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Routes
France
Normandy
Mortagne-Au-Perche
Sablons-Sur-Huisne

Above the Huisne – Beautiful bucolic greenway loop from Condé-sur-Huisne

Routes
France
Normandy
Mortagne-Au-Perche
Sablons-Sur-Huisne

Above the Huisne – Beautiful bucolic greenway loop from Condé-sur-Huisne

Moderate

4.0

(2)

2

riders

Above the Huisne – Beautiful bucolic greenway loop from Condé-sur-Huisne

01:29

24.6km

230m

Gravel riding

Moderate gravel ride. Good fitness required. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: May 13, 2026

Tips

Your route passes through a protected area

Please check local regulations for:

Parc naturel régional du Perche

Waypoints

A

Start point

Train Station

Get Directions

1

3.50 km

Above the Huisne

Highlight • Other

The Huisne is a river in central France, flowing in the regions of Normandy, Centre-Val de Loire and Pays de la Loire. It rises in the municipality of La Perrière, in the Perche Regional Nature Park, initially drains to the northeast, later to the southeast, finally turns to the southwest near Condé-sur-Huisne and, after around 165[2] kilometres, flows into the Sarthe in Le Mans as a left tributary.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

2

3.64 km

Beautiful bucolic greenway

Highlight (Segment) • Cycleway

Magnificent section of greenway. The vegetation forms an arc above the road, providing maximum shade on hot days. In places, the trees open a window onto the fields and the track approaches the river. A superb moment out of time.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

3

13.7 km

Saint Peter's Church

Highlight • Other

The Church of Saint-Pierre, under the Ancien Régime, part of the deanery of Bellême, in the diocese of Sées, is located in the heart of the village of Saint-Pierre-la-Bruyère, in the Perche region. This building features a relatively high nave, surmounted by a slate bell tower, extending into a square-plan choir, much lower, flanked by a rectangular chapel to the south.

The façade is supported by four powerful buttresses that appear to date from the late Middle Ages. It features a basket-handle lintel entrance door, dating from the late Gothic period. This door replaced a Romanesque doorway whose semicircular arch appears above the Gothic opening. It is surmounted by a pointed window.

The northern drip wall is flanked, where it meets the western façade, by a brick staircase turret leading to the attic.

The nave was built in the Romanesque period, as evidenced by the small round-arched windows in the upper part of the north drip wall. The bell tower is supported by four posts set within the nave's volume behind the façade wall. The three bays delimited by these posts are covered by a plastered wooden vault, lower than the nave vault, built in the 18th century. The triumphal arch is quite small. It is flanked by two finely crafted stone altarpieces.

The choir is adorned with a large stone altarpiece with three sides delimited by four columns, surmounted by a richly decorated cornice crowned with fire pots. The high altar and side altars, in the same style, were built after the episcopal visit of 1706. They are a representative example of the quality of the renovations carried out in Percheron churches in the 17th and 18th centuries.

A seigneurial chapel, built in the late 15th or early 16th centuries to the south of the choir, was converted into a sacristy between 1701 and 1706, to satisfy the observations made during the episcopal visitations. The arch opening onto the choir was walled up for this purpose.

Aside from the altarpieces, the church contains few furnishings: an 18th-century stone Virgin Mary and a 16th-century baptismal font.

The Sauvegarde de l'Art Français (French Art Protection Agency) granted €4,000 in grants in 2005 for the restoration of the roof.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

4

24.2 km

Notre-Dame Church

Highlight • Other

The church has a Latin cross plan. It has a single nave and a flat chevet. A small building is attached to the chevet. A bell tower flanks the building. Buttresses support the drip walls and the gable wall. Pointed arch bays with tracery illuminate the building. The portal, in a low arch, has its external arched voussure.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

B

24.6 km

End point

Train Station

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

14.0 km

8.05 km

1.79 km

424 m

303 m

Surfaces

7.60 km

6.81 km

5.90 km

4.24 km

< 100 m

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Elevation

Elevation

Nothing selected – click and drag below to see the stats for a specific part of the route.

Highest point (190 m)

Lowest point (110 m)

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Weather

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Sunday 24 May

32°C

17°C

0 %

Additional weather tips

Max wind speed: 15.0 km/h

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Our route recommendations are based on thousands of hikes, rides, and runs completed by other people on komoot.

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5.0

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Villeray Mill – Above the Huisne loop from Saint-Pierre-la-Bruyère

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