The Pays de Buch (French pronunciation: [pe.i byʃ]; lit. "Land of Buch"; Gascon: Lo País de Bug) is one of several areas that make up the Landes forest on Southwestern France's Atlantic coast. It extends across seventeen towns around Arcachon Bay and the valley of the Eyre River. Le Porge is at the north end, with the larger La Teste-de-Buch at the south and Belin-Béliet to the east.

Map of the Pays de Buch and Arcachon Bay

Geography

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Located in the southwest of the Gironde department, the Pays de Buch is bounded by Médoc to the north, the city of Bordeaux to the east, the Atlantic Ocean to the west into which the Arcachon Bay opens, as well as the Pays de Born to the south.

Tourist destinations

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The channels of Arcachon Bay

Landscape

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The Pays de Buch is part of the Landes Forest and the landscape is composed principally of maritime pines. Most of these pine trees were planted in the nineteenth century, except for the working forest of La Teste-de-Buch, which is natural. In the humid areas and near bodies of water like the shores of the Eyre River, the pines form a rich substrate for vegetation.[citation needed]

The lands near the ocean are marked by active dunes, fixed in part by people at the end of the nineteenth century. Further inland, old dunes are oriented in a north–south line and the forest is slowly recovering them, extending a dozen kilometers west–east. Across this dune corridor is the sandy plain of Landes.[citation needed]

The Arcachon Bay is, a large gap in the forested plain, offers a great variety of landscapes: salty marches at the bank of Arguin, the Dune of Pyla, and the Isle of Birds. The bay is the mouth of the Eyre River and receives the fresh water of the area.[citation needed]

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