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Travel, Spring, Europe, France Frances Lawrence Travel, Spring, Europe, France Frances Lawrence

Quimper - an off-season active itinerary for Spring

A 7-night springtime itinerary with medieval Quimper as the base. Cider, cycling, springtime walks, crepes and art.

Itinerary At A Glance

  • 7 night independent itinerary for the very northwest tip of France, using Quimper as the base

  • Based on travelling at the very end of winter/start of spring, driving there using the channel tunnel.

  • Highlights include discovering the Pont-Aven school of art, eating crepes in their cultural homeland, coastal biking

  • Based on a couple travelling, with a focus on leisurely cultural activities and biking, interspersed with time to just relax and soak up the atmosphere

 

Why here?

This is an alternative option for exploring Brittany in its off-season, using Quimper as the main base, for easy access to city, country, coast and culture, with all activities within a 1 hour drive or less.

Every image you will ever see for Brittany tourism - every website, every accommodation listing - will show Brittany in the summer time, bathed in gorgeous sunshine. It’s true that early spring is unpredictable in the northwest corner of Europe; we can get everything from blue skies and frigid air, to bouncing rain, to snow, freezing cold and biting winds, to very warm and sunny days hovering around 20°C. You just don’t know what you’re gonna get.

This makes it a brilliant month for a road trip, and a great month for venturing outside (dressed accordingly!) If the weather is just too much, there’s plenty indoor cultural action to amuse too.

Quimper is considered by many to be the ‘cultural heart’ of Brittany, and stretching from the coast to inland, there is the Parc naturel régional d'Armorique, a huge natural park with rugged granite peaks, moors & dense forests. Due to unpredictable weather, indoorsing will be a key fallback, so staying close to a city means cultural and foodie activities are in easy reach for when the weather just isn’t playing ball.


WHEN

April

Like the UK, April can be either cold and snowing, or warm and sunny, Take clothing options and plan activities that account for these unknowable circumstances.


TRAVEL MEANS

Drive from Leeds, using the Channel Tunnel crossing + Road Bike

Drive time is 12.5hrs. Alternative, similar travel time is to cross using the ferry from Plymouth to Roscoff


ACCOMMODATION

Near Quimper

Quimper’s countryside, being more inland, has much more of a ‘cosy’ comforting feel to it than the brazen and rocky boldness of the coast around Brest.

3 bed home on the banks of the River Odet

Auberge des Glazicks - Michelin-starred restaurant-with-rooms about 30 mins drive from Quimper

3 bed home in central Quimper

Hôtel Ginkgo - Just outside the city centre, boutique hotel with some rooms giving views over the River Odet


SCHEDULE

Day 1

Drive to Quimper - this is a 12.5 hour journey. Pack the car with supplies and plan the route with opportunities for break points

Check-in

Collect groceries


Day 2

Brunch or Lunch - with local cider at Le Sistrot

Bike ride - out to Parc botanique de Cornouaille (about 2hr bike ride round-trip)


Day 3

Crepe workshop - for the morning activity, book onto a crepe-making workshop in Benodet (25 min drive from Quimper)

Embroidery art - in the afternoon, visit the School of Embroidery Art by Pascal Jaouen in Quimper where they have regular exhibitions of artistic embroidery


Day 4

Relax - take the morning to chill

Walk - in the early-afternoon, take a walk in the Bois du Nevet (25 min drive from Quimper)

Evening Drinks - try local brew at La Baleine Déshydraté in Quimper


Day 5

All day bike ride - Start in the morning, bike out to Pont-Aven (4 hour bike ride round trip) and stop in at Le Musée de Pont-Aven to see their considerable collection of works from this area, most dating from mid-to-late 19th Century


Day 6

Walk - Take a morning walk in the Huelgoat Forest (50 min drive from Quimper)

Relax - Take the afternoon to chill out, read, draw, chat


Day 7

Spa day - Book a spa day of thalasso therapy at Valdys Spa in Dourarnez (30 min drive from Quimper)


Day 8

Drive home


 

Other April Itineraries

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Travel, Summer, Europe, UK, Channel Islands Frances Lawrence Travel, Summer, Europe, UK, Channel Islands Frances Lawrence

Guernsey in Spring - walking on a tiny island

My planned itinerary for spending 4 springtime days in Guernsey, Channel Islands. Days spent walking and picnicking, nights spent in a treehouse hotel.

 

Why Guernsey?

The Bailiwick of Guernsey is technically a collection of islands that includes the island of Guernsey plus nearby islands of Sark, Alderney, Jethou, Brecqhou and Herm.

Guernsey itself is a very very small island - just 65 sq. km. Comparing this to other islands: it is 7 times smaller than Ibiza, and 6 times smaller than Barbados. Comparing it to an English county: Cornwall is 55 times larger than Guernsey. Comparing this to cities in the UK, it is about the same size as Derby; a very very small British city indeed. Apparently, walking around the entirety of the Guernsey Coastal path is 64km which can be done at a very leisurely pace over the course of 4 days. So that sizes the prize a little.

Aside from its diminuitiveness, Guernsey is known for dramatic coastlines, lots of beaches, being a tax haven, being occupied by the Nazis during the Second World War and also being the home of Victor Hugo when in exile from France. The culture is neither British nor French, and both at the same time.

The attraction of Guernsey for the traveller is a little escapism, activities on the water and some easygoing outdoor activity like walking or leisure cycling to take in the sea views, pretty coves and fortress remnants. You come here to slow down, relax and experience island life.

 

Itinerary At A Glance

  • 4 night independent itinerary for Guernsey, part of the Channel Islands, off the south coast of England

  • Based on either flying in and out of Guernsey from Leeds, or East Midlands

  • Highlights include alfresco dining on English-French fusion fare, walking parts of the Coastal Path, a day trip out to Jersey to visit the War Tunnels and hiking with a picnic

  • Based on a couple travelling, with a focus on leisurely cultural activities and hiking, interspersed with time to just relax and soak up the atmosphere


WHEN

April or May

Typically dry with long daylight hours and mild pleasant weather


ACCOMMODATION

Being such a tiny island, and a popular one, accommodation choices are somewhat limited and what there is books up very very quickly. This needs to be booked very well ahead of time.

In order of preference for me:

Fermain Valley Hotel Treehouses (they have a yoga space in this hotel)

The Farmhouse Hotel and Restaurant

Greenhills Country Hotel

Fermain Tower **While very cool, this is also located in a small car park, so not quite the prettiest outdoor space. This is incredibly popular, easily with a year-long list of bookings already scheduled.


TRAVEL MEANS

Fly direct from Leeds to Guernsey or direct from East Midlands to Guernsey with Aurigny

The flight schedule is more restrictive from Leeds Bradford, with flights only on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays, whereas flights from East Midlands are 4 times a week.


SCHEDULE

Day 1

Arrive; settle in.


Day 2

Breakfast: Rooftop Cafe at Creasey’s, in St Peter Port

Hike with a Picnic: Take one of these harder hiking routes


Day 3

Hike: Take one of these routes

Dinner: Book at hotel gastropub Les Douvres, in St Martin’s - dinner and live music (Friday nights only)


Day 4

Day trip to Jersey: Take the foot ferry, have breakfast in St Helier at La Bouche in Central Market

Jersey War Tunnels: Book a ticket for an understanding of the island under German Occupation, the only part of the British Isles occupied during World War II


Day 5

Breakfast

Travel home: try to arrange return travel to leave in the morning


 

Other UK-based Itineraries

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Travel, Spring, Europe, UK, England Frances Lawrence Travel, Spring, Europe, UK, England Frances Lawrence

Central Cornwall - an active mid-week stay in Spring

Itinerary journal of my springtime holiday in Cornwall. Where we ate, what we saw and how we enjoyed biking around the countryside.


Itinerary At A Glance

  • 4 day independent itinerary for Central-Eastern Cornwall, based on driving from Leeds, in April

  • Highlights include Charlestown, Tintagel castle, dinner at Rick Stein’s, biking the Camel Trail and of course, eating famous Cornish treats like the pasty and cream tea

  • Based on a couple travelling, with a focus on leisurely outdoor and cultural activities, interspersed with time to just relax and soak up the atmosphere

 

Honest verdict

Does the place live up to expectations?

The only reason I booked this was that the pandemic forced me to consider staycation options. I myself have never paid attention to Cornwall, resistant mainly because it felt like too ‘obvious’ a choice, and since novel and unfamiliar cultural experiences is one of the main reasons I enjoy travel, holidaying on UK soil is usually very low down the list of options. Needs must in this case. Research turned up interesting historical sites, strong food culture and a countryside ideal for exploration by bike which is all the typical hallmarks of a destination we enjoy, so I booked.

Despite this, I still felt a bit bratty about it before we went; like I was being punished and not being allowed to travel abroad so this was like a version of being grounded…………..but having been and come back, I have completely amended my viewpoint.

Cornwall is not famous for nothing! I think its reputation a holiday destination is well-deserved - the countryside is attractive, there is plenty to see and do wherever you are in the peninsula and the food is great. I found the North Coast less attractive than the South Coast. It also felt like an island to me when we were there; the sea is almost always in view, which adds to the illusion of being ‘away’.

Turns out, staying in the UK can be just as enjoyable a holiday as going abroad, especially if the purpose is to just relax and enjoy some simple pleasures.

Did the itinerary work for the trip?

Cornwall is a very very long way from Yorkshire, so travelling such a distance means a weekend is really out of the question.

4 nights felt spot on for us - this was my Mum’s suggestion and one I will use again - 7 full nights would probably feel like too much for us in the UK.

She also recommended we stay Monday to Friday which was genius; you get the weekend before and after which both gives you time to organise yourself and also sort of ‘elongates’ the holiday into still feeling like a full week off work.

Side bonus is that Mon-Thu rates are oftentimes a touch cheaper than the weekends.

We had a mixture of activity, culture and history; and there wasy plenty more to do besides where we got to.

Would I make another visit?

In short, despite my reservations, I would, and probably will, go back.


WHEN

April

Very end of Spring


LIGHT & WEATHER

Long days, likely warm (not hot)

Sunrise: 06:56am to 05:57am

Sunset: 19:52pm to 20:38pm

14-15 hours of daylight


TRAVEL MEANS

Car & Bike

Driving from Yorkshire to Cornwall, with an overnight rest-stop in Bristol on the way down. About 6.5 hours each way.

Bike for activities whilst there.


ACCOMMODATION

We stayed in this Airbnb

This place was marvellous - very rurally located, luxury and modern, extremely well suited for a couple, with a fabulous little Japanese-style deep-seated bath and outdoor barbeque. Highly highly recommended.

 

SCHEDULE

DAY 1

Drive to Bristol; overnight in a Travelodge

DAY 2

Drive from Bristol, settle in

Biked The Camel Trail: a disused railway line that has been converted into an easy, mostly flat, bike trail

Cream tea at Tim’s Place in Wadebridge: very enjoyable and very attentive service (particularly for a cafe - felt more like proper restaurant waitress service)

Dined on the outdoor roof terrace at Rick Stein’s The Seafood Restaurant - this was when outdoor eating was the only option and admittedly, it was a bit too chilly to really fully enjoy it but we were so thrilled just to be in a restaurant, we still had a good time. Food, service and setting were all lovely.

DAY 3

Biked from Charlestown to The Lost Gardens of Heligan along Route 3 of the National Cycle Network - about 1hr each way. Enjoyed a leisurely afternoon wandering the ground and gardens before returning to Charlestown

DAY 4

Visited English Heritage site, Tintagel Castle. It is deservedly famous this place - a very large and imposing ruin of a castle perched on the north coast and spread over a large area. We spent a good few hours walking around imagining what it would have been like hundreds and hundreds of years ago. Recommended, especially as an off-weather day (which we had) - the blustery overcast and changeable weather just added to the atmosphere.

DAY 5

Had breakfast at St Kew Farmshop: this was KNOCKOUT!! Its a place for locals, so well off the tourist trail and you need a car to reach it, but it is worth it. Cafe and Farmshop combined, we had a delicious and healthy breakfast of pimped-up mushrooms on toast and a sausage-cheese English Muffin, and purchased local beef steak and asparagus for a barbecue at our accommodation later in the stay. They also have a lovely outdoor seating area looking over a small garden. Highly highly recommended

Wandered around Fowey (pronounced ‘foy’): a delightful little town on the south coast filled with independent shops and outlets. Just meandered the steep and narrow streets, drank coffee, soaked up the vibe, perused the little shops and admired the street art. If I was to recommend a place to stay in Cornwall, this would be it - the nicest town we visited on our stay

Ate freshly baked Cornish pasties from both Malcolm Barnecutts in Wadebridge, and Sarah’s Pasty Shop in Looe - both excellent. Controversially, the Cheese & Onion was my favourite

DAY 6

Drive home


Ideas for another visit

  • Stay in Falmouth for a bit of an arty ‘city break’

    Stay in Penzance for close proximity to Lands End and access to the Scilly Isles - itinerary here

    • Visit the Museum of Global Communications in Porthcurno - apparently, in 1870, the first international telegraph cable was brought ashore at Porthcurno, connecting Britain to India and later other parts of the British Empire. By the start of World War II, Porthcurno was a critical hub for allied communications with 14 cables coming ashore, carrying some 70% of all communications. Looks fascinating

    • Book in to see a performance at The Minack Theatre - an open air theatre on the cliffside overlooking the sea

    • Visit Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens near Penzance

    • Go to The Eden Project - on everyone’s list really, but unfortunately closed when we visited

    • Visit Nancarrow Farm for one of their famed Feasts or Sunday Lunch with home-reared organic meat

 

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Travel, Spring, Europe, Germany Frances Lawrence Travel, Spring, Europe, Germany Frances Lawrence

Hanover and The Harz Mountains - a Spring travel plan for mountain biking and city break

Travelling in spring, departing from Leeds, my imagined itinerary for 7 nights of exploring in Lower Saxony.

Why Hanover & The Harz Mountains?

The start of my research into The Harz Mountains was inspired by this article from Culture Trip; I did a bit more digging and found what looks to be a perfect region to explore on a bike.

The main focus of the trip will be the Harz Mountains and I’ve plumbed for one of the most obvious towns as the base - Quedlinburg. This little city is a UNESCO World Heritage site owing to it being the burial site for the first German King, and it was Germany's first capital and an important city during the Middle Ages. Now, it is a well-known tourist destination and is usually the favoured spot for a visit to the region. Looks to be a great base for a bit of biking around the Harz, while also offering up options for historical activities and dining.

Hanover (spelt Hannover in German) is very simply the nearest city and the most obvious airport - so I decided to make it a part of the itinerary. Much of their visitor marketing is geared towards the city as a business destination but reading between the lines, I found more than enough history, culture and uniquely Hanoverian experiences for us to enjoy a few days getting to know this city. The Aldstadt (German for ‘Old Town’) is full of those gorgeous half-timbered structures and it is home to the Eilenriede, Europe's largest municipal forest. It is very bike friendly, both in the city and its surrounds, with hundreds of kilometres of signposted routes and city bike lanes. Its reputation as a business hub also makes it incredibly easily logistics-wise, so superb for the independent traveller. Most unique of all is that the city has an international firework competition each year………weird, and cool. In short, many many reasons for a visit.

I have visited Germany once before - Bavaria and Baden-Wuttemburg - and ever since, I’ve been telling anyone who will listen that the best baked goods are in Germany - not in France, not in Italy - Germany. So add superb cake and daily pretzels to the list of attractions.


Itinerary At A Glance

  • 7 day independent itinerary; 4 nights in Quedlinburg, then 3 nights in Hanover, travelling in Spring - April, May or June.

  • Based on flying in and out of Hanover from Leeds with a hop in Amsterdam.

  • Highlights include a two-wheeled day trip to Marienburg Castle, international firework competition displays, enjoying modern German fine dining in a 2-star Michelin restaurant, understanding more of Germany’s medieval history, and biking around the Harz Mountains.

  • Based on a couple travelling, with a focus on leisurely cultural activities and biking, interspersed with time to just relax and soak up the atmosphere.


WHEN

Spring - April or May

The weather is very similar to the UK so highly unpredictable, though I’m of the opinion that Spring is the absolute best time to visit Northern Europe. That being said, I’ll still expect a variety of warm, cool, wet and generally changeable weather for this trip.


TRAVEL MEANS

KLM, from Leeds into Hanover, with a 2hr change in Amsterdam

I will also hire a car for the entirety of the trip, and a mountain bike for the stay in the Harz Mountains

Note the following:

  • the city centre is an environmental zone - access is only permitted for cars with a green sticker

  • there are over 360 kilometres of cycle paths alongside the city’s roads and 170 kilometres of cycle paths through Hannover's green spaces

  • you can take your bike on the tram or S-Bahn (Stadtbahn), sometimes at no extra charge


ACCOMMODATION

Quedlinburg (in order of preference):

Hanover (in order of preference):

 

SCHEDULE

Quedlinburg - Day 1 to 4

Take a guided mountain bike tour in the Solling-Vogler Nature Park & Mountain Biking network

Visit Volksbank Arena Harz mountain bike trail centre with a choice of 74 routes

Visit Bikepark Bodetal

Take any of these off-road routes to take in the scenery around the Bodetal

Eat some traditional German ‘pub-grub’ washed down with German beer at Brauerei Ludde Quedlinburg

Get some coffee and cake at Cafe Zum Roland

Hanover - Day 5 to 7

Visit the Sprengel Museum, to see their collection of 20th century cubist art

Book into a brewery tour at Herrenhauser Brauerei

Attend Velo City Night - at Velo City Night, thousands of cyclists conquer the streets of Hannover, forming a huge collective tour of the city. Similarly, at Skate by Night, around 4,000 inline skaters cruise around the city. Both initiatives are designed to promote alternative travel options and encourage the creation of the infrastructure needed

Attend one of the international firework competition displays at the Herrenhausen Gardens

Day trip to Marienburg Castle - 1 hr 30 m each way on a bike. Perhaps book for one of the guided tours or simply stop in at the restaurant

Hanover has a 2-star Michelin restaurant, Jante. I’d book in here for a treat

Stop by Lindenblatt Burger-Bar. All the ingredients are from the Hannover region, with the steaks coming from ecologically reared animals.

Stadtmauer Hannover - modern restaurant with a view of the Leine river

Have breakfast at Fraulein Schlicht (closed Monday & Tuesday)

 

ABOUT HANOVER’S NEIGHBOURHOODS

  • Aldstadt (Old Town) - the central historic hub. This is where all the major sites can be found and the half-timbered architecture

  • List - the cultured and refined residential district. To the northeast of the Aldstadt, it is just north of the Eilenreide Forest also, so very well located for both culture and the urban outdoors

  • Calenburger Neustadt - the student district. Bound on all sides by water - River Leine to the east and north, River Ihme to the west

  • Südstadt - the up-and-coming district for young professionals. This neighbourhood is quiet, residential and is considered a bit of a haven for outdoor activity (with both the Eilenreide and Machensee Lake in close proximity) and is home to a lot of design-focused modern boutiques and a variety of modern restaurants. It is also home to the Sprengel Art Gallery.

  • Linden - the edgy, funky alternative district. It only became part of Hanover in 1920 and often considers itself having a separate identity


FOOD AND DRINK - SPECIALITIES & CUSTOMS

In Lower Saxony (German: Niedersachsen), the cuisine is features many of the ingredients common to Northern Europe - buckwheat, apples, butter, potatoes, cherries, pears, plums, asparagus, cabbage, dill, beer and rye. Some of the more unusual specialities include:

  • Apple Soup made from cooked apples and raisins and seasoned with a generous helping of cinnamon and vanilla

  • During the spring season, asparagus served with schnitzel, potatoes and brown butter

  • Welf Pudding is a traditional dessert from Hanover, which is a two-layer posset-like concoction made from egg, milk, vanilla, sugar, cornstarch, dry white wine and lemon

  • Pinkel is Lower Saxony's national sausage

  • Sour milk cheeses such as Harzer, Gelbkäse and Bauernhandkäse

  • They also love Arme Ritter (French Toast) and Buckwheat pancakes


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