The Alsatian ...
The cottage "L'Alsacienne" has two bedrooms of 8 and 12 m² and a large living room kitchen.
Equipment of the cottage
Bedroom 1: 1 double bed 160 cm
Bedroom 2: 2 single beds 90 cm
TV 82 cm, German, French and Swiss TNT channels
New and fully equipped kitchen
Dishwasher
Internet access (wifi)
Wooden deck
Discover Alsace!
Whether you are sporty, gourmet or looking for tranquility, our cottages are located to satisfy all your desires and all your desires ...
Feel free to visit our charming Alsatian villages with their beautiful half-timbered houses ... For this, go to:
Riquewihr
Riquewihr is a village of Alsace, very famous and visited for its charm. Riquewihr enjoys great celebrity, not only in Alsace and France, but also in Europe. Riquewihr is a medieval town located in the heart of the Alsatian vineyard which owes its fame to its picturesque character and its remarkable architectural heritage.
Ribeauvillé
It is in this small town of 5,000 inhabitants that the Three Wise Men stopped for a stop and offered the innkeeper the famous kougelhopf.
Since then, Ribeauvillé celebrates the Alsatian cake every summer. But Ribeauvillé has other assets: first the vineyard established since the Middle Ages on an exceptional soil that allows the production of great wines. Then, the history of the Lords of Ribeaupierre of which it remains the ruins of the Three Castles.
Walking in the center of Ribeauvillé is a real pleasure. We never tire of the picturesque streets connected by squares decorated with Renaissance fountains (Place de l'Hotel-de-Ville and Grand-Rue in particular).
Kaysersberg
Medieval town built at the mouth of the valley of the Weiss in the plain of Alsace.
The city is situated in a fertile and picturesque region, at the entrance of the valleys of Lapoutroie and Orbey, and dominated by two mountains bathed by the Weiss, and one of which is crowned by the ruins of the castle of Kaysersberg.
Colmar
Colmar is an ancient city of the Decapolis, the league of the ten free cities of Alsace then part of the Holy Roman Empire. The city enjoys a particular climate conducive to the cultivation of the vine. In the Middle Ages, Alsatian wine was already one of the most popular in Europe. The location of Colmar, in the center of the vineyards of Alsace, near the piedmont Vosges, earned him the nickname "capital of wines of Alsace".