| Glénan archipelago |
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 Glénan archipelago - Une partie de l'archipel
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 Glénan archipelago - Voiliers au mouillage
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| Located
10 miles off Concarneau, the islands of Glénan are sometimes visible
from the coast. It is an archipelago of eight inhabited islands, of
five other islands and a multitude of small islands, rocks and reefs. |
Glénan archipelago - Plongée sous marine The sheep island is halfway from the continent. The other islands are grouped and delimit a sheltered Mountain Lake called "le lagon" (the lagoon). The purity of water and the low depth (less 2m with low tide) explain the astonishing luminosity which bathes the archipelago. Mainly sandy, the islands carry low vegetation made up mainly from tough grasses and thistles that suffer from the winter winds as well as the dryness and walkers in summer. Some trees manage to survive on |
Glénan archipelago - Une flore d'une grande richesse Saint Nicolas, Drenec and the Log. Obstinate, the Nautical Centre of Glénans replanted on Penfret a wood already destroyed twice by fire. There is no fresh water in the archipelago, except from a brackish pond on the Log and rainwater recovered on the roofs. The drinking water comes from the continent by boat. In summer, Saint Nicolas, the most attended island, is connected by high-speed motorboats to Concarneau, Port-La-Forêt, Beg-Meil and Bénodet. The sun reigns there (more often than on the coast), beautiful beaches, two small restaurants, a phone box but neither hotel, nor camp-site. Beware thus: not to miss the departure of the last motorboat! The other islands are private, but their beaches and their rocks are accessible with boat. The nautical centre tolerates the walkers on the islands that it occupies, in the condition that they remain on the paths. The preservation of fauna and the flora is at this price. The nautical centre occupies the islands of Bananec, Drenec, Cigogne and Penfret. At the beautiful season its sailing ships furrow all day the archipelago. They are not the only ones on water. Certain summer weekends, they are several hundreds of boats of all kind and size which undertake the crossing and stopover in Glénan the time of a bathe, a picnic or one night under the wind of an island. |
| PS : In winter the islands are returned back to the seagulls and only some fishermen attend the archipelago. |
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