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Boating France Appendix
Appendix:
Waterways Guides (Guides Fluvial) Retail Prices 2008, Including Post & Packing.
Boating In France Preface Clive Edwards
Preface:
An Introduction to the French Inland Waterways
By Clive Edwards, Response Motorsports Initiatives Ltd © “Boating in France;
Boating In France - Burgundy
Burgundy
Access to the navigable rivers and canals of the Burgundy Region is often via the River Yonne which is navigable for some 65 miles with 26 locks from a junction with the River Seine at Montereau to join the Canal de Nivernais at Auxerre. There is also a connection with the Canal de Bourgogne at Laroche Migennes.
Boating In France - Franche, Comte and Douds
Franche, Comte and Douds:
The River Saône is one of the most important rivers in France, flowing some 300 miles from its source in the Vosges Mountains through Franche-Comté and Burgundy to join the Rhone at Lyon.
Boating In France - Champange
Boating In France - The Ardennes
The Ardennes Region offers several cruising possibilities through what has been described as “the green heart of France”
Boating In France - Aquitane, Gascony & The Lot
Aquitaine, Gascony & The Lot:
The principal navigable waterways in this region are the Garonne River, the Garonne Canal (previously known as the Canal Lateral) The River Lot and the River Baise.
Boating In France - River Charente
The River Charente:
The River Charente flows some 100 miles from Angouleme westward to the Atlantic near Rochefort. There are only twenty-one locks, and navigation is easy.
Boating In France - Alsace
Alsace:
The best-known cruising-ground in Alsace is the Canal de la Marne au Rhin, connecting Nancy in the west with the Rhine near Strasbourg in the east, a distance of some 200 miles,

