| These are my personal impressions from a first visit to Cap d'Agde and a few practical hints for anyone thinking of going there. They are based on a week in mid-September 1995, which is in the low season. I had a really good time and met some great people, but Cap d'Agde does have a few drawbacks. |
The place
The Quartier Naturiste is a bit like a smaller version of the main town, built around a marina. It's about 20-30 minutes walk to the centre of Cap d'Agde, and about 10 km to the ancient city of Agde, where there is a railway station. There is an inconvenient circular bus service to both Agde and Cap d'Agde from the Quartier Naturiste, running less frequently outside the high season. Although Cap d'Agde is convenient for visiting interesting places (e.g., Narbonne, Carcassonne and Nimes) if you have a car, it is not well placed if you rely on the train.
The Quartier Naturiste has an excellent beach, maybe 2 km long, which is clean and well cared for, but it must be packed in the high season. There are several swimming pools; if you arrive with a tour company, free admission to one of them may be included in what you have paid.
Although the resort is open all the year round, most businesses inside are open only from May to September.
The Naturism
To the east of the naturist beach is a beach where naturists (unofficially) and textiles seem to coexist happily. At the west end, there is a path alongside the channel giving entrance to the Quartier Naturiste port, where you will find yourself opposite textiles fishing and strolling.
A wide range of people of virtually all ages visit Agde, and the place did not seem to be dominated by any age group or by one sex. Not surprisingly, given the time I was there, I saw very few families with school-age children, but many couples with and without young children.
The Weather
September weather is unreliable, although you can expect higher temperatures and more sunshine than in the British Isles. During my week we had cloudy early mornings with the sun breaking through later to give temperatures around 22-26C. One day it rained all day (the first whole day of rain since May) and for two days the wind was too strong and cold for sitting comfortably on the beach. I was told that September 1994 had much rain and gales.
The high season in Agde in 1995 was cooler than normal, coinciding with the hot dry weather in northern Europe.
The Price
Take as much as you can of the things you will need when you first arrive and, when you can, go shopping in the supermarkets (such as Intermarche) on the outskirts of Agde.
The Accommodation
The apartments in Port Natur are particularly badly designed from a security point of view, and if you leave the French windows open for air in hot weather anyone has access to your room. While I was there a couple lost everything as they slept.
There is a three-star hotel, the Eve, but I didn't investigate it. I suspect it's for the feelthy reech.
The Night Life
The Sleaze
The east end of the beach has an area marked by a fence where the authorities seem to tolerate exhibitionism in the dunes, and it is probably best for families to avoid this area. Aspiring exhibitionists should perhaps be warned that fine adhesive Agde sand being wind-blasted into all crevices may well be a passion-killer.
When assessing Cap d'Agde from this point of view, remember that it is not a naturist resort in the usual sense, but a part of France that happens to be for naturist use, and it is regulated by the local government. Although Cap d'Agde may seem very exciting from the viewpoint of Northampton or of Normal, Illinois, it is not way out for a place that is (a) in France and (b) somewhere where people go to relax. The sleaze is not obvious to families or those who are not looking for it.
The Conclusion
Copyright © 1995-2009 Richard Burnham