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Birds, beaches and bays: the other Somme

It is impossible to ignore the history of this region, but it has another side.

August 10, 2010 13:17
Sailing through the Hortillonnages, the serene floating gardens of Amiens

BySharron Livingston, Sharron Livingston

4 min read

The Somme, in Picardy, is the spiritual home of First World War I tourism; a place where descendants of fallen soldiers go to find the graves of their father, uncle or grandfather, or parties of schoolchildren are taken on educational trips.

So entrenched is the Somme in its Great War provenance, that the area is an unlikely destination for holiday-makers in search of fun and frolics, but that doesn't mean it isn't a beautiful area of France to visit - even without the pull of history.

Anyone driving through the Somme - and in particular the towns of Péronne and Albert - will see that the area is true to that perception and won't fail to notice, no doubt with an awkward gulp and a sinking feeling, the abundance of roadside war graves visible around every bend, all lovingly and reverently tended by the War Graves Commission. The Somme's superb museum mile, Le Circuit du Souvenir 1914-1918, provides a sad education on different aspects of the Great War.

The Somme Museum 1916 in Albert is set in a 250m tunnel, converted from an air-raid shelter after World War Two.