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"Blue Roads, Red Wine, and Quack Quack” " a Saint-Crépin-et-Carlucet Travel Page by edwis

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Home » Europe » France » Aquitaine » Saint-Crépin-et-Carlucet » Blue Roads, Red Wine, and Quack Quack” - Saint-Crépin-et-Carlucet, France

"Blue Roads, Red Wine, and Quack Quack” " a Saint-Crépin-et-Carlucet Travel Page by edwis

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edwis   
“All journeys have secret destinations of which the traveler is unaware”


Real Name: ED W.
Lives In: Tampa, US
Member Since: Jun 14, 2007
VT Rank: 6977

 

Page Views: 145            Last Visit to Saint-Crépin-et-Carlucet: August, 2008      

Blue Roads, Red Wine, and Quack Quack”

by edwis - last update: Sep 7, 2008

Our base for several days -

Many people consider this untouched region of France to have the most picturesque villages and towns in all of France. We won’t disagree. We picked up a rental car at the Bordeaux airport and drove the 3 hours to a little village called Carlucet. Eric and Helen’s (Brits) country manor is set on rolling hills about 15 minutes from the largest town in the area Sarlat de la Caneda. Sarlat has a world famous Saturday Market Day, not to be missed.

Their place is a fully restored old stone manor with several buildings and a wonderful swimming pool. We arrived hungry and Eric directed us to walk up the hill to the “Black Duck”. Since this is Perigord, home of Fois Gras and everything else duck; the place serves 6 items, with 5 being some sort of duck. Black is because they serve black Guinness on tap. Thus we were introduced into the region where every menu is full of duck (canard): duck breast, duck confit, duck magret, duck pate, duck Fois Gras, duck neck sausage, pressed duck leg, duck gizzards, and walnuts. We actually found it exciting and ate some form of duck by choice several days in a row. The region is very proud of their heritage and local cultures. Someone told us that you can always tell the Brits and the Americans, they are ones with a backpack full of everything they own, carrying water bottles.

We spent a day at the Saturday Market in Sarlat and we had so much fun that we went back that evening for dinner and entertainment. The streets were full of street musicians and entertainers, the most street artists we have ever seen at one place. We were glad we stayed out in the country, since the busyness of the city was constant.

On Eric’s advice, we rented our canoes

starting out in Vitrac, canoeing on the Dordogne River to La Roque Gageac, then to Beynac. Beynac is the village where the movie “Chocolate” was filmed. We stopped along the way and explored villages and rested. It took us over 3 ½ hours. Then we got a free shuttle bus ride back to the starting point. Along the way were the caves of prehistoric cliff dwellers, chateaus, and swimming in the shallow river.

Since most of the villages are only about 10-30 minutes apart, we spent our eight days there discovering several of the villages. We learned that if a town ends in “nac” or “ac” that means it is on water.

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