Family Holidays Overview

Family Holidays: Poitou Charentes Family Holidays

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Today

-6.1°C
21°F
Flying Time2.00 hours
Carbon Footprint0.56 tonnes CO2
TimezoneGMT +1
Local CurrencyEuro

Why

Covering a large area of central-western France and four départements, this region has seen a surge in popularity among British holiday-makers over the past few years, and is a particularly great place for family-friendly gîtes. Its attraction also comes from the fact that it is easy to reach from the UK. Despite all this, and despite the wealth of vast, clean, toddler-friendly beaches, accessible seaside towns with fabulous restaurants and cafés serving the freshest seafood, and great kids’ attractions, from a world-class conservation zoo to a futuristic theme-park of the moving image, it remains relatively untouristy.


Futuroscope
Futuroscope
La Rochelle harbour
A critter at Zooodysée
La Rochelle beach
  1. Top left: Futuroscope
  2. Top middle: Futuroscope
  3. Top right: La Rochelle harbour
  1. Bottom left: A critter at Zooodysée
  2. Bottom right: La Rochelle beach

When

The Charente-Maritime has a particularly mild climate, due to the Gulf Stream, that makes it very pleasant in spring and autumn, so don’t rule out out-of-season trips to La Rochelle and the islands. Do avoid, as elsewhere in France, the months of July and especially August, when the French take their holidays en masse and everything gets booked up aeons in advance.

How

The region is easily accessed by Eurostar/TGV or by budget airline, with the main hubs for both being Poitiers and La Rochelle. You are also within about four hours’ drive of some of the western Channel ferry ports.

Stay

There are many types of accommodation in Poitou Charentes, from hotels to villas and gites. Take a look at our range of affordable 2- or 3-star hotels in Poitou Charentes in conjunction with Active hotels, or if you fancy something a bit different, take a look at our self catering in France article, featuring 3 carbon-neutral holiday homes equidistant from Poitiers, Angoulême and La Rochelle.

Do

The region’s main attraction – so major, in fact, that it has its own TGV station with direct trains from Paris – is Futuroscope, a futuristic themepark loosely based around the moving image (many of its attractions are 3D or other quirky cinemas). The park is encircled by hotels catering especially to visitors, some with swimming pools and shuttle services (see the website for a list and direct bookings), or you can stay in nearby Poitiers ­– the historical regional capital, full of good shops, restaurants and cafés.

Thirty minutes’ south of Poitiers lies the Vallée des Singes, a conservation park with 30 species of free-roaming monkeys, plus jungle-themed play areas and a new mini-farm.

The next major town after Poitiers is La Rochelle on the coast – a pleasant spot with cobbled pedestrianised streets, great fish restaurants, a small but good sandy beach with lots of kids’ entertainments in high summer, and an excellent aquarium. If rain strikes, the town’s Museum d’Histoire Naturelle reopened in 2007 after extensive renovation works; the star attraction amidst its naturalist and ethnographical displays is the stuffed body of Zarafa, a giraffe given to Charles X by the Viceroy of Egypt in 1824. Transported down the Nile by boat, accompanied by three cows to provide her with milk, she disembarked in Marseilles, from where she walked to Paris (900km – special shoes were made for her!)

La Rochelle is the gateway to the Ile de Ré, an Atlantic island popular with French holidaymakers and Parisian second-homers, partly because it has about the same number of hours as sunshine as the South of France. There’s not much to do here beyond hire bikes, laze on the sandy, chilld-friendly beaches and eat ice cream and local oysters and fish (sold directly from the boats in some ports) – but that’s the point really. A little further south, the Ile d’Oléron offers more of the same – though it’s bigger and has less tourists. Just getting there is a thrill – the bridge from the mainland, at more than 3km, is France’s longest.

Between La Rochelle and the Ile d’Oléron, Chatelaillon-Plage is a family-oriented resort little known among Brits, and a good place for a low-key seaside holiday without the crowds. Don’t miss the wonderful Crêperie Bain des Fleurs for gorgeous pancakes on the seafront.

Toward the far south of the region lies Royan, a seaside resort with largely modern buildings, including a crazy cathedral that looks like something landed from Mars (most of the original town was razed by WWII bombs). There’s an old-fashioned, rather 1950s feel to the town that some love and others find lacking in Gallic charm, but there’s no denying the attraction of the vast flat beach for those with young kids. Close to Royan, at Les Mathes, the Zoo de la Palmyre is a world-class conservation zoo in the midst of a forest of maritime pines.

Among other attractions worth singling out is the Zooodysée, a forest ‘zoo’ with uniquely European animals, including wolves, owls and bisons, horse-and-cart rides, and little pavilions full of interactive and educational displays; it’s not far inland of La Rochelle in the forest of Chizé. Inland of the Ile d’Oléron, St-Savinien is well known for its boating lake with miniature replica ferries, steamers and the like, each of them taking one adult and one child (note that they’re only in operation in July and August).

Further south still, at Jonzac, Les Antilles is a huge indoor and outdoor waterpark with a wave machine, vast slides and more aquatic fun – great for days when the weather lets you down.

Lastly, don’t miss the under-rated town of Angoulême, billed the ‘capital of the comic strip’ – many of its walls have been decorated by famous comic strip artists, and it’s also home, since January 2008, to the Cité Internationale de la Bande Dessinée et de l’Image, comprising six ‘museums of the imaginary’: the Museum of Fine Arts, the History Museum, the Museum of Natural History, the Museum of Ethnology, the Museum of Sciences and Techniques and the Museum of Contemporary Art.

Eat

Apart from Charentaise snails – love ‘em or hate ‘em – you’ll find seafood aplenty, including the prized local oysters. One of the best fish restaurants is A Côté de Chez Fred in La Rochelle. Crêperies, as all over France, provide a handy fall-back for families; many are open all day.

Cost

Accommodation rates sky-rocket in June, July and August, but, as elsewhere, if you self cater you can keep costs down, despite the current strength of the Euro versus the pound.

Note that restaurants right on the seafront are often over-priced.


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