Arbres verdoyantsArbres verdoyants
©Forêt d'Arques|Yann Pelcat

La Forêt d'Arques

The green lung of the hinterland

The Arques forest offers almost 1,000 hectares of nature and relaxation.

Near Dieppe, it covers the communes of Arques-la-Bataille, Ancourt, Martin-Eglise and Saint-Aubin-le-Cauf.

Getting there

Fresh air

Natural curiosities

This is a beech forest where large conifers mingle with deciduoustrees*.
Among them are two remarkable trees: the Montariol Beech, the oldest tree in the forest, and the Water Bearer, a beech engraved with a drawing of a woman carrying a container of water on her head. This mysterious engraving is thought to date back over a century.

Along the way, you can admire two beautiful ponds frequented by frogs, newts and salamanders. In fine weather, you’ll be able to spot dragonflies, damselflies* and butterflies.

Practicalities

A place marked by history

The Arques forest is what survived the destruction of the Aliermont forest. This once covered the entire plateau of the same name. It was the property of the Dukes of Normandy.

It became a royal forest after Normandy became part of the French crown, then a state forest* during the French Revolution.

It is currently managed by the Office National des Forêts. The names of some crossroads (such as Rond des Ligueurs) and forest roads (Route Henri IV) recall the famous battle won by Henri IV over the Duke of Mayenne in 1589.

Page glossary

[woody_anchor id=”feuillus”]* deciduous: trees that bear leaves and lose them in autumn; coniferous trees bear needles.

[woody_anchor id=”demoiselle”]* damselfly: dragonfly-like insect

[woody_anchor id=”domaniale”]* forêt domaniale: state-owned forest