
Lavender fields, Cézanne's light, and Roman ruins in the olive groves.
カスタムツアーとは — Provence?
A custom Provence tour times the Valensole lavender visit for peak bloom (late June to mid-July), walks the Luberon's Gordes and Roussillon ochre cliffs with an art historian, arranges a private olive oil tasting at a Les Baux mill, and walks the Pont du Gard Roman aqueduct at dawn before tourist coaches arrive. The key is the Tuesday morning market in Apt for regional produce and the private wine tasting at Châteauneuf-du-Pape.
Provence is the lavender field photographed on every French travel calendar, but the real region is more specific and more interesting than that image suggests. The lavender blooms in the Valensole plateau for six weeks in July — the rest of the year, Provence is the Luberon hilltop villages, the Tuesday market in Apt, the olive oil mills of Les Baux, the Roman aqueduct of the Pont du Gard, and the street life of Aix-en-Provence's Cours Mirabeau. A custom Provence tour designs around the season you're actually visiting.
The region divides naturally into the Luberon (hilltop villages — Gordes, Bonnieux, Lacoste — and the ochre cliffs of Roussillon), the Alpilles (the olive groves around Les Baux, the Roman Glanum, and Saint-Rémy where Van Gogh was institutionalized), and the Camargue (the flamingo delta where the Rhône meets the Mediterranean). Each area deserves at least a day; together they make a 10-day itinerary feel properly full.
May through June delivers the best conditions without the July lavender crowds — poppies in the wheat fields, mild temperatures, and the Tuesday Apt market at its peak produce season. September brings the grape harvest. Tours start at €2,400 per person. Avignon (2 TGV hours from Paris) and Marseille (3 hours from Paris) are the natural entry points.
おすすめの月は May–June (lavender), September–October. 月別の計画メモをご覧ください。
地元オペレーターが厳選した体験の数々。すべてのカスタムツアーにこれらの一部、またはさらに良いものが含まれます。






2つの出発点 — 実際の旅程は完全オーダーメイドです。ここから組み立てます。
The lavender bloom typically runs late June to mid-July in the Valensole plateau and the Luberon. Peak bloom lasts approximately three weeks and varies by two to three weeks depending on the winter. The highest-altitude fields (above 1,000m in the Lure mountain) bloom later — mid-July to early August. A custom tour books accommodation in the Valensole or Luberon with confirmed knowledge of that year's bloom status. Outside the bloom, Provence is equally worth visiting for its villages, wine, and markets.
Gordes (the most photographed, best seen at dawn or dusk), Roussillon (ochre cliffs, a short walk through the Sentier des Ocres), Bonnieux (cedar forest above the village, panoramic valley views), Lacoste (Sade's ruined castle, minimal tourism), and Ménerbes (Peter Mayle's house from A Year in Provence, now sold). All are within 20km of each other. The mistake is trying to visit all five in one day — the villages are best experienced with time to sit, eat, and explore the agricultural surroundings.
Châteauneuf-du-Pape for the most serious Provençal red (Grenache-dominant, concentrated, the papal wine). Gigondas and Vacqueyras for more affordable alternatives with similar character. Côtes de Provence rosé — the region's defining wine style, salmon-colored and dry, best drunk young and cold. Bandol, south of Toulon, for the finest Mourvèdre-based reds in France. Beaumes-de-Venise Muscat for a sweet aperitif wine. Each appellation is within 90 minutes of Aix.
All three, at different times of year. Food: September–October (grape harvest, mushroom season, the autumn market produce). Wine: May–September for tastings at estates before harvest. Art: the Cézanne Aix locations, the Van Gogh Saint-Rémy and Arles sites, the Fondation Maeght at Saint-Paul-de-Vence. A 10–14 day itinerary can integrate all three seriously. The Luberon, the Alpilles, and the Camargue each contribute a different chapter.
A rental car is essential — the Luberon villages, the Valensole plateau, and the Camargue are inaccessible by public transport at the level of detail a custom tour requires. The TGV reaches Avignon (from Paris in 2h40) and Aix-en-Provence (3 hours), making these the entry points. A private driver is preferable for wine tastings where you'll be drinking. The Luberon villages are connected by narrow D-roads that require comfort driving in France.
AIコンシェルジュとチャット — 夢の旅を伝えるのに2分あれば十分です。