About Normandy on Culture & History 1 min read

How to Make Your Own D-Day Pilgrimage during the 80th Anniversary Year and Beyond

All eyes were once again on the coast of Normandy as the 80th anniversary of D-Day was marked on June 6, 2024 by the UK, US, Canada, and France.
 
The surprise landing of over 150,000 Allied soldiers on the shores of France in 1944 was described by Winston Churchill as “the most complicated and difficult” military operation in world history. Despite the incredible complexity, odds, weather, miscalculations, intense Nazi fortifications and thousands dead, D-Day was ultimately the beginning of the end of the war in Europe with Allied boots on the ground on the continent for the first time in five long years of war.
 
The sheer scope and audacity of the Landings, as well as the extraordinary feats of human spirit, international cooperation, engineering, and sheer heroism that made D-Day a turning point in human history, make a visit to the Landing Beaches an essential trip for us all to this day. 
 
Walking on the hallowed beaches in the footsteps of Allied soldiers, exploring bunkers, shell-pocked landscapes, and the genius portable harbour installations dreamed up to make the invasion of Europe possible is extraordinarily illuminating and moving for every single person who makes the trip.
 
WATCH ABOVE: A video my journey to Normandy’s D-Day Landing Beaches
 
Travelers have a number of cruising options to make your own pilgrimage to this sacred ground for Americans, Canadians, and British people.
 
Land Tours to Normandy and the D-Day Landing Beaches
 
  • Globus: 5-day, WWII D-Day Landing Beaches & Battle of Normandy tour;
  • Insight Vacations: 8-day Normandy, Brittany & the Loire Valley visits D-Day Landing Beaches as well as other highlights of France’s North and Northwest; 
  • Tauck: 13-day odyssey Normandy, Brittany, Paris & the Loire Valley also includes the Landing Beaches;
  • Kensington Tours: 9-day Paris and the Historic WWII Sites of Normandy; and
  • Kensington Tours: 12-day WWII: From Normandy to the Eagle’s Nest visits pivotal battlefield sites in Normandy and journeys into Germany.
 
River Cruises to Normandy and the D-Day Landing Beaches
 
Seine river cruises are the best cruise option to experience the D-Day Landing Beaches in Normandy.
 
The Seine flows north from the Paris area, emptying into the English Channel at the port town of Le Havre. River cruises begin and end in Paris. That round trip from Paris is doubly convenient: you can fly into and out of the same city, plus you can, of course, bookend your river cruise with a pre- or post-cruise extension in Paris or its surrounding regions.
 
At the northern end of the cruise itinerary at the coast, all the major river cruise lines offer shore excursions to the Normandy Landing Beaches. Here’s a selection of river cruise lines and Seine river itineraries that offer Landing Beaches shore excursions:
 
  • Scenic: 11-day Normandy and Gems of the Seine
  • Viking: 11-day Paris & the Heart of Normandy 
  • AmaWaterways: 7-night Paris & Normandy
  • Avalon Waterways: 8-day Paris to Normandy
  • Uniworld Boutique River Cruises: 8-Day, Paris & Normandy
  • Tauck: in addition to other Seine itineraries, Tauck offers a family-focused Seine river cruise; perfect for a memory-filled multi-generational trip to the historic beaches.
 
D Day Landing Beaches Shore Excursion Tip:
 
Check the details of the shore excursion to the Landing Beaches to make sure you will see the places of most meaning to you. There are 5 Landing Beaches: 2 American, 2 British, and 1 Canadian, as well as monuments and cemetaries and landmarks meaningful to WW2 and families of Allied veterans. No single excursion can encompass every sight. Canadian guests in particular, will want to make sure the shore excursion will take them to Juno Beach, the Canadian Landing Beach, in addition to the American Landing Beaches further west along the coast.
 
Ocean Cruises to Normandy
 
River cruises aren’t the only way by water to see Normandy. The D-Day landings, of course, happened from the sea, and visitors in these peaceful times can also arrive in Normandy on ocean cruises.
 
The usual ocean port of call for Normandy is Le Havre, France. And while some cruise lines offer shore excursions from Le Havre all the way to Paris, that is a) a long way to go, and much too little time in Paris to do the City of Light justice, and b) you miss Normandy and the D-Day beaches. 
 
I recommend taking the ship’s D-Day beaches shore excursion instead, while you are right there in Normandy, so you don’t regret missing walking in the very footsteps of one of the most impactful and heroic moments of our collective history.
 
START YOUR D DAY COMMEMORATIVE TRIP!
 
By: Lynn Elmhirst, Cruise/ Travel Journalist and Expert
 
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