A Week in the Mercantour National Park
Just an hour north of Nice is one of the largest national parks in France, the Mercantour. It lies just on the border of the Alpes. Mike and I discovered the area a bit last summer after passing through from the Savoie region to the north in our motorhome (good ol' George, we had to let him go). The Mercantour lies mostly inside the Alpes-Maritimes department of France, literally between the Alps and the Mediterranean Sea. During the summer, when the crowds and the heat on the Riviera become unbearable, many of the region's residents leave the beaches behind and head up to the mountains. Sometimes it takes an hour just to get from Antibes to Nice in August because of the traffic. But head up the Route du Grenoble and you'll be surrounded by pines, alpine villages and some of the best hiking and mountain biking trails in the country. Mike and I like to go because the cost of a vacation there is quite reasonable. We rented, through the internet site Abritel.com, which has listings from private owners divided into categories for sea, city, mountain and countryside. We got a maison-de-village (like a townhome) in village called Saint-Etienne-de-Tinée (along the Tinée River), €260 for the week (and they didn't care that we brought the little dogs along, as is the norm in France). Within the village there are about seven restaurants, three bakeries and two grocers. On the weekend there's an open market in the central square. Aside from not being able to eat out Friday night (every place was full), we had a few really nice meals (the crêperie next to the tourism office has the best crêpes and hot chocolate in town).
As for stuff to do...we mostly sat around reading newspapers at the café in the main square, napping and enjoying long meals. On sportier days we did some hiking around town. There's a ski lift that goes up to the top of La Pinée, where we had lunch, sunbathed (it may be cooler, but the sun's much hotter up there), and then hiked back down to the village. We saw quite a few mountain bikers taking their bikes up to the grassy ski slopes on the lift. The tourism office in St-Etienne-de-Tinée sells a detailed hiking guide for trails originating from the village, however it's only in French (not too many tourists 'round these parts that aren't French). Another popular attraction is the Via Ferrata, which I have no idea what it means in English, but involves passing through the mountain tops on tiny rope bridges, using rappelling equipment to keep from falling. Not for the feint of heart! For more info check out the tourism office in Auron, and remember, you can't sue when you hurt yourself doing crazy things in France. ;) There's also a bus to Auron, one of the larger ski resorts in the area, which has more shops and restaurants, but is noticeably more tourist-oriented.
The copyright of the article A Week in the Mercantour National Park in Parisian Tourism is owned by Heather Stimmler-Hall. Permission to republish A Week in the Mercantour National Park in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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