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The Vélo Francette, also known as V43, stretches from the Channel coast at Ouistreham all the way down to the Atlantic port city of La Rochelle, linking three distinct French regions along the way: Normandie, Pays de la Loire, and Nouvelle-Aquitaine. Created in 2015 and voted the best cycle route in Europe in 2017, this itinerary has since become one of France's most celebrated long-distance cycling journeys.
The route sets off from Ouistreham, on the iconic D-Day Beaches, then follows the Canal de l'Orne inland to the historic city of Caen. From there, it winds through the rolling Norman bocage along the Orne valley, through the Suisse Normande landscape, continuing south via Flers and Domfront into the Mayenne department. The journey then unfolds through Laval, Château-Gontier, and on to Angers, Saumur, Thouars, Parthenay, and Niort before reaching its Atlantic finale at La Rochelle. Whether you follow rivers through quiet countryside or cycle into medieval town centres, the Vélo Francette offers a gentle, scenic immersion into some of France's most unspoiled rural landscapes.
The route carries the V43 identifier, which appears on all signage along the itinerary. As part of France's national véloroutes scheme, direction signs are standardised and consistent throughout the journey, making navigation relatively straightforward for most of the route. The V43 marking provides a reliable thread from the Channel coast all the way to the Atlantic, even as the landscape and terrain change considerably between regions. No significant navigation difficulties are reported, though the variant junctions at Pont-d'Ouilly and Angers are worth a brief check of the map before setting off.
The Vélo Francette offers two sections where cyclists can choose between alternative paths:
The route unfolds in a natural north-to-south progression, each section revealing a different face of French countryside. The following key stages give a sense of the journey's arc:
Ouistreham to Caen
The itinerary begins at the sea in Ouistreham, a departure point shaped by the memory of the 1944 Allied landings in Normandy. From here, the route follows the Canal de l'Orne to reach Caen, offering a calm and largely flat opening leg through a landscape defined by that wartime history.
Caen to Domfront via Suisse Normande
After exploring the history-rich streets of Caen, the route enters the Norman bocage, following the Orne valley through a region known as the Suisse Normande. The terrain becomes more undulating here, passing through Flers and the medieval town of Domfront before crossing into the Mayenne department.
Mayenne to Angers
Following the Mayenne river southward, the route passes through Mayenne town, Laval, and Château-Gontier. This section is one of the route's most river-focused stretches, with the Mayenne river running alongside through gentle agricultural countryside.
Angers to Niort via the Loire and Poitou
From Angers, the itinerary touches the Loire before heading south through Saumur, Montreuil-Bellay, and Thouars into the Deux-Sèvres department. Parthenay and Niort mark the transition into Poitou-Charentes territory, with the landscape gradually flattening towards the marshland of the Marais Poitevin.
Niort to La Rochelle via the Marais Poitevin
The final section crosses through the Parc naturel régional du Marais Poitevin, an atmospheric wetland where waterways and cycling paths intertwine. Marans serves as the last stop before the route concludes in La Rochelle on the Atlantic coast.
The Vélo Francette passes through a rich variety of natural and historical landscapes. Key highlights include:
The route also passes through three regional natural parks: Normandie-Maine, Loire-Anjou-Touraine, and Marais Poitevin, each offering distinct ecosystems and landscapes.
The Vélo Francette is suitable for a wide range of cyclists. Families with children will find particularly accessible terrain in the Bocage Ornais and around Caen, where the landscape is gentler and the infrastructure well-adapted. The mix of dedicated green lanes and shared roads means that some sections require more attention than others, particularly in busier areas.
The Vélo Francette works well as a standalone journey, but it is also a valuable link in a wider network of French cycling itineraries. The route connects directly with three major western French long-distance routes: the Véloscénie (Paris to Mont-Saint-Michel), the Loire à Vélo (along the Loire valley), and the Vélodyssée (the Atlantic coast route). This makes it possible to plan a longer multi-route tour across western France.
Whether you cycle the full length from Ouistreham to La Rochelle or focus on a single region, the Vélo Francette delivers a genuine cross-section of French landscapes, history, and rural life, at a pace suited to absorbing the variety of scenery and culture along the way.
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