Why Pau needs a local guide
Henri IV was born in the château. The Boulevard des Pyrénées is a terrace that stretches over the valley with a mountain panorama that changes every hour. Pau has an English past — the Brits came for the climate, built a golf course (the first on the continent), a fox hunt, and a horse racing track. That odd Anglo-Béarnais mix lingers.
Pau sits at the foot of the Pyrenees with a boulevard-length view of the mountain chain that stops people mid-sentence on a clear morning. Henri IV was born in the château at the end of that boulevard, and the British liked the climate so much they built the first golf course on the European continent here in 1856. To become a tour guide in Pau means working the intersection of mountain tourism and Béarnais history — the château, the garbure simmering in farmhouse kitchens, the Jurançon vineyards across the Gave de Pau river. The city is a launch pad for the Pyrenees: hikers in summer, skiers in winter, and the Col du Tourmalet for Tour de France obsessives year-round. But Pau has enough of its own story to fill a full day without leaving town — the English quarter in Trespoey, the Musée des Beaux-Arts, the poule au pot that Henri IV promised every peasant on Sundays. If you want to become a tour guide in Pau, apply for the LYA guide position and bring your mountain knowledge alongside the Béarnais heritage — because the guides who combine both are the ones fully booked from April to October.