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The Jewish Chronicle

A Lot in laid-back Gascony

July 3, 2008 23:00

By

Anthea Gerrie,

Anthea Gerrie

5 min read

The last beautiful area of France remains almost ignored by tourists

If there is a beautiful part of France that still lays relatively undiscovered, it is surely Gascony. Time truly seems to stand still in this extraordinary green landscape, dotted with some of the best-preserved medieval houses, castles and fortifications in the world. Its neglect, given this lush countryside, delicious local cuisine, wealth of historic monuments and the thrill of having a fabulous fortified village all to yourself as you sip an outdoor aperitif on a lazy hot afternoon, is inexplicable.  

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The reason for the delightful lack of tourists and traffic can only be that the region (so far west that only the Pyrenees stand between Gascony and Spain) is too far-flung for Italians, north Europeans and even Parisians. But Eurostar and low-cost airlines from major UK cities to the gateway, Toulouse, have made it a lot more accessible to Brits.

Toulouse itself is a vibrant and rewarding city for those who take time to discover its slightly scattered pleasures. The magnificent 18th-century Capitole or Town Hall and the Gothic church of the Jacobins — with stained-glass, fabulous cloisters and summer concerts — are quite central. But the contemporary art museum, hidden away on the quieter side of the Garonne river in an old slaughterhouse, is not. But you can see art on display beside the river all summer, especially on a boat tour along this majestic waterway.