Travel Tour France

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Wandering through Strange-sounding French Territories Through a Strange-sounding French Hotel

One of the egregious thrills about visiting France is the concept of meeting people who speak a strange, but mysterious-sounding language. Add to that the fact that getting to see many French places will also most likely allow one to encounter regions that carry hard-to-pronounce French words, but sound elegant nevertheless.

If this just happens to be one's fantasy, then the accurate French hotel to stay in is the Auberge de Cassagne. Housed in a Provencal building that dates back to the 19th century, this distinctive hotel is literally surrounded by several French monuments that carry the standard tongue-twisting French names. For instance, standing three miles away is Avignon, the known artistic French city, which is the official residence of the Popes' Palace. Equally noted three miles away is the Saint Benezer bridge, while 15 miles away, one can get to see the Fontaine de Vaucluse. Meanwhile, almost 19 miles from Auberge de Cassagne is the Les Baux de Provence and the Pont du Gard and a a fairly remote 60 miles away is the Marseille Provence Airport.

All the above-mentioned territories may initially appear as simply hard-to-pronounce French landmarks, but they just happen to be places worth journeying through while in France, and the Auberge de Cassagne prides itself in being located relatively near the said places.

Of course, more than the territories, the hotel itself boasts of its own combination of attractions. These include a conglomeration of 40 rooms, all created with elegant facilities like walnut furniture, room-based films, Provencal fabrics, satellite TV, minibars, and Internet access among others. Moreover, among the supremely interesting facility though is the hotel's terraces that overlook the gardens.

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