Views : 1,079,556
Genre: People & Blogs
Date of upload: Jul 24, 2022 ^^
Rating : 4.916 (383/17,766 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-18T17:10:51.044966Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
France is so beautiful! Such a diversity in landscape and everything looks so amazing. I have always considered France to be the most beautiful country in Europe because it takes a bit of everything the nicest from Europe. Not to mention the culture, tradition and history that only emphasises how big the French nation is!
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You forgot the most beautiful regionđ±đ
I am German, but I love France and have been to all regions. I have already spent over a year in France through vacations in my life. In my opinion, the most beautiful region is the Provence. Vineyards, lavender fields, oak forests, one village is more beautiful than the other. The people are super relaxed, the food is simply delicious. Weekly markets, flea markets, concerts, artist villages. Culturally, there is so much going on there. And don't forget the nougat and candied fruit, which I can't get enough ofđ
I went there for the first time with my parents. I see the region as a second home. Because I was there every summer in my youth for 4-6 weeks, I have so many fond memories that I associate with this region. There's just something about sitting on the terrace under the plane trees with friends until late in the evening, drinking a little wine, having fun, and enjoying the food. Or when you walk to the bakery in the morning and get a still warm baguette with croissants. The French simply know how to live and enjoy life.
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I've been all around France and I'd say a few spots are missing overall, mainly in Aquitaine and Occitanie. There's the Dordogne, the Gorges du Tarn, the CĂ©vennes, the Aubrac plateau, the Quercy region (Rocamadour), and the ArdĂšche. I think that when visiting France, it's best to just pick a region or two and visit that. Doing specific locations one by one in different regions is the worst way to travel. Like for example, a lot of Americans will do Paris, the D-day beaches, part of the Riviera, and maybe another town like Lyon or Bordeaux. It's best to get lost in the countryside, visit the medieval villages, try out all the local food...
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I love this video. I'm from England and my family have been luck to visit France almost every year since I was 6 (I'm 32 now) it has to be one of my favourite countries in the world.
Some places I've visited and loved are Pont-Aven and Concarneau both in brittany, Bayonne near the spanish border, the Jura mountain region especially Lons-le-Saunier and also the little ski town of Valloire in the Alps.
There are too many amazing places to visit but these are some I've been to that really stuck in my mind
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As a french, my top LITTLE CITIES for each region that i suggest to visit (out of this video):
- BRITTANY : Concarneau
- PAYS DE LA LOIRE : Guérande
- NORMANDY : Les Andelys
-ILE DE FRANCE : Chevreuse
-CENTRE LOIRE VALLEY : Amboise
-GRAND EST : Bar sur Aube (Champagne) // Gerardmer (Lorraine) // kaysersberg (Alsace)
-CORSICA : l'Ile Rousse
-UPPER FRANCE : Pierrefonds (Picardy) // Cassel (North PDC)
-BURGUNDY-FREE COUNTY : Sens (Burgundy) // Dole (Free County)
-PROVENCE ALPES COTE D'AZUR : Embrun
-NEW AQUITAINE : Cognac (Poitou-Charentes) // La roque Gageac (Aquitaine) // Turenne (Limousin)
-OCCITANIE : Rocamadour (Midi-Pyrénées) // Minerve (Languedoc)
-AUVERGNE - RHONE ALPES : Vallon-Pont-d'Arc (RhĂŽne-Alpes) // Riom (Auvergne)
Enjoy ^^
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As a french and an architecture lover, I just wanted to thank you for such a highlight. I have visited most of the places you show here, and it's so satisfying to see that even in my lifetime, I still have so may things to discover in my own country. And then there's the rest of the world. My god, it's so fascinating to live in such a wonderful world đ
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@titteryenot4524
2 months ago
As a frequent British visitor to France, one of my favourite things about the country is the fact that itâs simultaneously a northern European country and a southern European country (a good way of illustrating this is noting that Dunkirk - 51.03°N - is almost on the same latitude as London - 51.51°N - whilst Perpignan - 42.69°N - is more or less on the same latitude as Rome - 41.90°N), and the food, people, architecture and general lifestyle reflect this fact. There is nothing I like better than getting a ferry to Brittany and Normandy, enjoying the Franco-Celtic green and pleasant scenery for a few days, then hopping on a TGV and 4hrs later Iâm soaking up the sun, listening to the electric buzz of the cicadas, and walking among the palm trees of Nice, or Marseille, or Perpignan. The colours change to reflect the predominant skies. Paris, with its resolutely monochrome palette, knows it's a northern town. 250 miles south and youâre in Lyon, a city whose colours resemble a box of ripening peaches and with bleached red roofs reflecting the southern sun. The fact the country also borders 8 other countries makes it endlessly fascinating, as you get that Flemish vibe in Lille, a distinctly Germanic tone in Strasbourg, and that seductive Latin magnetism of Spain and Italy in Bayonne and Nice. Food, people, weather, architecture all distinctly change to a fascinating extent from region to region, city to city, village to village. In many ways, notwithstanding its strong centralism and the prevalent 21st century globalism, France feels like about 3 or 4 countries in one. For all these reasons (and more!), itâs an endlessly captivating place.
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