Why Angers needs a local guide
The Apocalypse Tapestry in the Château d'Angers is one of the most important medieval artworks in Europe and most people have never heard of it. Angers is a calm Loire Valley city with slate roofs, a young population (the university is big), and vineyards that produce some of France's best whites just outside town.
Angers sits at the western edge of the Loire Valley, receiving around 1.5 million visitors a year — a fraction of what the chateaux further east attract. That imbalance is your opening. The Chateau d'Angers holds the Apocalypse Tapestry, a hundred meters of 14th-century weaving that is one of the most important medieval artworks in Europe, and most people have never heard of it. To become a tour guide in Angers is to work a city that functions best as a base: Saumur and its troglodyte caves sit forty minutes east, the Cointreau distillery runs tours where the orange-peel smell hits you from the parking lot, and the Savennieres and Quarts de Chaume vineyards produce some of the finest white wines in France just outside the city limits. The Doutre quarter across the Maine river has a calm village atmosphere, and the Sunday market along Boulevard Foch moves at a pace that feels nothing like Paris. Becoming a tour guide in Angers means connecting the tapestry to the troglodyte cellars to the Layon valley wines in a single day — a combination that no other city in the Loire offers from one starting point. If you become a tour guide in Angers, the competition is nearly nonexistent and the raw material is world-class.