The second day of the French Spa Tour and Cure started with a drive through the Pyrenees to the โbeaux villageโ of Saint-Bertrand-De-Comminges.
French Spa Tour
The journey from our overnight at Lโhostellerie des Cรฉdres to Saint-Bertrand-de-Comminges was a brilliant plan, thanks to my trip guide extraordinaire, Nevenka. She knew the view from Villeneuve-de-Riviรจre along the autoroute would be breathtaking. All along the way, autumn colors unfolded before us. One turn in the road was more beautiful than the last. The snow-covered mountains of the Pyrenees were always at our side.
Even the brief time we stopped at a roadway โaireโ (rest area) to fill up the gas tank was an adventure. Imagine finding a full-service cafeteria with lovely French cuisine on an interstate highway!
French Spa Tour and a Cure:ย Saint-Bertrand-De-Comminges
When the French designate a town as a โBeaux Village,โ they mean it. The petite town of Saint-Bertrand-de-Comminges and its famous Cathedral are sights to behold. What is now a UNESCO-cited medieval village of only a few hundred inhabitants was once where 30,000 Romans lived. The colony was founded by General Pompey during the Roman campaign in Spain. By the fourth century, the thriving town had its own diocese. Destroyed by the Vandals and again by the Germans, โCommingesโ lay deserted for five centuries. The bishopric, nevertheless, was preserved, so in the early twelfth century, the construction of a cathedral was ordered. Since then, the cathedral town has been a stage on the route to Santiago de Compostela.
Arriving on a Sunday during a church service at the Cathedral of Saint Mary was, perhaps, not the best idea… or maybe it was. The church was closed for Mass. While waiting for the service to end, we had plenty of time to stroll through the courtyard and garden … accompanied by the most beautiful organ music.
After Mass ended, we scampered into the sanctuary to view the famous organ inside. The massive organ, considered one of the best classical organs in France and the only one of its kind in Europe, stands over 53 feet tall in a corner beside the entrance. The organ has three keyboards and forty-one pipes โ twelve original from 1523. Across from the organ is a wooden wall that divides the entranceway and organ from the sanctuary. Since the service was just ending, the door on the dividing wall was open to let parishioners depart. We dashed through the door to see what to do before the next service.
Oh, that I could have stayed to discover more. Yet less time in the Cathedral left more time to walk through the town.
Our brief visit to Saint-Bertrand-de-Comminges was a small preview of what lay ahead in our journey toward the Basque Country of France. Some houses had exteriors with wood and brick facings; others were decorated with strings of red peppers around doors and windows.
Before we knew it, we were running late. Our check-in with the doctor at the spa was at four oโclock. We were off… but not before one last photo.