
Before I go back home on Tuesday, I’m going to share some of the photographs that I took yesterday in the historic quarter of Canet-en-Roussillon. There will be more to follow when I come back in a few weeks time. For those who might be interested, all the photos were taken with the camera on my iPhone SE.
(Photo above: Plant pots outside a house on the Rue du Presbytère)

(Left: Coloured shutters on houses in the Rue de l’Hôtel de Ville. Right: The sun shines through the arch on La Placette René Marty)

(Above: A classic Peugeot outside the Restaurant Vigatane on the Rue des Remparts)

(Left: An old town house on the Rue du Château. Right: The sun shines on the tower of the Parish Church of Saint Jacques, built between the 14th and 16th centuries)

(Above: Dappled sunlight shining through a palm tree leaving shadows on the old brick wall in La Placette René Marty)

(Above: The fountain by the Church in La Place Saint Jacques)

(Above: Le Château Vicomtal, originally built in the 11th century, is gradually being restored to its original splendour by local stonemasons)

(Left: An ivy clad house in the Rue de la Bascule. Right: View through an opening in the northern medieval town wall)

(Above: The local bar, Le Castell, advertises Brochettes, which are served on the terrace in summer, in the shade of the plane trees, yet to come into full leaf)
This takes me back to the times I’ve visited. Most recently, the stroll Ian and I took through the old town one day.
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