It’s a place of contrasts. One minute you’re standing on a windswept cliff where world history was rewritten, and the next, you’re in a sunny apple orchard drinking cider that tastes like liquid gold. It’s moving, it’s beautiful, and yes, the butter really is as good as they say.

1. Standing Where History Happened: The D-Day Beaches
- Omaha Beach & the American Cemetery: Seeing the thousands of white crosses at Colleville-sur-Mer overlooking the ocean is one of those moments that stays with you forever. It’s incredibly quiet and incredibly powerful .
- Pointe du Hoc: You can still see the massive craters left by bombs and the bunkers the Rangers had to scale. It’s a vivid, visceral reminder of what happened here in June 1944.
- Arromanches: At low tide, you can still see the remains of the "Mulberry Harbor" massive concrete blocks the Allies floated over from England to build an instant port. It’s an engineering marvel that’s still sitting in the surf.

2. The Island in the Sky: Mont Saint-Michel
It looks like something straight out of a Disney movie in fact, it actually inspired the castle in Tangled. Our advice? Try to get there early or stay late. When the day trippers leave and the tide comes in, cutting the island off from the mainland, the atmosphere is pure magic. Climbing the narrow, winding streets to the abbey at the top is a workout, but the view of the bay is worth every step.

3. Apples, Cheese, and "The Norman Hole"
- Cider & Calvados: Instead of wine, you’ll be drinking crisp apple cider served in a ceramic bowl, not a glass or Calvados, a potent apple brandy
- The "Trou Normand": This translates to "The Norman Hole". It’s a local tradition where you take a shot of Calvados in the middle of a big meal to "burn a hole" in your stomach and make room for more food. Highly recommended.
- The Big Four Cheeses: You’re in the land of Camembert. Pair it with its cousins Pont-l’Évêque, Livarot, and Neufchâtel and some fresh baguette, and you’ve got the perfect lunch

4. The Towns You’ll Fall For
- Honfleur: This is arguably the prettiest harbor in France. It was a favorite of Impressionist painters like Monet, and once you see the tall, slate fronted houses reflecting in the water at sunset, you’ll see why.
- Bayeux: Most people come here for the Bayeux Tapestry a 70 meter long "comic strip" from the year 1066), but the town itself is charmingly medieval and managed to survive WWII almost completely intact.
- Rouen: The city where Joan of Arc’s story ended. The Gothic cathedral is so beautiful that Monet painted it dozens of times just to catch the different light.