
Provence laid bare: ‘I shed my clothes and found freedom on a beautiful French island'
Off the coast of the southern French resort town of Hyères, Île du Levant is home to the only naturist community of its kind, the Domaine Naturiste d'Héliopolis. For 93 years, this rustic Eden has lured free-spirited lovers of nature and authenticity, as unabashedly naked as Adam and Eve before they ate the forbidden fruit. On every visit, I've found that when people shed their clothes, they shed their pretence. Unlike traditional naturist retreats where nudity is de rigueur, Héliopolis is peppered with clothing-optional spots. This makes it the ideal place for travellers to dip their toes into the naturist way of life.
I first came to Île du Levant with my twin sister when I was 20. We had grown up in a home that was comfortable with nudity, yet a clothes-free island was unfamiliar territory. Disrobing on the hiking trail, it seemed as if we were breaking the rules. And when a pleasure boat came close to us, we felt as exposed as the rocks below. The sun soon melted our inhibitions, however. It was exhilarating to be nude in nature, each sense amplified as if our clothing had been stifling them.
We instantly befriended a British couple, the awkwardness of chatting to strangers cast away with our clothes. When I returned to Héliopolis 26 years later, after moving to nearby Marseille, I was just as enchanted by its bare-it-all bonhomie, and felt worry-free as a solo female. I have returned every year since.
The Fédération Française de Naturisme defines naturism as: 'A manner of living in harmony with nature, characterised by the practice of communal nudity, which consequently fosters respect for oneself, others and the environment.' The seeds were planted in late 19th‑century Germany as a social-health movement in response to dehumanising industrialisation. While certain aspects such as alfresco gymnastics and abstention from alcohol have disappeared, the crux of the philosophy – that gathering au naturel in sun-kissed nature does the body and mind good – is still its raison d'etre.
One of the more unusual side‑effects of the back-to-nature trend that took hold during the Covid pandemic has been a surge in popularity of naturism in the UK, with an Ipsos poll in 2022 showing that one in seven Britons (6.75 million people) had practised it, up from 3.7 million in 2011.
There is also an increased interest among young adults. A symbol of body positivity and eco-consciousness, naturism is also 'a break from the noise of the news, consumerism and other concerns that weigh on our generation', says Naomi Gergaud, a 30-year-old fourth-generation Levantine, whose grandparents used to say: 'We weren't born in knickers.'
The UK's cool climate is not ideal for being in your birthday suit, however, so many Britons join northern Europeans in sunny southern France. The country is the world's leading naturist destination, welcoming 2.6 million visitors a year at naturist clubs, beaches or campsites. Or on an island, as in Héliopolis's case – though not an entire one, as 90% of Île du Levant is occupied by the French military. Over the centuries, everyone from Barbary pirates to Benedictine monks settled on the isle for its strategic, remote location.
The French natural medicine doctors Gaston and André Durville put down roots on Île du Levant in 1932, fresh from founding a naturist camp called Physiopolis on Platais island in the Seine. The brothers named their Mediterranean settlement Héliopolis, after the ancient Greeks' belief in the therapeutic properties of the sun (helios). Almost a century later, Héliopolis is a trip back to those simpler times, despite being just five nautical miles from the shore.
I board a passenger boat – fittingly called Amour des Îles (love of the islands) – in Hyères. As waves splash me in a salt-water mist, the 90-minute journey across the Mediterranean sets the scene for a great escape, especially when the captain takes a detour to an out-of-this-world rock formation, Cap des Mèdes, because 'the light is too beautiful'. There is no rush since Île du Levant moves at its own pace.
That is partly because no cars are allowed on the island, save for a taxi to ferry people from the port to their accommodation. Héliopolis has a small footprint of just 65 hectares (160 acres) and about 90 year-round residents. Besides, walking aids wellbeing, especially since it is on such a steep slope. A local tells me it takes three days for your legs to adjust. So pack lightly, which is easy when you will mostly be sporting a sarong. But don't forget a torch – though electricity arrived in 1989, there aren't any streetlights – which adds to the yesteryear charm.
After dropping my bag at Soléa Lodges, a trio of lovely studios overlooking the sea, I head off on an amble along eucalyptus-scented roads that weave past phone-booth libraries and dreamily named homes like La Recluserie (secluded hideaway). I find it easy to navigate using the wooden street signs, which have adages in French such as 'Être nu rendre heureux' (being naked makes you happy). That is surely the case when a leathery woman clad in just a lavender bumbag and matching flip-flops greets me with an ebullient 'Bonjour'. Saying hello is one of the isle's rules – reminders are posted on graphic signs about town. Others are to conserve water, a precious resource here, and to sit on a sarong in restaurants.
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All roads lead to the Place Durville that tops Héliopolis. The cafe/restaurant La Pomme d'Adam has been the resort's social hub since 1932. 'I came to holiday here and never left,' says my waiter. Holidaymakers pick up nude-themed collectibles at L'Érotique Traversée des Siècles and hefty slices of quiche for picnics at Boulangerie Pâtisserie la Grigne. Full nudity is forbidden in shops (Levantines don thong-like minimums to skirt this rule). This is because Hyères's town council has a presence in Héliopolis, helming the itty-bitty town hall, post office and police station. The full-time islanders manage everything else with their local union. Hence, the quirk of Héliopolis being a 'private domain that is open to the public'.
Nudism keeps tourism at bay compared with the busier Îles d'Or (Golden Isles) such as Île de Porquerolles, which attracts four times as many visitors as Île du Levant in high season. I have only visited in spring and autumn, which are the best times to savour the silence with the locals.
A third of Héliopolis is covered by the Domaine des Arbousiers, a nature reserve that sprawls between a dense maquis and the wind-battered coastline. The strawberry-tree-lined Sentier du Point du Jour leads to the highest point, where I'm rewarded with a panorama of the surprisingly pretty military base (early birds should come for sunrise). Heading back to the Mediterranean, the precipitous Sentier des Moines path zigzags through a fragrant pine forest to the Sentier du Bord de Mer.
This seaside trail is best traversed in the buff. With my skin deliciously warmed by the sun and refreshed by the breeze, I feel as free as the squawking seagulls gliding the thermals above me. Each step affirms the 'naturism is liberty' axiom that Levantines preach. A dip beckons at Bain de Diane, where concrete platforms scattered between rocks are topped with sunbathers. Their naked bodies are as much a part of the landscape as the lizards that scurry beside them, recalling writer Sophie Fontanel's poetic novel La Capitale de la Douceur: 'It's hard to believe that we look so much alike when we're undressed. We're all the same ideogram.'
Past the port, Plage des Grottes is Héliopolis's only sandy beach. The gorgeous turquoise cove has always been adamantly nude. 'Locals once used mirrors to deflect sunbeams into the eyes of textiles [clothed people] to steer them away,' says septuagenarian Frédéric Capoulade, the island's historian.
People can often be less social at traditional nude beaches. 'As a naturist community, we don't have the same barriers here,' says Fred Godeau, who owns the hip HéliOtel with his partner, Julie (their restaurant serves up a stellar panorama). Fred's words echo the Durville brothers' belief that clothes represent the social class to which an individual belongs. Everyone is on an equal footing wearing just a smile.
The ferry goes from Hyères (90 mins, €29 return, tlv-tvm.com) and Lavandou (35-60 mins, €34 return, ot-lelavandou.fr). Accommodation at Soléa Lodges (open year-round, iledulevant.com.fr) starts at €80 a night for a studio sleeping three. HéliOtel (open May-September, heliotel.net) has doubles from €150 BB

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Times
2 hours ago
- Times
My holiday debacle with a baby and toddler (and what I'd do differently)
The comedian Rob Beckett jokes that you shouldn't take children under four on holiday. If my last trip is anything to go by, he isn't just being funny. Our June holiday to the Île de Ré wasn't all bad — some of it was very, very good, and you'll read about that. But it wasn't terrifically relaxing either, and that was partly down to luck and partly down to me. I was over-ambitious and ambition is the enemy of a successful holiday with young children. I chose two (very lovely) islands off the west coast of France for a week-long break with plenty of travel. Plane, ferry, hire car — we'd covered them off in the first 24 hours on our way to the Île d'Yeu, our first stop. It was our third short-haul trip with two children, so we weren't exactly novices. The trouble started on the plane. After two attempts to land in Nantes, the captain told us he would probably have to give up, taking us instead to Bordeaux, more than 200 miles away. Nantes is, we were told, notorious for low-lying cloud and if the runway isn't visible from a certain height, pilots cannot land (fair enough). Were it only my husband and myself on the trip, this would have been an irritation. But we were with our three-year-old and one-year-old, and I had not packed enough snacks. As a kind passenger shared carrot sticks with the baby, the clouds lifted and our third attempt to land in Nantes was successful — but we had missed our ferry from the port of Fromentine, an hour's drive west. And the weather hadn't finished with us yet: we bounced across the Atlantic in high winds on a later boat to the Île d'Yeu. On that first night the gin and tonic had to work hard. Just as we'd begun to hit a holiday-like groove there, enjoying two days of cycling and shell-collecting on beaches, it was time to move on to the (perennially popular) Île de Ré. We took an afternoon sailing to the French mainland before we got on the road to the island, and it coincided with dinner time (5pm). Restaurants don't open before 7pm (bedtime), so everyone had to eat lots of bread from a roadside café and carry on covered in crumbs. By the time we arrived at our cabin on the Slow Living campsite, supermarkets were shut and bedtime milk had to be begged from the onsite restaurant. We were in one place for four nights, so part two of the holiday began to approach relaxation, although I hadn't anticipated quite how much my youngest would love beaches, shovelling into his mouth great fistfuls of sand. So beach time was spent trying to deter him from this endeavour (difficult) or to keep the sand out of reach (also difficult). Our daughter, meanwhile, took to rock climbing with seas swirling vengefully beneath her. Relax with the slim paperback I'd brought with me? Not a chance. • 16 of the best family adventure holidays But it was sunny, we had rosé back at our lodge and everyone settled down by about 8pm on most nights. Any chilled vibes were, however, entirely undone by the journey home. This time, air traffic control was to blame. As we arrived at the airport for our evening flight (after a nail-biting drive that should have taken two hours but jumped to four because of traffic), easyJet texted to say the flight had been cancelled. It was like being dumped on my way to a date. There was no one in the airport to guide us. Everything happens on the app, which though efficient, is very much a fastest-fingers-on-buzzers affair. The earliest flight home was two days later — then, suddenly, three days later. We panicked, booked it and took up the offer of a hotel for one night in Nantes. A surprise city break, the travel journalist in me thought. We don't have any clean underwear, the mum countered. Nor did our hotel have any cots. And despite the late arrival, long past bedtime, there was restless glee about the arrangement of two twin beds pushed together, babes in the middle and parental barriers on either side. • My hack for a family hiking holiday? Take the ski lifts in the Swiss Alps The morning brought no additional information from easyJet and there were no rooms at the hotel that night. Another couple booked on our original flight told us they weren't in a great hurry to return home — they'd been on holiday without their four children. Clearly they have skin in the game. At the hotel reception, the nice front-of-house formally welcomed us to Nantes, offering a map and wouldn't the children like to see the mechanised elephant? In the end, with the prospect of my NHS doctor husband missing two days of hospital clinics and a forceful desire to get the children back into their own beds and nursery, we opted out of the easyJet flight we'd rebooked, spent nearly £600 on train tickets to Paris (at least the children travelled for free) and from there on to St Pancras. To its credit, easyJet later refunded us the cost. The children, sitting on our laps, behaved admirably, to the degree that the retired Frenchman opposite us was moved to tears — he did admit to a glass of white wine at the station — because his children, now adults, barely spoke to him. This gave me pause to live in the moment even when the moment is stressful. The journey took seven and a half hours and involved the Paris Metro, which everyone (correctly) warned us isn't pram-friendly. Nor is it car seat, vast suitcase, two rucksacks and baby-friendly. But we weren't mugged (as the announcements repeatedly warned us) and Parisians came to our rescue on the stairs. I won't hear of them being tarred with unfriendliness again. One told us about a lift at Gare du Nord that whizzed us straight to the Eurostar terminal. Why is the Eurostar queue so awful? Once aboard I felt I deserved a glass of champagne. But you can't drink anything from an open vessel while holding a wriggly one-year-old. • 24 of the best baby and child-friendly hotels in the UK Special thanks to the American girls behind us who played peek-a-boo through the seat gap for longer than must have been charming. And to my husband, Rob, who kept his cool as our plans unravelled. Despite his threats never to go on holiday again — he rather swiftly cancelled his next batch of leave — I am busy researching our next trip. But this time we will be abiding by some golden rules… • Reset your expectations. If your children are happy and occupied, you will be happy. Out go galleries and restaurants, in come farm-stays, picnics and splash pools.• Keep it simple: one week, one destination. And ideally that destination should be less than an hour's drive from an airport or port. Some of my Kent-dwelling friends simply go to the East Sussex or Kent coast, and now I understand why.• Timing is everything and it is individual. Where there is choice, perhaps avoid the very early departure because it is hard (when holidaying with children) to recover from the associated sleep deprivation. And even if they are prone to waking at 3:30am or (lie-in!) 4am, they will not if you have a flight to catch. Where possible, also avoid booking an evening flight home — it's last-chance saloon, at least for that day. • Pay for the expensive parking right at the terminal. You do not want to be negotiating a shuttle bus with all that baggage.• If your flight/train is cancelled, get on the relevant app straight away. It will have more answers than anyone else.• Don't hire a car if you can manage without one — kids love buses and trains. If you are hiring, buy a lightweight car seat that is travel-friendly, so you can avoid the crippling rental charge (often upward of £70 for what will be a substandard seat). Most airlines take car seats in the hold for free.• Pack a snack bag to see off an apocalypse.• Hotels with kids' clubs are worth the inflated price — even if you are dropping them in for only a couple of hours rather than the guilt-inducing full day.• Double-up with another family. Extra adults means extra eyes; additional kids means playmates. • Packing light is impossible. It's all about packing barely anything for yourself, and everything they could possibly need. I used to buy (and sometimes still do, more in hope than expectation) holiday clothes. This is futile. My husband has always travelled with clothes that need binning, so they are worn and then ditched. I haven't been supportive of this policy, until recently. • Pattern is your friend; leopard print your summer neutral. It's far more stain-concealing than anything in fashionable ecru or even black. • Tell the children that the brown ice-cream is gravy-flavoured. Chocolate destroys clothes. And, despite the vitamin C, do not even consider cassis (blackcurrant) Share your experiences of travelling with young children in the comments


The Guardian
5 hours ago
- The Guardian
Provence laid bare: ‘I shed my clothes and found freedom on a beautiful French island'
The trail hugs every curve of the cliffside. On my left, the Mediterranean Sea swirls beside craggy rocks, while flowering plants unfurl on my right. A quarter of France's coast is lined with similar sentiers des douaniers (customs officers' paths), which were once used to patrol the sea. The difference on this trail is that I'm wearing nothing but my backpack. Off the coast of the southern French resort town of Hyères, Île du Levant is home to the only naturist community of its kind, the Domaine Naturiste d'Héliopolis. For 93 years, this rustic Eden has lured free-spirited lovers of nature and authenticity, as unabashedly naked as Adam and Eve before they ate the forbidden fruit. On every visit, I've found that when people shed their clothes, they shed their pretence. Unlike traditional naturist retreats where nudity is de rigueur, Héliopolis is peppered with clothing-optional spots. This makes it the ideal place for travellers to dip their toes into the naturist way of life. I first came to Île du Levant with my twin sister when I was 20. We had grown up in a home that was comfortable with nudity, yet a clothes-free island was unfamiliar territory. Disrobing on the hiking trail, it seemed as if we were breaking the rules. And when a pleasure boat came close to us, we felt as exposed as the rocks below. The sun soon melted our inhibitions, however. It was exhilarating to be nude in nature, each sense amplified as if our clothing had been stifling them. We instantly befriended a British couple, the awkwardness of chatting to strangers cast away with our clothes. When I returned to Héliopolis 26 years later, after moving to nearby Marseille, I was just as enchanted by its bare-it-all bonhomie, and felt worry-free as a solo female. I have returned every year since. The Fédération Française de Naturisme defines naturism as: 'A manner of living in harmony with nature, characterised by the practice of communal nudity, which consequently fosters respect for oneself, others and the environment.' The seeds were planted in late 19th‑century Germany as a social-health movement in response to dehumanising industrialisation. While certain aspects such as alfresco gymnastics and abstention from alcohol have disappeared, the crux of the philosophy – that gathering au naturel in sun-kissed nature does the body and mind good – is still its raison d'etre. One of the more unusual side‑effects of the back-to-nature trend that took hold during the Covid pandemic has been a surge in popularity of naturism in the UK, with an Ipsos poll in 2022 showing that one in seven Britons (6.75 million people) had practised it, up from 3.7 million in 2011. There is also an increased interest among young adults. A symbol of body positivity and eco-consciousness, naturism is also 'a break from the noise of the news, consumerism and other concerns that weigh on our generation', says Naomi Gergaud, a 30-year-old fourth-generation Levantine, whose grandparents used to say: 'We weren't born in knickers.' The UK's cool climate is not ideal for being in your birthday suit, however, so many Britons join northern Europeans in sunny southern France. The country is the world's leading naturist destination, welcoming 2.6 million visitors a year at naturist clubs, beaches or campsites. Or on an island, as in Héliopolis's case – though not an entire one, as 90% of Île du Levant is occupied by the French military. Over the centuries, everyone from Barbary pirates to Benedictine monks settled on the isle for its strategic, remote location. The French natural medicine doctors Gaston and André Durville put down roots on Île du Levant in 1932, fresh from founding a naturist camp called Physiopolis on Platais island in the Seine. The brothers named their Mediterranean settlement Héliopolis, after the ancient Greeks' belief in the therapeutic properties of the sun (helios). Almost a century later, Héliopolis is a trip back to those simpler times, despite being just five nautical miles from the shore. I board a passenger boat – fittingly called Amour des Îles (love of the islands) – in Hyères. As waves splash me in a salt-water mist, the 90-minute journey across the Mediterranean sets the scene for a great escape, especially when the captain takes a detour to an out-of-this-world rock formation, Cap des Mèdes, because 'the light is too beautiful'. There is no rush since Île du Levant moves at its own pace. That is partly because no cars are allowed on the island, save for a taxi to ferry people from the port to their accommodation. Héliopolis has a small footprint of just 65 hectares (160 acres) and about 90 year-round residents. Besides, walking aids wellbeing, especially since it is on such a steep slope. A local tells me it takes three days for your legs to adjust. So pack lightly, which is easy when you will mostly be sporting a sarong. But don't forget a torch – though electricity arrived in 1989, there aren't any streetlights – which adds to the yesteryear charm. After dropping my bag at Soléa Lodges, a trio of lovely studios overlooking the sea, I head off on an amble along eucalyptus-scented roads that weave past phone-booth libraries and dreamily named homes like La Recluserie (secluded hideaway). I find it easy to navigate using the wooden street signs, which have adages in French such as 'Être nu rendre heureux' (being naked makes you happy). That is surely the case when a leathery woman clad in just a lavender bumbag and matching flip-flops greets me with an ebullient 'Bonjour'. Saying hello is one of the isle's rules – reminders are posted on graphic signs about town. Others are to conserve water, a precious resource here, and to sit on a sarong in restaurants. Sign up to The Traveller Get travel inspiration, featured trips and local tips for your next break, as well as the latest deals from Guardian Holidays after newsletter promotion All roads lead to the Place Durville that tops Héliopolis. The cafe/restaurant La Pomme d'Adam has been the resort's social hub since 1932. 'I came to holiday here and never left,' says my waiter. Holidaymakers pick up nude-themed collectibles at L'Érotique Traversée des Siècles and hefty slices of quiche for picnics at Boulangerie Pâtisserie la Grigne. Full nudity is forbidden in shops (Levantines don thong-like minimums to skirt this rule). This is because Hyères's town council has a presence in Héliopolis, helming the itty-bitty town hall, post office and police station. The full-time islanders manage everything else with their local union. Hence, the quirk of Héliopolis being a 'private domain that is open to the public'. Nudism keeps tourism at bay compared with the busier Îles d'Or (Golden Isles) such as Île de Porquerolles, which attracts four times as many visitors as Île du Levant in high season. I have only visited in spring and autumn, which are the best times to savour the silence with the locals. A third of Héliopolis is covered by the Domaine des Arbousiers, a nature reserve that sprawls between a dense maquis and the wind-battered coastline. The strawberry-tree-lined Sentier du Point du Jour leads to the highest point, where I'm rewarded with a panorama of the surprisingly pretty military base (early birds should come for sunrise). Heading back to the Mediterranean, the precipitous Sentier des Moines path zigzags through a fragrant pine forest to the Sentier du Bord de Mer. This seaside trail is best traversed in the buff. With my skin deliciously warmed by the sun and refreshed by the breeze, I feel as free as the squawking seagulls gliding the thermals above me. Each step affirms the 'naturism is liberty' axiom that Levantines preach. A dip beckons at Bain de Diane, where concrete platforms scattered between rocks are topped with sunbathers. Their naked bodies are as much a part of the landscape as the lizards that scurry beside them, recalling writer Sophie Fontanel's poetic novel La Capitale de la Douceur: 'It's hard to believe that we look so much alike when we're undressed. We're all the same ideogram.' Past the port, Plage des Grottes is Héliopolis's only sandy beach. The gorgeous turquoise cove has always been adamantly nude. 'Locals once used mirrors to deflect sunbeams into the eyes of textiles [clothed people] to steer them away,' says septuagenarian Frédéric Capoulade, the island's historian. People can often be less social at traditional nude beaches. 'As a naturist community, we don't have the same barriers here,' says Fred Godeau, who owns the hip HéliOtel with his partner, Julie (their restaurant serves up a stellar panorama). Fred's words echo the Durville brothers' belief that clothes represent the social class to which an individual belongs. Everyone is on an equal footing wearing just a smile. The ferry goes from Hyères (90 mins, €29 return, and Lavandou (35-60 mins, €34 return, Accommodation at Soléa Lodges (open year-round, starts at €80 a night for a studio sleeping three. HéliOtel (open May-September, has doubles from €150 BB


The Independent
6 hours ago
- The Independent
Luxury €100 million superyacht erupts in flames at Saint Tropez port
This is the moment a luxury €100 million superyacht erupts in flames at the Saint Tropez port in France. Footage filmed by Gary Sturrock captured the moment the 41-meter superyacht, Sea Lady II, caught fire on Thursday, July 10, off the coast of the Mediterranean resort town of Saint-Tropez. Tourists and passers-by watched in shock as orange flames and thick black smoke were seen coming from the boat. Nearby vessels were moved away, and anti-pollution barriers were set up. The cause of the fire is currently under investigation.