It's found in Le Golfe
Calais, Boulogne sur Mer, Dieppe, Le Havre, are in Northern France and on the English channel. From the North, southwards: Dunkerque, Calais, Boulogne, Dieppe, le Havre, Caen, Cherbourg, Saint-Malo. All these are major ports with ferry services to England. Most of them are also resorts, though Dieppe and Saint-Malo are more popular than most. However, there are also a string of smaller fishing ports which double as holiday resorts. There are three or four of these between Boulogne and Calais alone.
Major French ports:- on the Mediterranean sea: Marseille ( the busiest French port - English spelling: Marseilles), Sète, Nice.- on the English Channel: Le Havre (second-largest French sea port), Calais, Dunkerque (Dunkirk), Boulogne, Cherbourg, Dieppe.- on the Atlantic: Brest, Lorient (both naval military bases), La Rochelle.- (sizeable) river ports: Rouen (on the Seine river), Bordeaux (on the Gironde estuary).
It depends from where yo are coming from. After some research I found out that Brittany Ferries Does many wonderful ferries from all over Europe. The price really depends on which route you take and where you are coming from the places in Portsmouth, Plymouth, and ST. Malo.
ranking by million tonnes (for Americans: "metric tons") in 2007 according to government data (detailed fact sheet on link) 1 MARSEILLE 96.3 2 LE HAVRE 78.8 3 DUNKERQUE 57.1 4 CALAIS 41.5 5 NANTES-SAINT-NAZAIRE 34.0 6 ROUEN 22.2
Marseille and Calais
France
Calais, Boulogne sur Mer, Dieppe, Le Havre, are in Northern France and on the English channel. From the North, southwards: Dunkerque, Calais, Boulogne, Dieppe, le Havre, Caen, Cherbourg, Saint-Malo. All these are major ports with ferry services to England. Most of them are also resorts, though Dieppe and Saint-Malo are more popular than most. However, there are also a string of smaller fishing ports which double as holiday resorts. There are three or four of these between Boulogne and Calais alone.
Major French ports:- on the Mediterranean sea: Marseille ( the busiest French port - English spelling: Marseilles), Sète, Nice.- on the English Channel: Le Havre (second-largest French sea port), Calais, Dunkerque (Dunkirk), Boulogne, Cherbourg, Dieppe.- on the Atlantic: Brest, Lorient (both naval military bases), La Rochelle.- (sizeable) river ports: Rouen (on the Seine river), Bordeaux (on the Gironde estuary).
It depends from where yo are coming from. After some research I found out that Brittany Ferries Does many wonderful ferries from all over Europe. The price really depends on which route you take and where you are coming from the places in Portsmouth, Plymouth, and ST. Malo.
ranking by million tonnes (for Americans: "metric tons") in 2007 according to government data (detailed fact sheet on link) 1 MARSEILLE 96.3 2 LE HAVRE 78.8 3 DUNKERQUE 57.1 4 CALAIS 41.5 5 NANTES-SAINT-NAZAIRE 34.0 6 ROUEN 22.2
Calais and Cherbourg.
Marseille and Calais
calais and something.......
Cherbourg et Calais
Calais, Le Havre, Brest, Bordeaux, Marseille
Calais, Le Havre, Brest, Bordeaux, Marseille
The ports of Dieppe, Le Havre, Rouen (on the Seine estuary, not a sea port), Cherbourg are IN normandy, so very close to it.