
8 km (5miles) from Falaise, 15 km (9 miles) from Argentan and its station with links in less than 2 hours to Paris, Montparnasse, 40 km (25 miles) from Caen and 55 km (34 miles) from the sea and Ouistreham (ferries to England).

In a village with 300 inhabitants situated in a protected area; access from Paris is easy with the excellent A13 only 10 km (6 miles) from the property. Paris is 130 km (81 miles) away, Evreux and Rouen are approx. 35 km (22 miles) away. The nearest French SNCF train station is 10 km (6 miles) away and the nearest of the surrounding villages is 2 km (1.25 miles) away.
All shops and amenities are present. The castles are open to the public in this tourist mecca where antique dealers, second-hand goods dealers, art craftsmen, local products, hiking and pony trekking are all proof of a dynamic region in tune with a challenging environmental and cultural demand.

South of the Lot, near to Cahors. A region with gently undulating countryside where the hills of downy oaks and the boxwood, hazel tree and juniper undergrowth, contrast with the barer areas where we can glimpse the white limestone, symbolic of this part of the Quercy region. There where numerous rivers and streams have gouged fertile valleys in which cereal crops, fruit and vines are grown.
A region with an amazing architectural heritage made up of numerous and varied medieval fortified towns, hilltop villages, castles, Romanesque churches as well as Gallo-Roman vestiges and windmills: the Valentré bridge classified as a World Heritage site by Unesco, the medieval villages of Montpezat-du-Quercy, Castelnau-Montratier, Lauzerte, the keeps of Montcuq and Luzech and Mercuès castle.
All amenities are five minutes away by car in the heart of a small pleasant town. Agen and its TGV train station, as well as Toulouse and its international airport are less than 100 km (63 miles) away.

Situated in Black Perigord, in the Bergerac - Périgueux - Sarlat triangle, an ideal starting point when visiting the mecca of cultural and great outdoor tourism, and treating yourself to a gastronomical tour of the land of good restaurants. A region full of an amazing historic and architectural heritage, renowned for its delightful scenery: the Dordogne and Vézère valleys, sinkholes, caves and prehistoric sites of worldwide renown, countless castles, and some of the most beautiful villages in France. Near to the beautiful, commercial town of Bugue, where, for more than 600 years there have been weekly markets selling local produce, and where several fairs and other traditional regional fetes are organised.

Situated in Figeac-Cajarc country, a land of contrasts, and enclosed between the Lot and the Célé valleys. An area known both for its stone and its underground rivers and steams. A peaceful region, blessed with wonderful wooded, wild and unspoilt surroundings, peppered with a series of exceptional sites and monuments created by nature and mankind: Marcilhac surrounded by its sheer limestone cliffs, Pech Merle cave, Cabrerets and its troglodyte castle, etc. In an ideal position for not only taking advantage of one of the last “black triangles” of France where a night sky of an almost unique purity can be observed but also for exploring the numerous other marvels in the Quercy region such as Rocamadour, St-Cirq-Lapopie, the Dordogne valley as well as the Padirac sinkhole. The beautiful medieval city of Figeac is nearby and has all amenities, a French SNCF train station and all schools.