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On June 21, 2026, it’s Father’s Day — and this year it coincides with the summer solstice, the longest day of the year. Instead of another forgotten gift gathering dust in a drawer, give him an unforgettable getaway: a Burgundy grand cru tasting, a mountain refuge night in the Vanoise, a motorcycle road trip on the Route des Grandes Alpes, a round of golf facing the cliffs of Étretat, or a fly-fishing bivouac in the Pyrenees. Whatever your father’s passion — wine, mountains, motorbikes, golf, or wild nature — these 10 father-son and father-daughter getaway ideas are all achievable in France over the June 21 weekend, with budgets, insider tips, and booking links.

1. 🍷 Wine Weekend in Burgundy: the Route des Grands Crus

Vougeot vineyards on the Route des Grands Crus in Burgundy, France
Photo by Ingeborg Korme on Unsplash

Dijon → Beaune, Côte-d’Or — UNESCO World Heritage vineyards

€380–800 for two, 2 days Perfect in June Pinot Noir, Chardonnay UNESCO World Heritage

The Route des Grands Crus runs from Dijon to Beaune through the world’s most prestigious wine appellations: Gevrey-Chambertin, Vougeot, Vosne-Romanée, Pommard, Meursault. Burgundy’s climats — these UNESCO-listed vineyard plots — form a patchwork landscape that changes character every 500 metres, depending on slope, orientation, and limestone composition. It’s the ideal destination for a father-son or father-daughter duo who want to understand why Burgundy captivates wine lovers worldwide.

Rather than the big négociant houses in Beaune, seek out independent family estates: a grower in Saint-Aubin or Maranges will welcome you directly into their cellar, explain their blending choices, and share their passion with a generosity impossible to find on organised tours. Some offer workshops where you create your own blend: you assemble different wines yourself and leave with your own labelled bottles.

Two-day itinerary

  • Day 1: Dijon → Gevrey-Chambertin (Clos de Bèze visit) → lunch in Morey-Saint-Denis
  • Afternoon: Château du Clos de Vougeot (architecture + tasting)
  • Overnight at a wine estate gîte in Vosne-Romanée or Nuits-Saint-Georges
  • Day 2: Beaune (Hospices de Beaune) → Pommard → Meursault → blending workshop
  • Gastronomic lunch with food and wine pairings
Pixidia Tip: Book your tastings 3–4 weeks in advance, especially in June. Small grower tastings are often free or nominal (€10–15/person) but require an appointment. Avoid Beaune on Saturdays — tour buses from Japan and the US converge there. Prefer Gevrey or Saint-Aubin instead.

2. 🍇 Vines & Bends in Alsace: Wine Route + Motorbike

Village of Riquewihr surrounded by vineyards on the Alsace Wine Route, France
Photo by Michiel Mulder on Unsplash

Colmar → Ribeauvillé → Kaysersberg — Vines and bends in Alsace

€350–600 for two, 2–3 days Spring and autumn ideal Gewurztraminer, Riesling Winding Vosges roads

The Alsace Wine Route is one of France’s most photographed roads — and one of the most enjoyable to ride by motorbike. From Colmar to Ribeauvillé, from Riquewihr to Kaysersberg, the villages seem designed to follow the curve of every hill. The Vosges provide the relief, the vineyards the softness, and the villages the visual reward at every bend. For a duo who share two passions — wine and the open road — Alsace is the perfect combination.

What sets Alsace apart from other wine regions is the density: in a single day you can taste a floral Gewurztraminer at a biodynamic producer in Eguisheim, a mineral Riesling in the cellars of Ribeauvillé, and a dry Pinot Gris from a grower who doesn’t export his bottles beyond the department. The small local cooperatives — often overlooked by tourist circuits — offer the best surprises.

Ideal 2-day loop

  • Colmar: Little Venice, covered market (morning)
  • Eguisheim + Husseren-les-Châteaux: biodynamic tasting
  • Riquewihr: medieval winepress visit + Crémant tasting
  • Climb to the Vosges (Route des Crêtes): alpine scenery at 1,000 m
  • Kaysersberg (Schweitzer’s birthplace): village cellar tasting
Pixidia Tip: If you’re riding a motorbike, the Route des Crêtes from Cernay to Col de Saverne offers spectacular views over the Alsatian plain and the Alps on a clear day. Combine it with a night in a Winzerstube (room at a winemaker’s house) for the complete experience.

3. 🍾 Saint-Émilion & Bordeaux: Underground Cellars and Grand Crus

Aerial view of Saint-Émilion and its UNESCO-listed vineyards in Gironde, Bordeaux
Photo by Call Me Fred on Unsplash

Saint-Émilion, Gironde — The medieval village with troglodytic cellars

€400–700 for two, 3 days May to October Merlot, Cabernet Franc UNESCO-listed since 1999

In Saint-Émilion, a medieval village perched on Cretaceous limestone, wine tourism takes on a uniquely archaeological dimension. Beneath the cobbled streets stretch kilometres of underground troglodytic cellars where châteaux like Angélus and Ausone have been ageing their wines for centuries. A father-son or father-daughter getaway here doesn’t just taste wine — it dives into 2,000 years of winemaking history.

To go beyond the famous châteaux, explore the neighbouring appellations of Castillon Côtes de Bordeaux or Francs Côtes de Bordeaux: artisan winemakers there produce wines of exceptional quality at four times lower prices, with no queues. A workshop led by a certified sommelier will teach you to decode Merlot aromas, Cabernet Franc structure, and the secrets of Bordeaux vintages.

Must-see

  • Visit the underground catacombs and monolithic church (carved from rock)
  • Tour du Roi: panoramic view over the vineyards from the terrace
  • Sommelier tasting workshop: Bordeaux food and wine pairings
  • Excursion to Pomerol (Château Pétrus backdrop, if open by reservation)
  • Gastronomic dinner in a restaurant with a grand crus wine list
Food & Wine Tasting Workshop in Bordeaux From €35
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Pixidia Tip: June, just before Father’s Day, is magnificent in the Bordeaux region: the vines are in full growth, the vineyards a luminous green. The châteaux are open for visits, without the crowds of September (harvest). Book accommodation in the village rather than in Bordeaux city to soak up the terroir.

4. 🥾 Lac des Vaches & Mountain Refuge in the Vanoise (Savoie)

Mountain lake in the French Alps at sunset, Vanoise, Savoie
Photo by David Amar on Unsplash

Pralognan-la-Vanoise, Vanoise National Park — 2,318 m, stepping-stone slabs

€200–350 for two, 2–3 days June to November Elevation gain: 700 m Difficulty: moderate

Lac des Vaches, at 2,318 metres in the Vanoise National Park, owes its name to the submerged stone slabs that let you cross it dry-footed by jumping from block to block — a fun and memorable experience. Reachable from the Fontanettes car park in Pralognan-la-Vanoise, the two-hour hike with 700 m elevation gain crosses flowery alpine meadows, persistent snowfields, and glacially sculpted scree. In June, the first Alpine flowers bloom against a backdrop of still-snowy summits: a perfect composition for father-child photos that will stand the test of time.

To extend the adventure with a mountain refuge overnight, the Croix du Bonhomme refuge (2,443 m, 99 beds, half-board ~€50/person) is a hiker’s hub at the heart of the Beaufortain. Local organic cuisine, warm atmosphere, and panoramic views of the Vanoise: a mountain night with your father remains one of the strongest memories you can share.

Getaway logistics

  • Start: Fontanettes car park, Pralognan-la-Vanoise (GPS accessible)
  • Lac des Vaches round trip: ~4h including photo stops
  • Gear: hiking boots, fleece, waterproof jacket (unpredictable mountain weather)
  • Refuge overnight (mandatory online booking)
  • Return via the Croix du Bonhomme slope for a full loop
Hiking and Wine between Côte-Rôtie and Condrieu (Lyon) From €35
See the activity
Pixidia Tip: Book your refuge night from March for the Father’s Day period. Mid-June is relatively quiet before the summer rush. If your father prefers comfort, several charming hotels in Pralognan offer hiking packages with a local guide and half-board at around €120–150/night.

5. ⛰️ Ascent of Pic du Canigou: the Catalan Giant

Mountain landscape of the Pyrénées with an altitude lake in the foreground, France
Photo by Quentin Jeandel on Unsplash

Pyrénées-Orientales, Occitanie — 2,784 m, Grand Site de France

€200–350 for two, 2 days June to September 2,784 m altitude Difficulty: strenuous

Rising to 2,784 metres, the Pic du Canigou is far more than just a peak in the Pyrénées-Orientales: it is a millennia-old symbol of Catalan culture. Labelled a Grand Site de France, it draws those seeking to immerse themselves in a living tradition while exploring a massif of incomparable wild beauty. Climbing the Canigou with your father is sharing an initiation rite passed down through generations of Catalan families.

The classic route starts from the Cortalets refuge (2,150 m) — reachable by 4×4 from Prades, then a 1.5-hour walk to the summit. In June 2026, remnant snowfields near the summit will still be partially present, making the ascent more epic. The descent can follow a different slope to explore the Gorges de la Carança, one of the most impressive gorges in the Pyrenees: metal walkways clung to the cliff face overlook the torrent 200 metres below.

A special bonus for Father’s Day 2026: the Fête du Feu du Canigou (Midsummer Fire Festival) takes place on June 23 (Feast of St John). By departing on June 21, you can stay on to witness the tradition where a flame is lit at the summit and descends through the whole of Catalonia in a chain of bonfires. A once-in-a-lifetime memory.

Practical tips

  • 4×4 shuttle from Prades or Vernet-les-Bains to Cortalets (~€15–20/person)
  • Night at Cortalets refuge: book several weeks in advance (~€25/person)
  • Light crampons recommended if residual snow in June
  • Descent to Vernet-les-Bains for thermal springs as recovery
Pixidia Tip: Mountain weather can change very rapidly. Check Météo-France Montagne before departure and don’t hesitate to cancel if storms are forecast. Allow a spare day in your programme in case conditions are unfavourable on June 21.

6. 🏍️ Route des Grandes Alpes: 700 km from Lake Geneva to the Mediterranean

Motorcyclist on a winding mountain road in the French Alps in summer
Photo by Patrick Robert Doyle on Unsplash

Lake Geneva → Alps → Côte d’Azur — The legendary biker’s route

€800–1,200 for two, 4 days June to October 700 km, ~30 mountain passes Col de la Bonette: 2,802 m

The Route des Grandes Alpes is France’s most iconic motorcycle route and one of the world’s most celebrated. Over 700 kilometres, from Thonon-les-Bains on the shores of Lake Geneva to Menton on the Mediterranean, it strings together the country’s highest mountain passes: Iseran (2,764 m), Galibier (2,645 m), Izoard (2,360 m), Bonette (2,802 m). The Col de la Bonette is France’s highest paved road — and one of Europe’s most photographed passages.

For a father-son or father-daughter duo who share a passion for motorcycling, this is the ultimate experience: waking up by Lake Geneva, crossing Alpine passes through the day, and arriving three days later at the Mediterranean. Each day brings a different identity: the Northern Alps with their chalets and torrents, the wild Mercantour with its marmots and eagles, the Côte d’Azur with its mimosa trees and palms. France’s number one tourist destination for bikers worldwide.

Recommended 4-day stages

  • Day 1: Thonon → Bourg-Saint-Maurice (via Megève, Col du Cormet de Roselend)
  • Day 2: Bourg-Saint-Maurice → Briançon (Col de l’Iseran 2,764 m + Col du Galibier)
  • Day 3: Briançon → Barcelonnette (Col d’Izoard + Cime de la Bonette 2,802 m)
  • Day 4: Barcelonnette → Menton (Gorges du Cians + Col de la Cayolle)
Pixidia Tip: Download the Liberty Rider app, which provides the full GPS track of the RGA with alternative variants. If your bike is heavy, 700 km with 30 passes can be tiring — opt for a lightweight, agile motorcycle. June is ideal: passes are open from late May and roads are still empty before the July–August surge.

7. 🌋 Motorcycle Road Trip in Auvergne: Volcanoes, Passes & Empty Roads

Volcanic landscape of Auvergne with the town of Murat at the foot of the volcanic mountains
Photo by Sebastien Lucas on Unsplash

Chaîne des Puys, Massif du Sancy, Puy Mary — France’s anti-tourist-mass destination

€400–600 for two, 3 days May to September ~500 km, nearly deserted roads UNESCO (Chaîne des Puys)

Auvergne is France’s most crowd-free motorcycle destination: virtually empty roads, authentic gîtes, farm-fresh cheeses (Saint-Nectaire, Cantal) and a volcanic landscape unique in Europe. The Chaîne des Puys, listed UNESCO World Heritage since 2018, lines up 80 dormant volcanoes over 40 kilometres — an incomparable geological spectacle seen from a motorbike. The ridges of the Massif du Sancy and the Cantal passes offer fluid bends through a landscape of pastures, forests, and crater lakes.

The Col de la Croix Saint-Robert (1,454 m), between Le Mont-Dore and Chambon-sur-Lac, is Auvergne’s signature pass: a climb flanked by cattle pastures that opens onto a sweeping panorama of the Massif du Sancy. From there, descend to the Puy de Dôme (1,465 m) — you can walk up in 45 minutes from the road, or take the panoramic tourist train (€18 return). The view from the summit over the Chaîne des Puys aligning its volcanic cones is among France’s most spectacular.

Recommended 3-day circuit

  • Day 1: Clermont-Ferrand → Puy de Dôme → Col de la Croix Saint-Robert → Le Mont-Dore
  • Day 2: Mont-Dore → Massif du Sancy → Puy Mary (1,589 m, foot) → Salers
  • Day 3: Salers → Gorges de la Truyère → Lac de Garabit → return
  • Accommodation in a local gîte or Auvergne inn (~€50–80/night)
Pixidia Tip: Avoid the main roads (N89, A75) and favour the small departmental roads (D8, D36, D27) that cross the volcanic plateaux. Standard GPS doesn’t show these roads — download GPX tracks from moto-trip.com or planet-ride.com to discover the forgotten gems of the Massif Central.

8. ⛳ Étretat Golf Club: Playing on the Cliffs of the English Channel

The famous white cliffs of Étretat in Normandy, France, with the sea below
Photo by Daniela Holzer on Unsplash

Étretat, Seine-Maritime, Normandy — 150 metres above the English Channel

€400–600 for two, 2 days April to October 18 holes, Par 72 Views over the Channel

Perched 150 metres above the English Channel, Étretat Golf Club is one of France’s most spectacular and most photographed courses. This century-old links nestled in the heart of the Alabaster Coast offers an experience where golfing strategy competes with visual wonder: every hole delivers a different view of Étretat’s iconic chalk cliffs, the Aiguille Creuse, and the vast expanse of the Channel. The ever-present sea breeze adds a formidable technical challenge even for experienced players.

For a golfing father or a duo wishing to take up the game in a breathtaking setting, Étretat is the perfect address. The Falaise d’Aval as backdrop, the sound of waves 150 m below, seagulls gliding silently around the green — a combination that is impossible to forget. Beginners will find on-site introductory lessons (€50–70/person) given by club-based professionals.

Golf weekend at Étretat

  • Green fee: €55–85/person depending on season (online booking recommended)
  • Early morning tee-off (8am): raking light on the white cliffs, spectacular photos
  • After golf: coastal footpath to explore arches and caves from the beach
  • Lunch at a village seafood restaurant
  • Day 2 option: D-Day beaches (Omaha Beach, Pointe du Hoc) 1.5 hours away
Pixidia Tip: Book your tee time 2–3 months in advance for a June weekend — morning slots sell out fast. Bring a waterproof jacket and windbreaker even in June: Channel winds can surprise on the cliff plateau. Club hire is available on site if you’re travelling without your own equipment.

9. 🌊 Spérone Golf (Corsica): the Hole Above the Mediterranean

The white limestone cliffs of Bonifacio in southern Corsica with the turquoise waters of the Mediterranean
Photo by Christian Thöni on Unsplash

Bonifacio, Southern Corsica — Hole 16, the par 3 above the sea

€900–1,500 for two, 3 days June to September 18 holes, designed by Robert Trent Jones Views of Sardinia

At the southern tip of Bonifacio, at the far end of Corsica, Spérone Golf is an adventure in itself. Designed by the legendary architect Robert Trent Jones, this course is world-famous for its hole number 16: a par 3 where you must drive over the turquoise waters of the Mediterranean. Club in hand, salty wind on your face, one short shot and the ball plunges into the sea — a technical as much as emotional challenge. That’s the soul of Spérone: audacious, spectacular, unforgettable.

To reduce Spérone to that single moment would be unfair. The white limestone cliffs, the wild coves accessible on foot from the course, and the views of Sardinia (just 12 km away) create a setting that seems unreal. For a father-son or father-daughter duo combining world-class golf with a sublime island, a weekend in Bonifacio — a medieval citadel perched on cliffs 60 metres above the sea — transforms Father’s Day into a truly exceptional trip.

Trip organisation

  • Flight Paris–Figari (Southern Corsica): €100–200/person return (book early)
  • Spérone green fee: €80–120/person (essential to book online)
  • Accommodation in Bonifacio: 3★ hotel with citadel view, €130–200/night
  • Day 2 option: kayaking in Spérone coves, Bouches de Bonifacio nature reserve
  • Dinner: langoustine and brocciu in the medieval high-town restaurants
Pixidia Tip: In June, wind can be strong on Corsica’s south coast (Tramontane or Libeccio). That’s part of the golfing challenge, but bring extra balls for hole 16! Corsica is also magnificent off the main tourist trails — hire a car and explore the Bonifacio hinterland for deserted beaches 20 minutes from the course.

10. 🎣 Fly Fishing & Bivouac in the High-Altitude Lakes of the Pyrenees

High-altitude lake in the Pyrenees surrounded by mountains under a brilliant blue sky, Ariège
Photo by Quentin Jeandel on Unsplash

Néouvielle Nature Reserve, Hautes-Pyrénées — 220 lakes, wild brown trout

€400–600 for two, 2 days 2 May to 11 October Brown trout, rainbow trout Bivouac under the stars

This is undoubtedly the most complete and intimate father-son/daughter experience in this guide: high-altitude hiking, pristine wild nature, a night under a starry sky above 2,000 metres, and fly fishing in crystal-clear waters undisturbed for weeks. The Néouvielle Nature Reserve in the Hautes-Pyrénées counts 220 mountain lakes (around 1,000 hectares of water) stocked annually with brown trout, rainbow trout, brook trout, and Arctic char.

The ideal programme: depart with a professional fishing guide from Barèges or Argelès-Gazost. Allow 1.5 hours of walking to reach the refuge at the foot of the Bastan lakes. The path is easy and well-maintained. You’ll fish in the company of the guide who knows the spots, dry-fly casting techniques, and the behaviour of high-altitude trout. The bivouac night — tent on an alpine meadow, shared freeze-dried meal, Milky Way overhead — will remain engraved in your memories as one of the most beautiful evenings of your shared life.

Trip preparation

  • Daily fishing permit: ~€15/person (available online at cartedepeche.fr)
  • Guide + 2-day bivouac: €200–350/duo (providers: Nomade Pêche, Pyrénéance)
  • Equipment provided by guide: rods, lines, waders, fly boxes
  • Bring: 3-season sleeping bag, warm clothing (5–10°C at night at altitude)
  • Accessible to beginners: casting technique taught on-site
Pixidia Tip: The mountain lake season in the Hautes-Pyrénées officially opens on 2 May and closes on 11 October. June is the ideal period: lakes are free of ice, trout are active from dawn, and the summer crowds haven’t arrived yet. A guaranteed lifetime memory.

🧳 Practical Information & Budget Summary

Here is a comparison table of the 10 ideas to help you choose based on your budget, available time, and fitness level:

#ThemeDestinationBudget (2 people)DurationDifficulty
1🍷 WineBurgundy€400–8002 days⭐ Easy
2🍇 WineAlsace€350–6002–3 days⭐ Easy
3🍾 WineSaint-Émilion€400–7003 days⭐ Easy
4🥾 HikingVanoise (refuge)€200–3502–3 days⭐⭐ Moderate
5⛰️ HikingPic du Canigou€200–3502 days⭐⭐⭐ Strenuous
6🏍️ MotoRoute des Grandes Alpes€800–1,2004 days⭐⭐ Moderate
7🌋 MotoAuvergne (volcanoes)€400–6003 days⭐⭐ Moderate
8⛳ GolfÉtretat (Normandy)€400–6002 days⭐⭐ Moderate
9🌊 GolfSpérone (Corsica)€900–1,5003 days⭐⭐ Moderate
10🎣 FishingPyrenees (bivouac)€400–6002 days⭐⭐ Moderate
Travel Insurance — EKTA

Sports activities coverage included: mountain hiking, motorbike, mountain fishing. Rescue costs covered.

From €3.90/trip
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Frequently Asked Questions about Father’s Day 2026 Getaways

What is the exact date of Father’s Day 2026?

Father’s Day 2026 falls on Sunday 21 June 2026. In France it is always the third Sunday of June. This year it coincides with the summer solstice — the longest day of the year, perfect for an outdoor, sporting, or cultural getaway.

What budget should you plan for a memorable Father’s Day getaway?

Budgets vary according to the activity and your choices. For a shared activity day + meal: allow €150–300 for two. For a full weekend (2 nights): €400–900 for a duo. For a premium destination like Corsica (Spérone Golf): €900–1,500. The most affordable options are hiking in the Vanoise (~€200) and the Canigou ascent (~€200). The most expensive experiences include the Grande Alpes motorcycle route (~€1,200) and golf at Spérone (~€1,500).

Are these activities accessible to beginners?

Yes, most of the experiences listed are accessible to beginners with guidance. Fly fishing can be learnt on the spot with a professional guide (no prior experience required). Wine tastings are open to all levels with accessible explanations. For golf, introductory lessons (€50–70) are available at all courses. The Vanoise hike (Lac des Vaches) is rated moderate and accessible from age 12 in good physical shape. Only the Canigou ascent requires good physical fitness.

Can teenagers participate in these getaways?

The vast majority of activities are accessible from age 14–15 with parental consent. Mountain fishing stays are open to young people from age 12 depending on the provider. For motorcycling (as a passenger), there is no minimum age. For hiking, moderate-difficulty routes (Vanoise, Auvergne) suit teenagers in good physical condition. Wine tasting experiences are restricted to adults, but cellar and vineyard visits are open to all ages.

Can you combine several activities on the same trip?

Yes, and it’s even recommended! Some perfect combinations: Motorbike + Wine in Alsace (ideas 2 + 7 reversed), Hiking + Fishing in the Pyrenees (ideas 5 + 10), Étretat Golf + D-Day Beaches (idea 8 + Norman history). The Route des Grandes Alpes can include a wine stopover in the Rhône Valley. Auvergne combines beautifully with volcanic motorcycle roads and artisan cheesemaking (Saint-Nectaire, Cantal, Bleu d’Auvergne).

When should you book for Father’s Day 2026?

Lead times vary by activity. For mountain refuges (Vanoise, Canigou): book from March–April, mid-June nights sell out fast. For premium golf courses (Étretat, Spérone): 2–3 months in advance. For winery tastings: 3–4 weeks is sufficient outside the most famous appellations. For flights to Corsica: buy in March for the best fares. For fishing guides: 4–6 weeks in advance is generally sufficient.

What weather to expect on June 21, 2026 for these activities?

June 21 is the summer solstice in France: one of the sunniest days of the year. In Alsace, Burgundy, Normandy, and Bordeaux, temperatures range between 20°C and 28°C with maximum sunshine. In the mountains (Vanoise, Canigou, Grandes Alpes), conditions are ideal for hiking and riding, although evenings remain cool at altitude (5–10°C). In Corsica, June is perfect: still-calm sea, pleasant heat, fewer crowds than July–August. One constraint: afternoon thunderstorms in the mountains — check Météo-France before each departure.

How to give a getaway as a last-minute gift?

For a last-minute gift, several solutions exist. Experience gift boxes (Smartbox, Wonderbox, Sport & Découverte) are available in electronic format, sent instantly by email. For a personalised getaway, you can prepare a « surprise envelope » with the detailed itinerary of your chosen trip: print a nice voucher, specify the destination and planned activities, and present it wrapped. Some activities (wine tastings, golf lessons, fishing excursions) offer gift vouchers directly on their websites.

Sources and references

  1. La Minute Gourmande — Wine weekend, complete guide to the best experiences in France
  2. Vinotrip — Wine tourism stays in Burgundy, Alsace, Bordeaux
  3. Teritoria — Wine weekend: which region to choose?
  4. Liberty Rider — Motorcycle road trip: the 5 most beautiful routes in France
  5. Les Apprentis Voyageurs — Touring Auvergne by motorbike: 3 unforgettable days
  6. Splendia — The 6 most beautiful hikes in France to do this summer
  7. Mon Séjour en Montagne — The 10 most beautiful mountain hikes 2025–2026
  8. Foreswing — The best golf courses in France
  9. Mon Projet Sportif — The 10 most beautiful golf courses in France
  10. Nomade Pêche — Fishing in the Pyrenean mountain lakes with a bivouac night
  11. Lacs des Pyrénées — Fishing regulations, Hautes-Pyrénées (season 2026)
  12. Pyrénéance — Mountain fishing stays in the Pyrenees
  13. Sport & Découverte — Father’s Day gift 2026: original activities
  14. Bienvenue au Pays — The favourite hikes of the French in 2026
  15. SNCF Connect — Top 5 golf courses with magnificent views in France

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