Description from the AF3V website of the Thouet Valley Cycle Path from St Martin to Parthenay (alopogies in advance for any clumsiness of style!)
As the towns are situated on the crests, and as the route often goes away from the river, there are frequent climbs. That makes the route a bit difficult for beginners or well-laden trippers, who should think about short stages.
The route is described in the published brochure in 8 sections. It starts at the edge of the department, at 2 km to the N of the lake “La Ballastière” at St Martin.
The first section between this lake and Thouars, 22 km long, is easy for families as it is perfectly flat. It follows for a long time the River Thouet, on a little sheltered road which, at the entry to Thouars, borders family gardens. After a very steep climb (the only one!), you cross the center of Thouars, go down on foot from the castle and cross the Thouet by the Romanesque bridge from where you get a beautiful view of the town.
The second section from Thouars to St Généroux (18.5 km) presents some climbs but you run alongside the Thouet many times (eg at Missé and before Boué) and you follow a wild 'almost-greenway' of 3 km before St G. In this town, the Romanesque bridge and the church are magnificent.
The third section, from St G to Airvault (11 km) often goes far from the valley onto a plateau (to where it climbs!) but the arrival at Airvault by the meadow of Soulièvres and the crossing of this pretty town pay off.
The 4th section (8.5 km) links Airvault with St Loup, a pretty village with houses with dovecotes.
The 5th section (8.5 km) passes by the Cébron Lake, a nature reserve and agreeable site, then descends to Gourgé where it crosses the Thouet on the Romanesque bridge.
The 6th section from Gourgé to Parthenay (22.6 km) is the most hilly of all, for the route climbs up to Lhoumois, then continues, far from the valley, into the hills. On the other hand, the entry into Parthenay has been made safe by the creation of cycle paths which lead to the crossing of the town which is achieved by means of a beautiful greenway running alongside the Thouet for 4 km, up to the leisure center and the Green Wood campsite. You have to climb into the town by small roads. Note: when you find yourself in the lower town, in the St James quarter, you can cross the Thouet at the old port, in order to join the start of the Parthenay – Bressuire greenway 1 km away.
Thursday, 29 October 2009
Tuesday, 27 October 2009
Le parcours mystère: un petit problème!
Hi folks. Sorry about the delay in the updated spreadsheets. I have met a problem on Day 4. This makes use of a greenway which we would be on from St Martin-de-Sanzay to Parthenay. This is 91 km according to the af3v website and our total for that day comes out at 116 km, the longest day up to that point (I thought initially it was going to be one of our shortest). I have been checking all the distances along the way, using Autoroute Express and, unless the route is extremely tortuous, this package didn't make it anything like this. I sent an email to Luc at af3v and, using Google Maps, he made it about 20 km less (in line with what I thought at first). But he also referred my question to Julien who knows the route well. Julien has just come back to say that the distances given on the website are spot-on and moreover the route is very hilly! Whoops - maybe we won't go on that one after all!
Any thoughts anyone? Any means of checking once again? BTW, Julien has referred me to the website for this greenway. The link is http://www.valleeduthouet.fr/cote-tourisme/le-thouet-a-velo/le-guide-decouverte/ I'd like to hear from anyone who can prove that our route is 20 km shorter than my latest figure! I haven't begun to study these pdf file maps yet myself.
Any thoughts anyone? Any means of checking once again? BTW, Julien has referred me to the website for this greenway. The link is http://www.valleeduthouet.fr/cote-tourisme/le-thouet-a-velo/le-guide-decouverte/ I'd like to hear from anyone who can prove that our route is 20 km shorter than my latest figure! I haven't begun to study these pdf file maps yet myself.
Thursday, 8 October 2009
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