AdBlock Detected

It looks like you're using an ad-blocker!

Our team work realy hard to produce quality content on this website and we noticed you have ad-blocking enabled.

Normandy D-Day Battlefields

Memorial Omaha Beach

To get to the Normandy D-Day battlefields, we booked a bus trip through a well-known internet site.  The trip was 14 hours in duration, with about three and a half each way journey from Paris.  When lunch and other times are taken out, we had about four hours in Normandy.  The tour touched on most of the major D-Day sites, but only that.  We would have appreciated more time to explore for ourselves.  As a result, we would have enjoyed ourselves more had we stayed in the area and combined this with other attractions, or tours we did, such as Mont Saint Michel.

Why Did We Go?

The D-Day landings and battlefields are historically very important and seeing them first hand would give us a good understanding of what happened.  It would also allow us to see the American Memorial near Caen, where many of the soldiers are buried. 

Our holiday was on a tight timeframe, so we did not have the time to see all of Normandy and experience what it had to offer.  Instead, we decided to do the bus trip.  It would take us to the specific areas of interest for D-Day and we could see the other aspects of Normandy on a return visit.

Unfortunately, we re-discovered that bus trips can be hit and miss, missing some sites, or limiting time at them.

Caen Memorial

The Caen Memorial has film and photographic exhibits covering World War Two, with an emphasis on D-Day.  This was all very interesting and comprehensive.  We specifically liked the underground bunker that exists on the same site.  You are able to walk through it at your own pace and see the displays of how it was set up to control the German troops in the area.

D-Day Museum Flags Normandy D-Day Battlefields
D-Day Museum Flags

For anyone wanting to know the story of D-Day and the preceding years of World War 2, this is an excellent place to visit.  You should probably go here before visiting the D-Day sites in the area.

Pointe du Hoc

This is the area where high cliffs with fortified gun emplacements overlooked the invasion beaches.  American Rangers scaled these cliffs on D-Day morning and disabled them, enabling the invasion to be a success.  Several of the gun emplacements are still intact, to you get to see a genuine fortification and what the soldiers had to contend with.  More impressive is looking over the cliffs to see what they had to scale before assaulting the guns.

German Bunker Omaha Beach Normandy D-Day Battlefields
German Bunker Omaha Beach
Omaha Beach Today Normandy D-Day Battlefields
Omaha Beach Today

The bunkers can be entered, giving you the viewpoint of the defending Germans.  The surrounding area has generally been left untouched so that the effect of the allied bombardment can be seen and many bomb craters are still visible.

Omaha Beach

We walked down to Omaha Beach where we could look up to some of the cliffs overlooking the invasion beach.  In 1944 these would have been defended by German soldiers.  This perspective really drives home what the Rangers had to climb to reach the German fortifications.  The beach is very peaceful now with no signs of what happened over 70 years ago.  Some Americans in the group took samples of sand home with them.

Omaha Beach Today Normandy D-Day Battlefields
Omaha Beach Today
Canadian Memorial Juno Beach Normandy D-Day Battlefields
Canadian Memorial Juno Beach

American Cemetery and Memorial near Saint-Laurent-sur-Mer

This is the final resting place of nearly 10,000 members of the US military. The cemetery overlooks Omaha Beach, where many of them fell.  The graves of many men who were killed in the surrounding area are also here.  There is a stunning sculpture of a soldier ascending to heaven as you enter the cemetery.  This sets an excellent atmosphere for the rest of the memorial.  It is a very peaceful place, with the numerous rows of headstones set in beautiful gardens.  Many of the graves hold the body of an unknown soldier, with the inscription stating that they are known only unto God.

US War Cemetery Memorial Omaha Beach Normandy D-Day Battlefields
US War Cemetery Memorial Omaha Beach
US War Cemetery Omaha Beach Normandy D-Day Battlefields
US War Cemetery Omaha Beach

Juno Beach

Juno Beach is where a combined British and Canadian army landed.  The Canadian Memorial consists of a howitzer, and stylised sculpture of two soldiers and flags of the participating Canadian Provinces.  We walked on the sand, which was very peaceful unlike June 1944.

Memorial at Juno Beach Normandy D-Day Battlefields
Memorial at Juno Beach
Howitzer at Juno Beach Normandy D-Day Battlefields
Howitzer at Juno Beach

Arromanches Harbour

We had hope to stop here and inspect the remains of the artificial harbour, as it was on of the great planning and engineering feats of the invasion.  Unfortunately, being on a bus trip and constrained by time tables, we were running late and had to miss this part, so only saw it as we drove by.

This is one of the great drawbacks of participating in a bus trip.  An area of specific interest to you can be missed, and cut from the tour due to circumstances.  Had we been travelling by ourselves, this would have been something we would not have missed.

What Did We Think?

What we saw was excellent.  From the Memorials to the fortifications and the beaches, we gained a great understanding of the events of June 1944.  If we had more time, spending more time in the area and not travelling back to Paris in the same day would have been better.  We would have combined this with our trip to Mont Saint Michel and the Loire Valley Chateaux.

Bus trips will always be problematic, as you can’t control who you go with, or the time-table if things go wrong.

Bar Beach Newcastle New South Wales

Bar Beach Newcastle is an excellent place for a relaxing half day.  It’s very easy to get to and has a nice large car park.  The ANZAC Memorial Walk   is to the north.  Dixon Park Beach, Merewether Beach and the Ocean Baths are to the south. They are all connected by a foot/bike path, or you can walk along the beach.

Swell at Bar Beach Coffee Shop

There is a coffee shop at Bar Beach, Swell at Bar Beach.  We usually buy a coffee and muffin here.  On a busy day be prepared to wait for your order to be filled as it is very popular.  While you wait, relax and watch the surf.  There is plenty of undercover seating if it is too hot, or raining.  We chose to sit down near the beach so that we could watch the waves roll in.

Susan Gilmore Beach

To the north of the beach is a rock platform and Susan Gilmore Beach.  This area is not accessible at high tide.  We walked over the rocks checking out the rock pools.  Be careful of the green slime, it can be a bit slippery.

waves breaking over rocks with water pools in the foreground at Bar Beach Newcastle
Rock Platform at Bar Beach
waves breaking over rocks with water pools in the foreground at Bar Beach Newcastle
Rock Platform at Bar Beach
waves breaking over rocks with water pools in the foreground at Bar Beach Newcastle
Bar Beach Rock Pools
waves breaking over rocks with water pools in the foreground at Bar Beach Newcastle
Rock Platform at Bar Beach Newcastle NSW

The shells and rocks can also be quite sharp, so you might want to put some shoes back on when walking over them.  Be aware though that your shoes will get wet.

Merewether Beach

We walked back along the beach to Merewether Ocean Baths.  It’s about a 2km walk, but very relaxing on a nice day.  

ocean waves breaking onto Merewether Beach near Bar Beach Newcastle
Merewether Beach

As you walk back, so can see surfers having fun on the waves.  Look out to sea and you will see the coal ships waiting to come in to be loaded at the Port of Newcastle.

surfer surfing at Dixon Park Beach with breaking waves and rocks near the beach
Surfing at Dixon Park Beach

We walked back to Bar Beach on the pathway above the beaches.  It’s very well laid out and there are also several places to stop for a meal or coffee along the way.

Merewether Beach Looking at Bar Beach with a sandy beach and ocean waves
Merewether Beach Looking at Bar Beach

We do this walk regularly, at least twice a month on weekends.  Always enjoyable and good exercise.

To see what else there is to do in the Hunter Valley, please see some of our other stories.

Our photos are available for purchase on