There are places that you don't pass through. You stay, you linger, you return. Salies-de-Béarn, hemmed in by the meandering Saleys river, is one of them. This small town in the Béarn region, whose name seems to ooze salt, welcomes you with the gentle, patient manner of towns that have nothing left to prove.

France. Salies de Béarn. 10 times saltier than seawater and rich in trace elements, the water in Salies-de-Béarn has a mineral content that is unique in the world. OT Sales de Béarn.
France. Salies de Béarn. 10 times saltier than seawater and rich in trace elements, the water in Salies-de-Béarn has a mineral content that is unique in the world. OT Salies de Béarn.

As you arrive, you are seized by a feeling of deep-rooted calm, as if the centuries had slowed down here to the pace of a pilgrim or a literate stroller. The light plays on the half-timbered facades, the murmur of the salt water seems to whisper forgotten chronicles, and the neo-Moorish thermal baths watch over the cure of bodies and souls like discreet sultans.

France. Along the charming cobbled streets of Salies-de-Béarn, you can admire the half-timbered facades and look for the oldest inscriptions engraved on the pediments. Béarn des Gaves Tourist Office.
France. Along the charming cobbled streets of Salies-de-Béarn, you can admire the half-timbered facades and look for the oldest inscriptions engraved on the pediments. © Béarn des Gaves Tourist Office.


There's no modern din here, just the echoes of voices, perhaps that of Henry IV on his way to Navarre. Salies is like a fountain of history, salty of course, but also warm and deep.

The Bayaà crypt


An old man in the arcades of the Place du Bayaà - a word that only a native knows how to pronounce from the heart - told me about the Jours de Sel (Salt days) and the Confrérie des Culs Blancs (Brotherhood of White Asses), guardians in their own way of a treasure older than Gascony itself. I saw a tiny Republic, faithful to its ancestral laws, where salt is not just a commodity but an identity.
The narrow streets always lead down to the river, as if everything here converged on this trickle of water that was once white gold. Salies was born of a geological miracle, but it grew out of a human pact. And in this tranquil landscape, I discovered the taste of salt and the fragrance of silence.

The Boar and the Salt: a local parable

France. Drawing water in the Middle Ages in Salies-de-Béarn. Watercolour by Marcel Saule, © Michèle Lasseur.
France. Drawing water in the Middle Ages in Salies-de-Béarn. Watercolour by Marcel Saule, © Michèle Lasseur.


It is often said that great discoveries are born of chance. In Salies-de-Béarn, fortune came from... a wild boar wounded while hunting.
The scene takes place somewhere in the Middle Ages, but the place is already imbued with the earthly alchemy that bubbles up underground with a wealth unknown to man. Hunters are stalking a wild boar in the nearby forest. The beast is hit, collapses not far from what was then an unglamorous marsh, and its pursuers find it after a few days - its body already covered in white crystals and partly preserved.
A miracle! Or rather, natural chemistry. The mud in which the boar expired contained salt. And this salt, both antiseptic and sacred, had preserved the flesh of the beast. Where putrefaction would normally have done its work, time seemed to stand still.
This wild boar, an animal lying on the ground, was to become a founder. Like the she-wolf in Remus and Romulus, the Salies wild boar was more than just prey: it was almost a miracle.
Men were intrigued and explored this marshy land, discovering underground salt springs. This was the origin of Salies, from the word " salis ", salt, the white gold before sugar. The town was built not far from there, with a salt works at its beating heart, feeding the economy, politics, gastronomy and even local institutions.

In this anecdote, a wise man would have seen more than a tale: a metaphor. Salies-de-Béarn was founded on an act of hunting and also on a respect for the natural miracle, on an economy of salt shared between families, recorded by brotherhoods and perpetuated in rituals.
And in the streets of Salies today, between two half-timbered houses, you might come across a small boar carved on a wall, a bench or a fountain. As if in recognition.

Les Parts-Prenants: the notaries of salt and memory: A salty legend

France. The Director of the Musée de Salies-de-Béarn shows us the Livre des Parts-Prenants, the last regulation of which dates from 1587. Michèle Lasseur.
France. The Director of the Musée de Salies-de-Béarn shows us the Livre des Parts-Prenants, the last settlement of which dates from 1587. © Michèle Lasseur.


If it is true, as wrote the historian Fernand Braudel (1902-1985), who studied rural France, that every village in the south of France still has a thousand-year-old political organisation, so Salies-de-Béarn is a small salt republic, and its Confrérie des Parts-Prenants, a Senate of deep waters.
Salt isn't just a condiment here: it's a foundation, a constitution, a common good. Ever since the miracle of the wild boar - the corpse sanctified by the salty mud - the town has built its order around this subterranean wealth. But unlike individual or feudal fortunes, the salt of Salies was very soon everyone's business.

France. Salies de Béarn. Situated on the banks of the first source of the Bayaà, the Maison des Parts-Prenants is one of the oldest in Salies, as it was already mentioned in the Censier of 1535. OT Gaves de Béarn.
France. Salies de Béarn. Situated on the banks of the first source of the Bayaà, the Maison des Parts-Prenants is one of the oldest houses in Salies, having already been listed in the Censier of 1535. © Béarn de Gaves Tourist Office.


This is where the Parts-Prenants come in. First established in the 13th century, these hereditary members formed a community of undivided owners of the salt deposit. A closed but stable community, handed down from generation to generation, by blood or by name. The watchwords: joint ownership, solidarity, continuity. Each share is passed on, not sold, in an almost feudal logic, but without a lord. For in Salies, salt reigns supreme.

France. In the heart of a typical Béarn house, the Musée du Sel et des traditions béarnaises reveals the fabulous history of Salies-de-Béarn and its salt springs. Béarn de Gaves Tourist Office.
France. In the heart of a typical Béarn house, the Musée du Sel et des Traditions béarnaises (Museum of Salt and Béarn Traditions) reveals the fabulous history of Salies-de-Béarn and its salt springs. © Béarn de Gaves Tourist Office.


The Salt Museum, discreet but solemn building, houses their archives, their decisions and their secrets - like a small secular Vatican where the underground treasury is administered. Everything here is codified: who can be a Part-Prenant, how dividends are distributed, how often the fountains shed their salty tears.
And like all ancient communities, the brotherhood has its rituals. Every year, during the Salt Festival, they parade in traditional costume, dressed in white (hence the nickname "White Asses"), girded in red, sometimes holding a symbolic cane or a document yellowed by time.

France. Salies-de-Béarn. Every second weekend in September, the Béarn des Gaves region hosts a not-to-be-missed festival: the Salt Festival. Adrien Basse-Cathalinat.
France. Salies-de-Béarn. Every second weekend in September, the Béarn des Gaves region hosts a not-to-be-missed festival: the Salt Festival. © Adrien Basse-Cathalinat.

Where other towns celebrate their patron saint, Salies honours its salt - and its guardians. It's a secular procession, to be sure, but one with an almost religious fervour. As the Parts-Prenants pass by, you can sense a form of attachment stronger than the law: a bond of flesh and soil, of memory and matter.
This institution could be seen as a miracle of republican longevity: a model of shared economy, where wealth is neither speculated nor squandered, but protected as a sacred common good, like the waters of an oasis.
And at a time when the world is buzzing with individualism, Salies is keeping its property safe, in a form of gentle, stubborn loyalty. For as the motto proudly inscribed at the heart of the town puts it:  "Who has salt, has life". . And in Salies-de-Béarn, it's the Parts-Prenants who look after them.

The benefits of a relaxing, salty break

France. Just 1 hour from the Pyrenees mountains and the beaches of the Basque Country and Landes, bordered by lush green plains and pretty landscapes, the Selya Resort & Spa is the promise of an invigorating, salty break. Studio Etika.
France. Just 1 hour from the Pyrenees mountains and the beaches of the Basque Country and the Landes region, bordered by lush green plains and pretty landscapes, the Selya Resort & Spa promises an invigorating, salty break. © Studio Etika.

Salies-de-Béarn is also a town of water. But it's not water you drink. It's water that stings, water that bites. It comes out of the ground laden with salt and it has the character of salt: brutal, conservative, tenacious.
People don't come here for the scenery, however beautiful, or for the sun, however generous. No, they come for the treatment. That's what the brochure says. But I wanted to know what is really being treated at Salies. The therapeutic properties of Salies-de-Béarn thermal spring water have been proven in the treatment of a wide range of conditions, including endometriosis, menopausal problems, rheumatic pain and enuresis in children.
The first thing I notice is the silence. At the spa, you don't talk much. You soak, massage and sweat. The staff are gentle, almost religious. One nurse said to me:  "We treat pain, but not all pain". .
I sat on a bench near the salt jets. A woman in her forties was reading a magazine without turning a page. A man with a high belly and slicked-back hair was chatting away without listening. I finally understood: pain is a facade. Visitors to the spa arrive with backache, leave with a clear complexion and sometimes a lighter heart. This isn't a hospital, it's a stopover.

France. The high level of salinity and the presence of 26 trace elements mean that the thermal waters of Salies-de-Béarn are recognised as effective in treating a number of illnesses. Studio Etika.
France. The high level of salinity and the presence of 26 trace elements - 290 gr/l, 10 times more than seawater - mean that the thermal waters of Salies-de-Béarn are recognised as effective in treating a number of illnesses. © Studio Etika.

In the bathing corridors, doors slam softly. And under the bathrobes, which are sometimes too white, you can feel the scars of other pains: loneliness, regrets, small ordinary failures. I met a doctor. He told me about sodium, calcium and osmotic pressures. I asked him what he thought of his patients. He smiled: "They're people like anyone else. But here, they have the right to admit they're tired"..
Then I understood. Salies-de-Béarn is not a spa. It's a secular confessional for tired souls. People come here bent over, and sometimes leave straighter. Is it the water that does it? A psychoanalyst would have said:  "I saw in the steam of the thermal baths what France keeps silent about: people who are no longer in pain, but who need to be touched.
And let me tell you: at Salies, you don't always get better. But you do get a real rest.

France. The thermal baths are surrounded by Belle Époque and Art Deco buildings, such as the Casino de Salies, housed in the hall of the 19th-century Hôtel du Parc. Salies de Béarn Tourist Office.
France. The thermal baths are surrounded by Belle Époque and Art Deco buildings, such as the Casino de Salies, housed in the hall of the 19th-century Hôtel du Parc. © Tourist office in Salies de Béarn.

Selya Resort & Spa

Tourist Office of Salies-de-Béarn
8 bis Pl. du Bayaà
64270 Salies-de-Béarn
https://www.tourisme-bearn-gaves.com

Salies-de-Béarn saltworks operating company
Avenue des Salines - Herre district
64270 Salies-de-Béarn
05 59 65 62 29

Text : Michèle Lasseur