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  5. Vineyards, Chateaux & Bordeaux with Swiss Alps, 3 Nights in Lake Como & 1 Night in Lucerne
Vineyards, Chateaux & Bordeaux with Swiss Alps, 3 Nights in Lake Como & 1 Night in Lucerne
Avalon Waterways60828

Vineyards, Chateaux & Bordeaux with Swiss Alps, 3 Nights in Lake Como & 1 Night in Lucerne

Date

2026-08-28

Duration

21 nights

Departure Port

Lake Como

Italy

Arrival Port

Bordeaux

France

Rating

Luxury

Theme

History & Culture

Avalon Envision 1
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Avalon Waterways

Avalon Envision

Launched

2019

Refitted

—

Tonnage

2,775 GT

Passengers

166

Cabins

83

Crew

47

Length

443 m

Width

12 m

Speed

12 knots

Adults Only

No

View Details

Itinerary

Day 1

Day 1

Bucharest

Romania
Bucharest

Bucharest, Romania's sprawling and magnificently contradictory capital, layers Belle Époque mansions, communist-era boulevards, and a furiously creative twenty-first-century scene into a city that rewards the curious traveler who looks beyond the obvious. Ceaușescu's colossal Palace of the Parliament — the world's heaviest building and a monument to totalitarian hubris — is unmissable; equally essential is the neighborhood of Floreasca, where design studios, natural wine bars, and acclaimed restaurants have made Bucharest one of Europe's most exciting emerging food capitals. Visit April through June for the most pleasant weather. Transylvania, with Bran Castle and the medieval city of Brașov, lies two hours north through dramatic Carpathian scenery.

Day 3

Day 3

Ruse

Bulgaria
Ruse

Ruse, Bulgaria's elegant Danube gateway, surprises with a Belle Époque city centre of Austro-Hungarian grandeur — neoclassical facades, ornate fountains, and a Liberty Monument that would not look out of place in Vienna. The city serves as the gateway to the spectacular Rusenski Lom Nature Park, whose limestone canyon shelters medieval rock-carved monasteries of eerie beauty. The remarkable Basarbovo Monastery, still inhabited by monks, clings to cliffs above the turquoise river. Local wineries produce distinguished Mavrud and Cabernet from the nearby Danube plains. May through September offers the most pleasant temperatures for exploration.

Day 4

Day 4

Lake Como

Italy
Lake Como

Lake Como, Italy is a distinctive port city where deep cultural heritage meets authentic local atmosphere, featured on itineraries by Uniworld River Cruises. Must-do experiences include walking the historic center to experience the layered architectural heritage, and seeking out the regional culinary traditions at a locally favored establishment away from the port area. The optimal time to visit is May through September, when mild temperatures and long days favor unhurried exploration.

Day 4

Day 4

Vidin

Bulgaria
Vidin

Vidin is a captivating port town on the Danube River known for its rich history, eclectic architecture, and vibrant local culture. Must-do experiences include exploring the Baba Vida Fortress and savoring local dishes like **kavarma** and **lutenitsa**. The best time to visit is during the spring and autumn months when the weather is pleasant and the local markets are bustling with activity.

Day 5

Day 5

Donji Milanovac

Serbia
Donji Milanovac

Donji Milanovac is a tranquil Serbian town on the banks of Lake Đerdap, nestled within the dramatic Iron Gates gorge of the Danube and surrounded by pristine national parkland. Visitors should not miss the Lepenski Vir archaeological site, home to seven-thousand-year-old Mesolithic sculptures, and the restored medieval fortress at nearby Golubac. The ideal time to cruise through the Iron Gates is from late May through September, when long daylight hours illuminate the gorge walls and riverside terraces invite lingering over fresh riblja čorba and local šljivovica.

Day 5

Day 5

Basel

Switzerland
Basel

Basel, where Switzerland, France, and Germany converge at the Rhine's northward bend, hosts a concentration of world-class art institutions that rivals any city its size on earth — the Kunstmuseum alone, the world's oldest public art collection, could occupy days, and Art Basel each June draws every name that matters in the contemporary art world to this compact, elegant city. The Rhine itself is the city's great social artery: in summer, locals jump in with waterproof bags and float downstream, a tradition as charming as any museum. Spring through autumn is ideal for outdoor exploration; Paris is just three hours by TGV and Strasbourg a mere twenty minutes by train.

Day 6

Day 6

Belgrade

Serbia
Belgrade

Belgrade, the 'White City' rebuilt at least forty times at the confluence of the Danube and Sava rivers, surprises every visitor with its raw, uncurated vitality — a capital that wears its turbulent history lightly while embracing the present with irresistible energy. The Kalemegdan Fortress, fortified for over two thousand years, offers the most dramatic river panorama on the entire Danube; below it, the Skadarlija cobblestone quarter fills nightly with kafana musicians and the aromas of Serbian rakija and roasted meats. Belgrade's nightlife — centered on the floating river clubs called splavovi — is genuinely legendary in Europe. Spring and early autumn offer the most comfortable conditions; the Iron Gate gorge is two hours downstream by river.

Day 7

Day 7

Novi Sad

Serbia
Novi Sad

Novi Sad — the "Serbian Athens" — unfolds along the left bank of the Danube beneath the commanding walls of the Petrovaradin Fortress, a Habsburg military masterpiece whose underground tunnel labyrinth and hilltop clock tower (with hands reversed, to confuse enemy gunners) make for one of Europe's most unusual fortress visits. The city's elegant pedestrian street, the Zmaj Jovina, is lined with 19th-century Habsburg architecture that rewards a leisurely afternoon, while the Serbian cultural renaissance of the same era left behind museums, galleries, and coffee house traditions that endure today. In July, the EXIT music festival transforms the fortress into one of Europe's most storied outdoor stages. Visit May through September for the finest weather.

Day 8

Day 8

Ilok

Croatia
Ilok

Ilok, a historical port in Croatia, enchants visitors with its medieval architecture, serene riverfront, and vibrant local culture. Must-do experiences include savoring traditional dishes like "čobanac" and sampling the exquisite local wine, "Traminac." The best time to visit is during the late spring or early fall, when the weather is pleasant and the vineyards are lush.

Day 9

Day 9

Rudesheim

Germany
Rudesheim

Rüdesheim am Rhein, a jewel of the UNESCO-listed Upper Middle Rhine Valley, is where Germany's most storied wine river cuts through vine-terraced slopes and medieval castle ruins. The pedestrianised Drosselgasse laneway — beloved since the Romantic era — hums with wine taverns pouring the region's celebrated Rieslings, crisp and mineral from the slate soils. The Niederwald Monument surveys the river from the heights, reached by cable car above the vineyards. Day trips by boat unlock Bacharach, Boppard, and the legendary Lorelei rock. September's harvest festivals transform the entire valley into a convivial celebration of the vintage.

Day 9

Day 9

Mohacs

Hungary
Mohacs

Mohács is a historically significant Hungarian town on the Danube, renowned for the pivotal 1526 battle and the UNESCO-listed Busójárás winter festival featuring dramatic masked processions. Visitors should not miss the fiery halászlé fisherman's soup prepared with fresh Danube catch, and a wine excursion to the nearby Villány appellation for world-class reds. The ideal season to visit is late spring through early autumn for warm riverside days, though February offers the unforgettable spectacle of Busójárás.

Day 9

Day 9

Koblenz

Germany
Koblenz

Koblenz stands at the Deutsches Eck — the German Corner — where the Moselle river pours into the Rhine in a confluence so geographically commanding that the Romans built a fortress here in 9 BC. The result is a city of exceptional Rhine Gorge scenery, with the formidable Ehrenbreitstein Fortress, one of Europe's largest, crowning the opposite bank and reachable by gondola for panoramas that stretch across three river valleys. A Rhine wine tasting at one of the city's historic Weinstuben, followed by a stroll through the Altstadt's baroque squares, is the definitive Koblenz afternoon. The finest weather arrives April through October, with the Rhine in Flames fireworks festival in August being particularly spectacular.

Day 10

Day 10

Budapest

Hungary
Budapest

Budapest, divided by the Danube into the hilly Buda of thermal baths and medieval castle lanes on one bank and the grand Pest of coffee-house culture and Art Nouveau splendor on the other, delivers the most theatrical first impression of any European capital — whether approached by river as the neo-Gothic Parliament materializes from the water or by night from the Citadella's sweep of illuminated panorama below. The city's celebrated thermal bath culture, rooted in Ottoman-era hammams and perfected in palatial Secession-era pools like the Széchenyi, is an experience entirely unlike anything else in Europe. Visit spring and autumn for comfortable temperatures; Vienna is two and a half hours west by train.

Day 12

Day 12

Amsterdam

Netherlands
Amsterdam

Amsterdam's UNESCO-listed canal ring — a concentric web of seventeenth-century merchant houses and arching stone bridges — remains one of the Western world's most perfectly preserved Golden Age cityscapes, best explored by bicycle or canal boat at a pace that lets the city's genius reveal itself slowly. The Rijksmuseum's collection of Rembrandt and Vermeer masterpieces is essential, while the Anne Frank House offers one of Europe's most profoundly moving historical encounters. Spring brings the iconic tulip season; summer fills the terraces of the Jordaan district. Schiphol Airport makes Amsterdam a seamless gateway to the entire European continent.

Day 12

Day 12

Paris

France
Paris

Paris rewards every arrival as though it were the first — the sweep of the Seine, the Gothic tracery of Notre-Dame rising again from its 2019 ashes, the Eiffel Tower somehow managing to astonish at each encounter, the Louvre's glass pyramid reflecting clouds in the courtyard of a palace that served French kings for four centuries. Beyond the monuments, Paris is a city of neighbourhoods: the Belle Époque brasseries of Montparnasse, the covered passages of the 2nd arrondissement, the rooftop terraces of Le Marais. The Luxembourg Gardens in April, or a late-September evening on the Canal Saint-Martin, are among the most civilised experiences in the world.

Day 13

Day 13

Vernon

France
Vernon

Vernon is a quietly beguiling Norman town on the Seine whose greatest treasure lies just four kilometers beyond its medieval bridge: the garden and water lily ponds at Giverny, where Claude Monet lived and painted for forty-three years, creating the luminous imagery that changed the course of modern art. The town itself retains considerable charm — a romanticly ruined twelfth-century bridge tower draped in ivy, half-timbered houses along the riverbank, and a fine museum housing several original Monet canvases. Monet's garden is open from April through October, reaching its peak splendor in May and June when his beloved water lilies are in full, painterly bloom.

Day 13

Day 13

Les Andelys

France
Les Andelys

Les Andelys occupies one of the Seine's most dramatic bends, dominated by the spectral ruins of Château Gaillard — Richard the Lionheart's 'Saucy Castle,' built with medieval speed in a single year and considered a masterpiece of twelfth-century military engineering. The view from the castle's white chalk promontory across the river's great loop is among the most beautiful in Normandy, a landscape that captivated Monet and Pissarro. Below, the twin villages of Grand and Petit Andely offer excellent Normandy cuisine, notably duck dishes prepared with local cider. Les Andelys is best visited April through October as part of a Seine river cruise; golden autumn light renders the chalk cliffs particularly luminous.

Day 14

Day 14

Caudebec-en-Caux

France
Caudebec-en-Caux

Caudebec-en-Caux nestles in a Seine meander between Rouen and the sea, famous for its Flamboyant Gothic Eglise Notre-Dame — a masterwork of late medieval stone lacework so exquisite that Henri IV called it 'the most beautiful chapel in my kingdom.' The town serves as an ideal quiet base for exploring the Seine Valley's quieter pleasures: the remarkable Abbaye de Jumiéges, its roofless nave open to the Norman sky, and the Manoir d'Ango, a Renaissance manor of extraordinary ambition, are both within easy reach. The tidal atmosphere of the Seine at this point rewards early morning walks along the embankment. Rouen, with its Gothic cathedral and Impressionist legacy, lies forty minutes east.

Day 16

Day 16

Rouen

France
Rouen

Rouen, the medieval capital of Normandy set in a wooded meander of the Seine, rewards slow exploration with one of France's richest concentrations of Gothic architecture. The vast cathedral — immortalised by Monet in his celebrated series of canvases — dominates a city where half-timbered lanes wind between Renaissance mansions and the square where Joan of Arc was burned in 1431. The covered market overflows with Normandy's great dairy bounty: camembert, livarot, and pont-l'évêque alongside cider and calvados. Paris lies just ninety minutes south by train. Spring and early autumn offer the most atmospheric conditions.

Day 17

Day 17

Conflans

France
Conflans

Poised at the confluence of the Oise and the Seine, Conflans-Sainte-Honorine has been France's inland waterway capital for over a century, its quays mooring more than a thousand traditional péniches whose painted hulls form a floating village of singular charm. The hilltop medieval town commands sweeping views over the meeting of rivers, while the National Inland Waterways Museum aboard a converted barge chronicles France's extraordinary network of canals and waterways. Just thirty kilometres from Paris, Conflans is best visited in summer, when barge festivals fill the riverbank with music, local produce, and the unhurried pleasures of la vie fluviale.

Day 18

Day 18

Paris

France
Paris

Paris rewards every arrival as though it were the first — the sweep of the Seine, the Gothic tracery of Notre-Dame rising again from its 2019 ashes, the Eiffel Tower somehow managing to astonish at each encounter, the Louvre's glass pyramid reflecting clouds in the courtyard of a palace that served French kings for four centuries. Beyond the monuments, Paris is a city of neighbourhoods: the Belle Époque brasseries of Montparnasse, the covered passages of the 2nd arrondissement, the rooftop terraces of Le Marais. The Luxembourg Gardens in April, or a late-September evening on the Canal Saint-Martin, are among the most civilised experiences in the world.

Day 19

Day 19

Bordeaux

France
Bordeaux

Bordeaux, France's premier port city, is renowned for its historical significance, stunning architecture, and world-class wine. Must-do experiences include savoring local delicacies at Marché des Quais and exploring the breathtaking art installations at Place de la Bourse. The best season to visit is during the late spring and early autumn, when the weather is pleasant and the vineyards are in full bloom.

Day 20

Day 20

Cadillac

France
Cadillac

Cadillac, a picturesque commune in the Gironde department, is celebrated for its rich history, charming architecture, and exquisite culinary offerings. Must-do experiences include savoring local delicacies like foie gras and exploring the historical Château de Cadillac. The best season to visit is during the spring and early autumn, when the weather is delightful, and local markets are bustling with fresh produce.

Day 21

Day 21

Cussac Fort Médoc

France
Cussac Fort Médoc

Where the Gironde estuary broadens toward the Atlantic, Cussac-Fort-Médoc occupies a quietly magnificent corner of Bordeaux wine country, its landscape shaped by Vauban's seventeenth-century star-shaped citadel — a UNESCO World Heritage fortification — and by centuries of châteaux producing some of the Left Bank's most distinguished Haut-Médoc cuvées. River cruisers dock here for château visits and private cellar tastings amid working vineyards, far from the tourist circuits of Saint-Émilion. September brings the harvest, filling the air with the intoxicating scent of fermenting Cabernet Sauvignon; the temperate maritime climate makes spring and autumn equally rewarding.

Day 22

Day 22

Blaye

France
Blaye

Crowned by a Vauban citadel that UNESCO recognises as one of Europe's finest military fortifications, Blaye guards the Gironde estuary with a watchful grandeur unchanged since Louis XIV's engineers completed their work in 1689. Taste the local delicacy of poutargue de Blaye — cured mullet roe from the estuary — explore the merlot vineyards of the Blaye Côtes de Bordeaux appellation, and take an excursion south to Bordeaux's grand neoclassical boulevards. September and October bring the heady aromas of harvest season to the surrounding wine country.

Day 22

Day 22

Bourg

France
Bourg

The port of Bourg, with its Roman roots and charming medieval architecture, offers a unique glimpse into southern France's history and culture. Must-do experiences include savoring local delicacies like "Pâté en Croûte" and exploring nearby attractions such as the Lascaux caves and the ancient city of Arles. The best season to visit is spring, when the region blooms into life and the markets are brimming with fresh produce.

Day 1

Bucharest

Romania
Bucharest

Bucharest, Romania's sprawling and magnificently contradictory capital, layers Belle Époque mansions, communist-era boulevards, and a furiously creative twenty-first-century scene into a city that rewards the curious traveler who looks beyond the obvious. Ceaușescu's colossal Palace of the Parliament — the world's heaviest building and a monument to totalitarian hubris — is unmissable; equally essential is the neighborhood of Floreasca, where design studios, natural wine bars, and acclaimed restaurants have made Bucharest one of Europe's most exciting emerging food capitals. Visit April through June for the most pleasant weather. Transylvania, with Bran Castle and the medieval city of Brașov, lies two hours north through dramatic Carpathian scenery.

Day 3

Ruse

Bulgaria
Ruse

Ruse, Bulgaria's elegant Danube gateway, surprises with a Belle Époque city centre of Austro-Hungarian grandeur — neoclassical facades, ornate fountains, and a Liberty Monument that would not look out of place in Vienna. The city serves as the gateway to the spectacular Rusenski Lom Nature Park, whose limestone canyon shelters medieval rock-carved monasteries of eerie beauty. The remarkable Basarbovo Monastery, still inhabited by monks, clings to cliffs above the turquoise river. Local wineries produce distinguished Mavrud and Cabernet from the nearby Danube plains. May through September offers the most pleasant temperatures for exploration.

Day 4

Lake Como

Italy
Lake Como

Lake Como, Italy is a distinctive port city where deep cultural heritage meets authentic local atmosphere, featured on itineraries by Uniworld River Cruises. Must-do experiences include walking the historic center to experience the layered architectural heritage, and seeking out the regional culinary traditions at a locally favored establishment away from the port area. The optimal time to visit is May through September, when mild temperatures and long days favor unhurried exploration.

Vidin

Bulgaria
Vidin

Vidin is a captivating port town on the Danube River known for its rich history, eclectic architecture, and vibrant local culture. Must-do experiences include exploring the Baba Vida Fortress and savoring local dishes like **kavarma** and **lutenitsa**. The best time to visit is during the spring and autumn months when the weather is pleasant and the local markets are bustling with activity.

Day 5

Donji Milanovac

Serbia
Donji Milanovac

Donji Milanovac is a tranquil Serbian town on the banks of Lake Đerdap, nestled within the dramatic Iron Gates gorge of the Danube and surrounded by pristine national parkland. Visitors should not miss the Lepenski Vir archaeological site, home to seven-thousand-year-old Mesolithic sculptures, and the restored medieval fortress at nearby Golubac. The ideal time to cruise through the Iron Gates is from late May through September, when long daylight hours illuminate the gorge walls and riverside terraces invite lingering over fresh riblja čorba and local šljivovica.

Basel

Switzerland
Basel

Basel, where Switzerland, France, and Germany converge at the Rhine's northward bend, hosts a concentration of world-class art institutions that rivals any city its size on earth — the Kunstmuseum alone, the world's oldest public art collection, could occupy days, and Art Basel each June draws every name that matters in the contemporary art world to this compact, elegant city. The Rhine itself is the city's great social artery: in summer, locals jump in with waterproof bags and float downstream, a tradition as charming as any museum. Spring through autumn is ideal for outdoor exploration; Paris is just three hours by TGV and Strasbourg a mere twenty minutes by train.

Day 6

Belgrade

Serbia
Belgrade

Belgrade, the 'White City' rebuilt at least forty times at the confluence of the Danube and Sava rivers, surprises every visitor with its raw, uncurated vitality — a capital that wears its turbulent history lightly while embracing the present with irresistible energy. The Kalemegdan Fortress, fortified for over two thousand years, offers the most dramatic river panorama on the entire Danube; below it, the Skadarlija cobblestone quarter fills nightly with kafana musicians and the aromas of Serbian rakija and roasted meats. Belgrade's nightlife — centered on the floating river clubs called splavovi — is genuinely legendary in Europe. Spring and early autumn offer the most comfortable conditions; the Iron Gate gorge is two hours downstream by river.

Day 7

Novi Sad

Serbia
Novi Sad

Novi Sad — the "Serbian Athens" — unfolds along the left bank of the Danube beneath the commanding walls of the Petrovaradin Fortress, a Habsburg military masterpiece whose underground tunnel labyrinth and hilltop clock tower (with hands reversed, to confuse enemy gunners) make for one of Europe's most unusual fortress visits. The city's elegant pedestrian street, the Zmaj Jovina, is lined with 19th-century Habsburg architecture that rewards a leisurely afternoon, while the Serbian cultural renaissance of the same era left behind museums, galleries, and coffee house traditions that endure today. In July, the EXIT music festival transforms the fortress into one of Europe's most storied outdoor stages. Visit May through September for the finest weather.

Day 8

Ilok

Croatia
Ilok

Ilok, a historical port in Croatia, enchants visitors with its medieval architecture, serene riverfront, and vibrant local culture. Must-do experiences include savoring traditional dishes like "čobanac" and sampling the exquisite local wine, "Traminac." The best time to visit is during the late spring or early fall, when the weather is pleasant and the vineyards are lush.

Day 9

Rudesheim

Germany
Rudesheim

Rüdesheim am Rhein, a jewel of the UNESCO-listed Upper Middle Rhine Valley, is where Germany's most storied wine river cuts through vine-terraced slopes and medieval castle ruins. The pedestrianised Drosselgasse laneway — beloved since the Romantic era — hums with wine taverns pouring the region's celebrated Rieslings, crisp and mineral from the slate soils. The Niederwald Monument surveys the river from the heights, reached by cable car above the vineyards. Day trips by boat unlock Bacharach, Boppard, and the legendary Lorelei rock. September's harvest festivals transform the entire valley into a convivial celebration of the vintage.

Mohacs

Hungary
Mohacs

Mohács is a historically significant Hungarian town on the Danube, renowned for the pivotal 1526 battle and the UNESCO-listed Busójárás winter festival featuring dramatic masked processions. Visitors should not miss the fiery halászlé fisherman's soup prepared with fresh Danube catch, and a wine excursion to the nearby Villány appellation for world-class reds. The ideal season to visit is late spring through early autumn for warm riverside days, though February offers the unforgettable spectacle of Busójárás.

Koblenz

Germany
Koblenz

Koblenz stands at the Deutsches Eck — the German Corner — where the Moselle river pours into the Rhine in a confluence so geographically commanding that the Romans built a fortress here in 9 BC. The result is a city of exceptional Rhine Gorge scenery, with the formidable Ehrenbreitstein Fortress, one of Europe's largest, crowning the opposite bank and reachable by gondola for panoramas that stretch across three river valleys. A Rhine wine tasting at one of the city's historic Weinstuben, followed by a stroll through the Altstadt's baroque squares, is the definitive Koblenz afternoon. The finest weather arrives April through October, with the Rhine in Flames fireworks festival in August being particularly spectacular.

Day 10

Budapest

Hungary
Budapest

Budapest, divided by the Danube into the hilly Buda of thermal baths and medieval castle lanes on one bank and the grand Pest of coffee-house culture and Art Nouveau splendor on the other, delivers the most theatrical first impression of any European capital — whether approached by river as the neo-Gothic Parliament materializes from the water or by night from the Citadella's sweep of illuminated panorama below. The city's celebrated thermal bath culture, rooted in Ottoman-era hammams and perfected in palatial Secession-era pools like the Széchenyi, is an experience entirely unlike anything else in Europe. Visit spring and autumn for comfortable temperatures; Vienna is two and a half hours west by train.

Day 12

Amsterdam

Netherlands
Amsterdam

Amsterdam's UNESCO-listed canal ring — a concentric web of seventeenth-century merchant houses and arching stone bridges — remains one of the Western world's most perfectly preserved Golden Age cityscapes, best explored by bicycle or canal boat at a pace that lets the city's genius reveal itself slowly. The Rijksmuseum's collection of Rembrandt and Vermeer masterpieces is essential, while the Anne Frank House offers one of Europe's most profoundly moving historical encounters. Spring brings the iconic tulip season; summer fills the terraces of the Jordaan district. Schiphol Airport makes Amsterdam a seamless gateway to the entire European continent.

Paris

France
Paris

Paris rewards every arrival as though it were the first — the sweep of the Seine, the Gothic tracery of Notre-Dame rising again from its 2019 ashes, the Eiffel Tower somehow managing to astonish at each encounter, the Louvre's glass pyramid reflecting clouds in the courtyard of a palace that served French kings for four centuries. Beyond the monuments, Paris is a city of neighbourhoods: the Belle Époque brasseries of Montparnasse, the covered passages of the 2nd arrondissement, the rooftop terraces of Le Marais. The Luxembourg Gardens in April, or a late-September evening on the Canal Saint-Martin, are among the most civilised experiences in the world.

Day 13

Vernon

France
Vernon

Vernon is a quietly beguiling Norman town on the Seine whose greatest treasure lies just four kilometers beyond its medieval bridge: the garden and water lily ponds at Giverny, where Claude Monet lived and painted for forty-three years, creating the luminous imagery that changed the course of modern art. The town itself retains considerable charm — a romanticly ruined twelfth-century bridge tower draped in ivy, half-timbered houses along the riverbank, and a fine museum housing several original Monet canvases. Monet's garden is open from April through October, reaching its peak splendor in May and June when his beloved water lilies are in full, painterly bloom.

Les Andelys

France
Les Andelys

Les Andelys occupies one of the Seine's most dramatic bends, dominated by the spectral ruins of Château Gaillard — Richard the Lionheart's 'Saucy Castle,' built with medieval speed in a single year and considered a masterpiece of twelfth-century military engineering. The view from the castle's white chalk promontory across the river's great loop is among the most beautiful in Normandy, a landscape that captivated Monet and Pissarro. Below, the twin villages of Grand and Petit Andely offer excellent Normandy cuisine, notably duck dishes prepared with local cider. Les Andelys is best visited April through October as part of a Seine river cruise; golden autumn light renders the chalk cliffs particularly luminous.

Day 14

Caudebec-en-Caux

France
Caudebec-en-Caux

Caudebec-en-Caux nestles in a Seine meander between Rouen and the sea, famous for its Flamboyant Gothic Eglise Notre-Dame — a masterwork of late medieval stone lacework so exquisite that Henri IV called it 'the most beautiful chapel in my kingdom.' The town serves as an ideal quiet base for exploring the Seine Valley's quieter pleasures: the remarkable Abbaye de Jumiéges, its roofless nave open to the Norman sky, and the Manoir d'Ango, a Renaissance manor of extraordinary ambition, are both within easy reach. The tidal atmosphere of the Seine at this point rewards early morning walks along the embankment. Rouen, with its Gothic cathedral and Impressionist legacy, lies forty minutes east.

Day 16

Rouen

France
Rouen

Rouen, the medieval capital of Normandy set in a wooded meander of the Seine, rewards slow exploration with one of France's richest concentrations of Gothic architecture. The vast cathedral — immortalised by Monet in his celebrated series of canvases — dominates a city where half-timbered lanes wind between Renaissance mansions and the square where Joan of Arc was burned in 1431. The covered market overflows with Normandy's great dairy bounty: camembert, livarot, and pont-l'évêque alongside cider and calvados. Paris lies just ninety minutes south by train. Spring and early autumn offer the most atmospheric conditions.

Day 17

Conflans

France
Conflans

Poised at the confluence of the Oise and the Seine, Conflans-Sainte-Honorine has been France's inland waterway capital for over a century, its quays mooring more than a thousand traditional péniches whose painted hulls form a floating village of singular charm. The hilltop medieval town commands sweeping views over the meeting of rivers, while the National Inland Waterways Museum aboard a converted barge chronicles France's extraordinary network of canals and waterways. Just thirty kilometres from Paris, Conflans is best visited in summer, when barge festivals fill the riverbank with music, local produce, and the unhurried pleasures of la vie fluviale.

Day 18

Paris

France
Paris

Paris rewards every arrival as though it were the first — the sweep of the Seine, the Gothic tracery of Notre-Dame rising again from its 2019 ashes, the Eiffel Tower somehow managing to astonish at each encounter, the Louvre's glass pyramid reflecting clouds in the courtyard of a palace that served French kings for four centuries. Beyond the monuments, Paris is a city of neighbourhoods: the Belle Époque brasseries of Montparnasse, the covered passages of the 2nd arrondissement, the rooftop terraces of Le Marais. The Luxembourg Gardens in April, or a late-September evening on the Canal Saint-Martin, are among the most civilised experiences in the world.

Day 19

Bordeaux

France
Bordeaux

Bordeaux, France's premier port city, is renowned for its historical significance, stunning architecture, and world-class wine. Must-do experiences include savoring local delicacies at Marché des Quais and exploring the breathtaking art installations at Place de la Bourse. The best season to visit is during the late spring and early autumn, when the weather is pleasant and the vineyards are in full bloom.

Day 20

Cadillac

France
Cadillac

Cadillac, a picturesque commune in the Gironde department, is celebrated for its rich history, charming architecture, and exquisite culinary offerings. Must-do experiences include savoring local delicacies like foie gras and exploring the historical Château de Cadillac. The best season to visit is during the spring and early autumn, when the weather is delightful, and local markets are bustling with fresh produce.

Day 21

Cussac Fort Médoc

France
Cussac Fort Médoc

Where the Gironde estuary broadens toward the Atlantic, Cussac-Fort-Médoc occupies a quietly magnificent corner of Bordeaux wine country, its landscape shaped by Vauban's seventeenth-century star-shaped citadel — a UNESCO World Heritage fortification — and by centuries of châteaux producing some of the Left Bank's most distinguished Haut-Médoc cuvées. River cruisers dock here for château visits and private cellar tastings amid working vineyards, far from the tourist circuits of Saint-Émilion. September brings the harvest, filling the air with the intoxicating scent of fermenting Cabernet Sauvignon; the temperate maritime climate makes spring and autumn equally rewarding.

Day 22

Blaye

France
Blaye

Crowned by a Vauban citadel that UNESCO recognises as one of Europe's finest military fortifications, Blaye guards the Gironde estuary with a watchful grandeur unchanged since Louis XIV's engineers completed their work in 1689. Taste the local delicacy of poutargue de Blaye — cured mullet roe from the estuary — explore the merlot vineyards of the Blaye Côtes de Bordeaux appellation, and take an excursion south to Bordeaux's grand neoclassical boulevards. September and October bring the heady aromas of harvest season to the surrounding wine country.

Bourg

France
Bourg

The port of Bourg, with its Roman roots and charming medieval architecture, offers a unique glimpse into southern France's history and culture. Must-do experiences include savoring local delicacies like "Pâté en Croûte" and exploring nearby attractions such as the Lascaux caves and the ancient city of Arles. The best season to visit is spring, when the region blooms into life and the markets are brimming with fresh produce.

Cabin Categories

Panorama Suite 1
Panorama Suite 2
Panorama Suite 7

Panorama Suite

Suite
200 m²Max 2
ABP

Stateroom Features:

Comfort Collection Beds
Luxurious mattress toppers
Egyptian super-combed cotton linens
European-style duvets
Soft & firm pillows
Extra blankets
Choice of bed configuration
Nightly turn-down service
Bedside tables with reading lamps
Premium Hairdryer
L'Occitane bath products
Spacious 3-door closets with shelves for ample storage
Easy under-bed luggage storage
Flatscreen satellite TV with English-speaking channels & over 100 free movie options
Alarm clock
Direct-dial telephone
Bathrobes & slippers
Well-stocked minibar
Complimentary filtered water
In-room safe
Individual climate control
Elegant, contemporary design
Large mirror in bathroom
Two windows
Full shower with glass door
Writing desk and chair
Lighted makeup mirror
Complimentary Wi-Fi
One Queen-Sized Bed or Two Twins
USB Ports

Queen or Twin ConfigurationLounge AreaVanity AreaShowerToiletries ProvidedRoom Service Available+8
View Details
Royal Suite 1
Royal Suite 2
Royal Suite 4

Royal Suite

Suite
300 m²Max 2
S

Stateroom Features:

Comfort Collection Beds
Luxurious mattress toppers
Egyptian super-combed cotton linens
European-style duvets
Soft & firm pillows
Extra blankets
Choice of bed configuration
Nightly turn-down service
Bedside tables with reading lamps
Premium Hairdryer
L'Occitane bath products
Spacious 3-door closets with shelves for ample storage
Easy under-bed luggage storage
Flatscreen satellite TV with English-speaking channels & over 100 free movie options
Alarm clock
Direct-dial telephone
Bathrobes & slippers
Well-stocked minibar
Complimentary filtered water
In-room safe
Individual climate control
Elegant, contemporary design
Large mirror in bathroom
Two windows
Full shower with glass door
Writing desk and chair
Lighted makeup mirror
Complimentary Wi-Fi
One Queen-Sized Bed or Two Twins
USB Ports

King or Twin ConfigurationLounge AreaVanity AreaShowerToiletries ProvidedRoom Service Available+8
View Details
Deluxe Stateroom 1
Deluxe Stateroom 2
Deluxe Stateroom 4

Deluxe Stateroom

Outside
172 m²Max 2
DE

Stateroom Features:

Comfort Collection Beds
Luxurious mattress toppers
Egyptian super-combed cotton linens
European-style duvets
Soft & firm pillows
Extra blankets
Choice of bed configuration
Nightly turn-down service
Bedside tables with reading lamps
Premium Hairdryer
L'Occitane bath products
Spacious 3-door closets with shelves for ample storage
Easy under-bed luggage storage
Flatscreen satellite TV with English-speaking channels & over 100 free movie options
Alarm clock
Direct-dial telephone
Bathrobes & slippers
Well-stocked minibar
Complimentary filtered water
In-room safe
Individual climate control
Elegant, contemporary design
Large mirror in bathroom
Two windows
Full shower with glass door
Writing desk and chair
Lighted makeup mirror
Complimentary Wi-Fi
One Queen-Sized Bed or Two Twins
USB Ports

Queen or Twin ConfigurationVanity AreaShowerToiletries ProvidedRoom Service AvailableMini Bar (Additional Cost)+6
View Details

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