What the organisers do is give me the equipment, provide me with instructions for the best route, arrange my hotels, transport my bags to the next one each day, and pick me up at the end.ĬLICK: Read my review of a Headwater Holidays trip in the DordogneĪ duck swims by with a trail of fluffy ducklings following behind her. It’s an independent trip in the sense that I start each day when I want, use the map to navigate my course, and go at the pace I want. These two days of kayaking are part of a week-long trip I am doing with Headwater Holidays here in this region of France. Perhaps I would have found answers for those questions if I had looked hard enough but luckily everything is being taken care of for me. Where would I have organized a kayak? What would I do with my bags? How would I have known the best stretch to paddle down? I’m not sure I would have thought to have done this if it had just been up to me. I’m pretty sure I spot a squirrel swimming between the banks at one point. Sometimes there are high limestone cliffs on one side of me other times I can spot a majestic chateau high above the trees there are a few places where a bridge crossing the river creates a perfect scene and at other times it’s just the birds and the trees that catch my attention. The points where I place the paddle across my lap and sit back are when there are straight stretches and a decent current. Although the flow is quite fast in places, there are also stretches where I need to paddle consistently to avoid coming to a complete stop. There are no rapids, no whitewater challenges. It’s almost 40 kilometres in total which seems like a good stretch of the river, even if it’s less than ten per cent. I’m spending two days kayaking along the Dordogne – from the town of Meyronne to Groléjac. But the river provides a natural and special way to explore. While this region is popular with tourists, most stay on the land. The name alone evokes a romantic notion of French rustic charm with grand castles and lush nature. I’m on the Dordogne River in the south of France – a waterway of about 500 kilometres that reaches the sea near Bordeaux. But, then again, it’s not that often that I have the opportunity to kayak with scenery like this. At times I wonder if I’m doing more floating than paddling.
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