Explore La Liviniere Cru wines.
Stay at La Souqueto accommodation and let us create a bespoke wine tour for you of the Minervois Wines..
Stay at La Souqueto accommodation and let us create a bespoke wine tour for you of the Minervois Wines..
At La Souqueto B&B we’ve taken a little time to seek out some of best local restaurants in the Languedoc.
The regions of Languedoc-Roussillon and the Midi-Pyrenees have merged to form the larger administrative region of OCCITANIE. The new name was selected after a public poll, being the popular choice of almost a quarter of the voters.
Stay at La Souqueto accommodation and let us help you to explore the numerous trails and walks in the Occitanie region of France.
Take a day out to explore the the Wines of La Clape.
Combine your stay at La Souqueto Accommodation with a Canal du Midi short cruise!
We are delighted to announce that La Souqueto B&B has won the coveted Tripadvisor ‘Travellers Choice’ Award!
La Souqueto Accommodation has a B&B with three lettable rooms, a self catering Apartment (sleeps 4) with sun terrace and an Independent Gite (sleeps 6) with swimming pool. La Souqueto house (sleeps 10) is available for Winter lets. Please see ‘Accommodation’ page on this website for more information.
This is a bit strange! Here I am, nearing 70, and cruising down the Canal du Midi in a lovely wooden motor cruiser built on the Norfolk Broads for my father over 50 years ago…
We all know that France is famous for it’s Markets. As a family now living here we can see just how important the Market place is for the locals. Apart from a place to buy, it’s a place to meet, swop news and maintain an important link with the older generation. In times of change the Market must feel like a safe haven for many!
There is a Market on every day in our part of the Languedoc throughout the year. Our local is Olonzac, just 10 minutes from La Souqueto B&B. Every Tuesday we buy the fresh seasonal produce for the week. It’s a wonderful routine and a chance for us to immerse ourselves in another nations culture.
Probably one of the most dynamic Markets is Les Halles de Narbonne. Wandering round this famous indoor food market, your senses are hit with a myriad pleasures: the opulent and heady aromas of freshly ground coffee, the inviting homely waft of croissants straight out of the oven, the buzz of morning banter from the stall holders chatting with the regulars, the jewel bright colours of succulent fruit and vegetables, the wicked reek of maturing cheese, flower stalls brimming with seasonal plants, silver bellied fish lain out on ice, red and pink hued meat hanging from hooks, light glinting off polished bottles of local wine, sacks of exotic spices threatening to spill over, vendors busily preparing pizzas, paellas or chow meins for the lunchtime rush, the visible pride of traders who have one thing in common – a real love of real food!
There are 72 traders and artisans with permanent stalls at Les Halles – including at least one stall which has been occupied by generations of the same family since the market was opened in 1901! Dedicated to providing the city with the best quality produce, the stall holders convene every day from 6 am to 1 pm to take part in this important daily event which almost seems to define Narbonne. Indeed, local people are quite right to be proud of their famous market, which also represents part of the hard-won modernisation of the city at the turn of the 20th century. The beautiful pavilion was originally conceived of in 1871, as a sensible way to house the ever-expanding and inconvenient outdoor market.
Local Markets:
Sunday: Narbonne, Trebes, Meze, St. Chinian
Monday: Narbonne
Tuesday: Olonzac, Carcassonne, Narbonne
Wednesday: Capestang, Narbonne
Thursday: Carcassonne, Narbonne, Meze
Friday: Montagnac, Narbonne
Saturday: Pezenas, Narbonne, Carcassonne
For guests who love horse riding and treks, we have found the most fantastic Ranch just 10 minutes away from La Souqueto a luxury bed and breakfast languedoc. The owner is a breeder of Appaloosas horses and has built a ranch in the foothills of the Black Mountains. She provides livery for clients too but most of her time is taken up organising and leading treks up into the mountains using a variety of tracks through the pine forests. She also provides lunches too out on the hills!
For Groups interested in booking a trek we can both manage the details of the trip and accommodate up to 10 people at La Souqueto luxury bed and breakfast languedoc.
For those that prefer walking this area has the most fantastic forestry tracks just outside the village of Bize Minervois. One can literally walk for miles and miles but we would suggest you head for the stunning village of Montouliers.
It sits in the foothills of the black mountains and is surrounded by Olive groves and vineyards and forms part of the wine soil of the ‘Serres’ Its name was taken from Olive groves on the hill where the village was built and was first mentioned in history in 940. (Monte Olerio, the Mount of Olives).
The caladées (small winding lanes of the village) take you to the beautiful church of Saint Baudile de Monte Olerio XIVe century and the medieval castle of the XIIe and XIIIe centuries.
The village is also well known for its Roman fountain.
Visited the area surrounding Chateau Castigno at Assignan earlier today. It’s a village situated a few miles above St Chinian in the Black Mountains. Fascinating story of an extremely wealthy family from Belgium who are having a massive influence on this sleepy village by re developing the Chateau and its vineyard and key businesses in the village square. It’s a must see and only 15 mins from La Souqueto.
Saint Chinian is a bustling village, only 15 minutes from La Souqueto luxury bed and breakfast South of France; dating back to 825 when a monastery was founded by Saint Anian, possibly on the site of what today is the Mairie. The monastery prospered and with it the village. It survived the Albigensian Crusades relatively unscathed and emerged in the 17th and 18th centuries as a centre for the manufacture of high quality cloth. During the French revolution the abbey was dissolved and its buildings put to new uses. The former abbey church is now the village hall and hosts everything from exhibitions to village dances.
The revolution also put an end to the cloth trade and the village had to rely on the wine for its fortunes. After the phylloxera crisis of the 1860’s, the Languedoc region was producing huge amounts of cheap wine. It was not until towards the middle of this century that the vignerons began to concentrate on quality rather than quantity. A VDQS since 1945, St Chinian acquired AOC status in 1982. The appellation area covers twenty communes and produces primarily red and rosé. The vines grow on hillsides facing the sea, at an altitude of 100 – 200m. St Chinian wines have a very long-standing reputation, going back as far as the fourteenth century.
Visiting St. Chinians Sunday Market is a must! It’s based in the town square under mature Plane tress.
Part of the promise to my son Jasper when we moved to the Languedoc, was that we would play Golf regularly. We found a great Course in Carcassonne…Golf de Carcassonne. You must understand that we are little more than enthusiastic amateurs but we were really impressed with the general quality of fairways and greens. An impressive restaurant overlooks the first tee with its rather unusual hill to drive up, but once on the top you are greeted by the most superb views of the surrounding area.