Calanque d'En-Vau, turquoise waters in the south of France

Calanque Cassis

Many say that it is the most beautiful and spectacular corner of the French Mediterranean. His name, well known throughout the Midi, is Calanque d 'En-Vau, a small and inaccessible cove with turquoise waters between the cities of Marseille and Cassis.

What in the Gallic country they call calanque is what in Spain we know as a cove: a small silver, made of sand or stone, more or less hidden. Calanque d'En-Vau certainly is, because getting to it is certainly a complicated mission. It must be so, so that this paradise can remain intact and beautiful as it is now.

These blue waters can only be reached by sea or through a narrow and complicated mountain path, as there is no paved road that takes us to them. The second option is harder but the effort is worth it, since once there the traveler will find himself in the middle of a paradisiacal environment, where silence reigns and transparent waters like few in the Mediterranean bathe a tiny beach of thick white sand.

Among the frequent visitors to Calanque d'En-Vau, the fans of the escalation, who climb its formidable stone walls that guard the entrance to the cove, and by lovers of the scuba diving, who discover under its waters a world of hidden treasures.


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