|
Descartes
 Descartes 20 minutes from La Plauderie is set
on the river Creuse, the town was home to the famous
philosopher René Descartes and there is museum dedicated
to him in the house where he was born.

The village has a busy Sunday morning market, where
you can buy the locally made, famous goats cheese, Sainte Maure de Touraine, fresh home-grown produce and wines of
the region or simply enjoy the atmosphere.
There is a choice of well-stocked supermarkets in the
town that make an ideal stop-off, if travelling down
from Tours, to pick up some fresh fruit and veg, local
wines and cheeses to get your holiday off to a pleasant
start.

For
leisure Descartes offers a heated outdoor swimming pool
complex with slides (open July and August, no outdoor
sh orts
allowed); baby pool, 25 metre pool and large sunbathing
area, cafeteria, children's play park, crazy golf,
fishing, canoeing on the river Cruise, tennis and a
beautiful walk through the shaded
riverside gardens.
You can hire canoes which can be
taken up-river to Barrou to allow you to return
downstream at your leisure.

The town has a link with the World
War II in that the line separating occupied and
free France is on the road heading out of the town in
the direction of Barrou/Le Blanc.

Another sad connection with WWII
can be found nearby in the
village of Maillé, in the direction of St.Maur-de-Touraine
where on June 10, 1944 as Paris was being liberated, the
village residents (124), mainly women and children, were
the victims of an organized massacre from the occupying
German army in retaliation for actions of the
resistance. The massacre lasted all morning. In the afternoon and late into
the night, the village was bombarded with artillery shelling
completing its destruction. There is a small
museum dedicated to the victims.
 You
can also explore the troglodyte dwellings at nearby St
Rémy-sur-Creuse. Ethni'Cité, as it is
referred to gives you a glimpse - just a glimpse- of
what cave dwelling living and working was like.The
exhibits are presented in this unique setting carved
into the rockface.In the Middle Ages these caves were the refuge of
lepers. Weavers later used the caves as workshops,
benefiting from the presence of underground streams.
There was also, allegedly, a fortress on the top of the
outcrop built by Richard the Lionheart. A small tower
buried under heavy vegetation is all that now remains.
** |