Archive for the ‘Weather’ Category
Charente Maritime holiday season; after the storms
Some good news for the tourism industry in the Charente-Maritime, where the Atlantic coastline took a deadly battering from Storm Xynthia in February.
 Though the physical signs of the storm are still visible in some of the seaside and beach resorts of the Charente-Maritime, the 2010 holiday season so far looks as if it is a good one.
 Resorts such as Fouras, near Rochefort, and the popular Île d’Oléron are reporting brisk business, while La Rochelle has seen high numbers of visitors too this summer.
 As for the Île de Ré, the most popular part of the Charente-Maritime – which is itself the second most popular department in France for holidaymakers – it seems relatively unscathed by the high winds and waves that crashed over it.
 ‘Whatever happens, the Île de Re is always the Île de Re,’ says one tourism official (presumably even if some bits of it are washed out to sea…).
The picture is not so rosy in all parts of the coastline, however. The beach at Aytré near La Rochelle was badly damaged by the storm and a number of camping areas are still closed.
 Elsewhere in the Poitou-Charentes region, campsites are mostly reporting strong bookings this summer, thanks to the fine weather and the economic crisis (meaning fewer French people are travelling abroad).
However the trend is for better-equipped more upmarket campsites – they seem to be the ones attracting the best bookings. Reservations at cheaper campsites are generally not doing so well.
Poitou-Charentes storm update: the rising death toll
As the citizens of Charente-Maritime begin the grim task of clearing up after the devastation wreaked by Storm Xynthia, the full impact of the wind and tides has begun to emerge.
Across France at least 52 died in the storm, most of them in the coastal resorts of the Vendée but many too in the Charente-Maritime. The worst hit areas here were the islands ÃŽle d’Oléron, ÃŽle de Ré, Aytré, La Rochelle and Châtelaillon Plage, and the department has reported at least eleven deaths. The coast to the south towards Royan was also hit, but less badly affected than areas further to the north.
The departments of the Vienne and Deux-Sèvres were also badly hit and they, together with the Charente-Maritime, were included in the official state declaration of a natural disaster. This means, in theory at least, that insurance claims for damage caused by the storm in those areas should be able to be processed, and quickly. In Poitou-Charentes the least affected department was the Charente, which was not included in the natural disaster status. Attention is now turning to why so many houses along the coast were built in areas prone to flooding from the sea.
Meanwhile businesses along the coastal area, a popular tourist area for the French and foreign holidaymakers, are having to take urgent action to get ready in time for the holiday season. The government has already pledged cash for stricken businesses, including oyster farms.
Storm and high tides hit Poitou-Charentes – death toll reaches 45 across France

The coast of Charente-Maritime was worst hit by Storm Xynthia
A powerful storm with gusts of up to 150kmh has hit the Poitou-Charentes, killing several people, cutting off the power for tens of thousands of homes and causing widespread flooding.
The part of the region worst hit by Storm Xynthia, which hit France in the early hours of Sunday 28 February, was the coast of Charente-Maritime, where high tides combined to cause flooding. An 88-year-old woman was found drowned in her own home at Boyardville in Saint-Georges d’Oléron on the ÃŽle d’Oléron, and there were reports that up to two other deaths could have been linked to the weather in the department. The flooding was also bad in the port resort of La Rochelle, where the emergency services were called in to rescue people from their homes.Â
Many thousands of people across Poitou-Charentes – especially the Charente-Maritime, the Vienne and the Deux-Sèvres - saw their electricity  cut off when fallings trees and branches brought down power lines. A number of roads were blocked by trees and there was widespread disruption to transport. Across France Storm Xynthia caused at least 45 deaths and brought power cuts to a million homes as repair teams struggled to keep on top of the damage. Worst hit were the towns of La-Faute-sur-Mer and Â
Aiguillon-sur-Mer in the Vendée just north of Poitou-Charentes, where a total of 29 people died as the strong winds and surging tide raised water levels by 1.5 metres.  Many of thsoe who died were drowned.
The storm, which was forecast well in advance by France Méteo, is the severest to hit Poitou-Charentes since the infamous storm of 1999.