Journal·Dordogne

Marqueyssac, by candlelight.

An hour east of the gate, clifftop gardens of clipped boxwood look down over La Roque-Gageac and the Dordogne river. On summer Thursdays, the paths are lit by two thousand actual candles. One of the best days this region does.

marqueyssac-view.jpg — to add (clifftop gardens with panoramic view of Dordogne, boxwood shapes in foreground)

An hour's drive east up the Dordogne from the estate, the land starts to fold properly. Limestone cliffs on one side, the river winding below, chateaux on most of the high points. This is what the French mean when they call this stretch the Vallée des Mille Châteaux — the Valley of a Thousand Castles — and on the clearest of those clifftops, at the gardens of Marqueyssac, you can see maybe thirty of them on a good afternoon.

Of all the day trips we send guests on, this is the one that most reliably comes back as "that was the best day of the trip." The combination is unfair: a great garden, a great lunch, a great village, and — if the timing works — a great way to get home.

The gardens

Marqueyssac, from above.

The Marqueyssac gardens were laid out in the 19th century on a narrow limestone ridge, a few hundred metres above the river. Six kilometres of paths run through roughly 150,000 hand-clipped boxwood bushes — sculpted into soft, cloud-like shapes that feel less like topiary and more like a geological phenomenon that happens to be green. You walk it slowly. That's most of the point.

The ridge gives you panoramic views across three of the most beautiful villages in France — La Roque-Gageac, Domme, and Beynac — all visible from different viewpoints along the walk. There's a restaurant near the entrance that does a reliable garden-terrace lunch, and a gift shop of the rare sort that contains things worth actually buying.

Thursday nights, summer only

The candlelit gardens.

This is the detail that makes Marqueyssac exceptional rather than merely beautiful. On Thursday evenings during July and August, the gardens stay open late and the paths are lit by two thousand candles. Not fairy lights. Actual candles, placed by hand through the afternoon and into the evening, re-lit if the wind takes them.

You arrive around seven, walk the gardens in the gold of the late sun, sit down for dinner on the terrace while the last of the light goes, and then walk back out as the candles come up. The gardens feel completely different at night — the boxwood shapes become sculptural in a way the day doesn't quite show, and the views of the valley below become a line of lamps in a row of villages.

It's the kind of evening that changes how people think about gardens. If you're staying with us in July or August and you only take one evening trip, this is the one.

Not fairy lights. Actual candles, re-lit if the wind takes them.
The river

La Roque-Gageac, below.

After the gardens — or before, if the afternoon is hot — drop down the cliff road to La Roque-Gageac. The village is built in a crescent against the cliff face, facing south across the river, and it's one of the most photographed places in France for an honest reason: there's nowhere quite like it. Ochre stone, a row of exotic gardens (the village has its own microclimate; bananas and bamboo grow against the cliff), and the river running flat and slow below.

The river is the other half of the day. You can rent canoes from the village — they drive you upstream, you paddle back to La Roque-Gageac. It's a gentle two-hour paddle, child-friendly, and you pass Castelnaud and Beynac — two of the great clifftop châteaux of the region — along the way. In July, you stop and swim. In shoulder season, you watch the river instead and let the boat drift.

There are several cafés and restaurants along the La Roque waterfront. Nothing remarkable food-wise, but the setting makes up for it. A late lunch or an early apéro in a stone café, looking up at Marqueyssac's cliff, is one of the easier pleasures the region does.

How to do it

The shape of a Marqueyssac day.

The sequence I'd plan: drive out late morning, stopping in Domme for coffee (it's one of France's plus beaux villages and it's a ten-minute detour). Arrive at Marqueyssac around noon, walk the gardens in the cool of the morning, lunch at the restaurant. In the afternoon, drop down to La Roque-Gageac, rent a canoe, paddle for two hours. Back on dry land by four, apéro on the waterfront, home by seven.

If it's a Thursday in July or August, flip the whole thing: arrive at La Roque-Gageac early, do the river in the morning, swim and lunch by the water, drive up to Marqueyssac in the late afternoon, walk the gardens at sunset, stay for the candlelit dinner, drive home under the stars.

That's a better day than most people have in a year, and it's an hour from the gate.

The Friday market at La Roque-Gageac is another good excuse to make the trip — one of the prettiest market backdrops in France, per our earlier post on markets.

— Skip & Stéphanie Bowman