Amboise

We didn’t have breakfast included at our hotel this morning so we went out to find a boulangerie for breakfast. We found one and the breakfast was wonderful.

French breakfast

This afternoon we spent several hours at the Château du Clos Luce Parc Leonardo da Vinci. It is where Leonardo da Vinci lived from 1516 until he died in 1519. The house and grounds were beautifully laid out with examples of Leonardo’ works and machines.

Leonardo’s study

After visiting the chateau we stopped for coffee and a strawberry jam crepe at a table in the sun because you can’t visit France without having a crepe and the sun was shining!

Coffee and a crepe
Duke and Mona Lisa
The grounds at Clos Luce

Later Duke did his review of our last rental car the FIAT 500 Hybrid. It is on my YouTube channel here. This review is the sequel to Duke’s original FIAT 500 review and it has some explosive revelations!

Duke’s FIAT 500 Review the Sequel

Today was Election Day in France we checked out the election action at Amboise city hall.

City Hall
Voting

For dinner we ate at the highly rated restaurant in our hotel and enjoyed great service, a nice ambiance and wonderful food.

Scallops and sweet potato appetizer
Beef main dish

Tours to Amboise

This morning we left Tours and drove a short distance to the Chateau Chenonceau. Chenonceau is the Chateau built on a bridge over the River Cher that you often see in guide books. It is called the Ladies’ Chateau because of the many ladies who lived here, built it and preserved it. They include Catherine de Medici and Louise Dupin. During WWII the river was the dividing line between occupied and unoccupied France. The French resistance used the chateau as an escape route for refugees fleeing the Nazis.

Chenonceau

We finally had a sunny day so it was a perfect day to explore the chateau and it gardens.

The gardens
Gardens at Chenonceau

The inside of the chateau for quite stunning too.

Louis XIV
Diane de Poitiers’ bedroom
The Gallery
View from the Gallery

Before leaving we checked out the maze.

The maze at Chemonceau

From Chemonceau we went to nearby Amboise where we are staying tonight and tomorrow night. It is a lovely little village on the Loire. We had a great dinner at an Italian Restaurant. I forgot to take pictures of the pasta and pizza. The salad was great too.

Dinner salad

On our way back to our hotel we got to see something we have hardly seen on this trip, a sunset!

Tours

Towards the end of our trips we like to slow down a bit and stay in places for two nights. In Tours we are staying in a bed and breakfast called La Héraudière. Our room is in what was the original farm house. The room is big and very comfortable. There is even a bread oven in our room!

Our room at Le Héraudière.
The bread oven in our room

This morning we booked a tour at La Cave de Vouvray. It was fascinating. The Vouvray region grows almost exclusively Chemin grapes. They make primarily sparkling wines. Over the centuries as the people of this area have quarried limestone for construction projects they have created elaborate cave systems. The Vouvray caves that we toured have three kilometers of galleries!

The caves currently contain five million bottles of wine! The one wall of bottles in this picture is multiple rows deep and contains 141,377 bottles

The tour was incredibly interesting and we had our English speaking guide to ourselves.

The caves
Our guide

At the end of our tour we tasted wine and bought some to ship home.

Wine tasting

This afternoon we went for a short walk along the Loire.

Along the Loire

For dinner we went back into central Tours.

Goat cheese and puff pastry
Caramelized onion and puffed pastry.
Pork chop and sweet potatoes

Les Moutiers-en-Retz to Tours

Today we left the Atlantic coast and drove almost three hours east to the town of Tours. Our Chambre d’Hotes reservation said we could check in at 5pm. We are staying at La Héraudière.

It took about 3 hours to get to Tours. We drove to the town center, parked and walked. First we went to the tourist office and got a map.

Tours tourist office

Tours is a really pretty town.

Walking from where we parked.
Half timbered buildings in Tours center
The church

We drove to La Héraudière and parked on the street to wait until we could check in. About 4:30 the host came out, knocked on the window and invited us in. He recommended we eat at a restaurant in the town center called Leonard de Vinci. It was a lovely and very good meal.

Leonard de Vinci Restaurant
We had a table at the front window
Salad with goat cheese and ham
Tagliatelle with truffles, ham and foie
Desert sampler

Rochefort to Les Moutiers-en-Retz

We drove further north along the coast today. At the grocery store where we stopped to buy bread I saw my first ever fresh oyster vending machine. It’s right next to the laundry machines in the picture below. You could buy 24 fresh oysters for €11.95.

Oyster vending machine behind the mail box.
24 oysters for €11.90 or 36 oysters for €17.85.

In the produce section of the grocery store I saw something else I have never seen before, a white mushroom growing kit.

Mushroom growing kit.

Next we checked out the Passage du Gois. It is a 2.5 mile long causeway from the coast to the island of Noirmoutier. It is flooded every day as the tide goes up. You can drive on it for 1.5 hours each side of low tide. They have a foot race across it every year and the Tour De France has gone over it. We just happened to be there near low tide so we drove across.

Warning sign for Passage du Gois
Driving across Passage du Gois

Tonight we are staying in a B and B called Le Moulin des Tréans. The owners made a reservation for us at a great seafood restaurant, La Maison de L’Eclusier.

Where we are staying, Le Moulin des Tréans
The restaurant where we ate, La Maison de L’Eclusier
Their specialties may be eels and frogs but we had neither one.
My scallops
Duke’s seafood assortment.