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TRIED


& TESTED Amadolce


AmaDolce is part of AmaWaterways’ fleet but is chartered by APT for a few seven-night Grand Bordeaux cruises each year. Built in 2009, it features


two decks of cabins with French balconies. Facilities include a lounge and bar, a massage room and a gym. Bikes are available for guided tours or DIY sightseeing. As well as the main


restaurant, there’s the intimate Chef’s Table, which serves a complimentary seven-course tasting menu with treats such as white asparagus soup and duck crepinette with orange sauce. Bookings are taken on board. Book it: Eight days’ all-inclusive starts at £3,445 per person, departing September 24. aptouring.co.uk


BEST OF BORDEAUX


E The Miroir d’Eau is a shallow patch of water on the promenade that, when the sun shines, literally reflects the stunning facade of the Bourse, and at other times is a play area for kids.


E La Cité du Vin offers an interactive guide to the history and art of viticulture around the world.


E The Marché des Capucins is a typical French market with stalls piled high with exotic cheeses, charcuterie and fruit.


E The 18th-century Grand Théâtre, one of Europe’s finest concert halls, hosts opera, ballet and music events year-round.


travelweekly.co.uk


DESTINATIONS BORDEAUX | CRUISE


CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: AmaDolce; La Cité du Vin; wine-tasting; Saint-Emilion


PICTURES: Gerald Lechner; Mamie Boude; Vincent Bengold; Shutterstock


Our Sauternes tour is followed by trips to châteaux


(the name for wineries, as well as castles, in this part of France) in Medoc and Saint-Émilion, where we admire the vineyard, take a quick peek at the humongous vats used to ferment wine, and then head to the tasting rooms, where our hosts pour generous quantities of their best reds.


In Libourne, I join a market tour that takes in the


extravagant fish and cheese stalls before hastening to a local cafe for charcuterie and wine, undeterred by the fact that we’ve only just had breakfast. There’s wine to accompany a culinary tour in


Bordeaux, and even a visit to a tonnellerie (barrel maker) starts with a couple of glasses of red. After all, in wine country, how else are you going to welcome guests?


BEYOND THE BOTTLE


Wine tasting aside, don’t get the idea that you have to be an expert to enjoy this cruise. No one is testing us and there’s plenty more to enjoy. The Sauternes excursion also includes a tour of the grand Château de la Brède, a castle built in the middle ages that was the erstwhile home of the 17th-century French philosopher Baron de Montesquieu.


He might not be a household name in the UK, but


he’s a rock star in France for his novel, Lettres Persanes, which criticised the then king, Louis XIV, and is said to have inspired the French Revolution. His theories on the need to separate the powers of the state and judiciary,


meanwhile, influenced the Founding Fathers when they drew up the US constitution. In Saint-Émilion, we go underground into a cave that legend says housed a kindly monk who gave his name to the town, and a monolithic church where wine and treasures were hidden from the Nazis during the Second World War (they knew, apparently, but fled with the wine and left the treasures).


On a tour of a vast citadel on the banks of the


Gironde in Blaye, we creep through dimly lit escape passages, built in case the defenders ever needed to scarper.


Later that afternoon, I saddle up and set off on a guided bike tour to Bourg. It’s barely 10 miles and would have been easy were it not for some mean hills along the way that had us all puffing, panting and pushing. I breathe a sign of relief when Bourg, where AmaDolce is now docked, finally looms into view, and another when I see the barman. After all that pedalling, I need a glass or two of something red to recover!


TW 16 JANUARY 2020 79


33The bike tour would have been easy but for some mean hills along the way that had us all puffing, panting and pushing


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