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Glide and seek on star of the Loire
Daily Record
|March 07, 2026
On the Loire Princesse, the first cruise ship built for France's longest river, SANJEETA BAINS takes a glorious tour of the region's finest medieval sights
Standing behind the captain at the Star Trek-like command deck of the Loire Princesse, screens glowing and controls vibrating, it’s immediately clear this voyage will be far from a languid drift.
The Loire, France's last wild river, has long resisted modern navigation. With its shifting sandbanks and unpredictable water level, it was deemed unnavigable by modern ships.
Until the MS Loire Princesse: the first French vessel engineered specifically for the country’s untamed and longest river.
An innovation award-winner, the Princesse, which accommodates up to 96 passengers, is outfitted with a shallow draft and paddle wheels, that allow it to navigate the river.
The ship was my home for a five-day CroisiEurope cruise through the Loire Valley - a Unesco-listed landscape of chateaux, vineyards and medieval towns
Paddle wheel cruising has always appealed to the romantic in me, but as I discovered, Loire river cruising is no simple fairy tale - it's an unpredictable adventure.
Our journey began and ended in Nantes. After a 90-minute flight from Gatwick and a 25-minute drive from the airport, we arrived at the city centre dock at midday, with time to wander before setting sail.
After dropping our bags, we headed to La Cigale, Nantes’ most celebrated brasserie with gilded mirrors and sculpted ceilings setting the scene for a leisurely lunch. Out on the streets, creperies are on almost every corner.
Nantes, once the capital of Brittany, was separated from the region in 1941 - a controversial decision that, as our guide Pablo noted, still stirs resentment. Yet the city’s Breton soul hasn't faded.
Pablo describes Nantes as “culturally between Paris and Brittany.” Walking past its elegant shops, the city certainly carries the refinement of France’s capital, nowhere more so than in the lavish covered shopping arcade Passage Pommeraye, adorned with neoclassical statues and delicate ironwork.
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