Passage du Gois explained

The French: Passage du Gois (in French pronounced as /pasaʒ dy ɡwa/) or French: Gôa is a causeway between Beauvoir-sur-Mer and the island of Noirmoutier, in Vendée on the Atlantic coast of France. The causeway is 4.125km (02.563miles) long[1] and is flooded twice a day by the high tide. A road runs along the causeway.

Every year, a foot race – the Foulées du Gois – is held across it, starting at the onset of high tide.[2]

Tour de France

The Passage du Gois was used in Stage 2 of the 1999 Tour de France bicycle race. It proved to be divisive due to a crash caused by the slippery surface. The crash created a six-minute split in the peloton which ended the hopes of many favourites to win the race, including Alex Zülle, who would eventually finish second overall.[3]

The Passage du Gois was used again in the 2011 race, as the starting point of the first stage.[4]

See also

46.9308°N -2.1261°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Le Passage du Gois . Beauvoir sur Mer . Mairie de Beauvoir sur Mer . fr . 2015-07-07 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150706052419/http://www.mairie-beauvoirsurmer.fr/le-gois-la-route-sous-la-mer/presentation/ . 2015-07-06 .
  2. Web site: Passage du Gois . 20 September 2021.
  3. News: 1999 Tour de France stage two: Passage du Gois causes chaos . 20 September 2021 . Cycling Weekly . 30 June 2011.
  4. News: Passage du Gois, team time trial back for 2011 Tour . 20 September 2021 . VeloNews.