Imagine driving through the French countryside surrounded by rolling hills and pastoral beauty. The landscape is lush with budding flowers, charming farm houses and grazing Normandy cows roaming lazily through the grass. The French countryside seems as though it could go on forever, extending endlessly in fields of wild flowers. Suddenly the scenery shifts revealing shockingly blue ocean and dramatic rock formations in the distance, a quaint French town nestled around the water’s edge. This is Étretat.
With its iconic cliffs framing Caribbean hued seas, Étretat looks like a place found in Hawaii rather than on the Pays de Caux coast of France. The cliffs look out onto open ocean, as though you could spread your arms and sail freely across the Atlantic without a care in the world. With its awe inspiring scenery and romantic seaside town, it’s no wonder that artists like Claude Monet had set up easels to capture the magic Étretat holds.
While recently visiting the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, I came across Monet’s series of paintings depicting la magnifique Étretat. Although Monet is my favorite artist and his paintings perfectly captured the pastels and vibrant hues Étretat offers, it is an impossible task to truly harness the unparalleled sense of freedom and peace that visiting Étretat brings.
Standing on those cliffs, the entirety of the Atlantic Ocean in front of me, I remember feeling both sublimely happy and utterly relaxed—-a sentiment I wish I could inspire more often in New York. Any worry, stress or negative thought seemed to float away from my mind leaving behind a sense of contentment that can only be described as magical. Although Étretat is miles away from where I now sit in my Manhattan apartment, I find peace knowing that heaven on earth is only a plane ride away.
