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Sur le mur du port de pêche, l'artiste Klaus Dauven et Kärcher ont créé une œuvre d'art éphémère et représenté par des visages de personnalités locales en utilisant la méthode dite du graffiti inversé.
Sur le mur du port de pêche, l'artiste Klaus Dauven et Kärcher ont créé une œuvre d'art éphémère et représenté par des visages de personnalités locales en utilisant la méthode dite du graffiti inversé.
Sete Cidades is an active volcano that sits on the western part of the island. There are a number of hikes around the caldera and to various viewpoints.
View of Sete, France from the top of Mont St Clair.
Sète known as Cette until 1928, is a commune in the Hérault department in the Occitanie region in southern France. Known as the Venice of Languedoc and the singular island it is a port and a seaside resort on the Mediterranean with its own very strong cultural identity, traditions, cuisine and dialect. It is also the hometown of artists like Paul Valéry, Jean Vilar, Georges Brassens, Gregory Del Piero, Hervé Di Rosa, Manitas de Plata, and Robert Combas.
Built upon and around Mont St Clair, Sète is situated on the south-eastern hub of the Bassin de Thau, an enclosed salt water lake used primarily for oyster and mussel fields. To its other side lies the Mediterranean. And the town has a network of canals which are link between the Étang de Thau and the Mediterranean Sea.
Marella Explorer can be seen docked in the port.
Sète, a largish port on the coast of Languedoc in France, is squeezed between the Mediterranean sea and the "Etang de Tau", a huge inland expanse of sea water. The town is crisscrossed by canals that link the sea port to the Etang de Tau. One tradition is boat josting : each neighbourhood sponsors a boat with ten rowers, a pilot and a spear holder. As two boats row forcefully toward one another, the aim is to take down the opponent's spear holder.