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Canal
Latéral a la Loire |
Price £16.99 Available for purchase on-line from our sister company redumbrella. In PAL DVD-R format, suitable for the UK, European and Australia / New Zealand markets. Will also play in laptops anywhere. |
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The
mighty River Loire is known as the last great untamed river in Europe.
It has dangerous shifting sandbanks, frequent flash floods in the winter,
and in the summer, it’s so shallow that commercial navigation is
all but impossible. And so it was that in the 1820’s, work started
on a Canal Latéral, which ran parallel to the Loire, running more
or less around the edge of it’s flood plain. The Loire valley is
stunningly beautiful of course with its wooded slopes and elegant chateaux.
The magnificent Ducal Palace at Nevers is one of the finest in France.
At La Charité the video takes you on a tour of the abbey, now a
World Heritage site, and at Cosne-sur-Loire, the camera takes you through
a busy French street market, buzzing with activity. We associate the Loire
Valley with fine white wines, of course, and the video includes a visit
to the Marcel Gitton vineyard. The proprietor Pascal Gitton takes you
on a fascinating tour of the cellars, and the fermentation vats, an area
not normally seen by the public. We take you to the ancient city of Sancerre,
perched on a hill top at the heart of the wine making region, with magnificent
commanding views of the Loire and the vineyards. 150 years ago, the Loire
was a centre for heavy industry. There was a major iron works at Beffes,
which made heavy use of the canal. A quarter of the whole of France’s
output of iron in the nineteenth Century came from Beffes. On the video,
we tracked down those original furnaces, now hidden away in some woodland,
but in surprisingly good condition. Fourchambault was another centre for
heavy industry. The skilled labour required to run the steel furnaces
here was recruited from Staffordshire and South Wales. There’s very
little remaining commercial traffic on the canal, but we filmed two 300
tonners, carrying grain bound for the Netherlands. The Canal Latéral
makes three spectacular river crossings. It crosses the Loire on a fine
old stone aqueduct at Digoin. It crosses a major tributary of the Loire,
the Allier, again on a stone aqueduct, this time a magnificent 18 arch
structure. At Briare, it crosses the Loire again on the longest aqueduct
in Europe. Built in the 1890’s, it was the first major structure
anywhere to be built in steel, and like all three aqueducts, it can carry
300 tonne barges to the Freycinet standard. But perhaps the most memorable
feature of this canal is it’s amazing wildlife. In and on the water,
on the banks and in the air, we filmed an abundance of species that many
of us just hadn’t seen before. |
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