Cherbourg, France, May 15, 2014
St.
Malo in Brittany was originally listed as the last French port on our itinerary. The big tourist
attraction there is Mont St Michel, a famous monastery and commune that juts out into the English
Channel. Michael and I had not particularly
planned to go to Mont St Michel because we had been warned that it is usually
swarming with tourists (3 million a year) and wait times are hours to get in to see the medieval
fortress/church/city.
When we embarked
in Lisbon, we were told that the docks at St Malo had been damaged in a storm
and the port of Cherbourg would be substituted.
The SilverSea tour operation did wonderful work setting up shore
excursions on short notice to nearby points, even an all day trip to Bayeux to see the
famous tapestry. They also offered a ten-hour tour to some of the famous WWII Allied
landing sites on the coast of Normandy. This was especially
appropriate as this year marks the seventieth anniversary of the D-Day landings
that lead to the eventual fall of Germany.
As impressed as I was with the offering of an all-day trip
to WWII landing sites, we were not willing to take this excursion. This was the day we planned to pack for our return home the following day. Michael and I were more
interested in a half day tour; seeing the Normandy countryside of the Cotenin peninsula where Cherbourg is located.
We spent a pleasant four hours touring the Normandy
countryside and listening to a very French centric version of English-French
history from our tour guide. According to him, the Norman
French were really Vikings who took over England and held large parts of France
for centuries. The French eventually
intermarried and absorbed them; thus England was really ruled by Frenchmen. Our guide thought the hundred years war was just a family feud. Anyway, the countryside was beautiful, the villages
quaint and the ride entertaining.
| The Normandy Countryside, Stone Fences, Hedgerows and Stone Houses |
| ||
| Port of Barfleur |
| Seaside Village of Barfleur |
| No Need for Air Conditioning |
| The Day's Catch Has Been Unloaded,St Vaast la Houge |
| Poisson Shop (Fish Store) |
| The Tour Guide Directed Us to Tourist Land at St Vaast la Hogue |
Back at the ship, we had a late lunch and began packing. The
trusty scale we brought along let us balance our large suitcases at exactly fifty pounds each to
avoid overweight luggage charges.
British Air has a fifty pound weight limit on carry-on luggage also so
the only practical restriction on the carry-ons was how much weight we each could lift into the
aircraft's overhead storage bins.
Silver Whisper
stayed relatively late at Cherbourg as it is only a few hours sail across the
English Channel to Southampton, our disembarkation point. Michael and I had time after packing to take
the shuttle bus the short distance into Cherbourg and to walk about and see the
nearby sights.
Cherbourg was an important port during the Napoleonic
Wars. The harbor was heavily fortified
against an attack by the English. A
French naval architect named Vauban started rebuilding the harbor in 1776. The project was not completed until
1860. When it was done, Cherbourg had
the largest man-made harbor of its time.
The Titanic called at Cherbourg as the last stop before it
set out on its fateful journey across the Atlantic. During World War II Cherbourg was an
important German naval harbor until heavily damaged by the Allies and retaken
at the end of June 1944. Today it is an
important ferry terminus serving Portsmouth and Poole, England, Rosslare, Ireland,
and the Isle of Jersey in the English Channel. Otherwise, Cherbourg is a sleepy
tourist town, a place for a relaxing vacation on the northern French coast.
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of Cherbourg is the
extreme difference between high and low tide.
Michael and I were walking about at low tide in the afternoon. Small boats moored at the local marina were
almost aground. The distance from the
water to the top of the docks must have been about twenty feet. By the time we departed in the evening, the
boats were floating at a level almost even with the top of the pier. I had not
realized the effect the English Channel has on magnifying high and low tides.
Michael and I fell asleep while the ship was docked at Cherbourg; we woke to see a familiar sight - the pier at Southampton. All we saw of England that day was a view from the motor coach that took us from the pier to Heathrow Airport.
Our spring 2014 cruise was unique. Almost all of the ports we visited were new
to both Michael and me. I feel as if I
had an intensive look at various aspects of Spanish culture even if I only saw
Spanish people out and about in the morning and early afternoon. Neither Michael nor I can stay up late enough
to experience a Spanish dinner and we totally missed the nightlife on the days
Silver Whisper was in port late. I have
a better appreciation of Portugal and its Atlantic island territories. Bermuda was deeply British even though it is
fiercely independent. Visiting France is always a joy. I’m looking forward to next March when we
board Silver Wind for a journey from Singapore to Athens. With that trip, I will have sailed completely
around the world (over the course of six years) and I will finally see
India. The world is indeed filled with
many wonders and I feel privileged to have seen as many of them as I have.