Routes

Planner

Features

Updates

App

Login or Signup

Get the App

Login or Signup

Routes
Road cycling routes
France
Pays de la Loire
La Flèche

Chemiré-En-Charnie

The best traffic-free bike rides around Chemiré-En-Charnie

5.0

(2)

158

riders

36

rides

No traffic road cycling routes around Chemiré-En-Charnie are situated within the Sarthe department of the Pays de la Loire region, offering diverse terrain for road cyclists. The area is defined by the historic "Charnie" region, featuring the Forêt de la Charnie with its small, shaded roads and winding paths through wide valleys. This landscape provides a mix of wooded sections and open countryside, ideal for tranquil cycling experiences.

Best no traffic road cycling routes around Chemiré-En-Charnie

  • The most popular no…

Last updated: July 3, 2026

7

riders

#1.

Ancien chateau de Tennie loop from Forêt domaniale de Petite Charnie

36.5km

01:35

230m

230m

Easy road ride. Great for any fitness level. Mostly well-paved surfaces and easy to ride.

Navigate with device

Send to Phone

Save

Easy

Moderate road ride. Good fitness required. Mostly well-paved surfaces and easy to ride.

Moderate
guide_signup
Let us show you the way with the komoot mobile app
With a free komoot account, you can easily find, customize, and navigate endless outdoor adventures.

Sign up for free

Moderate road ride. Good fitness required. Mostly well-paved surfaces and easy to ride.

Moderate

Moderate road ride. Good fitness required. Mostly well-paved surfaces and easy to ride.

Moderate

Hard road ride. Very good fitness required. Mostly well-paved surfaces and easy to ride.

Hard
Sign up for free to see 32 more rides around Chemiré-En-Charnie.

Get access to more routes and recommendations from other explorers.

Sign up for free

Already have an account?

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

Start today with a free account

Your next adventure awaits.

Login or Signup

Popular around Chemiré-En-Charnie

Traffic-free bike rides around Chemiré-En-Charnie

Tips from the Community

AeroGrail By Chris 🇨🇵 🏔
August 6, 2025, Église Saint Jean Baptiste

The church dates from the early 12th century. It is a church enclosed within its cemetery. It retains the typical features of small rural churches of the 12th century. It has preserved its apse, its gable-roofed bell tower, its small Romanesque windows, its arcades with a barrel-vaulted transept, and the exposed timbers of its nave. In addition to 14th-century wall paintings, discovered by chance in 1888 by workers whitewashing the interior of the sanctuary, the building houses an 18th-century tuffeau altarpiece, a 15th-century baptismal font, and a 16th-century terracotta statue of the Virgin. The church is part of the parish of Saint-Pierre-du-Maine. The church has been listed as a historic monument since May 8, 1958. The altarpiece, the baptismal font, and the Virgin and Child are listed as historical objects.

Translated by Google

0

0

Parish Church of Saints Peter and Paul. The parish was once part of the archdeaconry of Sablé and was under the jurisdiction of the bishopric of Le Mans. It is only mentioned in texts from the 12th century onwards. The construction of the building, however, predates these first mentions and dates back to the first half of the 11th century. Most of the nave survives from this early church, whose south wall features a narrow, semicircular bay, dressed in red sandstone. The north wall partially collapsed in 1558 and was rebuilt shortly after. To the south, at the junction of the nave and the choir, the bell tower was added in the 12th century. It is a massive tower supported at the corners by buttresses; it is quadrangular in plan and built outside the building. At its summit, this tower features two levels of openings on each side: first, a relatively wide, double-arched bay, surmounted by two narrower, semicircular openings. It is covered with a saddleback roof, a feature found in several surrounding churches. Its eastern face is flanked by an apse housing a chapel dedicated to Saint Louis. A doorway in the tower's west wall, with a lintel carved with an ogee (opened in the late 15th or early 16th century), provides access from the outside. The choir, whose drip walls are built in line with the nave walls, was built in the 13th century on the site of a more modest choir. It features a flat chevet pierced by two narrow pointed-arch windows (blocked during the construction of the altarpiece). The same type of openings are found on its side walls. As with the nave, the main structure is made of sandstone rubble, but for this part, the walls are supported by buttresses with dressed stone glacis. These are joined at their summit by a very crude modillioned cornice, which is particularly visible on the north face. Internally, the building forms an elongated volume, with the choir and nave separated by a thick wall pierced by a double-rolled pointed arch: the nave and choir occupy two-thirds and one-third of the space, respectively. Despite some modest later alterations, the church retains its ancient appearance. The furnishings were largely renewed in the second half of the 18th century. The three limestone altarpieces, built in 1766 at the initiative of the priest Jacques-René Guitton de l'Écluse, are the work of an architect from Précigné (Sarthe) named Lalande. The main altarpiece, placed against the apse wall, is concave in shape. It comprises three bays and retains its ancient statuary: Saint Peter and Saint Paul, patron saints of the church, in the side niches, and Saint Anne and the Virgin Mary in the upper one. The center is occupied by a painting depicting the Adoration of the Magi, a copy after Rubens. The side altars, located at the entrance to the choir, are dedicated to the Virgin and Saint Julian. A wrought iron arch serves as a beam of glory: it is the work of a local marshal, Château. A few years later, in 1785, a new baptismal font was installed, as was a pulpit (Perret, carpenter). In 2004, the Sauvegarde de l'Art français (French Art Protection Agency) granted €4,000 in aid for the repair of the roof and the installation of a lightning rod.

Translated by Google

0

0

Church of Saint-Pierre. Auvers, a large village located 8 kilometers from Sablé and the Abbey of Solesmes, is mentioned as early as the 11th century as a priory dependent on the Abbey of La Couture in Mans. The texts seem to establish that its foundation was favored by Guy de Laval and later by his son, Hamon. The original chapel was replaced in the 12th century by a church consecrated by Guillaume Passavent, Bishop of Le Mans, which allows us to date its construction between 1154 and 1187. The priory, after a period of relative prosperity in the 13th century, no longer housed a prior from the 15th century onward. The church served as the parish church, while the priory under its control was transformed and enlarged: part of the 17th-century dwelling still survives in the extension of the south arm of the transept. From the 12th-century church Only the nave remains, as the transept and choir were rebuilt in 1866. The overall silhouette of the building is strongly marked by the contrast between the modest volume of the old nave and the substantial eastern block. The plan is that of a Latin cross with a single nave and transept. The 19th-century alterations consisted of building this transept on the site of the two former chapels of Saint Anne and Saint Michael, creating two apsidal chapels opening onto the arms of this transept, and rebuilding the choir and apse. As a reminder, the chapel of Saint Anne served as a burial place for the lords of Le Plessis, and that of Saint Michael for the lords of La Panne. The bell tower of the old building has been preserved to the north, as has the chapel of Saint Peter to the south, which, attached to the priory, was reserved for religious orders. In plan, the base of the bell tower and the chapel of Saint Peter form, with the new transept, a sort of double transept. The western facade is adorned with a portal that dates back to the early 19th century, surmounted by a window that is likely contemporary. The nave is relatively narrow and elongated, its masonry constructed of small, cubic rubble stones, with roussard sandstone quoins. It is lit to the south by three semicircular bays and two to the north, which were modified in the 19th century. Some of the upper Romanesque openings, which were blocked, are still recognizable on the exterior of the north wall. It is covered with a paneled vault with exposed tie beams. The base of the bell tower has a ribbed vault, with a rather heavy profile. The interest of this building lies in the large collection of mural paintings dating from the 16th century that cover the walls of the nave. These paintings were partially discovered as early as 1903 and the painter Yperman was then commissioned to make copies for the Museum of Comparative Sculpture. In 1948, they were the subject of a classification order, then, in 1973, a study by the Champs-sur-Marne Laboratory. Several cycles can be recognized, notably: on the south wall, the Nativity and the Flight into Egypt, as well as the life of Saint Martin; on the north wall, the Last Judgment and the Sacrifice of Abraham, as well as Saint James the Greater and the legend of Saint Hubert. They also feature numerous miracle-working saints: Saint Europa, who cured dropsy, Saint Apollonia for toothaches, Saint Avertinus of Tours, for headaches, Saint Generated, the object of a popular cult in the region. Some forty years ago, Saint Opportune, Saint Julian of Brioude, Saint Mammès, the "Tale of the Three Dead and the Three Living," and numerous other scenes were still being identified. The poor condition of the framework and roofing led to deterioration of the building's walls, particularly those of the nave: the Sauvegarde de l'Art Français (French Art Protection Agency) awarded a grant of 60,000 francs for this work in 1997.

Translated by Google

0

0

The Church of Our Lady of Sablé-sur-Sarthe is believed to have been built in the 15th century. Extensively restored over the centuries, it now boasts a late 18th-century neo-Gothic style, which has helped to highlight its medieval architecture. During the third quarter of the 17th century, the church's high altar was restored, and at the end of the first quarter of the 18th century, three new bells were cast by workshops in Le Mans. Finally, in the mid-18th century, the bell tower was rebuilt, as we can still see it today.

Translated by Google

0

0

Notre-Dame-du-Pé shared its history with Anjou. Today, it is part of the Angevin Maine. In the Middle Ages, the parish was part of the Angevin seneschalship of La Flèche. Under the Ancien Régime, the commune was attached to the elected territory of La Flèche. During the French Revolution, the commune, like all those in the seneschalship of La Flèche, was attached to the new department of Sarthe. In 1801, during the Concordat, the parish was separated from the Diocese of Angers and transferred to that of Le Mans.

Translated by Google

0

0

Paul_C
April 27, 2023, Abbaye de Solesmes

At the beginning of the 11th century it was a Benedictine abbey. It is worth visiting, but also crossing the river to admire it from its elevated position.

Translated by Google

2

0

Paul_C
April 26, 2023, Manoir de la Cour

Built in the 13th century, the Manoir de la Cour is one of the rare examples of a civil building from this period that is still well preserved. It has been restored and now houses a permanent exhibition on the history of the building in the Middle Ages.

Translated by Google

2

0

Paul_C
April 26, 2023, Moulin de Parcé

The mill dates from the 10th century. The lords of Champagne allowed the inhabitants of the parish to use the mill for a fee. In the 19th century, three wheels were in service. The smallest was used to grind oak or chestnut bark to tan hides. The other two wheels were used to produce flour. The mill has been beautifully restored over the past decade.

Translated by Google

2

0

Frequently Asked Questions

How many no traffic road cycling routes are available around Chemiré-En-Charnie?

There are over 35 dedicated no traffic road cycling routes around Chemiré-En-Charnie, offering a variety of experiences for different skill levels. You'll find 12 easy routes, 24 moderate routes, and 1 more challenging option.

What kind of terrain can I expect on these no traffic road cycling routes?

The routes around Chemiré-En-Charnie traverse the historic 'Charnie' area, featuring picturesque landscapes. You'll encounter small, traffic-light roads, often winding through the Forêt de la Charnie with its 'petits chemins très ombragés' (small, very shaded paths) and 'chemins creux' (hollow paths). The broader Pays de la Loire region offers a mix of countryside, valleys, and wooded areas.

Are there any easy, car-free road cycling routes suitable for beginners or families?

Yes, there are 12 easy routes perfect for those seeking a relaxed ride. An excellent option is the Étang de la Groie – Ancien chateau de Tennie loop from Saint-Symphorien, which covers approximately 37.5 kilometers with gentle elevation changes, making it very accessible.

What are some notable landmarks or attractions I can see along the no traffic road cycling routes?

While cycling, you can explore the natural beauty of the Forêt de la Charnie. For historical and cultural sights, consider routes that pass near attractions like the medieval village of Sainte-Suzanne, home to Sainte-Suzanne Castle, or the Château de Clairbois. The Le Tertre Ganne — Scenic viewpoint overlooking Sainte-Suzanne also offers beautiful vistas.

Are there any longer, moderate no traffic road cycling routes for more experienced cyclists?

Absolutely, the majority of routes are moderate, offering a good challenge. For example, the Notre Dame Church – Solesmes Abbey loop from Mareil-en-Champagne is a moderate 53-kilometer ride with over 340 meters of elevation gain, providing a rewarding experience through varied landscapes.

What do other road cyclists enjoy most about cycling in Chemiré-En-Charnie?

The area is highly rated by the komoot community, with an average score of 4.3 stars. Reviewers often praise the tranquility of the small, traffic-light roads, the scenic beauty of the forests, and the variety of routes available for different fitness levels.

Are there any circular no traffic road cycling routes available?

Yes, many of the routes are designed as loops, allowing you to start and finish in the same location. For instance, the Château loop from Mareil-en-Champagne is a moderate 39-kilometer circular route that takes you through the charming local scenery.

What is the best time of year to enjoy no traffic road cycling in Chemiré-En-Charnie?

The Pays de la Loire region generally offers pleasant cycling conditions from spring through early autumn. Spring brings blooming landscapes, while summer provides warm weather, often with shaded paths in the forests. Autumn offers beautiful foliage. Always check local weather forecasts before heading out.

Can I find routes that offer a good balance of distance and elevation?

Many routes provide a good mix. The Saint John the Baptist Church loop from Mareil-en-Champagne is a moderate 53-kilometer route with over 410 meters of elevation gain, offering a substantial ride with engaging climbs and descents.

Are there any routes that pass through or near interesting villages or towns?

Yes, several routes will take you through or near charming local communities. For example, the Statue and figurine loop from Loué, a moderate 46-kilometer ride, starts from Loué, allowing you to explore the town before or after your cycle.

Most popular routes around Chemiré-En-Charnie

Hiking around Chemiré-En-Charnie

Most popular attractions around Chemiré-En-Charnie

Places to see

Store rating

Get inspired with the komoot mobile app

With a free komoot account, you can easily find, customize, and navigate endless outdoor adventures.

or

Join komoot Now

Store rating

Explore more

Browse the best Road cycling routes in other regions.

CourtillersSablé-Sur-SartheYvré-Le-PôlinVionPincéFilléÉtival-Lès-Le-MansMaignéPirmilLouplandeJuigné-Sur-SarthePrécignéVoivres-Lès-Le-MansBoussePoillé-Sur-VègreNotre-Dame-Du-PéFercé-Sur-SartheChemiré-Le-GaudinMézerayJupillesSolesmesLa Suze-Sur-SartheSaint-Jean-Du-BoisFontenay-Sur-VègreChâteau-L'HermitageEtang Des VarennesMareil-Sur-LoirAvoiseAuvers-Le-HamonSouligné-FlacéClermont-CréansMalicorne-Sur-SartheDureilNoyen-Sur-SartheRequeilFléePontvallainRoézé-Sur-SartheDissay-Sous-CourcillonLigronVaasAsnières-Sur-VègreChantenay-VilledieuTasséVerneil-Le-ChétifBeaumont-Pied-De-BœufBazouges-Sur-Le-LoirLa Bruère-Sur-LoirMayetVouvray-Sur-LoirLouaillesChâteau-Du-LoirNogent-Sur-LoirLavernatMontabonLuceauAmnéCourcelles-La-ForêtLouéLe Grand-LucéVillaines-Sous-LucéBeaumont-Sur-DêmeLa Fontaine-Saint-MartinCrosmièresCérans-FoulletourteParigné-Le-PôlinOizéTassilléCré-Sur-LoirVillaines-Sous-MalicornePoncé-Sur-Le-LoirRuillé-Sur-LoirBrûlonArthezéMarçonLa Chapelle-D'AlignéSaint-Denis-D'OrquesChahaignesBrains-Sur-GéeCourdemancheChevilléAvesséForêt de la Grande CharnieSaint-Georges-De-La-CouéeJoué-En-CharnieMareil-En-ChampagneSaint-Ouen-En-ChampagneSarcéLe BailleulSaint-Vincent-Du-LorouërLa Chartre-Sur-Le-LoirLhommeCoulongéViré-En-ChampagneThoiré-Sur-DinanPruillé-L'ÉguilléSaint-Pierre-Du-LorouërSaint-Pierre-De-ChevilléAubigné-RacanParcé-Sur-SartheMansignéLavenayLa Chapelle-Aux-ChouxSaint-Germain-D'ArcéGuécélardThorée-Les-PinsSavigné-Sous-Le-LudeChenuCrannes-En-ChampagneSaint-Jean-De-La-MotteSouvigné-Sur-SartheLuché-PringéLa Chapelle-GaugainÉpineu-Le-ChevreuilLe LudeVallon-Sur-GéeSaint-Christophe-En-ChampagneSaint-Pierre-Des-BoisChassilléAuvers-Sous-MontfauconLongnesSpayMontreuil-Le-HenriCoulans-Sur-GéeDissé-Sous-Le-Lude

Nearby adventure guides

Things to Do around Neuvillette-En-Charnie

background

Get ready to conquer new peaks

Sign up for Free

Explore
RoutesRoute plannerFeaturesHikesMTB TrailsRoad cycling routesBikepackingSitemap
Download the app
Follow Us on Socials

© komoot GmbH

Privacy Policy