Showing posts with label South of France. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South of France. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 November 2016

Pack your dancing shoes . . .

NEXT spring, South of France residence Chateau Lou Casteou, will be holding its next luxury dance and fitness break, to be held 6th - 9th April, 2017. The four-day, all-inclusive residential retreat will be led by dancers Juan Let’s Salsa and Simon and Becky Mascarenhas.

Guests will try out the different dance disciplines of Merengue, Bachata, Cha Cha Cha, Salsa and Kizomba. The retreat will cater for both beginners and experienced dancers wishing to improve their footwork skills.

Juan has performed as a dancer and teacher in top London venues and Simon has a steadfast reputation as a smooth and relaxed dancer, teacher and choreographer. Simon has made a number of big stage and film appearances, including ‘Strictly Come Dancing’ and the big screen hit Cuban Fury in 2014.

Dancing will also be complimented by fun fitness activities designed to improve the core and leg muscle groups used in dance. These include core strengthening and fun swiss ball sessions, plus water and Latino aerobics. Guests will also take in a visit to a local Provençal vineyard and the Cuban Club, La Bodeguita.



Go Holiday news : www.govillasandcottages.co.uk
All your holiday needs: IN PRINT - ON-LINE - DiGiMAG - SMARTPHONE -TABLET - BLOG - TWITTER - G+ - FACEBOOK

Picture Credit: Chateau Lou Casteou

Friday, 8 May 2015

On show – almost perfect replicas of man’s oldest art

SOME of the planet's oldest Stone Age paintings are on the walls of a cave complex in a mountain in south-east France. 
Discovered in 1994, there are hundreds of paintings of horses, mammoths, rhinos, lions, bears, plus handprints. 

A cliff fall hermetically sealed the cave, protecting the paintings from the world for more than 20,000 years. To protect them for all time – they could be destroyed just by human breath – access to the cave, through an almost always closed steel door, has been and remains severely restricted, although in 2009 the German filmmaker Werner Herzog uncovered its contents when he and a very small crew were allowed exclusive entry to make his 3-D documentary, Cave of Forgotten Dreams.


Because the general public will never be able to see the artworks – thought to be between 30,000 and 37,000 years old – the French government has spent €56 million (£60 million) building an almost-exact replica of the cave system (known as the Chauvet Cave, after the scientist who found it) including copies of 400 of the paintings. The Pont d'Arc Cavern building, just over a mile from the original site, was opened in April by President Hollande. 


Inch by inch, scientists and artists used the same tools and techniques believed to have been used in the Stone Age. Six thousand digital photographs of the painting were taken, enabling them to be copied accurately. Even the stalactites and stalagmites in the original cave, along with the cool temperatures and thick smell of humidity, have been replicated.

A similar replica — of the 18,000-year-old cave drawings in the Lascaux caves in south-west France — attracts 300,000 visitors a year, and the government is hoping the Pont d'Arc Cavern will be just as popular. It is the largest perfect replica of a prehistoric site in Europe. Set within a large wooded area, it includes (alongside the replica cave) a discovery centre, a permanent exhibition, sheltered interpretation stations, and an educational area for youngsters. The Pont d'Arc Cavern is in Ardeche – part of the Rhône-Alpes region – north of Nimes.

For opening hours and tour booking information in English, go to: http://ardechelacavernedupontdarc.for-system.com/z8501e3f42507x42507b17499_uk-Pont-d-Arc-Cave-Your-ticket-guided-tour-in-English-Vallon-Pont-d-Arc.aspx

www.culture.gouv.fr/culture/arcnat/chauvet/en
www.acavernedupontdarc.org/en/the-cavern-pont-darc

Go Holiday editor David Kernek comments: This replica will undoubtedly be a technical and engineering masterpiece, but with economic times as tough as they are in France, many – in that country and elsewhere – might be asking if this was the wisest use of £60 million. It is, after all, a replica. It would have much less expensive to distribute free copies of Werner Herzog’s excellent documentary movie Cave of Forgotten Dreams, which was filmed in original cave and comprises close-ups of these remarkable artworks.


Go Holiday news : www.govillasandcottages.co.uk
All your holiday needs: IN PRINT - ON-LINE - DiGiMAG - SMARTPHONE -TABLET - BLOG - TWITTER - G+ - FACEBOOK

Picture Credit: photo-DRAC-Rhone-Alpes-Ministere-de-la-Culture-et-de-la Communication-191

Thursday, 19 March 2015

Eurostar brings south of France closer to UK travellers

EUROSTAR has launched a campaign to promote its year-round service direct to the South of France. 

Destinations such as Lyon, Avignon, and Marseille will all be within easier reach of London and Ashford thanks to the new Eurostar service starting on May 1.




The new Eurostar route offers a seamless journey from the heart of London or Ashford to the centre of Lyon, Avignon and Marseille.


Go Holiday news : www.govillasandcottages.co.uk
All your holiday needs: IN PRINT - ON-LINE - DiGiMAG - SMARTPHONE -TABLET - BLOG - TWITTER - G+ - FACEBOOK

Picture Credit: "Eurostar à Chambéry (2014)" by Florian Pépellin - Own work via Wikimedia Commons .