Riviera Bliss Discovery from France To Italy
Dive into the captivating tale of our coastal journey, where the sea breeze whispers timeless charm, cultural richness, and vibrant hues along the Mediterranean shores. Join us for an enjoyable discovery of the colorful Riviera.
Unveil the Coastal Canvas!
Embark on a Mediterranean odyssey, where the azure waters of Hyères set the stage for a journey through coastal elegance. Sail to the glamorous shores of St. Tropez, dance along the Lerins Islands' pristine melody, and discover the timeless allure of Villefranche-sur-Mer. Cap Martin unfolds as a hidden gem, and Bordighera offers a floral masterpiece. Finally, explore the coastal haven where Liguria's seaside splendor meets timeless charm.
This boat tour promises an enchanting blend of natural beauty, cultural richness, and the authentic allure of the French and Italian Riviera. For those starting their boat tour in Hyeres, Toulon Hyeres Airport is the nearest point of arrival. You can quickly embark on your unforgettable sea adventure with a short transfer from the airport at the beginning of your journey.
Hyères
Hyères sits at the eastern end of the Var coast, with three offshore islands — Porquerolles, Port-Cros, and Île du Levant — known together as the Îles d'Or (Islands of Gold) for the mica-rich rock that catches the sun. Porquerolles is the largest and most visited: a village of 200 people, vineyards, sandy north-shore beaches at Notre-Dame and Plage d'Argent, and a national park covering the wild south. Port-Cros is the first marine national park in Europe, with snorkel trails on the seabed. Hyères is 2 hours from Saint-Tropez and 90 minutes from Toulon. Season runs May through October.
Saint-Tropez
Saint-Tropez is the Riviera at full volume — a fishing village that became a yacht-set capital after Brigitte Bardot stepped onto the quay in 1956 and never quite came back down. The action runs along the Pampelonne sand: Club 55, Nikki Beach, Bagatelle — beach clubs where the lunch line stretches into a six-hour anchorage. The harbour itself stages a daily megayacht parade you watch from a terrace with a glass of Côtes de Provence rosé. Sail offshore for relief: the Îles d'Hyères are an hour west, the Lérins Islands off Cannes a half-day east, both with quiet pine-covered anchorages — and onshore, the Place des Lices Saturday market and the Musée de l'Annonciade show the older village still there underneath. Season May through October; July-August are loudest, June and September keep the scene but lose the crush.
Lerins Islands
The Lerins Islands sit 2 kilometres off Cannes in the Bay of Cannes, two main islands separated by a 500-metre channel that doubles as a sheltered anchorage. Sainte-Marguerite, the larger northern island, holds the 17th-century Fort Royal — the prison that held the masked prisoner who became the basis of Alexandre Dumas's The Man in the Iron Mask. The southern island Saint-Honorat is still owned by Cistercian monks, who have lived on the island since 410 AD and run a working vineyard and small restaurant — the only place to eat on the island. Both islands are forested with Aleppo pine and eucalyptus. Lerins is 30 minutes from Cannes and 60 minutes from Antibes. Season runs April through October.
Villefranche-sur-Mer
Villefranche-sur-Mer sits between Nice and Cap Ferrat, in one of the deepest natural harbours on the entire Mediterranean coast — the Rade de Villefranche drops to 95 metres within 100 metres of shore, deep enough that the largest cruising yachts can anchor close in. The 16th-century Citadelle Saint-Elme guards the harbour mouth and now houses three small museums. The pastel-colour Old Town climbs steeply from the seafront, with the covered Rue Obscure (a 13th-century arcade) running parallel to the quay. The neighbouring Cap Ferrat peninsula 1 kilometre east holds the Villa Ephrussi de Rothschild and the most-photographed coast path on the Riviera. Villefranche is 15 minutes from Nice and 30 minutes from Beaulieu. Season runs April through October.
Cap Martin
Cap Martin sits on the eastern French Riviera between Monaco and Menton, a forested promontory dropping to a 4-kilometre rocky shore. The cape forms part of the commune of Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, with the medieval Roquebrune village on the hillside above. The shore-walk Promenade Le Corbusier winds around the cape's rock-edge — Le Corbusier kept a small wooden Cabanon on this path (now a UNESCO-listed minimalist 16-square-metre design) and drowned swimming off the rocks in 1965. The west side of the cape holds the protected anchorage between Cap Martin and the Monaco border. The east side reaches the long Carnolès beach toward Menton. Cap Martin is 10 minutes from Monaco and 20 minutes from Menton. Season runs April through October.
Bordighera, Italy
Bordighera sits on the western tip of the Italian Riviera, just 15 kilometres from the French border at Menton, at the eastern end of the Riviera dei Fiori (\"Flower Riviera\") — a stretch of coast named for its 19th-century industry of supplying cut flowers to the rest of Europe. The Old Town climbs a rocky hill above a fishing harbour, with the Spianata del Capo headland walk circling the cape just below the medieval gate. Claude Monet spent three months painting in Bordighera in 1884, producing 38 canvases of the town and its olive groves. The seafront Lungomare Argentina, named for Eva Perón who walked it during exile, runs 2 kilometres along the bay. Bordighera is 60 minutes from Monaco and 90 minutes from Sanremo. Season runs April through October.
Liguria
Liguria is the crescent-shaped Italian region wrapped around the Gulf of Genoa, running 300 kilometres from the French border in the west to the Tuscan border in the east. The capital is Genoa, one of the great medieval maritime republics, with the largest port in Italy and a UNESCO-listed Old Town of marble palaces. Either side of the city, the coast splits into two named Rivieras — the Riviera di Ponente (west toward France, flatter and beach-oriented) and the Riviera di Levante (east toward Tuscany, with the famous cliff-edge villages of Portofino, the Cinque Terre, and Portovenere). The mountain ridge runs parallel to the coast just 15 kilometres inland. Standard charter routes are 5-7 days. Season runs April through October.
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