Dordogne sites suggestions

grezza
grezza Forum Participant Posts: 21

hi guys. We have just gone to book up next years hols only to be disappointed that camping les peneyrals is already booked up for most of the dates we are travelling. Could anyone recommend an alternative to peneyrals in dordogne please. Problem we have
is our kids loved peneyrals for all the pools. Slides. Play park etc. And enjoyed the good food in the restaurant and the evening entertainment. Struggling to find something to tick all boxes. All comments greatly appreciated. 

Comments

  • ValDa
    ValDa Forum Participant Posts: 3,004
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    edited October 2016 #2

    Are you trying to book through the Caravan Club or have you checked with the site itself?   I've just tried the site's own reservations page, and on the dates I tried (in July and August during the school holidays) there were spaces available - albeit it
    does say 'Last available piches'.

    I know it's nice to go back to a favourite site, and we did it many times when our children were young, but equally they loved other sites too.  Perhaps if you can't find what you want in the Dordogne extend your search area - perhaps to include other lovely
    regions.

     

  • grezza
    grezza Forum Participant Posts: 21
    edited October 2016 #3

    Thanks for your reply valda. We are torn between here and are he for next summer. We are taking friends with us who are first timers into Europe with their van. So between us we have 3 kids aged around 10 hence the need for good pools etc. Any suggestions
    on sites would be very helpful

  • ValDa
    ValDa Forum Participant Posts: 3,004
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    edited October 2016 #4

    Which sites have you looked at as alternatives?  It's a very long time since we had children with us, but it would help to know if you've already decided against somewhere.

    Have you checked directly with the site that they can't accommodate you, rather than just through the automatic booking page?  Sometimes there are glitches and pitches are available when the computer says "no".

  • eurortraveller
    eurortraveller Club Member Posts: 6,830 ✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #5

    I can only repeat what Val said earlier. Don't assume that a campsite is fully booked just because the Club has used up its own allocation of pitches. It's always worth contacting the site directly. 

  • Unknown
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    edited October 2016 #6
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  • angiepanjie
    angiepanjie Forum Participant Posts: 14
    edited October 2016 #7

    Has anyone stayed at Camping Le Montant
    http://www.camping-sarlat.com/   I'm also looking for somewhere near Sarlat but don't have young children?

  • Unknown
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    edited October 2016 #8
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  • ValDa
    ValDa Forum Participant Posts: 3,004
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    edited October 2016 #9

    Can you go the last two weeks in August?  There is plenty of space then.  We used to find it the best time to holiday. 

  • ValDa
    ValDa Forum Participant Posts: 3,004
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    edited October 2016 #10

    Has anyone stayed at Camping Le Montant http://www.camping-sarlat.com/   I'm also looking for somewhere near Sarlat but don't have young children?

    The site looks to be one which is undiscovered by anyone other than the French.  It gets high scores on Zoover from all reviewers (average of 8.9) but there are 119 reviews in French, 12 in Dutch, and just one in English.

    It looks lovely and I shall put it on to me 'may have a look at this one' list!

    If you look it up on Zoover then there are several sites listed at the bottom which also have good reviews.

  • Tammygirl
    Tammygirl Club Member Posts: 7,957 ✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #11

    Has anyone stayed at Camping Le Montant
    http://www.camping-sarlat.com/   I'm also looking for somewhere near Sarlat but don't have young children?

    The site looks to be one which is undiscovered by anyone other than the French.  It gets high scores on

    Zoove
    r from all reviewers (average of 8.9) but there are 119 reviews in French, 12 in Dutch, and just one in English.

    It looks lovely and I shall put it on to me 'may have a look at this one' list!

    If you look it up on Zoover then there are several sites listed at the bottom which also have good reviews.

    Have just looked at this and like ValDa its gone on my list to stay at €16.50 per night for outfit + 2 persons + ehu, can't be bad.

  • ValDa
    ValDa Forum Participant Posts: 3,004
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    edited October 2016 #12

    I've just looked at the prices too - and Tammygirl is right - for a site with those facilities, and good reviews,   It offers three different sizes of pitch, and in low season pitches are just 5 euros - including the largest 200 sq m pitch.  Each person
    is 4 euros and electricity 3.50 euros!

    Definitely on our hit list for next year, when the Dordogne is likely to be part of our holiday.  We canoe and haven't yet 'done' the Dordogne properly, yet.  We've done the odd short trip, but never a longer one, largely because of unsuitable weather when
    we've visited.  Now from our house in France we will be able to set off any time, pick up our caravan, and be there the same day - so we can really watch the weather.

  • eurortraveller
    eurortraveller Club Member Posts: 6,830 ✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #13

    How that site has changed. We were there in the summer of 1982 and went back in 1983. It was just a farm site then - Camping de Ferme du Montant, and cost us 36 francs, about 5 euros for 5 of us. A ten year old daughter was moping because her two brothers
    wouldn't play with her and one of us said,"Oh go and play with the gypsies". She did. 

    Do others of you keep caravan log books with nuggets of history in them? 

  • AstralRanger12
    AstralRanger12 Forum Participant Posts: 27
    edited October 2016 #14

    No Laughing

  • Wherenext
    Wherenext Club Member Posts: 10,607 ✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #15

    Do others of you keep caravan log books with nuggets of history in them? 

    Yep, every year and they make cheerful reading especially in the depths of winter. They often act as a reminder to revisit certain places or sites.

  • TonyBurton
    TonyBurton Forum Participant Posts: 269
    edited October 2016 #16

    Try Soleil Plage, Montfort, Dordogne, France.  A very nice site. http://www.soleilplage.fr/

    Write your comments here...Yes, Highly recomended. We only stayed for two nights on the way back from Spain. We wanted a canoe trip down the river. We used Camping Cheques as it was towards the end of the season. Nice pools. See their website.

  • Metheven
    Metheven Club Member Posts: 3,987 ✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #17

    Two years ago we stayed at campsite 'Pepetuum' on the Dordogne, near Vitrac and the fantastic town of Domme. Accepts ACSI card and good facilities of pool, restaurant etc, and under half a mile away a great restaurant with adjacent canoe hiring.

  • ValDa
    ValDa Forum Participant Posts: 3,004
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    edited October 2016 #18

    How that site has changed. We were there in the summer of 1982 and went back in 1983. It was just a farm site then - Camping de Ferme du Montant, and cost us 36 francs, about 5 euros for 5 of us. A ten year old daughter was moping because her two brothers wouldn't play with her and one of us said,"Oh go and play with the gypsies". She did. 

    Do others of you keep caravan log books with nuggets of history in them? 

    No, but fortunately I have a good memory.  I can still remember lots of details about most of the sites we've stayed on.  Our first ever camping trip in France was to Le Paradis at St Leon sur Vezere, in the Dordogne (lovely site by the way).  I can remember the Dutch owners offering us a drink when we arrived hot and tired and thinking 'Wow' I also remember the kindness of a Dutch couple in the next tent who babysat for us for an hour in the evening so that we could go to the bar.  We loved the site, especially the pool (much smaller in those days), and it set us off on thirty six years of camping and caravanning holidays.

    Le Paradis has changed too, and so have many others that we've been to over the years, but like a lot of sites it remains in the ownership of the same family.  

    We paid just £99 for that trip, with Eurocamp, including the ferry, a week at Le Paradis, and a second week at Le Truc Vert on the Gironde peninsula near Arcachon.

    Some sites we won't go back to because we want to remember them as they were - such as Val de Cantobre in the Gorges du Tarn area.  This site would make a possible alternative for the OP if they want to think about a different area.  We stayed there so many times that we became friends with the owners and used to meet up with them if they were in this country.  Then they split up, and the site was sold to a Dutch camping organisation, so we haven't been back. However, it still scores 9.1 out of 10 on Zoover and still has the wonderful facilities that we remember.

    We have introduced the site to several friends over the years, and all of them loved it and the area.

  • Unknown
    Unknown Forum Participant
    edited October 2016 #19
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  • Tammygirl
    Tammygirl Club Member Posts: 7,957 ✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #20

    I started a couple of years ago using the calendar on my tablet to record information, which sites we have stayed on, what the facilities are like, what there is to do in the area. I have also taken notes of if we receive satellite reception. We are gradualy
    building up some favourites and hope to add lots more to it over the coming years.

  • Wherenext
    Wherenext Club Member Posts: 10,607 ✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #21

    Two years ago we stayed at campsite 'Pepetuum' on the Dordogne, near Vitrac and the fantastic town of Domme. Accepts ACSI card and good facilities of pool, restaurant etc, and under half a mile away a great restaurant with adjacent canoe hiring.

    Write your comments here... Stayed there this year and found it a most enjoyable site. Very quiet at night and in a good spot for sightseeing, walking and canoeing. The owners are extremely friendly and speak English if your French isn't up to snuff. Pitches
    are big enough but beware low hanging branches from the many trees on site. 

    It still takes ACSI out of season and this year was a bargain at 13 euros a night.

  • InaD
    InaD Club Member Posts: 1,701 ✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #22

     

    Do others of you keep caravan log books with nuggets of history in them? 

    Yes, I do; I record mileages between sites on trips, and also record the distances of our cycle trips and where to; prices paid on campsites.  All makes interesting reading in later years, for example, we stayed in Nevers in June this year.  Not been there
    since we were there in our tent in the 80's!  The toiletblock certainly was 100% better than how I remember it in the 80's too!