Calvados is one of the most visited areas in France because of its seaside resorts which are among the most prestigious in France with their luxurious hotels, casinos, green countryside, manors, castles, the quiet, the chalk cliffs, the typical Norman houses, the history of
William the Conqueror, Caen, Bayeux, Lisieux, the famous D-day beaches and numerous museums about the Second World War. Culinary specialties from the verdant countryside of Calvados are abundant:
cider,
calvados,
camembert, and
Pont-l'Évêque cheeses. One of the advantage of Calvados is to be fairly near large urban centers (Paris, Ile de France). Calvados is therefore often preferred for holidays and for weekends and sometimes considered as the
countryside of Paris. Calvados, via the port of
Ouistreham, is an entrance to the continent from Britain. There are two airports:
Caen-Carpiquet and
Deauville-Saint Gatien. The department of Calvados has several popular tourist areas: the
Bessin, the Plain of
Caen, the
Bocage Virois, the
Côte de Nacre, the
Côte Fleurie and the
Pays d'Auge. Several beaches of Calvados are popular for water sports, including
Cabourg and
Merville-Franceville-Plage. Tourist capacity (2022): • 10,200 hotel rooms • 14,410 camping sites • 12,795 other beds (tourist resorts, holiday villages, rural gites, youth hostels)
Second homes As of 2019, 17.9% of available housing in the department were second homes. File:Caen France (28).JPG|
Caen File:Chateau de Falaise 2008.jpg|
Château de Falaise File:Harold dead bayeux tapestry.png|A fragment of the
Bayeux Tapestry File:Omaha-beach-cemetery.jpg|
Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial File:Beuvron-en-Auge plein.JPG|Half-timber houses in
Beuvron-en-Auge, one of the
Most Beautiful Villages of France File:Suisse Normande Orne.jpg|
Suisse Normande ==Sport==