Overview - Places - Cruises on my barge - Pictures - Map Location

Overview of the Canal

Taking ten years to build, the Canal des Ardennes was opened in 1833 linking the Canal lateral a l'Aisne at Vieux-les-Asfeld with the Canal de l'Est at Pont-a-Bar. It covers a distance of around 88km, has 44 locks and a single 197m tunnel at St. Aignan. It doesn't actually pass through the Ardennes as its name suggests but points in that general direction. The canal follows the river Aisne upstream until it reaches the small village of Semuy, where it climbs through the Montgon flight of 27 locks over a distance of just 9 km. At Le Chesne, it joins the course of the river Bar through to Pont a Bar. From Vieux the canal rises 105 m above the river Aisne before falling 15 m in order to link up with the river Meuse. It's delightfully rural canal from one end to the other with much of it overgrown, foliage tumbling right into the water. Commercial traffic is now rare except in the lower reaches where, particularly in the autumn, barges transport champagne grown cereal from canal side silos.

Canal des Ardennes

Places along the Canal des Ardennes

Overview - Places - Cruises on my barge - Pictures - Map Location

Pont-a-Bar - Hannogne-St-Martin - St Aignan - Malmy - Chemery-sur-Bar - La Cassine - Le Chesne - Montgon - Neuville Day - Semuy - Voncq - Vouziers - Mont-de-Jeux - Rilly-sur-Aisne - St Lambert-et-Mont-de-Jeux - Attigny - Givry - Seuil - Thugny-Trugny - Rethel - Nanteuil-sur-Aisne - Chateau-Porcien - Asfeld - Vieux-les-Asfeld

Pictures of the Canal des Ardennes

Overview - Places - Cruises on my barge - Pictures - Map Location
Ardennes A canal runs through it.jpg (166525 bytes) Ardennes trio of Dutch cruisers.jpg (67329 bytes) Ardennes ancient church near La Cassine.jpg (160184 bytes)
Canal des Ardennes scenery near Pont a bar A trio of Dutch cruisers explore An ancient church near Malmy
Ardennes Chez Joel near Attigny.jpg (218378 bytes) ardennes church asfeld.jpg (190021 bytes) Attigny mooring.jpg (220099 bytes)
The 'Chez Joel' near Attigny Asfeld's unique baroque church Mooring at Attigny
Auberge Faisan Dore Mouzon.jpg (203057 bytes) Ardennes Church Rethel.jpg (141834 bytes) Ardennes ancient church near La Cassine (1).jpg (209466 bytes)
Auberge Faisan Dore Rethel's church The ancient church near Malmy
Ardennes Pastoral landscape.jpg (64928 bytes) Ardennes Malmy restaurant.jpg (144183 bytes) Camobarge Variscourt 2.jpg (208784 bytes)
Landscape near St. Aignan tunnel 'Au coin d'Enfer' restaurant near Malmy The 'camobarge'
Barge Final Fling 060.jpg (221635 bytes) bow deck.jpg (180132 bytes) Bullet holes in building.jpg (340601 bytes)
Overgrown Montgon flight ecluse Lunch stop on the Ardennes Bullet holes
Beautiful cloud formations over the Canal des Ardennes
c mezieres to variscourt 2006 029.jpg (156089 bytes) c mezieres to variscourt 2006 043.jpg (188163 bytes) c mezieres to variscourt 2006 047.jpg (174349 bytes)
Near 'Pont a bar' on the Canal des Ardennes Overgrown Canal des Ardennes Lovely relaxation on Barge Nilaya
Camobarge Variscourt 1.jpg (246536 bytes) Ardennes Ecluse Goats.jpg (214704 bytes) Canal des Ardennes cruising.jpg (172019 bytes)
The 'camobarge' Lockside goats Canal des Ardennes Scenery
Canal des Ardennes Commercials.jpg (108484 bytes) Stef locking.jpg (215595 bytes) Johanna Neuville Day (5).jpg (212017 bytes)
Commercial Freycinets loading on the Ardennes Stef working? Rare indeed... Barge Nilaya and Johanna at Neuville-Day
guests 7.jpg (174125 bytes) Canal des Ardennes sign.jpg (108355 bytes) Mike Sylvia Maria David Canal des Ardennes (2).jpg (224177 bytes)
Relaxing in the Ardennes Canal des Ardennes sign Relaxing in the Ardennes
Mike Sylvia Maria David Canal des Ardennes (3).jpg (221630 bytes) Stef Goat.jpg (74387 bytes) variscourt to bar le duc 2006 054.jpg (217669 bytes)
Relaxing in the Ardennes Stef and his girlfriend! Relaxing aboard Barge Nilaya
Neuville Day 2.jpg (196174 bytes) Mike Sylvia Canal des Ardennes.jpg (171731 bytes) gushing lock gates.jpg (275974 bytes)
Mid flight on the Montgon staircase Relaxing in the Ardennes Lock on the Ardennes
Mike Sylvia Canal des Ardennes (1).jpg (146415 bytes) Mike Sylvia Canal des Ardennes (2).jpg (159930 bytes) Mike Sylvia Canal des Ardennes (3).jpg (192248 bytes)
Mike and Sylvia chilling out Locking through Locking through on the Ardennes
Mike Sylvia Canal des Ardennes (4).jpg (229027 bytes) Neuville Day San Souci bar.jpg (171722 bytes) and Johanna Neuville Day (1).jpg (161030 bytes)
Relaxing in the Ardennes San Souci at Neuville-Day Neuville-Day
Neuville Day.jpg (96275 bytes) Peter Christine Variscourt (1).jpg (270826 bytes) Johanna Neuville Day (2).jpg (145826 bytes)
Neuville-Day Peter and Christine cycling Barge Nilaya and Johanna at Neuville-Day
Johanna Neuville Day (3).jpg (151227 bytes) variscourt to bar le duc 2006 061.jpg (199176 bytes) Johanna Neuville Day (5).jpg (212017 bytes)
Barge Nilaya and Johanna at Neuville-Day Mooring on the Ardennes Canal Barge Nilaya and Johanna at Neuville-Day
Johanna Neuville Day (4).jpg (165212 bytes) Peter Christine Variscourt.jpg (110698 bytes) Mike Sylvia Maria David Canal des Ardennes (4).jpg (189186 bytes)
Barge Nilaya and Johanna at Neuville-Day Peter and Christine cycling back with cake! Relaxing on the Canal des Ardennes
variscourt to bar le duc 2006 018.jpg (134251 bytes) Johanna Neuville Day.jpg (136680 bytes) variscourt to bar le duc 2006 001.jpg (218922 bytes)
Commercial barge passing Barge Nilaya Barge Nilaya and Johanna at Neuville-Day Commercial Freycinet on the Canal des Ardennes
variscourt to bar le duc 2006 067.jpg (99396 bytes) Stef creative rope work.jpg (167395 bytes) variscourt to bar le duc 2006 053.jpg (184427 bytes)
Sunset on the Ardennes Canal Stef's spring! Relaxing aboard Barge Nilaya
variscourt to bar le duc 2006 086.jpg (159977 bytes) variscourt to bar le duc 2006 049.jpg (72032 bytes) variscourt to bar le duc 2006 089.jpg (185292 bytes)
Barge Nilaya and Linquenda's guests enjoy a BBQ Baguettes and croissants at dawn Barge Nilaya and Linquenda's guests enjoy a BBQ
Walnuts.jpg (349411 bytes)
Walnuts for the taking of!

Location of the Canal des Ardennes

Overview - Places - Cruises on my barge - Pictures - Map Location

Charleville-Mezieres to Reims

Canal des Ardennes

Cruises on the Canal des Ardennes

Overview - Places - Cruises on my barge - Pictures - Map Location

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Full 2010 Cruise Programme 

The Wild Ardennes to Champagne

Champagne through the Wild Ardennes

Overview - Places - Cruises on my barge - Pictures - Map Location

Full 2010 Cruise Programme

The Wild Ardennes to Champagne 

HOME PAGE
Charleville-Mezieres to Reims (Cruise runs Saturday to Friday)

Highlights: Charleville-Mezieres Place Ducale - Montgon Flight of 27 locks - Intensely rural scenery - Champagne Capital of Reims

Let the world glide romantically byYou'll join Barge Nilaya at her mooring in Charleville-Mezieres. It's a pleasant little town laid out in the 17th century around the Place Ducale, one of the most beautiful Louis XIII style squares in France. It's home to a museum celebrating the life and works of French poet Arthur Rimbaud as well as home to the International Marionette institute. The institutes building has an hourly automaton that recites the local legend of the Four Aymon brothers or Quatre Fils Aymon as it is known locally. I normally cook your welcome aboard dinner on the first evening aboard, but because some of our moorings are very rural this week, I thought I'd give you the chance to dine out in the town. Charleville offers some excellent dining opportunities plus a great bar in the hold of a cavernous French Freycinet (Barge). If you fancy something light with a glass of beer or wine, why not try the 'tarte-flambe'. It's a bit like a pizza with cheese, onion and bacon. Very tasty!

We'll be steaming out of Charleville on Sunday morning having consumed a hearty continental breakfast. In complete contrast to the civilisation of Charleville, the stunning Canal des Ardennes is a little like I would imagine the Amazon to be in places, with foliage that has utterly overtaken the waterway's original boundaries. From the Canal de l'Est junction with the Canal des Ardennes at Pont-a-Bar, the canal is predominantly rural from beginning to end and wild remote moorings are the norm through to Variscourt. After cruising through the short 'St. Aignan' tunnel, I hope to moor somewhere near the village of Malmy this evening. It's a wild bank area with two tiny hamlets nearby. Tonight, we'll either be self catering aboard or you might choose to walk a couple of kilometres to a pleasant restaurant in the neighbouring village. If you are game for more exercise, you might choose to head off for a long walk across the fields to the 13th Century church and 16th Century ruined Chateau' at 'la Cassine', maybe returning via 'Vendresse' with its ruined chateau and monastery. It'll build up your appetite nicely! 

Being in the middle of nowhere, on Monday we'll head off early towards the small town of 'Le Chesne' and prepare for another highlight of this navigation, the Montgon flight of 27 ecluses (locks) that drop Barge Nilaya slowly between the towns of Le-Chesne  and Attigny. It's a lot of hard work for the crew, taking up to seven hours to cover what is little more than nine kilometres in distance. We aim to break that in two by mooring half way down at the small village of Neuville-Day in order to enjoy a well earned drink and possibly even dinner at a pleasant little hostelry. I enjoyed several beers there in 2006 and was delighted when the owner delivered fresh baguettes and his 90 year old mother to Barge Nilaya in the morning. I'd forgotten that the previous night I'd promised her a ride on Barge Nilaya! 

One thing you will notice as we drop through the ecluses it that every one has its derelict lock-keepers cottage. Two autumns ago, when I passed through this flight, the overgrown gardens trees were so bursting with fruit it would have been a crime not to go 'scrumping'. As a result, we feasted on apple pie for weeks and weeks afterward! 

On Tuesday, having descended through the rest of the flight, we'll stop for lunch in the small town of Attigny before cruising on to tonight's destination, the larger regional centre of 'Rethel'. It's a great place to dine ashore and a local restaurant there specialises in regional cuisine which might include some of the town's famous white sausages known as 'Boudin Blanc de Rethel' 

Some of the overgrown tree lined reaches cruised on Wednesday are quite breathtaking and we have a very good chance of spotting bird life including the usually elusive Kingfisher. If there's space at Asfeld's quay, I'll moor for lunch and allow you time to visit the villages extraordinary seventeenth century brick built baroque church before moving on to the beautifully manicured rural mooring provided and maintained by the villagers in the small hamlet of Variscourt. It's another wonderful spot to relax, read a book or get the BBQ out yet again. The small town of Guignicourt lies a couple of kilometres bike ride away along the tow path.

On Thursday morning, we turn off the Canal des Ardennes and head south down the 'Canal de l'Aisne a la Marne' to our mooring in the fabulous City of Reims, famed throughout the world for its involvement in the Champagne industry! It is highly likely that we'll visit the 'odd' Champagne cave in town, possibly even forcing yourselves to drink yet more of the celebrated liquid? The champagne houses of GH Mumm, Taittinger, Veuve Clicquot and Piper-Heidsieck offer guided tours and degustations. 

There is so much to see and do here. Reims' Notre- Dame Cathedral is spectacular with a facade containing some 2300 statues! It's 38 metre high nave has borne witness to the coronation of French Kings from Clovis in 498 AD until Charles X in 1825. It contains no less than two UNESCO world heritage monuments, the stunning 'Palais du Tau' and interior of the 'Basilique St. Remi'. I have details of a self guided 2 hour walking tour if you are interested in following it. Reims is a wonderful city to explore at your leisure and you might decide that tonight's the night to round off your week and splash out on a meal out in one of Reims' very chic and fashionable restaurants. 'Foch' and 'Le Millenaire' are but two of Reims three fork Michelin rated establishments. I would recommend that you consider staying a day or so more to fully appreciate all the city has to offer, maybe booking a hotel in town?

On Friday morning, you are due to depart Barge Nilaya after breakfast. Trains from Paris to Charleville-Mezieres take about 90 minutes and from Reims to Paris, about an hour.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Unforeseen circumstances sometimes affect our cruising schedule. These can include, but are not limited to: illness, floods, weather, canal closures, canal maintenance, lack of moorings, bureaucracy, strikes, civil disturbance, acts of god, the engine, and whims and fancies of both skipper, guests and crew. All of these things might cause last minute changes to the above and cruise routes. Although rare, we reserve the right to alter any and all routes accordingly. Flexibility is the name of the game and any such changes cannot be considered grounds for cancellation of the cruise.

Charleville-Mezieres to Reims

Overview - Places - Cruises on my barge - Pictures - Map Location

Full 2010 Cruise Programme

Champagne & the Wild Ardennes

HOME PAGE
Reims to Charleville-Mezieres (Cruise runs Saturday to Friday)

Highlights: Charleville-Mezieres Place Ducale - Montgon Flight of 27 Locks - Rural scenery - Champagne Capital of Reims

The canal is a tad overgrown, MOST of the way!You'll be joining Barge Nilaya at our mooring in the fabulous City of Reims, famed throughout the world for its involvement in the Champagne industry! It is highly likely that you'll visit the 'odd' Champagne cave in town, possibly even forcing yourselves to drink yet more of the celebrated liquid? The champagne houses of GH Mumm, Taittinger, Veuve Clicquot and Piper-Heidsieck offer guided tours and degustations. 

There is so much to see and do here. Reims' Notre- Dame Cathedral is spectacular with a facade containing some 2300 statues! It's 38 metre high nave has borne witness to the coronation of French Kings from Clovis in 498 AD until Charles X in 1825. It contains no less than two UNESCO world heritage monuments, the stunning 'Palais du Tau' and interior of the 'Basilique St. Remi'. I have details of a self guided 2 hour walking tour if you are interested in following it. Reims is a wonderful city to explore at your leisure and you might decide that tonight's the night to kick start your week and splash out on a meal out in one of Reims' very chic and fashionable restaurants. 'Foch' and 'Le Millenaire' are but two of Reims three fork Michelin rated establishments. I would recommend that you consider arriving a day or so earlier to fully appreciate all the city has to offer, maybe booking a hotel in town?

Berry-au-BacHaving consumed a hearty continental breakfast, on Sunday morning we'll be steaming out of Reims following the 'Canal de l'Aisne a la Marne' through to the important canal junction with the 'Canal des Ardennes' at Berry-au-Bac. In complete contrast to the civilisation of Reims, the canal quickly leaves the old industry and decaying wharves as we skirt the Champagne cereal plains. The stunning Canal des Ardennes, which is in places, a little like you might imagine the Amazon to be, with foliage that has utterly overtaken the waterway's original boundaries. Right through to Pont-a-Bar the canal is predominantly rural from beginning to end and wild remote moorings the norm if we so choose, or we can stop at some of the small towns and villages we encounter en-route. Tonight we'll moor at the beautifully manicured rural mooring provided and maintained by the villagers of the small hamlet of Variscourt. The small town of Guignicourt lies a couple of kilometres bike ride from the mooring. Variscourt is a wonderful place to relax.

On Monday we'll cruise onward to Asfeld. You can take a walk to see the villages extraordinary seventeenth century brick built baroque church while I prepare lunch which if weather permits, we'll enjoy outside on deck. In the afternoon we are cruising through some particularly wonderful overgrown stretches of canal and have a very good chance of spotting bird life including the usually elusive Kingfisher. Our destination today is the Town of 'Rethel', where you might choose to dine ashore, possibly enjoying some of the town's famous white sausages known as 'Boudin Blanc de Rethel'. There is a great restaurant in town which specialises in specialties of the region.

Tuesday sees us cruise through to Attigny for lunch before beginning to climb through one of the highlights of this navigation, the Montgon flight of 27 ecluses (locks) that raise Barge Nilaya slowly between the towns of Attigny and Le-Chesne.  It's a lot of hard work for the crew, taking up to seven hours to cover what is little more than nine kilometres in distance. One thing you'll notice as we climb through the ecluses it that virtually every one has its derelict lock-keepers cottage. Last autumn ago when I passed through this flight, the overgrown gardens were so bursting with fruit that it would have been a crime not to go 'scrumping'. As a result, we feasted on apple and fruit pies for weeks and weeks afterward. I aim to break the flight in two by mooring half way up at the small village of Neuville-Day in order to enjoy a well earned drink and possibly even dinner at a pleasant little hostelry there. I enjoyed several beers there two years ago and was delighted when the owner delivered fresh baguettes and his 90 year old mother to Barge Nilaya in the morning. I'd forgotten that the previous night I'd promised her a ride on Barge Nilaya! 

On Wednesday we'll climb the balance of locks and pass by the small town of 'Le Chesne' to a very rural place somewhere near the village of Malmy. It's a wild bank area with two tiny hamlets nearby. Tonight, we'll either be self catering aboard or you might choose to walk a couple of kilometres to a pleasant restaurant in the neighbouring village. If you are game for more exercise, you might choose to head off for a long walk across the fields to the 13th Century church and 16th Century ruined Chateau' at 'la Cassine', maybe returning via 'Vendresse' with its ruined chateau and monastery. It'll build up your appetite nicely! 

On Thursday we pass through the short 'St. Aignan' tunnel, arriving in Pont-a-Bar for lunch. Shortly after, we'll join the Canal de l'Est taking us right into the heart of Charleville-Mezieres. Charleville is a pleasant town laid out in the 17th century around the Place Ducale, supposedly one of the most beautiful Louis XIII style squares in France. It's home to a museum celebrating the life and works of French poet Arthur Rimbaud as well as the International Marionette institute. The institute's building has an hourly automaton that recites the local legend of the Four Aymon brothers or Quatre Fils Aymon as it is known locally. It's well worth seeing. Charleville offers some excellent dining opportunities plus has a great bar in the hold of a cavernous French Freycinet (Barge). If you fancy something light with a glass of beer or wine, why not try the 'tarte-flambe'. It's a bit like a pizza with cheese, onion and bacon. Very tasty! 

You'll be leaving Barge Nilaya after breakfast on Friday morning. Trains from Charleville-Mezieres to Paris take about ninety minutes and from Paris to Reims around an hour.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Unforeseen circumstances sometimes affect our cruising schedule. These can include, but are not limited to: illness, floods, weather, canal closures, canal maintenance, lack of moorings, bureaucracy, strikes, civil disturbance, acts of god, the engine, and whims and fancies of both skipper, guests and crew. All of these things might cause last minute changes to the above and cruise routes. Although rare, we reserve the right to alter any and all routes accordingly. Flexibility is the name of the game and any such changes cannot be considered grounds for cancellation of the cruise.

Charleville-Mezieres to Reims

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