Overlord-Neptune
NormandyONtour
‘The Allied Triangle’ – Winter
Tour Description
Full Day Private Tour of The Canadian, American & British D-Day Sectors
The Advantages of a Private Tour
→ A Private Tour is the perfect way to discover the D-Day landing sites of Normandy in a small family group, or group of friends, accompanied by a professional native English-speaker Guide.
→ All of the D-Day sites listed – as well as additional brief stops on our planned route – have been carefully chosen to include the major sites covering all three Allied Sectors. All of our D-Day Private Tours are fully modifiable and we will always accomodate requests for additional stops where possible. Our Canadian clients will be interested to learn that a 1-hr visit to the Juno Beach Visitor Centre is also available on the day (please speak to your driver-guide). At major sites there is ample freetime to walk around and take photos and at brief stops – such as at ‘The Dragoons’ Monument’ or the ‘1st Hussars Memorial Plaque’ – we are not required to disembark (unless at clients’ behest).
→ You will have your own dedicated guide in your own small private group throughout the entire duration of the tour, who will go out of his / her way to make your day memorable and endeavour to answer your every question.
→ Our Private Tour clients benefit from a flexible Bayeux / Caen Hotel pick-up & drop-off service, as well as a later start option. Furthermore, this tour is suitable for clients who are arriving in Bayeux (at 09:16) by train, Mon – Fri, from Paris St. Lazare Station (or Caen) for a full-day D-Day Tour.
Travel in style, safely…
Our D-Day Private Tours are conducted in luxury 8-seat Mercedes Tourers with air-conditioning front and rear, drinks holders, a fridge to keep your water chilled, tinted electric windows for your privacy, USB charging points for all of your devices, onboard WiFi and exceptionally comfortable seating complete with leather upholstery. Not only do our vehicles have automatic gearboxes offering the smoothest ride possible, but they are also equipped with the latest in vehicle security & passenger safety technology.
Tour Schedule
The tour runs Monday to Saturday all-year-round. A Private Tour service is also available on Sundays throughout the year, and reservations are via email only.
The D-Day Sites you will visit on this tour
American Sector {Suggested Itinerary only}: Pointe-du-Hoc. Ver-sur-Mer/Vierville (option), Omaha Beach & Widerstandsnest WN62, Colleville American Cemetery, Overlord Museum at Colleville (Option). Canadian Sector: Bény-sur-Mer Canadian Cemetery (option), Bernières-sur-Mer, Canada House on Juno Beach, Charlie 1 Tank & Cosys Bunker. *Juno Beach Visitor Centre (option). British Sector: Arromanches & Mulberry Harbour B, Arromanches Visitor Centre (option) and Longues-sur-Mer German Battery (Atlantic wall). Ryes Commonwealth War Cemetery (option), Crépon Green Howards Memorial & Creully Castle (options).
Pick-up Times & Locations
→ If you are based in Bayeux then we suggest a 09:00 hotel start for this tour, returning to your Bayeux hotel at 18:00. Alternatively, why not book a 09:30 Place de Québec pick-up in the centre of Bayeux and take a morning stroll through Bayeux and grab a fresh coffee & croissant before your tour starts? At lunchtime clients can either opt to visit a restaurant in town for a full sit-down lunch or grab a quick sandwich before visiting our recommended optional D-Day attraction: Arromanches Visitor Centre . Our Private Tours are 100% flexible…
→ If you are based in Caen then you may either book a flexible Caen pick-up & drop-off at checkout or you might consider taking the 09:01 Caen > Bayeux, Mon – Fri train and choosing a free Bayeux Station pick-up. (*Please note that since we are Bayeux-based, there is a supplement payable for Caen pick-up / drop-off services). Please refer to ‘Helpful Info’ menu for pick-up location maps.
NB: The scheduled Paris > Caen / Bayeux train arrives in Bayeux at 09:16 Mon – Fri and and we will be waiting for you on the platform when you arrive. For Caen-based clients: The Caen > Bayeux Saturday train departs Caen 09:03 on Saturdays and we can pick you up at Bayeux Station on Saturdays too (Please be sure to check all train schedules ahead of travelling).
Alternative Tours with us
→ If clients should be seeking more in-built tour flexibility, NormandyONtour recommends either a Full-Day Premium Chauffeur-Guide Service, or our Flagship Overlord-Neptune multiple-day D-Day Experience Tour.
The Battle was WON…The Tour is ON
OverlordNeptune
*Tip : Click the square logo upper left (before NormandyONtour) or click the numbers for more details…
D-Day Private Tours – Flexible Start Times for Bayeux-based clients
Welcome Aboard
We propose a 09:45 start
Public toilets available
Place de Québec
Place de Québec is situated just around the corner from The Bayeux Tourist Information Office. We can pick up here anytime Mon – Sat for a full-day D-Day Private Tour. There are toilet facilities here, as well as a cafe nearby – ‘La Garde Manger’ – perfect for passengers who wish a quick coffee prior to departure. Passengers can specify their tour start time and designated pick-up /drop-off location on our booking system. (Our Bayeux Train Station pick-up is at 09:20 Mon-Fri and we will always wait for you…). Private Tour clients also benefit from a free Bayeux Hotel pick-up / drop-off option.
50th Northumbrian Division
Short visit – Optional
1. Ryes Commonwealth Cemetery
This small, virtually forgotten cemetery – off the beaten track and surrounded by fields – is situated between Bayeux and Arromanches and is rarely visited by major tour companies or tourists. Beautifully maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission it contains 653 Commonwealth war graves, including one Polish and 335 German. The first interments in the cemetery were made two days after the initial D-Day landings. Some of the soldiers buried here are from the 50th British Northumbrian Infantry Division that landed on Gold Beach. The cemetery also contains a large number of Royal Navy and merchant navy sailors. Two brothers, Private Joseph Casson (Durham Light Infantry) and Marine Robert Casson (45 Commando) are buried beside each other in the graveyard. We will begin our Allied Triangle D-Day Group Tour in this humble place…
Green Howards cap badge
10 minute visit
2. Green Howards Monument – Crépon
The 6th and 7th Battalions of the Green Howards were part of the D-Day landings, wading ashore on Gold Beach on the morning of 6 June 1944. By the evening of the first day they had fought their way seven miles inland, further than any other British or American unit. By the close of the operation 180 Green Howards had lost their lives. Middlesbrough born Company Sergeant Major Stanley Hollis (1912 to 1972) was awarded the Victoria Cross (VC) for his actions on D-Day; the only VC to be awarded on 6th June. At the moument errected in his and in his division’s honour and unveiled by the King of Norway on the 26th October 1996, we will take a reverent look at some of his heroic actions on D-Day…
1st Hussars 4th/7th Dragoons, Winnipeg Rifles
15 minute visit
3. Creully & Creullet Castles
From June 7th 1944 onwards The BBC began broadcasting the first news of the Battle Of Normandy from Creully Castle, while in a second castle near nearby – known as Creullet castle, which lies to the northwest of the village of Creully – General Montgomery set up his tactical headquarters, where he received dignitaries, politicians and senior military commanders including Winston Churchill, Charles De Gaulle, Dwight Eisenhower and King George VI. As we visit the Creully Castle grounds we will learn of some of the events surrounding the D-Day liberation of the entire town, which lay in the hands of the German 716th Infantry Division’s heavy artillery battery…
Lest we forget…
Short visit – optional
4. Bény-sur-Mer : Canadian War Cemetery
Bény-sur-Mer was created as a permanent resting place for Canadian soldiers who had been temporarily interred in smaller plots close to where they fell. As is usual for war cemeteries or monuments, France granted Canada a perpetual concession to the land occupied by the cemetery. The graves contain soldiers from the 3rd Canadian Division and 15 airmen killed during the Battle of Normandy. The cemetery also includes three British graves and one French grave, for a total of 2048 markers. Bény-sur-Mer also contains the remains of nine sets of brothers. We will make a short stop at the cemetery to pay our respects…
The Queen’s Own Rifles Of Canada
30 minute visit – includes freetime
5. Canada House : Bernières-sur-Mer
“Within sight of this house over 100 men of the Queen’s Own Rifles were killed or wounded, in the first few minutes of the landings”. That stark inscription welcomes visitors at the entrance of a large, timber-framed house overlooking Juno Beach In the village of Bernières-sur-Mer. ‘La Maison des Canadiens,’ or Canada House, is one of the most iconic buildings in Canadian military history. It was one of the first houses liberated by Canadian soldiers on D-Day, 6 June 1944, and has since become a familiar historic landmark, standing in the backdrop of the many black-and-white photographs showing troops landing on the sands of this village in Normandy….At Canada House we will take a closer look at the fierce battle which resulted in heavy losses for the Canadians landing on Juno Beach on D-Day…


7th Canadian Infantry, 26th Assault Squadron British Royal Engineers
15 minute visit
6. Charlie-1 Tank & Cosys Bunker WN #31
This Churchill Mk IV AVRE tank was designed to get close to fortifications and blow them up with its mortar. This obstacle-clearing tank called ‘Avenger’, lay hidden under the sand-dunes of Juno beach for 3 decades and was not rediscovered beneath the sand dunes until 1976! Just along the path we will also visit Cosys Bunker, named after Lieutenant W.F. “Cosy” Aitken, who commanded No. 10 Platoon, of B Company, Royal Winnipeg Rifles. On D-Day, his men stormed the bunker and suffered 78% casualties in doing so...
The Dorsets & 231st Brigade
20 minute visit – includes freetime
7. Gold Beach – Asnelles
Asnelles was heavily bombed by the Allied air forces and the navy at dawn on D-Day. The 1st Hampshire and the Dorsetshire Regiments, supported by the Sherwood Rangers tanks of the 8th Armored Brigade experienced heavy fighting here at the two German Strongpoints WN 36 & WN 37. At this stop we will visit Gold Beach, and if the tide is out we will be able to visit the remains of ‘Port Winston’ – Mulberry Harbour B. Whilst visiting the beach here we will take a brief look at the German strongpoints which inflicted heavy casualties as the Allied soldiers landed here at 07:25 on D-Day…
The 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division
1-hr visit : lunch & *museum (*optional)
Public toilets available
8. Arromanches – Mulberry Harbour ‘B’
It was on the beach of Arromanches that, during the Invasion of Normandy immediately after D-Day, the Allies established an artificial temporary harbour to allow the unloading of heavy equipment without waiting for the conquest of deep water ports such as Le Havre or Cherbourg. Although at the centre of the Gold Beach landing zone, Arromanches was spared the brunt of the fighting on D-Day so the installation and operation of the port was able to proceed as quickly as possible without damaging the beach and destroying surrounding lines of communication. We will stop for lunch up on the bluff overlooking Arromanches – with the most stunning view of the entire day’s tour laid out before us…
The 2nd Devonshire Regiment
20 minute visit – includes freetime
Public toilets available
9. Longues-sur-Mer German Battery
The anti-naval guns of The German Battery at Longues-sur-Mer were a key element of Hitler’s Atlantic Wall. Built on a clifftop overlooking the English Channel and situated right in the heart of the Allied assault sector between Omaha and Gold Beaches, they included a range-finding post and four casemates, each housing a 150-mm gun. Despite numerous Allied air raids in the night of 5th June 1944, the battery was still operational on the morning of 6th June. On our visit to this UNESCO World Heritage site, you will be able to go inside the casemates themselves, and we will discover why it took the Allies until June 7th to force its surrender…
The Big Red One – ‘BRO’
No Mission Too Difficult. No Sacrifice Too Great. Duty First!
20 minute visit – includes freetime
10. Omaha Beach + WN 62
Omaha Beach, was the code name for one of the five sectors of the Allied invasion of German-occupied France in the Normandy landings on June 6, 1944. Taking Omaha was to be the responsibility of United States Army troops of the First Division nicknamed ‘The Big Red One’. However faced with the 12,020 experienced combat troops of the German 352nd Infantry Division, the battle-hardened 1st Infantry Division had its work cut out. During this memorable visit you’ll find out why nothing here went according to plan on D-Day. Thus we shall discover how ‘Bloody Omaha’ earned its name…


50 minute visit – includes freetime
Public toilets available
11. Normandy Colleville American Cemetery
On June 8, 1944, the U.S. First Army established the temporary cemetery, the first American cemetery on European soil in World War II. After the war, the present-day cemetery was established a short distance to the east of the original site. Come and honour the graves of our fallen Heroes, discover the gold-embossed gravestones of the three Medal of Honour recipients – listen to some stories from their lives – and peruse the wall of the missing upon which are engraved the names of 1557 servicemen never recovered…
The 2nd & 5th Rangers – Rangers lead the way
40 minute visit – includes freetime
Public toilets available
12. Pointe-du-Hoc
Pointe-du-Hoc, a 100ft promontory cliff overlooking the English Channel on the coast of Normandy in northern France was heavily fortified with concrete casemates and gun pits and protected by the German 352nd Infantry Division. On D-Day the United States Army Ranger Assault Group under lieutenant colonel James E. Rudder assaulted and captured Pointe du Hoc after scaling the cliffs. Disabling the six 155mm guns there was crucial to the successful completion of the Allied Land Invasion. There was however a cruel surprise in store for Colonel Rudder’s men…
Homeward-Bound
20 minute drive back to Bayeux Train Station
Public toilets available
We arrive back at Bayeux Station or at your designated Bayeux location at 18:00
We will always depart our last stop on schedule at 17:30 to ensure that we arrive back in Bayeux in plenty of time for clients to catch the 18:35 Mon-Fri, Bayeux > Paris train. During our relaxing drive back to the station you will have 20 minutes to reflect on the day’s touring and have a casual chat with your Guide. We always appreciate feedback about your D-Day experience and welcome any last-minute questions. Please do not hesitate to let your driver know if we can be of any further assistance. Thank you for choosing NormandyONtour.
END OF THE TOUR
17:45
*Your Private D-Day tour lasts a total of 8 hrs including 1 hour for lunch.
Drop-off Times [Mon – Fri]: We will return you to Bayeux Train Station on weekdays at 17:45. If you are returning to Bayeux, then we will either return you to your hotel, or drop you off in Place de Québec between 17:45 and 18:00. Please speak to your driver, who will be glad to assist in making your advance dinner reservations.
Drop-Off Times [Sat/Sun]: We will either return you to your hotel, or drop you off in Place de Québec between 17:45 and 18:00. Upon request we can also drop off at Bayeux Train Station on Saturdays/Sundays at approximately 17:45. Please speak to your driver.

NormandyONtour
6 Voie Panoramique
14960 St. Côme-De-Fresné
Calvados, Basse-Normandie
View of Arromanches from our HQ
Company # 00211 18 14
Reg: 835 397 027 RM 14
Chauffeur VTC # 01417003101
Transport License: 2018/28/0000616
Tel: +33 783 810 921

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