When we went to the south of France back in February, we decided to rent a car in between our time in Aix-en-Provence and Marseille and spend a day exploring the countryside. Provence and the south of France have no shortage of interesting places to visit, such as the Calanques and Cassis to the east of Marseille, Avignon, and Arles. We decided to spend our time touring the Luberon region.
The Luberon is formed by three different mountain ranges, with many small towns situated in the resulting valleys. We first learned about the region when reading A Year in Provence, a very funny book that my mother-in-law sent to us last year. The book follows an Englishman's account of buying a house in the Provence and his first year of living there. It has a number of amusing accounts of the cultural differences that he experiences in moving to the south of France, some of which seemed very familiar to us.
We visited four villages in the region: Gordes, Roussillon, Lacoste, and Ménerbes (the setting for A Year in Provence). We were amazed at the difference in each village's color palette. They are all no more than 10 miles apart, but Gordes (the hill town pictured above and to the left) was mostly pale golden stone, Roussillon (pictured below) was orange and red, Lacoste was cool, gray stone (pictures at the very bottom), and Ménerbe (not pictured) had buildings covered with ivory plaster.
The orange-yellow in this picture is naturally-occurring ochre in the soil around Roussillon.
The whole area was stunningly beautiful despite it being the middle of the winter. I can't imagine how much more gorgeous the views must be in the summer when the grapevines and lavender plants we saw fill the stretches between the villages with even more color. After a day of exploring, we were ready to follow Peter Mayle's lead and move south for our own year in Provence!