The town of Percé, named after Percé Rock, is located at the tip of the Gaspé Peninsula, directly opposite the famous rock and Bonaventure Island. Percé Rock has captured the attention of passersby for decades: descriptive notes by Samuel de Champlain from 1603 mention the beauty of the area.
Once a small fishing village, Percé offers a unique built heritage and an exceptional maritime panorama: Percé Rock, like a massive ship stranded near the shore, is overflown by birds and accessible at low tide, with steep cliffs on either side, and nearby, Bonaventure Island, now a Quebec national park, a summer refuge for over 250,000 migratory birds, including 120,000 northern gannets.
Behind the magnificent Saint-Michel Church, trails lead to the lookouts at the summit of Mont Ste-Anne, the Grotto, and the Crevasse, where one can marvel at the site's beauty.
In the village, there are old fishing buildings, ancestral homes, a museum, art galleries, and an impressive tourist infrastructure.
Photo source: Wikipedia, by Claude Boucher