Gardon
| Gardon | |
|---|---|
| Origin | Cévennes |
| Mouth | Rhône |
| Basin countries | France |
| Length | 133 km |
| Avg. discharge | 32 m³/s |
| Basin area | 2,200 km² |
The Gardon or Gard (Occitan and French: Gardon, Gard) is a river in southern France. It is the namesake of the Gard département.
The Gardon is 133 km long including its longest tributary "Gardon de Saint-Jean". It rises in the Cévennes and ends into the Rhône River (right side tributary) at Beaucaire, across from Vallabrègues.
Several of its tributaries are also called Gardon.
The Roman aqueduct Pont du Gard and the 16th century Pont Saint-Nicolas are two historical bridges that cross the Gardon. The Gorge du Gardon, which ends at Pont Saint-Nicolas, is a popular recreation area for kayaking, canoeing, rock climbing, and hiking.
In September of 2002 and again in December of 2003, the Gardon had record level floods that damaged many of its bridges including the Pont Saint-Nicolas, which has since been fully restored.
Places along the river
La Grand-Combe and Alès are situated on the "Gardon d'Alès", the major left tributary.
External link
- Regordane Info - The independent portal for The Regordane Way or St Gilles Trail. The Regordane Way runs alongside The Gardon river from Ners south-eastwards (in English and French)
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)





