From Cherbourg port of call, visit Normandy Day Beaches with a licensed guide that will take you to several of the iconic landmarks where 150,000 soldiers from America, Britain, Canada and many other nations (Danish, New-Zeland, Australia …) landed by sea and air along the Normandy coastline (Utah, Omaha, Juno, Gold, Sword). The D-Day invasion (Neptune Operation) is significant in history for the role it played in World War II. Part of the Operation Overlord, the codename for the Battle of Normandy, the Allied operation will last less than a year after the invasion of the western Europe with Germany surrendered.
C

anadian Sector


Réf Tour : # H3

From the port of call in Cherbourg, go back in time and visit the great Norman battlefields of the Second World War to understand the key events of Operation Overlord. Your guide will welcome you to the port of call.

Tours are private, but if you want to share yours with some other participants, you can look on the website like ‎‎www.cruisecritics.com‎‎ ‎

‎Pick-up/drop-off locations: Cherbourg port of call
Pick-up time/drop-off time: 8.30am/5:30pm
Duration: 9 hours

Rate for 1 to 7 pax : from 1100€

Inclusions
Lunch of the guide/driver

Exclusions
Entrance fees or tasting fees, unless mentioned
Gratuities for the driver/guide
Meals and drinks, unless specified
Personal insurance and expenses

Description
The Ardenne Abbey – The North Nova Scothia Highlanders Memorial – The Sherbrooke Fusiliers Regiment Memorial – Hell's Corner – Anguerny (part of the ELM line) and its Inukshuk - The Canadian Cemetery in Bény-Reviers – The Canada House – The Hotel Graves – Juno Beach Center and its park – Juno Beach.

Explore with your licensed driver-guide the details of Overlord operation and discover key Canadian D-day sites and the different divisions (Infantry, Airforce, Support) involved in the landing of Juno area.

During that highly personalised tour, your guide will give you some full explanations to better understand what went wrong and what went right for each battlefield site. By the end of your visit, you will understand the strategic choices for the Allied invasion of Normandy and you will feel that you have proudly fulfilled your duty of remembrance by paying tribute to all those young men who sacrificed themselves to save France, Europe and the world.

Your private driver-guide will share the highlights of Juno sector. Your day will start at the Ardenne Abbey built in the 12th century and occupied by the monks until the French revolution. In the 20th century, the place was under the control of a farmer Jacques Vico and became under the german occupation a training camp for the the French resistance. On June 7th 1944, the buildings were occupied by the Hitlerjugend Division or called the Baby division (12 SS division). Today a Memorial commemorates a tragic event that happened there with the execution of 27 canadian soldiers.

On the way to go to Juno beach, you will see two Memorials dedicated to the North Nova Scotia Highlanders and to the Sherbrooke Fusiliers Regiment. One stop will be held to Hell's corner where the Canadians resisted repetitive attacks by the Germans and bombardments for three weeks until the victory at the Carpiquet aerodrome on July 4. We will stop in Anguerny (Elm line), where the 3 Canadian Regiments (La Chaudière, the Queen's Own Rifles and the Fort Garry Horse) set up their camp for the night. An inukshuk, a stack of human-shaped stones from the Inuit tradition, symbolizes brotherhood, mutual respect and friendship between people.

To conclude the morning, you will pay tribute to the 2.049 brave and young Canadians who are burried in that small Cemetery in Bény-Reviers before you gather at the Canada House where a memorial has been erected in honour of the Queen's Own Rifles Regiment and the Fort Garry Horse Armoured Division who paid a heavy price in the assault. Not far away, you will see the Hotel Graves, the headquarters for the Canadian and British War correspondants.

After the lunch break, you will head to Juno Beach Centre, its park and the landing beaches where the Regina and all Canadian Scottish regiments landed. Juno Beach Center presents the story of a new nation, the civilian war effort of the entire population, the early involvment of the country to help England to fight the Nazis as well as the various Canadian campaigns through Europe and even Asia.

The park is very interesting too to go for a a pleasant walk and see some remains of the atlantic wall (strongpoints, tobrouk, command post ...), a Churchill AVRE tank (Armoured Vehicle Royal Engineers), armed with a 290mm gun used to destroy enemy fortifications. On June 6, 1944, "One Charlie" got stuck in the mud 100 m from the shore and remained there until 1977 when it was excavated, restored and offered on display. Close to the tank, you can't miss the Cosy's Pillbox, easily recognisable by its tilt, which was the site of fierce fighting on 6th June 1944.

Juno sector is the place who received the Prime Minister Churchill, the first steps of Charles de Gaulle since his exile in England and King of England. That is why today is erected a huge silver Lorraine French resistance cross to mark to return of Charles de Gaulle in France.
C

anadian Sector

Réf Tour : # H3

From the port of call in Cherbourg, go back in time and visit the great Norman battlefields of the Second World War to understand the key events of Operation Overlord. Your guide will welcome you to the port of call.

Tours are private, but if you want to share yours with some other participants, you can look on the website like ‎‎www.cruisecritics.com‎

‎Pick-up/drop-off locations: Cherbourg port of call
Pick-up time/drop-off time: 8.30am/5:30pm
Duration: 9 hours

Rate for 1 to 7 pax : from 1100€

Inclusions
Lunch of the guide/driver

Exclusions
Entrance fees or tasting fees, unless mentioned
Gratuities for the driver/guide
Meals and drinks, unless specified
Personal insurance and expenses

Description
The Ardenne Abbey – The North Nova Scothia Highlanders Memorial – The Sherbrooke Fusiliers Regiment Memorial – Hell's Corner – Anguerny (part of the ELM line) and its Inukshuk - The Canadian Cemetery in Bény-Reviers – The Canada House – The Hotel Graves – Juno Beach Center and its park – Juno Beach.

Explore with your licensed driver-guide the details of Overlord operation and discover key Canadian D-day sites and the different divisions (Infantry, Airforce, Support) involved in the landing of Juno area.

During that highly personalised tour, your guide will give you some full explanations to better understand what went wrong and what went right for each battlefield site. By the end of your visit, you will understand the strategic choices for the Allied invasion of Normandy and you will feel that you have proudly fulfilled your duty of remembrance by paying tribute to all those young men who sacrificed themselves to save France, Europe and the world.

Your private driver-guide will share the highlights of Juno sector. Your day will start at the Ardenne Abbey built in the 12th century and occupied by the monks until the French revolution. In the 20th century, the place was under the control of a farmer Jacques Vico and became under the german occupation a training camp for the the French resistance. On June 7th 1944, the buildings were occupied by the Hitlerjugend Division or called the Baby division (12 SS division). Today a Memorial commemorates a tragic event that happened there with the execution of 27 canadian soldiers.

On the way to go to Juno beach, you will see two Memorials dedicated to the North Nova Scotia Highlanders and to the Sherbrooke Fusiliers Regiment. One stop will be held to Hell's corner where the Canadians resisted repetitive attacks by the Germans and bombardments for three weeks until the victory at the Carpiquet aerodrome on July 4. We will stop in Anguerny (Elm line), where the 3 Canadian Regiments (La Chaudière, the Queen's Own Rifles and the Fort Garry Horse) set up their camp for the night. An inukshuk, a stack of human-shaped stones from the Inuit tradition, symbolizes brotherhood, mutual respect and friendship between people.

To conclude the morning, you will pay tribute to the 2.049 brave and young Canadians who are burried in that small Cemetery in Bény-Reviers before you gather at the Canada House where a memorial has been erected in honour of the Queen's Own Rifles Regiment and the Fort Garry Horse Armoured Division who paid a heavy price in the assault. Not far away, you will see the Hotel Graves, the headquarters for the Canadian and British War correspondants.

After the lunch break, you will head to Juno Beach Centre, its park and the landing beaches where the Regina and all Canadian Scottish regiments landed. Juno Beach Center presents the story of a new nation, the civilian war effort of the entire population, the early involvment of the country to help England to fight the Nazis as well as the various Canadian campaigns through Europe and even Asia.

The park is very interesting too to go for a a pleasant walk and see some remains of the atlantic wall (strongpoints, tobrouk, command post ...), a Churchill AVRE tank (Armoured Vehicle Royal Engineers), armed with a 290mm gun used to destroy enemy fortifications. On June 6, 1944, "One Charlie" got stuck in the mud 100 m from the shore and remained there until 1977 when it was excavated, restored and offered on display. Close to the tank, you can't miss the Cosy's Pillbox, easily recognisable by its tilt, which was the site of fierce fighting on 6th June 1944.

Juno sector is the place who received the Prime Minister Churchill, the first steps of Charles de Gaulle since his exile in England and King of England. That is why today is erected a huge silver Lorraine French resistance cross to mark to return of Charles de Gaulle in France.