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Sail With Bacchus Aboard a French Country Waterways Barge Trip

The 12 of us gathered for a sumptuous four-course gourmet dinner, each dish seasoned, served and savored with…

French Barge The Nenuphar is one of French Country Waterwaysโ€™ four barges that traverse the canals of France. Photo courtesy of French Country Waterways
French Barge The Nenuphar is one of French Country Waterwaysโ€™ four barges that traverse the canals of France. Photo courtesy of French Country Waterways

The 12 of us gathered for a sumptuous four-course gourmet dinner, each dish seasoned, served and savored with elan. The artistically folded napkins were rivaled only by the several glasses at each setting, aligned to designer specification.

The conversation flowed as freely as the wine, laughter bubbling up and over the table like a fine bottle of champagne. It was hard to believe we had met for the first time just a few hours earlier when we boarded our luxury barge for a week-long cruise along the waterways of France.

This is not a “cruise” as most of the world defines it. The boat is small; the body of water of choice is canal, not ocean; there are no swimming pools or discos on deck; shipboard activities range from reading on the sundeck to reading in the parlor area.

Yet according to every passenger aboard, the trip not only lived up to but exceeded expectations. A rare show of unanimity among travelers.

This particular barge, the Nenuphar, one of four operated by French Country Waterways, Ltd., lumbers through a beautiful stretch of the Loire Valley on some of the oldest canals in France, dating back to 1604.

The waterways wind along tree-lined towpaths, past medieval villages, stately chateaux, rolling fields, and ever-famous vineyards.

Wine and Cheese Reign Supreme

Table setting of food and wine
The sampling of multiple vintage wines is the highlight of every barge cruise sponsored by French Country Waterways. Photo courtesy of French Country Waterways

All the senses are satiated, but taste and smell predominate, with wine and food the focus of the trip. Both lunch and dinner, exquisitely prepared and presented, are accompanied by a select red and white wine; at dinner, exclusively from Grand Cru or Premier Cru vineyards.

The de rigueur Plat de Fromage, a selection of three different cheeses, is served up with as much reverence as the wine.

Each bottle of wine is tenderly caressed as its characteristics are lovingly described prior to serving. The table is hushed as it learns of the wine’s vintage, heritage, blush, fruity nose, supple taste, sweet aroma, lightness, elegance, finesse, its children, hobbies and indiscretions.

Woman holding a plate of cheese
Multiple cheeses accompany every meal aboard the Nenuphar barge along the Loire Valley canal in France.
Photo courtesy of French Country Waterways

Comparable homage is paid to the cheese. There’s always the basic cow, goat, and blue varieties: farm fresh, 5 months old, 2 weeks old, square curd, penicillin rind, pasteurized, unpasteurized, mild and nutty, light and fresh, tangy and robust. This is a cheese we’re talking about!

Once I returned home, I found it hard to look at a glass of wine or a wedge of cheese without wanting to know its entire history.

The French take their wine and their cheese very seriously. No doubt, if the barge were to sink, the crew would save the wine and the cheese first. Fortunately, this is not a concern in four feet of water.

Although the Vibe is Laid-Back, There is Always Something to Do

Houses along a canal in France
The countryside along the canals provides ongoing engagement. Photo by Victor Block

When not eating, we engaged in a wide range of diverse activities, sometimes alone, sometimes in pairs, and sometimes as a group.

At any moment in time, I’d look around to see several people reading, a few playing cards and avoiding the discussion of politics, or scrolling through their phones.

Still others might be off walking or riding bikes along the towpath. And not surprisingly, after lunch, more than a fair number of passengers might just be napping. The fact that Wifi was only available topside and at odd hours bothered no one.

“Decadent laid-back living” is how Irene Hosford, a lawyer from Dallas, Texas, describes the trip. “The tension just rolls away. Especially just walking along the towpath, you see things you don’t ordinarily notice, even if they’re always there.”

Incomparable Service and Attention to Detail Abound

Beautifully poresented plate of food
Food presentation is one of the many culinary delights of French Country Waterways’ barge cruises.
Photo by Victor Block

It is indeed the service, the attention to detail, that distinguishes this company from other barge operators: from fresh fruit and fresh coffee to fresh flowers and fresh linens. And it is the crew, hailing from across Europe, who themselves worship French wines with more than typical enthusiasm, that sets the tone for the trip.

Captain Sam steers a steady course both at and away from the helm. Matilda brings as much grace to keeping your stateroom spotless as she does to the elegant presentation of wines and cheeses.

Adrien was always there with a helping hand, whether tying up at a lock or negotiating a bike on or off the barge at just the right moment.

Sabine, tour guide extraordinaire, imparts so much appreciation and enthusiasm to every attraction that it’s as though she, too, is discovering it for the first time.

Millie, resident chef and culinary artist, “People taste first with their eyes before they taste with their tongues,” provides the centerpiece around which everything else revolves.

But it’s Alice who offers to bring you a drink on the deck just as you were thinking you wanted one. I was sitting on the deck reading and lusting after a refreshing glass of white wine. And Voila – Alice appears with a glass in hand. I raised a very skeptical eyebrow. “Télépathique,” she explained in her irresistible French accent.

Shore Excursions are Not to be Missed

People in a winery
A visit to a vineyard is always on the menu – after all, it is France! Photo by Victor Block

Delightfully planned excursions to French chateaux, abbeys and villages are on offer. Or perhaps to a well-known vineyard for a wine tasting, after all, it had probably been at least an hour since our last sip of the grape, take up most of the afternoons.

A dinner ashore at a renowned Michelin three-star restaurant provides a break from barge cuisine, although no one wants one. And everyone agreed it wasn’t close to comparable. So much for Michelan stars.

My husband and I chose to skip a tour of an artisan oak wine-barrel making facility because it sounded boring. Apparently, each sliver of wood is handcrafted, and the artistry throughout is impressive. The other 10 passengers spoke about the outing with reverence for the next two days.

Pottery
A visit to a pottery factory produced works of art as opposed to just household furnishings.
Photo by Victor Block

We didn’t make the same mistake with the pottery factory outing, where the hand-crafted creations, fashioned here since 1821, more resemble works of art than household furnishings.

The Beauty of Slow Travel

Barge navigating a lock
Watching the navigation of multiple locks on the canal provides unending entertainment on the Loire Valley barge cruise. Photo by Victor Block

Your typical French town lives up to storybook expectations, narrow cobblestone streets and windy alleyways; half-timbered, turret-topped buildings adorned with gargoyles and intricate ironwork dating from the 15th to the 19th centuries; lace curtains in every window; flowers in every window box; pastry shops on every street corner, cafes in every square.

You stop to absorb the history, only to have your reverie interrupted by a teenage girl with plum-colored hair and earbuds in each ear racing by on rollerblades. So much for nostalgia.

Although on the surface, this is not a vacation for the person who thrives on activity, admittedly, the most exciting thing to happen some days may be that the barge goes through a particularly deep lock; somehow, there’s always something to do.

Rich Genererson and his wife, Marie, from Venice, Florida, have celebrated their five-year anniversaries aboard a barge for the last 20 years.

”We enjoy the serenity of the surroundings and the camaraderie of meeting new people. The food and the wine are just a bonus.”

Barge cruising is synonymous with slow. You could probably get to your destination faster by walking, but that’s not the point. Traveling by barge is about enjoying the process, reveling in the countryside, and mastering the fine art of relaxation. Oh yes, it’s also about the wine and the cheese.

For more information, visit www.fcwl.com.

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