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24 favorite journey finds of 2024 – from turtles in Turkey to a Highland pub crawl

24 favorite journey finds of 2024 – from turtles in Turkey to a Highland pub crawl

Unspoilt seashores and a turtle rescue centre in Turkey

Travelling down Turkey’s Turquoise Coast, my spouse and I chanced on İztuzu seashore accidentally. Virtually three miles of sand stretches in a slender spit between a river delta and the ocean, ringed by excessive mountains.

In 1987 building had began on a large resort complicated. However İztuzu – now often called Turtle Seashore – is likely one of the Mediterranean’s most vital breeding grounds for loggerhead turtles. A world marketing campaign was launched, and the event plans had been shelved. Now it’s strictly protected. The seashore was busy with sunbathers, however mendacity down is forbidden within the broad swathe of sand from which hatchlings emerge.

We visited the rescue centre that rehabilitates victims of boat collisions and fishing web entanglements, the place loggerheads float in tanks of salt water. The precept of coexistence, which many see as on the coronary heart of contemporary Turkishness, extends to marine life too. And the water felt pretty.
Nick Hunt

Lincolnshire’s (much less blingy) reply to Cape Cod

Travelling to north Lincolnshire this yr, I preferred Cleethorpes greater than I anticipated, and I preferred Humberston Fitties very a lot certainly. Snuggled behind sand dunes, the Fitties is one among Britain’s surviving plotlands – the casual, self-built chalet camps that emerged within the late Nineteenth-century.

The Fitties is now a chosen conservation space. It’s not as makeshift because it as soon as was however, effectively, there’s one thing about it, a working man’s Cape Cod with an outsider-ish air. Native-born Julie Connell remembers holidaying right here within the Nineteen Seventies: “My dad and mom owned a chalet. In these days the lighting was by oil lamps. I can nonetheless bear in mind the odor.”

I stayed at Little Haven, one among three chalets Julie now rents out. Fortunately, it has all mod-cons however nonetheless retains the Fitties spirit. “It’s magical,” Julie provides. “The Fitties envelops you with its shabby-chic mentality, its combine of individuals and their ardour to guard the place for generations to return.”
Chalets, sleeping 4 or 5 from £110 a night time, holidaystaycations.co.uk
Sarah Baxter

All life is underneath Marseille’s southern solar

Soccer on the seashore in Marseille. {Photograph}: Sener Yilmaz Aslan/Getty Photos

Pull up a chair outdoors Chez Yassine; order a steaming, spicy leblebi (chickpea stew) and a bottle of thick home lemonade; watch all of it unfold. Watch Marseille seethe and teem and toil underneath an enormous southern solar. Watch the ladies open shuttered home windows, and the boys of the markets hawk apples, blenders, bins. Sip a beer on the steps of Cours Julien whereas the final of the sunshine lifts graffiti off golden partitions. Hear a pianist play at a beachside bus cease. See the younger ones with salted smiles dance outdoors galleries, in fish eating places, underneath pine parasols. Get up subsequent day with a hangover, a croissant, a restaurant. Do all of it once more.

Go to Marseille for a hymn to the miracle of cities. Nowhere with such manic variety ought to work. However simply sufficient love is simply sufficient to make it sing. Here’s a world of people that need to dwell, and share this one life.
James Gingell

The most effective fish soup I’ve ever eaten, Poland’s Baltic coast

Fisherman’s soup with halibut, salmon and herbs.

Proper on the seashore on the Gulf of Gdańsk, a bay of the Baltic Sea, is Bar Przystań, which has been serving seafood and chilly Polish beer for 25 years. You’ll be able to order fried Baltic flounder or herring tartare however what most individuals flip up for, even within the peak of summer time, is the fisherman’s soup with halibut, salmon and herbs. The queues for this bowl of deliciousness might be lengthy and that’s as a result of it’s beneficiant, filling but gentle and a meal in itself. It was actually the very best fish soup I’ve ever eaten (and it price lower than £5). As for Sopot, a 20-minute prepare journey from Gdańsk, it’s a rich and fairly glitzy “see and be seen” kind of a spot with fabulous villas set simply again from the seashore. Come summer time, it might probably get very busy certainly, and Bar Przystań is a pleasant down-to-earth spot far sufficient away from the crowds who have a tendency to assemble at Sopot’s greatest recognized attraction – the longest picket pier in Europe.
Caroline Eden

Graves breathe their tales close to Carcassonne, France

There are few surprises left in Carcassonne, its historical past tidied up. Nevertheless, a couple of miles from town, on the village of Villarzel-Cabardès and within the grounds of Château Villarlong, our host urged we would stroll to the Necropolis of the Visigoths. No indicators pointed our approach to the traditional monument by means of rock-strewn vineyards, hard-baked by the solar, however a pine-covered hillock, rising from the flat plain, enticed.

And there, breaking free from the earth, lay the limestone tombs, “like a wound working a overseas physique to the floor of the pores and skin”, as creator Owen Sheers as soon as put it. The 44 graves are aligned east to west. Many are small, maybe for the younger. Nothing on the hill has been tidied; the graves nonetheless breathe their tales.

As we left, I felt that if I turned across the graves would have vanished, and of their place the Visigoths can be standing among the many pine timber, taking a look at me.
Christopher Morris

Fascinating industrial historical past on Cumbria’s coastal railway

Furness Abbey in Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria. {Photograph}: Heritage Photos/Getty Photos

The journey from Preston boded badly. Rain-loaded clouds had been inbound. On getting off the prepare and crossing a puddle-pocked street to be met by an workplace block and a statue of the late footballer Emlyn Hughes, I questioned about my choice to go to the Lancashire little bit of “Cumbria” quite than Cumberland or Westmorland.

However preconceptions had been blown away together with the storm. Barrow-in-Furness turned out to be a captivating, traditionally complicated, even stunning place. The Dock Museum tells the story of an epicentre of iron, metal and shipbuilding. In 1871, the Bishop of Carlisle described Barrow as “one of many miracles of our time; I look upon it with that very same kind of surprise with which some […] regard the pyramids”.

I crossed over to Walney Island, passing employees’ tenements on Highly effective Avenue en path to the seashore – there to drink up views north to Black Combe fell, from which, Wordsworth mentioned, “the amplest vary of unobstructed prospect could also be seen that British floor instructions”. I, although, went in the wrong way, to dreamy Piel Island, with its pub and chateau wreck.

Barrow is on the chic Cumbrian Coast railway line – doable as a part of a giant Lancaster-Settle-Carlisle loop. It has an abbey as spectacular as Tintern. Fernando Pessoa, Postman Pat and Dave Myers all sang its praises. Now I have. You’ll, too, when you go.
Chris Moss

Wineries and strolling trails in Germany’s borderlands

A chapel amid fields and vineyards in Markgräflerland, south-west Germany. {Photograph}: mauritius photos GmbH/Alamy

Nestled within the south-western foothills of Baden-Württemberg, the Markgräflerland isn’t essentially the primary place guests head for when visiting Germany’s Black Forest. Near the French and Swiss borders, the area is best recognized for its wines than its strolling trails – although there’s loads of the latter to be loved. A lot of the wines grown round right here, as with Baden and Germany extra broadly, are white, and plenty of of them have similarities to wines from Burgundy, which is simply a few hours away and enjoys an identical local weather. Alongside well-known varieties similar to weissburgunder, silvaner, Müller-Thurgau and riesling, you should definitely pattern a gutedel (chasselas in French), a grape distinctive to the area that has been produced because the center ages.

Freiburg im Breisgau, which has oodles of historical past and a big pupil inhabitants that retains it vibrant all yr spherical, is a captivating base. In summer time, head to the placing cathedral for town’s summer time wine competition, or hop on to the Baden Wine Route or Markgräfler Wiiwegli, which showcase native delicacies, family-run vineyards and a few nice surroundings. They are often loved on foot or by bike, and Basel, must you fancy a day journey, is only a 40-minute prepare journey away.
Paul Sullivan

Whizzing by means of the mountains of Andalucía on e-bikes

Jane Dunford e-biking in Andalucia.

It’s the carpets of wildflowers that stick in my thoughts. I’d come to Sierra de Aracena and Picos de Aroche pure park in Andalucía in spring, anticipating olive groves and sleepy villages, however the blooms introduced a childlike pleasure.

This sparsely populated space close to the Portuguese border in Huelva province, simply an hour and a half from Seville, has its personal microclimate, which paints the valleys and meadows with a lush brush. I used to be right here to pattern a brand new e-biking vacation and – whizzing up hills, by means of forests, passing cobbled hamlets and fairly church buildings – quickly found how a lot enjoyable mountain biking might be.

Finca El Moro, my charming base close to the city of Fuenteheridos, has three restored cottages, all with their very own little pool. The 75-acre farm was deserted in the course of the civil warfare and introduced again to life by Britons Nick and Hermione Tudor within the Nineteen Nineties. Now run by their daughter Daisy and her boyfriend Eliott, e-mountain biking holidays had been launched for the primary time this yr.

Round routes absorb the very best of the realm, with completely different holidays pitched to completely different ranges of experience (or you’ll be able to simply keep at a cottage and exit for a day). I’ve heard it’s simply as magical in autumn too – the right excuse to return.
Jane Dunford

A prickle of porcupines in Lazio, Italy

A porcupine in Lazio. {Photograph}: David J Slater/Alamy

It was on perhaps the third day of our journey staying in a villa within the Lazio countryside that we determined to go to Rieti, a 30-minute drive away, on a uninteresting, wet night. We discovered a captivating city with a taverna run by three sisters the place we ate scrumptious pasta, but it surely was on the best way again that we made our best discovery.

Regardless of being on a daily tarmacked street, the journey was a safari. As we turned a nook we had been confronted by an offended porcupine, its spikes overrated, in the course of the street. The brakes had been slammed on amid cries of disbelief. We drove on however as we turned the subsequent nook we had been confronted by not one however 4 porcupines, all displaying their quills in fury. Once more they scuttled off into the bushes. Not believing there might be any extra surprises, we turned a 3rd nook solely to be confronted by a household of untamed boar trundling throughout the street. Who knew Lazio might be so wild?
Max Benato

Secret restaurant that brings a style of Center East to Helsinki

Foraged flower petals in The Room in Helsinki. {Photograph}: The Room

Pulling apart the curtain in the back of Gastro Grill Mure in Helsinki, I discovered The Room, a tiny 14-seater house that’s a restaurant with a distinction. It was the beginning of a blinding meals journey following the trail of the chef Kozeen Shiwan. His gold grills glittered as he informed us concerning the menu, which displays the story of his life, from the day a grenade landed in his household’s again yard in Iraq.

Dishes echoed their journey from Sulaymaniyah to northern Europe as Center Jap flavours – smoked olives in black lime, medjool dates – and Nordic staples – biodynamic beetroot and foraged flower petals – mixed. It blew me away; a 10-course menu is €149 however price each penny. It’s simply one of many diverting foodie delights on provide within the metropolis. At Hakaniemi meals corridor I attempted classics similar to sea buckthorn pictures and sauna-cured ham; Sure Sure Sure is a joyful vegetarian restaurant in a former McDonald’s, which by some means makes all of it the higher (mains from €16). I all the time love visiting Helsinki – it’s vibrant, vibrant, and superbly designed – and I by no means depart hungry.
Laura Corridor

Falling in love with island life in Læsø, Denmark

Foraging for seaweed in Læsø, Denmark. {Photograph}: LABAN/thefoodproject.dk / Go to Denmark

The commercial harbour at Frederikshavn was my introduction to Danish island hopping, the ferry departing as my bus from Aalborg arrived. Rescued by a heat pub and a deep bowl of fiskesuppe, I caught the subsequent boat, arriving on Læsø after darkish.

By morning I used to be smitten, with a dip within the sea, then breakfast at Guesthouse Læsø (pictures of aquavit optionally available). The island is ringed with seashores, and from the clear waters the industries of salt, langoustine and seaweed preserve guests effectively fed and high Danish eating places equipped. I traversed the huge Rønnerne salt marshes on a tractor tour, then visited Læsø Salt, the place mineral-rich salt from the groundwater is extracted utilizing medieval strategies.

Later, I donned armpit-high waders and adopted Rie Ladefoged of Læsø Tang into the ocean, armed with scissors for a foraging lesson. Again on dry land we toasted bladderwrack on a campfire, earlier than a slap-up langoustine feast at Hummerens restaurant.
Ailsa Sheldon

Gradual journey and bear-watching in Estonia

A brown bear within the Estonian forest. {Photograph}: Urmas83/Getty Photos/iStockphoto

Earlier than I even received close to the bears, the prepare journey to Estonia, by way of Poland and Lithuania, was a revelation. I broke by means of the “this takes too lengthy” apprehension and loved each minute (a four-day Eurail go is £245 adults, £183 under-28s, £220 over-60s). By the point I reached Estonia, I might have turned again for residence fairly contented with my journey. However there was one thing within the woods I wished to see.

The Estonian bear inhabitants plummeted to beneath two dozen within the Twenties, however now it’s someplace up round 1,200. In all that point, there’s solely been one critical damage, so far as I might confirm: a fisherman who received bitten when he by chance got here between a mom and cub.

With information Bert Rähni of NaTourEst I hiked to a conceal close to the Russian border and sat ready. Simply after sundown, a feminine bear ambled into view. She solely stayed for about 5 minutes, but it surely made for an unbelievable expertise.
Kevin Rushby

An deserted Brutalist resort in Spain

We stumbled on the tiny medieval village of Alarcón accidentally, whereas driving the again roads residence from Andalucía final winter. Its fort, positioned atop a rocky promontory on a deep gorge of the Júcar River, has been tastefully transformed into one among Spain’s most spectacular Parador inns.

Keep the night time, then enterprise three miles out of city and also you’ll discover a completely different however equally intriguing instance of Spanish hospitality – the huge and deserted Lodge Claridge on the previous Madrid-Valencia street. In-built 1969, its Corbusier-inspired concrete curves make it one of many best examples of Brutalist structure in Spain. A fashionable hotspot within the 70s and 80s, the arrival of the A3 motorway sounded its dying knell. Now it stands crumbling by the roadside, ripe for exploration …
Lois Pryce

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Stone circles and star-gazing in County Tyrone

Beaghmore stone circles in County Tyrone. {Photograph}: Design Pics Inc/Alamy

Between the Davagh Street and the Blackrock Street within the Sperrin mountains of County Tyrone, I discovered myself in a liminal house between current and previous. At Davagh forest, a state-of-the artwork observatory opens up the darkest skies in Eire by way of a high-powered telescope and interprets the summary wonders of the universe. The clock began to wind again on the path from the observatory by means of a woodland of Scots pine and then on to a boardwalk that traverses a panorama of bathroom, heath and historical farmland.

Crossing the Blackrock Street about 20 minutes later, I stepped over into the neolithic age. The Beaghmore stone circles – seven circles, 10 rows of stones and 12 cairns artfully organized – aren’t as incongruous a sight as seeing Stonehenge from the A303, however are all of the extra spectacular for his or her unobtrusiveness, their lack of scale and the sense that they’ve been stumbled upon. A lot as they had been after they had been first found by a farmer chopping peat within the Nineteen Thirties.
Andy Pietrasik

Matisse’s late masterpiece is full of color, France

Murals and stained-glass home windows in Matisse’s Chapelle du Rosaire in Vence, France. {Photograph}: FORGET Patrick/SAGAPHOTO.COM/Alamy

Within the remaining decade of his life, when ill-health prevented him from portray, Henri Matisse made “cut-outs” – shapes snipped out of paper. This methodology enabled him to supply an astonishing late work: a chapel simply outdoors Vence, a medieval walled village in south-eastern France. Throughout a visit to Cannes this autumn, I made a pilgrimage there, taking a prepare to Cagnes-sur-Mer, a bus to Vence and a remaining stroll to the chapel.

Matisse designed each element of the Chapelle du Rosaire: the straightforward whitewashed constructing itself; the altar, crucifix and candle-holders; the murals; even the monks’ vestments. Most superb of all are the stained-glass home windows. Vibrant yellow, inexperienced and blue glass floods the chapel with color and lightweight. “This work has taken me 4 years … and it’s the results of my whole working life,” mentioned Matisse at its consecration in 1951. “Regardless of all its imperfections, I think about it to be my masterpiece.” He died three years later, on the age of 84.
Rachel Dixon

Stress-free in type at a magical B&B in Brittany

Classic decor and beneficiant breakfasts at Le Manoir Caché in Merdrignac, Brittany. {Photograph}: Sawdays

As quickly as my household and I arrived at Le Manoir Caché (doubles from €80), a stunning B&B within the village of Merdrignac, we fell underneath its spell. Its proprietor, Anoushka Lewis, a former London theatre producer, is renovating the 18th- and Nineteenth-century manor home, and its enjoyable environment comes courtesy of her aptitude for internet hosting and for decor. The three double bedrooms – one might be modified to a twin – have been embellished with vibrant print materials and classic furnishings. In addition to the sprawling backyard, there’s a roof terrace used for artwork workshops and yoga retreats. The beneficiant breakfast consists of copious pastries, selfmade jams and excellent espresso.

After a time out exploring central Brittany together with swimming on the close by Lac de Trémelin, we got here again to Le Manoir, the place Anoushka had lit the barbecue for us to cook dinner on and had set the outside desk stylishly; there was even a chandelier hanging from the tree above our heads.
Carolyn Boyd

La Capa restaurant, Madrid. {Photograph}: Leah Pattem

In September, three associates, Arturo Romera Figueroa, Martin Phillp See and Antonio Tapia Baudesson, with backgrounds in farming, cooking and hospitality, breathed new life into a conventional Madrid bar within the numerous neighbourhood of Carabanchel.

Leaving the Eighties decor untouched, they reopened La Capa as a contemporary Spanish restaurant championing native producers. At lunchtimes, the restaurant is filled with clients tucking right into a €23 set menu that modifications day by day to showcase seasonal elements. Within the evenings, the à la carte choice gives acquainted favourites similar to tortilla de patatas, escalope and sea bass – alongside a nod to chef See’s Philippine heritage with dishes similar to lumpia (a kind of spring roll).

La Capa’s olive oil hails from the Jaén area, with producers sometimes stopping by to share their tales – and oil – immediately with diners.
Leah Pattem

A historic mountain village within the Julian Alps

The historic settlement of Planina v Lazu within the Julian Alps. {Photograph}: Holly Tuppen

Like many nice discoveries, we ended up in Planina v Lazu after a chat at a bar. When thunderstorms scuppered plans for a household hike (I used to be travelling in Slovenia with my youngsters – 9 and 11) to Triglav nationwide park’s highest mountain hut, a fellow hiker beneficial Planina v Lazu, a settlement with written information relationship again to the sixteenth century, as a substitute.

We set off down the mountain, mountain climbing by means of dense forest and crossing wildflower meadows till we reached a clearing dotted with picket huts, owned and preserved by the Stara Fužina-Studor Agrarian Society. Farmers from lower-altitude villages nonetheless personal and use the huts in summer time.

It was a stunning hub of exercise; a tapping hammer echoed and children fussed over a cussed llama. We lingered longer than anticipated, visiting Petričev stan – the settlement’s best-preserved constructing and residing museum – and sampled cheese from Farm Gartner. We haven’t stopped considering a slower life within the shadow of the mountains ever since.
Holly Tuppen

Time journey in Valença, Portugal

The fortified medieval city of Valença and the River Minho, Portugal. {Photograph}: vicvaz/Getty Photos

Time moved backwards as I crossed the bridge over the River Minho from Spain to Portugal – and that’s not simply me trotting out an overused journey writing trope. As I walked a couple of metres south from Tui whereas strolling the Camino Portuguese, a part of the Means of Saint James, I went again one hour.

The time distinction is a quirk from 1940 when Spain modified its time zone to match German-occupied Europe. However that wasn’t the one factor that appeared firmly prior to now: the tempo in Valença is decidedly gradual.

A Thirteenth-century star-shaped fortress encircles the whole city, hiding inside a labyrinth of cobbled streets, stone homes, tiled partitions and tiny retailers promoting the linen the area is famed for. The cafes had been akin to entering into somebody’s entrance room, and for little or no money we had been handled to caldo verde soup served with broa de milho (cornbread), all overlooking beautiful views of the Tui hills and the river that divides them. I’m not non secular, however sitting on the fort wall consuming my bread, I could have mentioned a bit prayer of because of Saint James for my greatest discovery of the yr.
Phoebe Smith

Stroll from Scotland’s lowlands to its Highlands, with pubs aplenty

The Cateran Path, by means of Perthshire and Angus. {Photograph}: Stuart Kenny

There’s a very clear second on the Cateran Path, a 64-mile round strolling route by means of Perthshire and Angus, the place you permit the lowlands of Scotland and enter the Highlands.

It comes after you have got climbed the saddle between Ben Earb and Meall Uaine, entering into the southernmost reaches of the Cairngorms nationwide park. Till this level, the route is one among mild hills and farmland. Right here, the Munros of Scotland spring up and announce themselves: Creag Leacach and Glas Maol backdropping the Spittal of Glenshee, a village the place a number of valleys meet and two rivers converge.

You stand on a geological fault that has separated cultures, languages and livelihoods for 1000’s of years, and which, in some respects, nonetheless does.

This path, which celebrated its twenty fifth anniversary this yr, is Scotland in miniature. It passes rivers and deserted mills, agricultural land and livestock, rewilded havens the place beavers now swim, and mountains not so simply formed by human instruments. Oh, and there’s a cracking pub at each cease alongside the best way. That’s vital.
Stuart Kenny

A 100mph meal to recollect within the Pullman eating carriage

Lemon meringue tart within the Pullman eating automobile. {Photograph}: GWR Pullman

Lunch opened with contemporary pea and watercress soup and heat, olive-studded bread – all ready in a tiny kitchen that’s transferring at 100mph – and the lemon tart had a citrussy kick. It’s a surprisingly good meal (£37 for 2 programs, £44 for 3). There’s a Pullman eating automobile on two weekday trains every approach between Paddington and Plymouth, and one every approach to Swansea. I commonly journey by rail to Wales and Cornwall so this was a discovery to savour.

In 1867 George Pullman launched his palatial eating carriages within the US, and Nice Western began operating them within the Twenties. A century on, it got here as a revelation to search out that eating vehicles are nonetheless a factor. Whilst you feast, the hills and estuaries hurtle previous outdoors the window.

At present’s vibe is sensible company quite than dazzling luxurious. However with white tablecloths and actual chinaware, the expertise nonetheless evokes a golden age of rail. On a Tuesday lunchtime, the carriage is empty aside from one different diner who’s arrived on spec and is having fun with a half bottle of purple. Passengers with first-class tickets can e-book forward, whereas these in commonplace class can ask on the day and see if there’s room. I know I’ll.
Phoebe Taplin

A hearty feast for a traveller contemporary off the prepare in Vienna

In between sleeper trains, I used to be mooching across the neighborhood of Vienna station on the lookout for a late lunch. It was drizzling and chilly after I handed the steamed-up window of what gave the impression to be a deli. However after I nosed contained in the door, the aroma of slow-cooked broth and luxury drew me in.

The only waitress waved me over, translating a daily-changing German menu. She beneficial the schweinebraten – roast pork shoulder – which arrived pooling in intense gravy with a fats spicy dumpling and candy bacon cabbage on the aspect.

Nothing on the menu at Edelgreisslerei Opocensky price greater than €20, and as soon as I’d completed I browsed the deli on the entrance for pots of cashew pesto and hunks of bergkäse cheese for the onward journey. Having forgotten the title, I discovered myself again in Vienna a yr later and wandered round till I discovered it once more, the meals even higher than earlier than.
Monisha Rajesh

Pilgrimage to a playwright’s pub in County Kerry

John B Keane’s pub in Listowel, County Kerry Eire. {Photograph}: Brickley Pix/Alamy

Billy Keane emerged from the misty March night into the amber glow of his Listowel pub in County Kerry trying like a personality from one among his father’s performs. I had wished to return right here – John B Keane’s pub – for years, ever since I noticed my older brother carry out in John B’s play The Discipline in a musty city corridor a lifetime in the past.

Outdoors, it’s only a lantern-lit sliver of William Avenue, however inside, the place stretches deeply into honeycombed wooden surfaces, with a black vary. The partitions are papered with John B’s manufacturing posters in addition to photographs of previous guests, similar to Brendan Behan, Seamus Heaney, Gabriel Fitzmaurice and Kate Winslet, so the place provides off extra of an off-Broadway vibe than a conventional bar.

John B’s performs had been impressed by the material of the area people, in response to Billy. Or as a neighborhood as soon as quipped: “He took down what we mentioned and charged us to learn it.”
Vic O’Sullivan

Escape the crowds to stroll amongst Montmartre’s legends, Paris

On a Sunday morning, the hilltop neighbourhood of Montmartre, former hang-out of artists similar to Monet, Renoir and Van Gogh, has all of the attraction of Wembley Park tube station on match day, and twice the crowds. Escaping down a steep, winding lane, we discovered ourselves on the gates of Montmartre cemetery and stepped gratefully into its leafy embrace.

To stroll among the many moss-covered tombs of La Cimetière du Nord (because it’s formally recognized) is to immerse your self within the metropolis’s creative life. We paid our respects to the film-maker François Truffaut, admire the graveside statue of Nijinsky, depicted in his iconic function as Petrushka the puppet, and sought out the ultimate resting place of Edgar Degas, who captured the vibrancy of Montmartre’s nightlife in his work. Maybe no person embodies this spirit greater than Louise Weber, star of the Moulin Rouge. She is buried in a quiet nook, her tombstone embellished with a single purple carnation.
Joanne O’Connor


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