Off the Beaten Path in France, Where is it?

secret places france

 

 

I am often asked about France, it makes sense given that I live here and write a blog about it. When I travel to a new place I like to have a few facts about the place in my pocket too. A good restaurant, a must see or do sort of thing, where to stay… a few starting bits so that I have a foot on the ground when I arrive.

The main question I am asked (outside of brocantes and where to stay) is about the secret spots, the hidden places, the off the beaten track… the real "France". I have thought about that question for awhile. Imagining a secret spot, some hideaway, where few tourists have been, a place that captures the French essence. Somewhere were someone could go and feel France embracing them in one juicy double kiss to the cheeks.

  

secrets of France

 

 

The hidden places in France…

Behind the iron gate, inside the kitchen, on the other side of the garden wall, deep down in the wine cellar, inside the turret…

When you are in France it does help to know that wherever you are is most likely knee deep with wonder and awe. With France being the most visited country in the world what secrets remain? In Paris alone, there are over fifty million tourists a year plus…

"6,100 streets in Paris
13,260 crossroads
3,000 km of pavements
33.7 km of Boulevards des Maréchaux around Paris 
4.4 km of Grands Boulevards (between Place de la Madeleine and Place de la Bastille) 
9,884 benches, 107 clocks, and 1,856 bus shelters
109 Wallace drinking fountains 
 2,417 km of sewers…"

Via Paris.FR

 

secrets France

 

Secret places in France… 

I like grocery stores. And non-cosmopolitan cafes, bakeries that are not famous and sitting at the counter sipping on something, usually orange presse.

Over ten years ago I remember turning on the internet for the first time and instantly typing words such as:

France,

French,

Brocante,

Antiques,

French Antiques,

Undiscovered France,

Touring France…

and not one single thing popped up, instead, a blue screen starred back.

Now anything, everything, whatever we are searching for is ours in seconds.

 

Can there be a secret, a hidden place and off the beaten path?

Who is Norman?

Where can I learn to make Goat cheese in France?

Hot air balloons, boat rides, and charms?

Embracing your inner slowpoke.

Islands in France?

Have you ever been on a train from Menton to Sospel?

Wine tours in Alsace? 

 

 

 

Secrets France

 

How do I answer the question I am so often asked?

The first time I went to France was with my cousin Linda. My cousin was living and working in Germany when I arrived Linda asked, "Do you want to go to Paris? I need to go shopping, and I am thinking of Paris."

So we went to Paris.

Linda shopped. I tagged along.

We didn't see any of the sites other than taking a drink on the Champs Elysee. We walked down backs streets, and into little shops, we never saw one tourist, nor monument. It was magical!

Though Paris was awesome and the train ride was equally mesmerizing. I was hooked.

 

Years later when I married and moved to France, my parents came to visit me. We walked every single day from sun up to sunset. Each morning before heading out I would say, "Let's focus on Pain au Chocolat", or "The perfect rose", or "The best garden bench", and off we would go without any other agenda.

Now, what does this have to do with off the beaten trail and secret spots in France?

Not much.

 

 

secrets france

 

 

Discovering a place is about going with your shoes off, with your hands ready to reach out. It is about closing your eyes and breathing with your heart. It is about getting lost and finding what you are looking for. Discovering a place is seeing the beauty in the smallest details: By holding beauty because you see it and not because someone has told you where to look. The secret spots, the hidden places, the off the beaten path… they don't exist per se, instead, people what to experience France of their dreams. They want to wake up to what they have read about, dreamed about, they want the Oh la la experience.

 

They need a brocante.

What am I saying. Forget that. 

 

secrets france

 

Off the Beaten Path places to visit in France:

Some of my favorite people in France…

Vox Populi

Reves d'Argile

Domaine Lucien Jacobs

La Madone

Jouvaud 

Francoise's Pottery

 

What makes a place come alive? The people you meet and the experiences you share.

 

 

secret places france

 

 

If you want to discover a place, let it soak into to you and take root. Take time to let it absorb you. Expect the unexpected as a gift. If you want to find that secret place, that off the beaten path, where tourist don't go, if you want the place that you dream about be it the cobble stones, the church bells, the croissants with butter filled happiness, the berets, the baguettes, the movie set imagery than come to France with your five senses as your guide. Trust yourself to find what you are looking for follow your insticts, let your desire(s) be your guide.

 

If you want to be the one of few, and not one in thousands then go explore France in the countryside, in the middle of France.

French Countryside 

A house in the French Countryside, we have one for sale….

Castles a dime a dozen

Back roads through France.

 

Or just join me by coming on a journey (French la Vie).

 

 

 

off the beaten track france

 

 

France. 

I love it.

Add your French favorites in the comment section.

 

 



Comments

13 responses to “Off the Beaten Path in France, Where is it?”

  1. Diogenes

    Oh how I love that perfect balcony with the topiaries. Everything about it.

  2. In Paris, Au Pied Couchon for the crepes Grand Marnier. I swear, you are going to want to lick the plate clean. And their flambé goes sky high and I always get nervous they are going to set the red velvet drapes on fire. La droguerie is a fascinating little store crammed to the gills with precious treasures…beautiful delicate silk flowers, unique buttons, gorgeous ribbon. Speaking of ribbon, there is Mokuba. I love strolling through Jardin du Luxembourg…it is a photographer’s delight. I wrote a small book about it with accompanying photos. If you head over to Place de Madeleine you can buy wild strawberries at Hediards to eat with a cookies from their tin. Fauchon is a delight and that is where I pick up their fruit pates (jellies) my favorite is apricot, blackberry tea and an amazing choice of fresh desserts you can take to-go or eat in the cafe upstairs. And around the corner, Maison du Chocolat for almond nougat dipped in chocolate. It is my favorite city, hands down. The Marías district is fun to stroll thru, especially along the water. Printemps has perhaps the best scarf department I have ever seen. If you love antique buttons, go see Irma the button lady at the market at Saint Ouen. Paris is a surprise every day. Just walk out the door and start walking. Poke your nose into the bakeries…grab an escargot (sweet roll studded with raisins and a hot chocolate. Now is the perfect time to be in Paris if you are stuffing an Easter basket. The candy stores are filled to overflowing with beautiful molded bunnies in all sizes, candied almonds and studded chocolate eggs.

  3. Just to be there. Every time we disembark the plane, it feels as if we have never left. To walk through Carrefour and know where everything you need is located.
    Ali

  4. Jacklynn Lantry

    For me, off the beaten path was staying at your apartment in St. Zach. Wandering the streets of the tiny village, watching parents drop their kids off at school, hearing bits of conversation (in french, of course) floating through the window from the street, passing by open shutters and smelling dinners being prepared in the evening, taking in the redolent scent of wild rosemary while hiking in the hills, stumbling upon a game of petanque in the park, listening to the chime of church bells. Every single day was a collection of special moments, far away from the big or fancy or formal. It was, simply, life simmered in the cadence of France and it was every bit as special as any tour or monument.

  5. Leonie BUCHANAN

    We have been to Paris twice & walked our feet off, became lost but who cares found little treasures along the way.
    I love to see behind the scenes, when I go to the ballet or musicals I don’t always look at the leading people but watch the others in the chorus. So…..when we went to see the Opera Bastille it was not open to the public because they were rehearsing, as there were only a few of us they let us into watch the rehearsals, it was pitch black but we watched them on the stage going through their ‘hoops’. It was fascinating & altho we didn’t see an opera for me it was special. I have been to rehearsals for the Australian Ballet & several musicals & I never tire of listening to the director stop a performance & explain how they want something done, to me it is just as exciting as the official performances.

  6. Hi Corey, Do you have any tips for me? My 16-year-old nephew is going to spend Spring break doing music training in Avignon. He speaks Spanish, but no French. I’m trying to give him a little cheat sheet on culture, navigating shops etc. before he goes. (I have a Masters in French.) I know your young nieces visited recently. Any advice that helped them? Many thanks from a anxious auntie in San Francisco.

  7. Irene Thomas

    Corey and Friends, One of my most interesting memories of Paris, was our Sunday Dinner with Jim Haynes. You had suggested the gathering in one of your blogposts, and I followed up on it, as a surprise for my two traveling companions. Jim is an expatriate, former NPR host, and his home was filled with the most interesting people, from all over the world, including a young man from a tiny town, right next to my parents, in Upstate NY and a German journalist following the German symphony, in Paris. Jim proves it is a small world of which we are all a part. Our host made it possible for us to speak one on one with others that our trips to museums and gardens had not allowed us to do. This was seven years ago, and although Jim has advanced in age, I see he is still holding his Sunday meals. https://www.jim-haynes.com/

  8. Frank Levin

    In the twenty trips that Barb and I have made to France over the years many of our best experiences turned out to have happened as the result of a “wrong turn,” that turned out to be “right. It began when we missed our exit on the Autoroute and thereby wandered into a,”Fete de Battage,” in the tiny town of Logron. We were the only non-French there for the ancient tractor parade and the festivities in general. It was our second trip to France and hooked us on exploring by car where every turn is a “right” turn because all roads lead somewhere and around every turn there is something you have not seen before and probably couldn’t have imagined before as well. Plus we have learned to follow the battered and time-worn signs since they usually lead somewhere wonderful. Once we searched out all the places on the composite post card of Brittany for a wonderful day opf being the only people at all four of those places.

  9. Barbara Blizzard

    Since Frank and I will be in Provence in early May, we would like to find your friend Monique’s shop to see her wares. Is it in Auriol or do we need to find her at the market in Aubagne? More explorations for us this year.

  10. Barbara Blizzard

    Favorite recent trip was the Christmas markets of Alsace – searched out all the small ones, best being the one at Neuf Brisach which is inside a Vauban fort not far from Colmar.

  11. My Mother and I loved Uzes and Vivier.

  12. Love your thoughts on off the beaten tract when traveling. I always seem to focus on flowers and tea. One of my fondest memories is being lost on a back road in France and finding a stone wall overflowing with flowers, just tumbling over the top. It was beautiful! On this same adventure I found a stone table along the side of a back road just beckoning me to sit awhile and sip a cup of tea.

  13. Christine

    Thank you for the mention !!! xoxoxo

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