its juicy cher-
the D900, whose 12th-century frescos were
ries (the first pickings of the season are packed
much admired by Picasso and Braque in 1910.
off to the French president), Céret doesn t
Others in St-Genis des Fontaines (www.ville-saint
feel French. In the town s snug setting in
genisdesfontaines.fr), St-André (www.saint-andre66.fr)
the Pyrenean foothills, caramel- and ochre-
and frescoed Prieuré Santa Maria del Vilar (www
coloured stone buildings soak up the sun,
.prieuresantamaria.fr) near Villelongue dels Monts
while inhabitants discuss bullfighting over
continue the art roman trail (p39).
sangria and tapas. On the settlement s eastern
The mad-busy beach resort of ArgelÅs Plage,
fringe the medieval Pont du Diable, built by
strewn with camp sites on every road leading
the devil, leaps across the Tech in one death-
into it, kisses the northeast fringe of the Massif
defying arch  the world s biggest when it was
des AlbÅres.
built in 1341.
Bevy of corrida-rich férias aside (p215), it
SLEEPING & EATING
is the outstanding Musée d Art Moderne (%04
Les Palmiers (%04 68 89 73 61; 33 rue Louis et Michel Solar,
68 87 27 76; www.musee-ceret.com; 8 blvd Maréchal Joffre;
Laroque des AlbÅres; d incl breakfast Ź 95) Across from
adult/12-18yr Ź 8/6; h10am-7pm May-Sep, to 6pm Wed-Mon
Laroque s quaint village square, this gour- Oct-Apr) that draws visitors. Superbly endowed,
met choice has a fantastic range of market- its cutting-edge architecture showcases a col-
driven menus (Ź 22 to Ź 75; open lunch and
lection that owes much to Picasso, Braque,
dinner Tuesday to Friday and Sunday, dinner
Chagall, Matisse, Miró, Dalí and other artistic
Saturday May to September, lunch and dinner
visitors, all of whom donated works: Picasso
Wednesday to Friday, dinner Saturday, lunch
rented a house in Céret with Braque at 1 rue
ROUSSILLON
Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels VALLÉE DU TECH " " Arles-sur-Tech 227
des Évadés de France between 1910 and 1911, lounge around in pink dressing gowns and
giving 53 pieces alone. outmoded swimming hats. Arles grew up
From the gallery, midway down the café- around the Carolingian Abbaye Ste-Marie (%04
laden main street, topped along its whole 68 83 90 66; adult/12-18yr Ź 3.50/2.50; h9am-7pm Jul &
length in summer with a green umbrella of Aug, 9am-noon & 2-6pm Sep & Jun, 9am-noon & 2-6pm Mon-
plane-tree leaves, stroll east and bear right at Sat, 2-5pm Sun Oct-May), a fortified 10th-century
the end along blvd Jean JaurÅs. Duck under church with beautiful Romanesque cloister.
the city wall (place Picasso) and delve into local In the courtyard near the church entrance
culture at the Maison du Patrimoine (%04 68 87 is Sainte Tombe, a 4th-century sarcophagus in
31 59; www.maisondupatrimoine-ceret.fr; place Picasso; adult/ which water has miraculously welled up since
12-18yr Ź 2.50/1.50; h10am-1pm & 3-7pm Mon-Sat Jul & sheltering the relics of its patron saints, Abdon
Aug, 10am-noon & 2-5pm Mon-Fri Sep-Jun). Next door, and Sennen. Each year on 30 July, the tomb is
Cellier des Arcades (3 rue Danton) is a wine shop emptied of holy water during mass and shared
crammed with wine to taste and buy. among pilgrims.
Complete a perfect day with un verre (drink) Arles is the springboard for forays into the
beneath plane trees in the old town on place des Gorges de la Fou (%04 68 39 16 21; adult/5-12yr Ź 6/3;
9 Jets, a lovely square where local students busk
h10am-6pm Apr-Nov), signposted 1.5km west
and the Fontaine des 9 Jets tinkles as it has always on the D115. Despite the gaudy parade of
done since 1313. inflatable castles and souvenir kiosks at the
entrance, the 3km return hike along a metal
Information walkway to la fou (Catalan for  precipice ) is
Tourist Office (%04 68 87 00 53; www.ot-ceret.fr; worth it. Discovered in 1928, the rocky can-
1 av Clemenceau; h9am-1pm & 2-7pm Mon-Sat, 10am- yon served as a hideout for Catalan bandits
1pm Sun Jul & Aug, 10am-noon & 2-5pm Mon-Fri, 9am- in the 1830s and 1840s.
12.30pm Sat Sep-Jun) Around the corner from main-street The Tourist Office (%04 68 39 11 99; www.tourisme
boulevard Maréchal Joffre; turn left at its eastern end. -haut-vallespir.com; 2 La Place; h3-6pm Mon, 10am-noon
& 3-6pm Tue-Fri, 10am-noon Sat) has information
Sleeping & Eating on summer festivities, including the tradi-
Eating and drinking opportunities abound tional Chants Catalans that fill the square with
on blvd Maréchal Joffre, blvd Jean JaurÅs folk music every Wednesday evening in July
and on stylish place des 9 Jets. Keen to feast and August.
solely on local farm produce? Breakfast or To really get away from it all, pitch up at
lunch on cheese, cold meats and salads at the Dutch-run Mas de la Fargassa (%04 68 39 01
La Praline (%04 68 87 71 21; 4 rue Pierre Rameil), off 15; www.fargassa.com), an organic fruit farm with
place Picasso. chickens, donkeys, horses and a river for kids
Hôtel Vidal (%04 68 87 00 85; 6 place to muck around in. Track it down in Mas
o
Soutaine; d Ź 40) Round the corner from blvd Pagris, about 8km south of Amélie-les-Bains
Jean JaurÅs and quelle surprise! This arcaded on the over-wiggly D55.
bishop s palace with 19th-century palms, Part of the Logis de France network, Les
18th-century forged-iron work, vine-covered Glycines (%04 68 39 10 09; hotellesglycines@orange
terrace and old stone balustrade is plain gor- .fr; rue du Jeu de Paume; d Ź 52; hmid-Feb mid-Nov), a
geous. Its Restaurant Del Bibe (starters/mains rust-coloured 15-room house in Arles, en-
Ź 16/19; open lunch and dinner Thursday to joys a spacious, well-shaded terrace restau-
Monday) is the hottest address in town. rant (two-course menu Ź 13, three-course
Hôtel des Arcades (%04 68 87 12 30; www.hotel menu Ź 16 to Ź 27) pierced by the trunk of an
-arcades-ceret.com; d Ź 42-57; pa) Run with pa- enormous pine.
nache by a dynamic sibling duo, this 30-room Stock up on pieds cuits vinaigrette (piggie
hotel overlooking place Picasso is a gallery in trotters in viniagrette), fouet au Roquefort
its own right. Almost every square inch of wall (dried sausage flavoured with Roquefort),
displays a poster, photo or print to view. spicy chorizo and other picnic delicacies at
Boucherie La Place (La Place).
ARLES-SUR-TECH For an evening of grilled sardines, squid,
pop 2700
spice-hot chorizo and sangria cocktails, Cave
This small provincial town is 4km west of spa
Les Voûtes (%04 68 87 80 71; 2 place de la République; 5
town Amélie-les-Bains, where elderly curistes
tapas Ź 10), a wine cellar and tapas bar on a tiny
R O U S S I L L O N
228 VALLÉE DU TECH " " Prats de Molló Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels
old-town square off the main street in Amélie- Tarzan-style between trees 45m off the ground
les-Bains, is the most atmospheric address. Its along a 400m-long zip-line or simply strolling
organic fruit juices (kiwi, pear, strawberry, between different tree types and picking wild
cherry& ) are wild. strawberries in the Arboretum are highlights at
Monto Z Arbres (%04 68 22 43 55; www.montozarbres
PRATS DE MOLLÓ .com; adult/3-18yr Ź 22.50/7-20.50; h10.30am-7.30pm Jul-
pop 1080
Aug, 2-7.30pm May, Jun, Sep & Oct), 1.5km west of Prats
The Tech Valley s final curtain call before
de Molló on the D115. Advance reservations
climbing three cols (mountain passes) above
are obligatory for all activities. You can also
1000m into Spain is this enchanting moun- stay here; see below.
tain village, 20km west of Arles. Cafés bathe
Northwest along the scenic D115A is La
in the shade behind medieval city walls and
Preste-les-Bains (www.laprestelesbains.com), a moun-
organ concerts breathe life into the Église Stes- tain spa known for its curative waters since
Juste-et-Ruffine (admission free; h11am-1pm & 2-7pm
the 14th century. Its name became an official
Mon-Sat, 2-7pm Sun Jul & Aug), the crowning glory
appendage of Prats de Molló in 1959.
within the ramparts.
But the piÅce de résistance is Fort Lagarde
Information
(adult/12-18yr/under12yr Ź 3.50/2.50/free; h11am-7pm
Tourist Office (%04 68 39 70 83; www.pratsdemollo
daily Jul & Aug, 2-6pm Apr, Jun & Sep mid-Nov), a fort
lapreste.com; place le Foiral; h9am-noon & 2-6pm or
built above the fortified village in the 17th
7pm Mon-Sat, from 10pm Sun) Outside the walls overlook-
century to defend France s newly acquired
ing the large gravel market square where local Pratéens
frontier with Spain. Its original Tour de la
(no, people from Prats are not called prats) spin boules.
Guardia (signal or warning tower), built by
Ask about its guided nature walks (Ź 15).
Aragonese rulers in 1307, communicated with
others in the region using smoke signals by
Sleeping & Eating
day, fire at night  a scenic drive west across
Monto Z Arbres (%04 68 22 43 55; www
o
that trio of cols (the D115) unveils several.
.montozarbres.com; La Galliné, rte d Espagne; incl breakfast
Later, prisoners perished in the dungeon, con- hammock Ź 16, tree house s/d/tr/q Ź 41/70/100/130; hdaily
structed under Vauban with the rest of the fort
Jul-Aug, weekends May, Jun, Sep & Oct) Hidden in the
from 1677 onwards. Walking around its 40
nature-rich, thick Fôret du Haut Vallespir is
armoury rooms, powder magazines, kitchens,
this challenging tree-climbing centre with a
guardhouse and barracks for 100 soldiers, it
host of activities, trails for kids and  very
is hard to believe that Vauban intended the
romantically  a tree house. The little wooden
star-shaped fort to be twice the size. Lit at
cabin has a table-clad terrace up high and is
night, it makes a dramatic picture.
equipped inside with a white cotton dressed
Getting to the fort requires stamina. Hiking
double bed, two bunks, a mirror and not
up, opt for the steep covered passageway
much else (no plugs). Guests get a torch to
(marked chemin couvert), dating to 1851,
trog five minutes downhill to the loo and
which has 142 slippery steps and plenty of
showers at base camp, where breakfast is
arrow slits and the odd gunpowder reserve
also served. If roughing it in with mates in
to distract; coming down, follow the sentier
hammocks (some cocooned with mosquito
(trail) between trees. In July and August
nets) is more your style then opt to camp
weekly guided tours (Ź 4) include a shuttle bus,
in trees by the river; dining is Ä… la campfire
as does the flamboyant Visite-Spectacle (adult/
and there s a toilet but no shower. Monto
6-12yr/under 6yr Ź 9.50/6.50/free; h4pm Sun-Fri mid- Z Arbres is 1.5km west of Prats, signposted
Jul late Aug), a spectacular 1½-hour perform- off the Spain-bound D115.
ance led by knights in shining armour and
Hôtel Le Bellevue (%04 68 39 72 48; www.hotel
cavaliers on horseback; contact the tourist -le-bellevue.fr; place El Firal; s/d Ź 53/64; a) Assuming
office for both. Catch the same young actors
pride of place on Prats main square outside
in action minus the canons in the village dur- the walls, this 18-room hotel peeps at plane
ing La RelÅve de la Garde (The Changing of the Guard;
trees and boules players from its balcony-clad
h11am-noon Mon, Wed & Fri mid-Jul Aug). rooms. Its gourmet restaurant (menus Ź 21,
Rock climbing, via ferrata (rock climb- Ź 36 and Ź 42; open lunch and dinner daily)
ing along a fixed course with the aid of ca- is highly regarded, and affordable salads are
bles, harnesses etc), tree climbing, whizzing
served in its terrace restaurant.
ROUSSILLON
Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels VALLÉE DU CONFLENT " " Prades 229
Ferme Auberge La Costa de Dalt (%04 68 39 74 40;
PRADES
rte du Col d Ares; menu incl wine Ź 33; hlunch Sun Apr-Sep) A pop 5600
family affair, this secluded farm where 80-odd The main town, 44km west of Perpignan,
cows are bred for meat is the place to lunch Prades is an attractive place with houses
on Sunday or, if you re lucky, another day of of river stone and brick, liberally adorned
the week (call ahead). Everything served is with pink marble from nearby quarries.
its own produce, be it the tapas, charcuterie Internationally known for its annual classical-
(cold meat), fresh herb sausages or the lamb music festival (p215 ), it is also the main
or veal main course. Cheese is from the valley jumping-off point for the Massif du Canigou
and dessert is a juicy fruit tart, with produce and the Parc Naturel Régional des Pyrénées
fresh from the farm orchard. Should you fall Catalanes (p234), a nature park stretching
in love with the magnificent mountain views west along the valley to the Spanish border.
at this isolated farm, 10km west of Prats and
5km from the Spanish border off the D115, Information
it has self-catering gîtes to rent. Laverie (138 av du Général de Gaulle; h8am-8pm)
L Unique (rue de la Porte de France; menus Laundrette.
o
Ź 17.50, mains Ź 25-35; hlunch & dinner Tue-Sun) Unique s Maison de la Presse (155 av du Général de Gaulle)
unique chef was on his way to Portugal after Walking maps and guides.
15 years at a Cap d Agde restaurant when Tourist Office (%04 68 05 41 02; www.prades
this kitchen beckoned. He only cooks fish  -tourisme.com; 4 rue des Marchands; h9am-noon &
predominantly Ä… la plancha (on a stone, slate 2-6pm Mon-Sat, 10am-noon Sun Jul & Aug, 9am-noon &
or wooden slab)  in an open-plan kitchen, 2-6pm Mon-Fri Sep-Jun) Just off place de la République.
inviting diners to admire every move, spec-
tacular plate design included, against a musi- Sights & Activities
cal backdrop of 1950s pure jazz. His mousse Towering over central place de la République
au turrone, a top-secret variation of Spanish is Église St-Pierre, whose bell tower is the only
nougat, is sensational. remnant of the original Romanesque church,
rebuilt in the 17th century. Within its dimly
lit interior, the wonderfully expressive 17th-
VALLÉE DU CONFLENT century Entombment of Christ is by Catalan
sculptor Josep Sunyer, the creative talent be-
West of Perpignan fruit orchards, vineyards
hind the exuberant main altarpiece, a chef-
and medieval villages carpet the gentle lower
d oeuvre of Catalan baroque; the switch to
reaches of the Conflent (or Tęt Valley as it s
illuminate the latter is to the left of the altar.
called in equal measure) as the river nears
From the church a tourist itinerary traces
the end of its 120km-long journey from
the steps of Spanish cellist Pablo Casals, who
Lac des Bouillouses (2017m), on the door- settled in Prades in 1939 after fleeing Franco s
step of Spanish Catalonia and Andorra, to
Spain. The Musée Pablo Casals (%04 68 96 28 55;
the Mediterranean. The area immediately
33 rue de l Hospice; admission free; h9am-noon & 2-5pm
south of this valley is known as Les Aspres;
Tue-Fri, 9am-1pm Sat Jul & Aug, 10am-1pm & 4-7pm Tue &
see p219.
Wed, 3-7pm Fri, 10am-1pm Sat Sep-Jun) commemorates
As Roussillon s main valley it is appropri- his life and musical achievements, celebrated
ate for the Conflent to cradle the symbol of
with gusto for two weeks in late July or early
Catalonia at its heart, the sacred peak of Pic
August during the Festival Pablo Casals (%04 68
du Canigou (2784m), where summer-solstice
96 33 07; www.prades-festival-casals.com in French).
bonfires are lit and magical herbs gathered.
Rent wheels from Cycles Flament (%04 68 96
Hiking, biking and white-water sport oppor- 07 62; 8 rue Arago; half-/full day Ź 10/13; hTue-Sat), off
tunities on it know no limits.
the main square. At the tourist office VTT en
For those who prefer less footwork, a train
Conflent (in French) details nine mountain-
(see the boxed text p232) trundles along a
bike routes (easy to tough).
healthy chunk of the valley, the dramatic
Gorges de Carança being one of many moun- Sleeping & Eating
tain stops on its journey into the ancient Camping Municipal La Plaine St-Martin (%04 68 96 29
Catalonian county of Cerdagne, split since the 83; www.leconflent.net/camping; adult/tent/car Ź 2.50/2.85/2;
17th century between France and Spain.
hyr-round) This small and well-run camp site,
R O U S S I L L O N
230 VALLÉE DU CONFLENT " " Around Prades lonelyplanet.com
GETTING UP THE PIC
Everyone s keen to summit this sacred mountain  call it the obligatory pilgrimage when in
Roussillon.
Most don their walking boots at the Chalet Refuge des Cortalets (%04 68 96 36 19, 04 68 05 63
57; dm Ź 16, breakfast Ź 5.50; hJun-Oct), a hostel and mountain refuge at 2200m, from where it is a 1½-
to two-hour hike to the steep-sided summit (2784m). Depending on your car (the mountain road
is unsurfaced and pot-holed) and the weather (avoid when wet), you can drive as far as Cortalets.
Follow the N116 from Prades 2km east to Los Masos, turn right and take the D24 south for 4.5km
through the hamlet of Villerach and beyond until the road becomes a dirt track  at which point
it s 22km of rough pot-holed motoring at no more than 30km/h to Chalet Refuge des Cortalets.
Or bounce up to Cortalets in a 4WD (Prades
%04 68 05 27 08; Villefranche de Conflent %04 68 05 99
89; Cornelia de Conflent
%04 68 05 64 61); in Vernet-les-Bains, contact Garage Villaceque (p233). The
return journey typically costs Ź 25/12 per adult/child aged four to 10 and must be reserved in
advance. Most 4WDs access Cortalets along a forest track (off-limits to private vehicles) from
Fillols, just east of Cornelia de Conflent.
For mountain bikers and walkers, Vernet-les-Bains (p232) is a great base for attacking the Pic;
trails wind up directly from the spa town. Many walkers also tackle the ascent from Fillols (six
hours) or from Chalet Refuge de Mariailles (%04 68 05 57 99, 04 68 96 22 90; dm Ź 13, half-board
Ź 29; hyr-round), a stone chalet at 1730m, accessible by 4WD forest track or walking trail (three
hours) from the Col de Jou just beyond Casteil (p232). The ascent from the refuge (four hours),
the GR10, crosses the Cheminée rock face and is tougher.
Tourist offices in Prades (p229) and Vernet (p232) have comprehensive information on walk-
ing and biking in the Massif du Canigou, and sell maps and guides. Trails, tagged with yellow
markers, are generally accessible June to October.
down the road from the municipal outdoor Design-driven with bold colour schemes, this appealing B&B
pool, has shaded pitches and a dozen-odd cooks up Mexican cuisine in the evening (dinners Ź 23).
wooden chalets sleeping six (low/high season Villa LafabrÅgue (%04 68 96 29 90; www.villafrench
Ź 30/52.85 per night or Ź 210/370 per week). .com; 15 av Louis Prat; d incl breakfast Ź 65-90; ps)
Castell Rose (%04 68 96 07 57; www.castellrose English-run chambre d hôte with mountain view, in a
-prades.com; chemin de la Litera; incl breakfast d Ź 69-105, q Florentine-styled villa built for a rich banking family in 1873.
Ź 109-129; ps) Predictably this family house
with vast grounds, a pool, tennis courts and AROUND PRADES
vintage petrol pump is in much demand. Book Two of the Pyrenees most precious exam-
well in advance to snag one of its five rooms ples of Romanesque art and delightful stroll-
or self-catering gîte. Dinner costs Ź 25/12 ing around hilltop villages make this area
per adult/child. a must.
Casa Nostra (%04 68 05 62 66; 2 rue des Marchands;
5-/8-ingredient salad Ź 7.50/11.50, lunch/dinner menu Ź 13/18; Abbaye St-Michel de Cuxa
This beautiful Romanesque abbey (%04 68 96
hlunch & dinner daily) This simple but soulful
Catalan bistro serves gambas (prawns) flam- 15 35; www.cuxa.org; adult/12-18yr Ź 4/2.50; h9.30am-
béed 18 ways (in whisky, pastis, Noilly Prat 11.50am & 2-6pm Tue-Sat May-Sep, to 5pm Oct-Apr),
etc) and inspired pick-your-own-ingredients founded in 878, sits amid elegant gardens and
salads. Products are local and invariably or- vineyards a few kilometres south of Prades on
ganic. We highly recommend the anchoïade the D27 to Fillols. Inside the pre-Romanesque
Catalane (anchovy dip) followed by prawns church, France s largest, consecrated in 974,
roasted in caramelised Banyuls vinegar. the altar stone is original. The lovely 12th-
A robust general market fills place de la century cloister (1130) provoked a bevy of
République on Tuesday morning and there s creative activity in Roussillon s famous marble
a farmers market on Saturday. sculpture workshops, but what you see today
Also recommended: is a 1950s reconstruction of the original. Five
El Zocalo (%04 68 96 19 85; www.elzocalo-prades.com; monks live at the abbey today, making jam
13 rue des Oliviers; s/d incl breakfast Ź 75/89-119; ps) and turning pots to sell between prayers.
ROUSSILLON
lonelyplanet.com VALLÉE DU CONFLENT " " Villefranche de Conflent 231
Eus Vallée de la Castellane
Heaped on a hillock between rocks and crab- North of Prades the Castellane Valley climbs
like cactus 5km east of Prades, Eus must surely steadily up and over the Col de Jau (1506m) into
have been custom-made by medieval work- Languedoc, snaked for its entire Roussillon
men for 3rd-millennium meandering, enjoyed length by the scenic D14. First stop is Molitg-
before or after a dip in Lac de Vinça, 8km east. les-Bains (population 250, altitude 1314m), a
Climb to the church at the top, past the odd mountain spa resort 8km north which, despite
artist s workshop, and revel in the sweeping the pink bathrobes, is not quite as staid as oth-
panorama of the Pic du Canigou and val- ers, thanks to two illustrious addresses: the
ley below. The white patch of greenhouses is Grand Hôtel (%04 68 05 00 50; www.chainethermale.fr;
PepiniÅre BachÅs (%04 68 96 42 91; www.lesagrumes d Ź 125-195; psai) in the spa grounds; and
dumonde.fr; traverse Los Masos), an extraordinary the Château de Riell (%04 68 05 04 40; www.chateaude
citrus-fruit nursery. Buses to/from Eus stop riell.com; d low/high season from Ź 340/380; psai), a
below the village on the N116. fairy-tale castle with a tasty restaurant (starters/
mains Ź 25/35), between rock and mountain.
Prieuré de Serrabone & Beyond In Mosset (population 295, altitude 715m), a
Signposted 15km east of Prades off the N116, chateau-topped village 4km further north, La
the D618 twists tirelessly through green oak Tour des Parfums (adult/12-18yr Ź 3/2.50; h10am-noon
and cork oak forest, tree trunks stripped brick- & 3-7pm mid-Jul mid-Sep), inside the Tourist Office
red and dark brown, to the Prieuré de Serrabone (%04 68 05 38 32; www.mosset.fr), is an interactive
(%04 68 84 09 30; adult/12-18yr Ź 3/2; h10am-6pm daily), voyage into medieval scents and gardens, in-
an 11th-century abbey with 18m-tall bell spired by the profusion of typical wild moun-
tower, single gallery cloister and Catalonia s tain flowers that grow in its garden.
most outstanding examples of Romanesque Local farm Mas Lluganas (%04 68 05 00 37; www
sculpture. In 1151 its church was enlarged and .maslluganas.com; d/tr incl breakfast Ź 50/60, d with shared shower
the altar separated from the congregation with Ź 33), 2km south on the D14, does B&B and cooks
a vaulted gallery, superbly sculpted with lions, hearty meals with its produce  veal, duck, foie
eagles, monkeys and other bestial imagery gras and so on (menus Ź 14 and Ź 20).
in local pink marble. In the grounds a vine Three daily buses (%04 68 35 29 02) link
collection grows and a botany trail winds past Prades with Molitg (35 minutes) and Mosset.
garrigue rich in wild thyme, broom, juniper
and fern to an orchard laden with almond, Ille-sur-Tęt
apple, lilac and mimosa trees. Worth no more than a brief stop, this small
Make a day of it by continuing south along town, 19km east of Prades, has a shabby and
the D618 to Boule d Amont (population 75), exhausting maze of dusty medieval streets
a mountain village where boules de picou- and back alleys where old folk pull out their
lats (spicy meatballs in a tomato, olive and chairs and chat for hours. In the 13th-century,
mushroom sauce), tarragon-scented lamb and Hospitaller knights founded Hospici d IllÄ…, now
other regional specialities bubble in the pot at a Centre d Art Sacré (%04 68 84 83 96; rue de l Hôpital;
the Auberge du Val d Amont (%04 68 53 29 70; www adult/13-18yr Ź 3.20/2.40; h10am-noon & 2-7pm Mon-Fri,
.aubergebouledamont.com; menus Ź 20), where you can 2-7pm Sat mid-Jun Sep, 2-6pm Wed-Mon Oct mid-Jun).
also stay (singles/doubles Ź 20/35). More gasp-worthy is Site des Orgues (%04
Alternatively, overnight at Domaine Les 68 84 13 14; adult/10-13yr Ź 3.50/2; h9.30am-8pm Jul &
Aspres (%04 68 39 42 28; www.chambresdhotes-gites Aug, 10am-6.30pm Apr-Jun & Sep, 10am-12.30pm & 2-6pm
.fr; s/d/tr incl breakfast from Ź 45/50/100), a farmhouse Oct, 2-5pm Nov-Jan, 10am-12.30pm & 2-5pm Feb & Mar),
(dinners Ź 25) off the D13 in La Bastide with natural rock formations soaring sky-high like
no neighbour bar Pyrenean peaks; or at the the pipes of a church organ about 2km north
Auberge de St-Marsal (%04 68 39 42 68; www.saint of town on the D2. Before leaving town, ask
marsal.net; d Ź 35-47, half-board per person Ź 35), a stone at the Tourist Office (%04 68 84 02 64; sq de la Poste)
inn with 12 rooms and a matchless pano- about walking trails around the rocks.
rama south of the Col Xatard in St-Marsal 
no surprise that it runs painting courses! VILLEFRANCHE DE CONFLENT
Carrying on south along the D618 you even- pop 225
Small, yes, but significant, hugely so. Hemmed
tually hit the Vallée du Tech (p226) several
in by tall cliffs, Villefranche sits at the strategic
dozen hairpins later.
R O U S S I L L O N
232 VALLÉE DU CONFLENT " " Vernet-les-Bains Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels
THE CANARY
Carrying nearly half a million passengers during the three peak months of high summer, Le Train
Jaune (The Yellow Train; %04 68 96 63 62; 4 daily Jun-Sep, 2 daily Oct-May), nicknamed The Canary since its
grand opening in 1910, chugs 63km along the Conflent between Villefranche (427m) and Latour de
Carol (1231m; adult/child aged four to 11 Ź 18.10/9.05, three hours) through spectacular Pyrenean
scenery. En route it goes through 17 tunnels, over numerous bridges including the magnificent
156m-long and 80m-high Pont Gisclard (1905 08), and around 390 bends; its maximum speed is
55km/h, though 30km/h is more the norm. In July and August a couple of carriages are open-top,
and 14 of the 22 tiny mountain stops require passengers to flag the train down or seek out the
conductor to alight, injecting the journey with a real dose of old-fashioned nostalgia.
A great day trip is by train from Villefranche de Conflent to ThuÅs-Carença (adult/child aged
four to 11 Ź 6.80/3.40, 40 minutes), from where it s a five-minute walk downhill to the car park
for the Gorges de Carança. Death-defying is the only word fit for the incredible footpaths (1½ to
three hours) that snake along metal walkways, across ridges and next to perilous cliff edges with
sheer 400m drops. Mont Louis (opposite) is another good day trip from Villefranche (adult/child
aged four to 11 Ź 8.90/4.45, 1½ hours); its citadel is a 1km walk uphill from the train station.
confluence of the Rivers Tęt, Cady and Rotja,
Le Vauban (%04 68 96 18 03; www.residence-le-vauban
hence its thick defensive fortifications, com- .com; 5 place de l Église; d with kitchenette 1st/subsequent
plete with arrow slits, dry moat and ramparts
night Ź 60/50; hmid-Apr mid-Oct) For very simple,
that can be walked. Built by Vauban in the
no-frills lodgings above village bar Le Nation,
17th century to augment the original 11th- Vauban is your man; add Ź 5 per night to sleep
century defences, the fortified village became
a third person in its functional studios.
a Unesco World Heritage site in 2008.
Auberge St-Paul (%04 68 96 30 95; 7 place de l Église;
Towering above the village is Château-Fort
menus Ź 19-100; hlunch & dinner Tue-Sat, lunch Sun) The
Liberia (%04 68 96 34 01; www.fort-liberia.com; adult/child
whole gamut of budgets is catered for at this
Ź 6/2.80; h9am-8pm Jun-Sep, 10am-6pm Oct-May), a sec- gourmet inn with tree-shaded gravel terrace
ond mammoth Vauban stronghold born in
basking in the shade of Église St-Jacques. Kick
1681 and strengthened under Napoleon III. To
off on a culinary high with pan-fried foie gras
visit it  views from the top are spectacular  served with melon and red fruits in a caramel-
hike up the 734-step covered staircase built in
ised soy sauce.
the 1850s (a theatrical experience), walk the
longer but less vicious sentier (footpath) or
VERNET-LES-BAINS
hitch a ride in a 4WD (adult/child aged five pop 1450
to 11 Ź 3/2). When crossing the railway line Busy in summer and a ghost town the rest
separating the village from the hill, beware the of the year, this charming spa 9km south of
highly dangerous exposed third rail. Buy fort Villefranche was much frequented by the British
tickets in the village at the Musée Plan en Relief de aristocracy in the late 19th century: English
Villefranche (%04 68 05 74 29; 17 rue St-Jacques; adult/child writer Anthony Trollope set his short story La
Ź 2.30/1.30; h9am-8pm Jun-Sep, 10am-6pm Oct-May). MÅre Bauche here after visiting in 1859. Vernet s
The Tourist Office (%04 68 96 22 96; www.ville green status as a village arboretum exalts the
franchedeconflent.fr; 32bis rue St-Jacques; h9am-noon & 300 varieties of tree adorning its slopes, many
2-5pm or 6pm Apr-Sep, 9am-noon Mon-Sat Sep-Mar), beside brought in as seeds by overseas visitors.
western Porte d Espagne, abuts the entrance Basking in the shade on a café terrace, brows-
to Villefranche s spectacular ramparts (adult/child ing place de la République s Saturday-morning
Ź 4/1.50, audioguide Ź 3; h10am-8pm Jul & Aug, to 7pm Jun market, admiring summertime blossoms or
& Sep, variable hr Oct-Dec & Feb-May). moseying up to the church make for a hand-
some morning  or hit Casteil, 2.5km south, with
Sleeping & Eating its soul-stirring abbey and walking trail up the
Plenty of unexceptional eating options cater- Pic du Canigou (see the boxed text p230).
ing to the tourists that pour into the village The Tourist Office (%04 68 05 55 35; www.ot-vernet
line rue St-Jean, the souvenir-shop street par- -les-bains.fr; place de la République; h9am-12.30pm &
allel to rue St-Jacques. 2-6.30pm Mon-Fri, 9am-noon & 3-6pm Sat, 10am-12.30pm
ROUSSILLON
Book your stay at lonelyplanet.com/hotels VALLÉE DU CONFLENT " " Mont Louis 233
Sun May-Sep, closed Sat & Sun Oct-Apr) has informa- Les Deux Lions (%04 68 05 55 42; www.les2lions.fr;
tion on hiking and biking. The Maison de
18 blvd Clémenceau, Vernet-les-Bains; d incl breakfast from
la Presse (5 place de la République) sells maps and
Ź 60; hmid-Apr mid-Oct; p) Sage-green shutters
Garage Villaceque (%04 68 05 51 14; rues du Conflent
shield the mustard town house from the sun
& Colonel Nou) rents mountain bikes (Ź 10/15/61
at this friendly five-room chambre d hôte, at
per half-day/day/week).
the foot of the village. To really relax, go for a
room with bijou terrace and canvas deckchair
Abbaye St-Martin du Canigou
overlooking the garden.
This spectacular eagle s-nest abbey, hidden
Le Mas Fleuri (%04 68 05 51 94; www.hotellemas
between beech and chestnut trees, sits atop
fleuri.fr; 25 blvd Clémenceau, Vernet-les-Bains; d/tr/q from
a rocky outcrop in splendid isolation. It was
Ź 85/130/209; A South
hmid-Apr mid-Oct; p)
founded by Cerdagne-Conflent count Guifred
American doctor arrived in Vernet during
II in 1008, shaken by an earth tremor in 1428
WWI and had this wonderful house with tree-
and shut in 1786, after which the ornate marble- studded park built  the smell of lime-tree
sculpted capitals propping up the lovely clois- blossom in early July is intoxicating. Sadly,
ter, unusual columned stonework in the crypt
the salon is the only room still in use. Bar
and Lombard bell-tower stonework were plun- breakfast, the rest of the hotel action happens
dered. Painstakingly restored between 1902
in the purpose-built 1970s block opposite.
and 1932, the former Benedictine abbey (%04
Low-season rates are substantially less.
68 05 50 03; www.stmartinducanigou.org; adult/12-18yr/under
12yr Ź 5/3/2; hhourly guided tours 10am-5pm Mon-Sat, 10am
MONT LOUIS
& 12.30pm Sun, to 4pm Tue-Sun Oct-Dec & Feb-May), a beau- pop 270
tiful example of Romanesque architecture, has Another Unesco-protected Vauban creation,
been tended since 1988 by Beatitude nuns and this atmospheric walled town invariably sits
monks  15 live here today. in a cloud at its 1600m mountain perch. Built
Access is only by guided tour, and it s a between 1669 and 1672 on the site of an aban-
40-minute uphill walk through woods from doned 10th-century village, its lumbering
Casteil; the footpath is next to the church (in walls defended the upper Conflent Valley and
June and early July stop en route to buy cher- its crossroads with the River Aude (north) and
ries and homemade apple juice!). Alternatively, the Massif du Carlit (west). Today special-unit
hitch a one-way/return 4WD ride (Ź 8/11) with French commando troops train in the citadelle
Garage Villaceque (see above). and an old church, well and wash house create
soul in the civilian old town.
Sleeping & Eating Most remarkable is the Four Solaire (%04 68
In the abbey grounds, walkers can kip in the 04 14 89; www.four-solaire.fr; adult/7-17yr/under 7yr Ź 6/4.50/
seven-bunk, stone Refuge de Montagne, a free; hguided tours half-hourly 10am-6pm Jul & Aug, hourly
stone hut with electricity and a toilet-and- 10am-5pm Sep-Nov & Mar-Jun), the world s first solar-
shower block, but no drinking water. In powered oven, built in 1947 and used as a model
Casteil, Camping Domaine St-Martin (%04 68 05 52 for 15 more subsequently built around the world.
09; www.domainestmartin.com; 6 blvd de la Cascade; 2 adults, Reaching 3000°C at its hottest point, it s used
tent & car low/mid-/high season Ź 8/12/18; hMar-Nov; s) today to fire ceramic pots  which you can buy 
is well equipped and has a pool. and forge train whistles for Le Train Jaune
Relais St-Martin (%04 68 05 56 76; 1 chemin de (opposite). Informative 45-minute guided visits
St-Martin de Canigou, Casteil; d with shared bathroom Ź 20, include a demonstration of the sun setting a
d/tr Ź 35/38) Salads and light grills (two-/three- piece of wood alight and a tour around the 141-
course lunch menu Ź 12/14.50) are the main- sq-metre heliostat, made up of 567 mirrors that
stay of this mountain inn, set at the start of automatically follow the course of the sun.
the footpath up to the abbey. Views are green The Tourist Office (%04 68 04 21 97; h10am-noon
and lovely. & 2-6pm), inside the walls, runs guided visits of
Hôtel-Restaurant Le MoliÅre (%04 68 05 50 97; the military citadel (adult/child Ź 4.50/1.50)
www.lemoliere.com, Casteil; d Ź 43-49; hApr-Oct) On the and has bags of information on summer and
left as you arrive in the hamlet, this Casteil winter sports on the Plateau de Capcir, imme-
hotel is an institution thanks to the creative diately north of Mont Louis along the D118.
light lunches (tarts and salads Ź 10 to Ź 12) it Les Angles (1650m; www.lesangles.com), FormiguÅres
serves English-style on its green lawn. (1570m; www.formigueres.net) and Puyvalador (1700m;
R O U S S I L L O N
234 VALLÉE DU CONFLENT " " Lac des Bouillouses & Font Romeu lonelyplanet.com
DELIGHTFULLY GETTING AWAY FROM IT ALL
Following the more southern of the two roads to Spain from Mont Louis, the N116 cruises scenically
12km west to Saillagouse (population 820). Buy local cheese and charcuterie at butcher Bonzom
et Fils (14 av des Comtes de Cerdagne) on the main street, then plunge 2km south along the D33 to
the tiny mountain spa of Llo (1400m). Park in the field of a car park and follow the track five
minutes to Les Bains de Llo (%04 68 04 74 55; www.lesbainsdello.com; rte des Gorges; adult/3-11yr/family
Ź 9/7.50/29; h10am-7.30pm Jun-Apr), outdoor baths where you can get away from it all in warm
natural waters, delightfully scenic when the ground is snow-covered. Alternatively, zip through
trees like Tarzan at the Via Ferrata Les Escaldilles (%06 85 02 23 84; www.viaferrata-de-llo.com; with
instructor Ź 39-45, without instructor Ź 19-25; h9am-4pm Jul & Aug, 10am-3pm Sat & Sun Sep-May), next to the
baths in Llo, or hike along the kid-friendly footpath to the beautiful Gorges du SÅgre.
To really get away from it all, overnight in the village. Its name meaning Chez Michel in Catalan,
Cal Miquel (%04 68 04 13 68; www.calmiquel.com; d incl breakfast Ź 52, half-board per person Ź 44) is a ruin of
an 18th-century farm stylishly restored and transformed into a rustic maison d hôtes (dinners Ź 17).
With its terrace garden and breathtaking view, it s irresistible. But then so is its neighbour, 12-room
boutique hotel Auberge Atalaya (%04 68 04 70 04; www.atalaya66.com; d Ź 98-160; hEaster mid-Oct;
s), an elegant ode to the finest side of life with a grand piano in its dining room (menu Ź 34)
and the extraordinary panache of grand dame Mme Ghîlaine Toussaint at its heart.
www.puyvalador.com), the main ski resorts, offer Or trek 5km south to trailside eco-lodge
limited but scenic alpine skiing; Les Angles L Orri de PlanÅs (%04 68 04 29 47, 06 22 32 25 32; www
is a known mountain-biking base. .orrideplanes.com; dm Ź 15, d incl breakfast Ź 60; s), an
Mont Louis is also the main jumping- ecologically managed stone farmhouse and
off point for green forays in the Parc Naturel refuge, planted at 1550m on the GR10 in
Régional des Pyrénées Catalanes, a nature park PlanÅs. Walking distance from the village s
protecting the upper Conflent Valley from treble-shaped Romanesque church, it is a
Prades to the Spanish border. Get the full place to wallow in nature.
low-down on botanical walks, rare-flower
discovery workshops and so on from the park
LAC DES BOUILLOUSES & FONT ROMEU
office (%04 68 04 97 60; www.parc-pyrenees-catalanes
This protected nature reserve sits in the
.fr; 1 rue Dagobert).
heart of the harsh Massif du Carlit from where,
Aqua-blue shutters, flower boxes and an
at the foot of its highest granite peak, Pic
old stone facade inside the walls make B&B La
Carlit (2912m), the region s longest river has
Volute (%04 68 04 27 21; http://lavolute.monsite.wanadoo
its source. Almost immediately, the River
.fr; place d Armes; d incl breakfast Ź 65) a lovely place to
Conflent (or Tęt) is tamed by Lac des Bouillouses
overnight in Mont Louis.
(2017m), the reserve s largest lake, dammed
between 1903 and 1909 to power the first
trains along the valley. Crowds flock here
A SPANISH ISLAND IN FRANCE
in July and August to walk around the lake
& is precisely what small town Llívia
and pick up other scenic walking trails into
(population 1400) is, 11km southwest of
the massif.
Font Romeu and some 4km east of Spain
The main access point is Font Romeu (pop-
proper. The Spanish enclave was created in
ulation 2000), a ski resort with snow-kiting
1659 by the Treaty of the Pyrenees, which
school and summer hiking and mountain-
ended the 30-year war between France and
bike base, 10km west of Mont Louis. The
Spain by ceding Roussillon and the north- Tourist Office (%04 68 30 68 30; www.font-romeu.fr; 82
ern half of the ancient Catalonian county of
av Emmanuel Brousse), next to the cable-car station
Cerdagne in the eastern Pyrenees to France.
on the main street, has maps and information
The deal, which saw 33 Cerdagne villages in
on the two chairlifts and cable car (adult/child
all come under the French crown, excluded
aged six to 16/family return Ź 12.50/8.50/31)
the county s ancient capital of Llívia thanks
required to reach the lake. Shuttle buses
to its status since antiquity as a  city .
(adult/child aged six to 16 return Ź 5/2) also
transport walkers to the lake from the Pla da
ROUSSILLON
lonelyplanet.com VALLÉE DE L AGLY " " Tautavel 235
BarrÅs car park (1660m), a few kilometres May, Jun, Sep & Oct), chugs along the valley from
north of Mont Louis on the D60; the sinuous Rivesaltes to Axat, 60km west.
road goes the whole way to the lake but is off-
limits to normal cars between 7am and 7pm. TAUTAVEL
Outdoor action aside, Fort Romeu s big- Observing (by camera) archaeologists in real
gest attraction is Le Grand Four Solaire d Odeillo time excavating the same cave where a human
(%04 68 30 77 86; www.promes.cnrs.fr; 7 rue du Four skull believed to be 450,000 years old was un-
Solaire; h10am-noon & 2-6pm), a giant 1970s 1000- covered in 1971 is the highlight of the Musée de
kilowatt solar furnace and scientific research la Préhistoire (Prehistory Museum; %04 68 29 07 76; www
centre in Odeillo, 1km south, where you can .tautavel.com; av Léon-Jean Grégory; adult/7-14yr Ź 7/3.50;
learn about solar energy. Further exhibitions
h10am-7pm Jul & Aug, 10am-12.30pm & 2-5pm or 6pm
at Thémis (%04 68 04 14 25; h9.30am-12.30pm & 2-7pm Sep-Jun), 27km northwest of Perpignan above
Jul mid-Sep), a 1980s solar-powered tower 5km Tautavel village. In addition to the seasonal
west, complete the lesson in renewable energy. live link-in with the Caune de l Arago, the
For more, see p58. museum has a full-size reproduction of part
Mont Louis train station is 1km downhill of the cave, holograms, dioramas, fossilised
from the citadel. bones and so on. Admission includes entry to
the nearby Musée des Premiers Habitants d Europe
(Museum of Europe s First Inhabitants; rue Anatole France;
VALLÉE DE L AGLY adult/7-14yr Ź 3.20/1.60; h11.30am-1.30pm & 2.30-5.30pm
Sep-Jun, 11.30am-7.30pm Jul & Aug), a 300m signposted
The most northern of the three valleys cross- walk away.
ing Roussillon from east to west, the Agly
ensnares the sunbaked vineyards and arid ST-PAUL DE FENOUILLET
limestone mountains of Le FenouillÅdes. Not The sleepy old medieval capital of Le
only does this wine country prop up big names FenouillÅdes is the launching pad for dramatic
like Rivesaltes and Maury, it is also spitting dis- forays into the 500m-deep Gorges de Galamus,
tance from the land of the Cathars, wild coun- with its emerald-green waters, and spiritual
try dotted with 11th- to 13th-century clifftop Ermitage de St-Antoine de Galamus (h10am-6pm or
fortresses perched so high their very existence 7pm Apr-Oct), where 18th-century hermits spent
seems a minor miracle. See p196. a solitary existence devoted to God. A 10-
In summer a century-old narrow-gauge minute walk along a rocky footpath from the
tourist train, the Train du Pays Cathare et du car park at the southern end of the gorges on
FenouillÅdes (%04 68 59 99 02; www.tpcf.fr; adult/ the D7 gets you to the hermitage. In season
5-12yr return Ź 18/12; hdaily Jul & Aug, 3 or 4 times weekly between 1pm and 7pm, lights regulate traffic
A DAY WINE TASTING
The perfect way to end a morning in Rivesaltes (p220), known for its sweet dessert wine, is with
a long and lazy wine tasting over lunch at Château de Jau (%04 68 38 90 10; lunch/dinner menu
incl wine & coffee Ź 29/39; hlunch & dinner mid-Jun Sep). At this creative venue, 15km west, countless
visitors return year after year to dine on the same menu, served since 1978 on the terrace of this
Tuscan-style 18th-century chateau hidden in a mass of vines planted by Cistercian monks in the
12th century. Each course is built solely from local produce and is accompanied by two different
wines from the estate; detailed tasting notes (together with a warning to the driver to stay sober)
add to the fun, and views over the fish-filled pond are idyllic. César, TapiÅs and Ben (whose distinc-
tive squiggly handwriting is the logo for the estate s table wine Le Jaja de Jau, jaja being slang for
a simple wine jug) are among the artists to have featured in the Espace d Art Contemporain, a
contemporary art space hosting seasonal exhibitions which diners can freely peruse.
Post-lunch, drive west to Maury (population 900) and stock your cellar with vin doux naturel at
the Cellier des Vignerons de Maury (%04 68 59 00 95; www.vigneronsdemaury.com; 128 av Jean JaurÅs).
For dinner, nip across the road to Le Pichenouille (%04 68 59 02 18; www.restocave.com; 33 av Jean
JaurÅs; starters/mains Ź 7/12; hlunch & dinner Thu-Mon, closed dinner Sun & all day Mon-Wed Nov-Mar), an inspired
bistro cum wine cellar where you can eat and drink wine at cheaper, wine-producer prices.
R O U S S I L L O N
© Lonely Planet Publications
236 VALLÉE DE L AGLY " " St-Paul de Fenouillet lonelyplanet.com
on the terrifyingly sinuous, single-lane D7 the office for the Train du Pays Cathare et du
overhung with rock; at other times cross your FenouillÅdes (%04 68 59 99 02; www.tpcf.fr), which
fingers and pray you don t meet an oncoming passes through St-Paul de Fenouillet.
vehicle on the 1.4km stretch. Camping des Randonneurs (%04 68 59 05 50; www
The Tourist Office (%04 68 59 07 57; www.st-paul66 .campingdesrandonneurs.com; 2 adults & tent/car Ź 9.50/2,
.com; 26 blvd de l Agly; h10am-noon & 3-7pm Mon-Sat, 4-/6-person tepee Ź 79/95, 2-/4-person roulotte Ź 69/89; hmid-
shorter hours Sep-Jun) has plenty of information on Apr mid-Oct), 15km west in Fenouillet, oozes bo-
gorge walking and canyoning  the adrenelin- hemian romance with its igloo tents, tepees and
pumping thing to do! On the 1st floor is roulottes (gypsy caravans) between trees.
© 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.
ROUSSILLON


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