Breakfast at Hotel Relais du Chambrieres was very good too, especially for €8. We have an approximate limit on brekky. More than €10 is too much, and we decline it.
We set off to drive the most direct route to Antibes, along the D4085 and D6085 through the Parc Naturel Regional du Verdon. The hotel proprietor recommended Moustiers Saint Marie, but we had been there, and along the Gorge du Verdon a couple of times before. Not to be missed if you haven’t seen it though. I plan to be back next year on a motorcycle.
The drive was fabulous. We’d driven north on it before, but not south. Surprising how green the country still is after the hot summer. We passed a sign to a Citroen museum. Since we were driving a Citroen, the appropriate thing to do was to turn back and take a look, but the museum was closed, for some period between 4 hours and 8 months.
Further on, Castellane had abundant free parking just across the river from the town centre. We pulled in and walked back over the bridge into the centre. We’d stayed here before in 2007, but I’d forgotten what an attractive town it is.
I could live here. It’s on the Route Napoleon, handy to the Gorge du Verdon, the Alps, the Cote d’Azur, Corsica and Italy. Great sunny climate, but affordable. A 150sq metre house goes for about €300k, not very different to most of Australia. Castellane might be a bit cold in winter, as it is at 1200m. Our later descent to the coast was very long, with smashing views to the Mediterranean. Even better on a motorbike. I once read that the South of France is a cold country with sunny weather. Vis a vis latitude, it’s about the same as Hobart. I couldn’t live in Hobart.
On the drive down to Antibes we had to disobey Camille repeatedly, as usual. Are you crazy? I’m not turning off the main road to go down there!
We are handing in the Citroen tomorrow at Nice Airport, so tonight we must organise our possessions into a form that can be lugged onto a bus for the airport on Friday and checked in.