What Really Happened In Calvados Skies?
Calvados has a modest but unusually useful UFO record: not because it contains a famous “classic” case, but because France’s official UAP archive lets readers see how ordinary strange-sky reports are investigated, downgraded, left unresolved for lack of data, or occasionally explained with physical evidence.
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Introduction
The most interesting Calvados case is probably the 5 August 1991 Lisieux/Hermival-les-Vaux sighting, where two gendarmes reported a fast, silent red sphere at low altitude. GEIPAN classifies it as “C”: not identified because reliable information is insufficient. That distinction matters. In Calvados, the official record is less a catalogue of confirmed mysteries than a practical lesson in how witness testimony, local geography, night lighting, coastal aviation, and incomplete records shape UFO history.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
What the official Calvados record actually shows
France is unusual because UFO-style reports are handled by a public body inside CNES, the national space agency. GEIPAN was created within CNES in 1977, collects and analyses UAP reports, publishes anonymised files, and works with partners including the gendarmerie, police, the Air and Space Force, CNRS and Météo-France. Its own wording is careful: it uses UAP, or PAN in French, rather than UFO, partly because many reports are not solid “objects” at all and partly because “UFO” too easily implies flying saucers or extraterrestrials.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frGeipan Mission & Geipan | GEIPANGeipan Mission & Geipan | GEIPAN
That framework is important for Calvados. The department’s GEIPAN entries are mostly routine, terrestrial reports: a moving yellow light near Hérouville in 1978, a fast orange-haloed object near Evrecy in 1979, a burning paper balloon at Honfleur in 1980, probable Venus at Aunay-sur-Odon in 1983, a brief red sphere near Lisieux in 1991, debris at Tilly-sur-Seulles in 2012 and Caen in 2021, drone-like lights at Bayeux in 2023, and a probable sky-tracer at Trouville-sur-Mer in 2024.[Geipan+4Geipan+4Geipan]cnes-geipan.frGeipan Recherche de cas | GEIPANGeipan Recherche de cas | GEIPAN
GEIPAN’s classification system helps separate different kinds of uncertainty. “A” means a phenomenon is perfectly identified after investigation; “B” means probably identified; “C” means not identified because of lack of data or information; and “D” means not identified after investigation. GEIPAN says the judgement depends on two ideas: residual strangeness after checking known explanations, and consistency, meaning the quantity and reliability of the information available.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frGeipan La méthodologie de classification au GEIPAN | GEIPANGeipan La méthodologie de classification au GEIPAN | GEIPAN
That makes the Calvados record more sober than many UFO retellings. A “C” case is not automatically a stronger mystery than a “B” case. Often it means the report is too thin to test properly. GEIPAN’s national figures also put Calvados in context: CNES currently describes 24.6% of phenomena as clearly identified, 39.7% as probably identified, 32.4% as unidentified for lack of data, and only 3.3% as unidentified after investigation.[CNES]cnes.frGEIPAN | CNESGEIPAN | CNES
The 1991 Lisieux case is Calvados’ clearest unresolved entry
The Calvados case most likely to interest readers looking for a genuine unresolved report is the GEIPAN file listed as Lisieux, observed on 5 August 1991. The case involved two gendarmes on patrol near Hermival-les-Vaux, who reported a red sphere about 80 centimetres in diameter moving very quickly and silently at roughly 15 metres above the ground. GEIPAN notes that the observation was very brief, that the two gendarmes’ statements were concordant, and that the phenomenon could not be identified.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
The witness profile gives the case some weight. Police or gendarmerie witnesses are not automatically more accurate than civilians, but they are usually more familiar with formal observation, written statements and local reporting procedures. In France, the gendarmerie is also a major point of entry for UAP reports because of its territorial coverage and proximity to the public.[Gendarmerie Nationale]gendarmerie.interieur.gouv.frOpen source on gouv.fr.
Still, the case is not a strong “unknown after investigation” file. GEIPAN classifies it as “C”, meaning lack of reliable information, not “D”, meaning unidentified after investigation. There is no public indication in the short case page of photographs, video, radar data, physical traces, independent civilian witnesses, or a longer observation window. The result is a credible but weakly evidenced local mystery: worth preserving in Calvados UFO history, but not strong enough to carry large claims.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
The case also shows the difference between witness credibility and evidential strength. Two gendarmes may give concordant testimony, but a few seconds of observation of a small luminous phenomenon at night leaves investigators with very little to test. Possible explanations such as a small pyrotechnic object, a misjudged light source, an animal- or vehicle-related reflection, or a brief atmospheric effect cannot be assessed confidently from the published summary alone. GEIPAN’s “C” classification is therefore a cautious outcome, not a declaration that the object was exotic.
The solved cases are the real pattern
Most Calvados entries become more understandable when treated as identification problems rather than folklore. The department’s official record repeatedly shows how mundane phenomena can look extraordinary when seen briefly, at night, at low altitude, or without a clear scale.
At Hérouville/Biéville-Beuville on 6 August 1978, two witnesses reported a very bright yellow light moving slowly and regularly at high altitude for about three quarters of an hour before disappearing. GEIPAN classifies the case “B” and summarises it as a probable satellite observation. The long duration, steady motion and high altitude make that interpretation much more plausible than a manoeuvring craft.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
At Evrecy/Esquay-Notre-Dame on 8 September 1979, two witnesses saw a circular object moving fast, losing altitude and surrounded by an orange luminous halo. GEIPAN’s probable explanation is an atmospheric re-entry. A striking detail in the report is that one witness received an electric shock while trying to open a window, but GEIPAN explicitly says that this episode cannot be directly linked to the observed phenomenon, and that the local electricity station reported no anomaly on its lines.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
At Honfleur on 19 August 1980, a group of young people saw a pale, rounded luminous mass moving slowly and swaying in the sky before it caught fire and fell. This is one of the department’s most satisfying solved cases because the gendarmerie recovered part of the object in a tree. The debris showed it was a small home-made paper-and-wire hot-air balloon, although its owner was not found.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
Why Calvados produces sky confusions
Calvados is not an isolated rural sky. It has a Channel coastline, tourist towns, busy roads, ports, two significant civil airports, local leisure flying, and a long aviation history. Caen-Carpiquet Airport is close to Caen and describes itself as being 7 km from the city centre, while Deauville-Normandie Airport is at Saint-Gatien-des-Bois, close to Deauville and the Côte Fleurie. Aéroport de Caen Carpiquet+2Aéroport de Deauville[caen.aeroport.fr]caen.aeroport.frOpen source on aeroport.fr.
That aviation setting matters for UAP interpretation. Aircraft, approach lights, helicopters, drones, sky-tracers, contrails and airport-area lighting can all produce reports that sound strange when described from a single viewpoint. GEIPAN’s Calvados files include cases interpreted as contrails, lasers, drones, sky-tracers, lanterns and debris; the department’s sighting history is therefore partly a history of ordinary aerial activity being seen under imperfect conditions.[Geipan+2Geipan]cnes-geipan.frGeipan Recherche de cas | GEIPANGeipan Recherche de cas | GEIPAN
The old military significance of Caen-Carpiquet adds local texture but should not be overplayed. The airfield was inaugurated just before the Second World War, captured by German forces in 1940, fought over in 1944, and later developed for civil use. That history explains why aviation is deeply embedded in the area’s landscape and memory, but it does not turn modern Calvados sightings into military mysteries by default.[Wikipedia]WikipediaCaen–Carpiquet AirportCaen–Carpiquet Airport
The coast also changes perception. Lights near the sea horizon can be hard to judge for height, distance and speed. The 2024 Trouville-sur-Mer report is a good example: a witness facing the sea saw a round luminous mass moving apparently west to east at very low altitude in cloudy sky for around 15 seconds. GEIPAN judged the consistency only medium because there was one witness and no photo or video, and classified the case “B” as a probable sky-tracer.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
The 1954 stories are colourful but fragile
Any department-level UFO history in France has to face 1954, the year of the famous French wave of flying-saucer reports. Calvados appears in that tradition, but the evidence is much weaker than the better-known national cases. A frequently repeated 18 October 1954 story places a “saucer” at Moyaux, or sometimes Moyeux, Noyeux or a locality reported from Lisieux. In the common version, several people ran across fields towards a saucer surrounded by white smoke after a child alerted them; a farmer named Filate supposedly fell into a deep pond while staring at the sky and nearly drowned.[Ufologie]ufologie.patrickgross.orgOpen source on patrickgross.org.
The value of this story is not that it proves a UFO incident. Its value is that it shows how the 1954 wave mixed local press humour, copying between newspapers, uncertain place names and later catalogue entries. Patrick Gross’s specialist catalogue notes that the account was reported in the press from 20 October 1954, that the location shifted between Calvados and Eure in later retellings, and that there was not enough information to evaluate what the “saucer” might have been. His own discussion even raises the possibility that the story may have been a press invention or at least a weak anecdote rather than a serious observation file.[Ufologie]ufologie.patrickgross.orgOpen source on patrickgross.org.
That makes the 1954 Calvados material best treated as media history, not hard evidence. It belongs in the department’s UFO page because readers will encounter it in catalogues and older ufological literature, but it should not be presented beside GEIPAN’s later gendarmerie-backed records as if it had the same evidential status. The 1954 item has charm, but its sourcing is unstable, its details are thin, and its location history is messy.[Ufologie]ufologie.patrickgross.orgOpen source on patrickgross.org.
A separate academic reference to the 1954 Normandy case at Bauquay in Calvados appears in a 1986 JSTOR-indexed article about mysterious celestial objects and the movement from myth to reality. That confirms that Calvados was part of later discussion of the French 1954 material, but the accessible bibliographic snippet is not enough on its own to reconstruct the case in detail.[JSTOR]jstor.orgOpen source on jstor.org.
Recent cases show how the UFO category has changed
The recent Calvados cases are especially useful because they show modern explanations that did not dominate older UFO catalogues. Lanterns, drones, LED-lit devices, projectors and lightweight commercial materials have become a major part of the strange-sky landscape.
The Bayeux case of 22 October 2023 is a good example. A lone witness saw a red light moving rapidly, then stopping; red and green lights blinked alternately; a pale yellow conical beam pointed towards the ground and swept for several seconds; the object then moved away with a brief zigzag. GEIPAN summarised the case as a probable drone. The reported colours, hovering, beam and manoeuvres fit a drone hypothesis far better than older explanations such as planets or balloons.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
The Caen case of 19 October 2021 shows another modern pattern: not a light in the night sky, but an oddly shaped dark object in daytime. Two friends eating on a rooftop terrace saw a silent, dark, low-altitude object with a flat underside and rounded top; it moved in a straight line, made a slight turn and rose. GEIPAN classified it “A”, identifying it as a light, rigid piece of black expanded PVC foam carried by the wind.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
The 2013–2014 cluster in the GEIPAN table is also revealing. Around that period, Calvados entries include Thai lanterns at Biéville-Beuville, Caen and Giberville, a flare at Saint-Vigor-le-Grand, a contrail at Trouville-sur-Mer, and insufficient-information cases at Vire and Saint-Gatien-des-Bois. This does not necessarily prove a local “flap” in the dramatic sense; it may also reflect reporting habits, public awareness, and the spread of lanterns, cameras and online reporting routes.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frGeipan Recherche de cas | GEIPANGeipan Recherche de cas | GEIPAN
How to judge a Calvados UFO claim
The most useful question is not “Was it a UFO?” but “What kind of uncertainty are we dealing with?” In Calvados, the answer usually falls into one of four groups.
Identified after evidence was checked. Honfleur 1980 is the clearest example because debris was found in a tree and matched a paper-and-wire balloon. Caen 2021 is another strong example, with GEIPAN classifying the dark object as debris. These cases may sound strange at witness level but become ordinary after investigation.[Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
Probably identified, but with some uncertainty. Hérouville 1978 as a probable satellite, Evrecy 1979 as a probable atmospheric re-entry, Aunay-sur-Odon 1983 as probable Venus, Tilly-sur-Seulles 2012 as windblown debris, Bayeux 2023 as a probable drone, and Trouville 2024 as a probable sky-tracer all fall into this broad pattern. These are not worthless reports; they are exactly the cases that show how investigators compare witness descriptions with known phenomena.[Geipan+5Geipan+5Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
What Calvados adds to French UFO history
Calvados is not a department defined by a single landmark UFO event. Its contribution is quieter: it shows the everyday workings of the French official system at local scale. The department’s files include witnesses with different levels of reliability, reports with and without physical evidence, cases where astronomy or wind explains a sighting, and cases where modern devices such as drones and sky-tracers alter what “UFO” reports look like.[Geipan+2CNES]cnes-geipan.frGeipan Mission & Geipan | GEIPANGeipan Mission & Geipan | GEIPAN
The department also illustrates why public UFO archives need careful reading. A table of cases can make Calvados look like a chain of mysteries; the individual files show something more nuanced. Some entries are solved cleanly. Some are probable identifications. Some are weak because the observation was brief, solitary or undocumented. A few, especially the 1991 gendarme sighting near Lisieux, remain interesting precisely because they resist easy explanation while still falling short of strong proof.[Geipan+2Geipan]cnes-geipan.frOpen source on cnes-geipan.fr.
For a mainstream reader, the honest takeaway is that Calvados has a real UFO history, but not a sensational one. Its record is best understood as a set of human encounters with ambiguous lights, weather, aircraft, objects, reflections and modern aerial devices, filtered through official procedure and local memory. The mystery lies less in proof of extraordinary craft than in the fragile boundary between what people saw, what investigators could test, and what the surviving record can still support.
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to What Really Happened In Calvados Skies?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
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Emphasizes official investigations and documented cases, paralleling discussion of GEIPAN and public records.
The UFO Experience
Provides a framework for evaluating UFO reports, matching the page's focus on investigation and classification.
The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects
Shows how official UFO investigations often move from mystery toward mundane explanations.
The Demon-haunted World
Explores critical thinking and the evaluation of extraordinary claims, directly relevant to assessing strange-sky reports.
Endnotes
1.
Source: cnes.fr
Title: GEIPAN | CNES
Link:https://cnes.fr/en/projects/geipan
2.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Caen–Carpiquet Airport
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caen%E2%80%93Carpiquet_Airport
3.
Source: jstor.org
Link:https://www.jstor.org/stable/40781818
4.
Source: archives.calvados.fr
Link:https://archives.calvados.fr/ark%3A/52329/c4gz218rs0m6
5.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calvados
6.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GEIPAN
7.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: UFO sightings in France
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UFO_sightings_in_France
8.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Calvados (department)
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calvados_%28department%29
9.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayeux
10.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Groupe d’études et d’informations sur les phénomènes aérospatiaux non identifiés
Link:https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groupe_d%27%C3%A9tudes_et_d%27informations_sur_les_ph%C3%A9nom%C3%A8nes_a%C3%A9rospatiaux_non_identifi%C3%A9s
11.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Unidentified flying object
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unidentified_flying_object
12.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Deauville–Normandie Airport
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deauville%E2%80%93Normandie_Airport
13.
Source: cnes.fr
Link:https://cnes.fr/projets/geipan
14.
Source: geipan.fr
Link:https://www.geipan.fr/sites/default/files/Compte%20rendu%20enquete22.pdf
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Source: geipan.fr
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16.
Source: bayeux.fr
Link:https://www.bayeux.fr/en
17.
Source: youtube.com
Title: Alain Juillet, Ex-head of French Spy agency DGSE, talks about UFOs
Link:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBbR0mB11dM
18.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
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19.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Title: Geipan Recherche de cas | GEIPAN
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20.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://www.cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/1991-08-01241
21.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Title: Geipan FAQ | GEIPAN
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22.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Title: Geipan Mission & Geipan | GEIPAN
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Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://www.cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/1978-08-00534
24.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://www.cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/1979-09-00657
25.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://www.cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/1980-08-00789
26.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Title: Geipan La méthodologie de classification au GEIPAN | GEIPAN
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27.
Source: gendarmerie.interieur.gouv.fr
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28.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/1983-04-00970
29.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://www.cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/2012-08-08283
30.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/2013-04-09337?field_date_value=2021-11-23&field_is_new_value=1&page=17
31.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://www.cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/2021-10-51258
32.
Source: caen.aeroport.fr
Link:https://www.caen.aeroport.fr/en/
33.
Source: deauville.aeroport.fr
Link:https://www.deauville.aeroport.fr/en/
34.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/2023-10-51490?page=1
35.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://www.cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/2024-04-51530
36.
Source: ufologie.patrickgross.org
Link:https://ufologie.patrickgross.org/1954/18oct1954moyauxf.htm
37.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
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Source: cnes-geipan.fr
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Source: cnes-geipan.fr
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40.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
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41.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/1998-07-01504
42.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://www.cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/2013-12-08618
43.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/2008-05-08404
44.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://cnes-geipan.fr/fr/cas/2014-07-08948?field_classification_des_cas_target_id%5B0%5D=12&order=field_date_d_observation_textuel&page=%2C82&sort=desc
45.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://cnes-geipan.fr/en/search/cas?field_agregation_index_value=&field_classification_des_cas_target_id%5B0%5D=11&field_date_d_observation_value%5Bmax%5D=&field_date_d_observation_value%5Bmin%5D=&field_date_value=&field_departement_target_id=&field_document_existe_ou_pas_value=All&field_is_new_value=All&field_is_revisited_value=All&field_latitude_value%5Bmax%5D=&field_latitude_value%5Bmin%5D=&field_longitude_value%5Bmax%5D=&field_longitude_value%5Bmin%5D=&field_phenomene_target_id=&field_type_de_cas_target_id=All&order=title&page=%2C90&sort=desc
46.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
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Source: cnes-geipan.fr
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Source: cnes-geipan.fr
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Source: cnes-geipan.fr
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Source: cnes-geipan.fr
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54.
Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Title: GEIPA N / CNESNo information is available for this page
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Source: cnes-geipan.fr
Link:https://www.cnes-geipan.fr/en
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Link:https://www.kupi.com/en-ae/explore/france/caen/carpiquet-airport
57.
Source: caen.aeroport.fr
Link:https://www.caen.aeroport.fr/en/normandy/
58.
Source: caen.aeroport.fr
Link:https://www.caen.aeroport.fr/en/airport/
59.
Source: majestic.co.uk
Link:https://www.majestic.co.uk/calvados
60.
Source: academia.edu
Link:https://www.academia.edu/99067452/GEIPAN_classification_with_text_mining_and_machine_learning
61.
Source: academieairespace.com
Link:https://academieairespace.com/event/geipan-studies-uaps-ufos/?lang=en
62.
Source: deauville.aeroport.fr
Link:https://www.deauville.aeroport.fr/en/book-a-flight/
63.
Source: uapedia.ai
Link:https://uapedia.ai/wiki/geipan-frances-official-uap-unit/
64.
Source: instagram.com
Link:https://www.instagram.com/calvados_normandie/?hl=en
Additional References
65.
Source: youtube.com
Title: French Government DECLASSIFIED UFO Report: The COMETA Files Explained
Link:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_m7TEFOFW4Q
66.
Source: youtube.com
Title: Pierre Bescond: Why France Studied UFOs at the Highest Level
Link:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWKfvL0666E
67.
Source: youtube.com
Title: The COMETA Report
Link:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MehFli3lOm8
68.
Source: researchgate.net
Link:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/369507030_GEIPAN_classification_with_text_mining_and_machine_learning
69.
Source: dday-overlord.com
Link:https://www.dday-overlord.com/en/battle-of-normandy/alg/alg-b-17
70.
Source: embross.com
Link:https://www.embross.com/case-studies/aeroport-deauville-normandie/
71.
Source: bayeux-bessin-tourisme.com
Link:https://bayeux-bessin-tourisme.com/en/
72.
Source: beersofeurope.co.uk
Link:https://www.beersofeurope.co.uk/spirits/style/calvados/?srsltid=AfmBOoojLM_ozZvtlg6PhohKqEm_Nwu2n7m4HRoyBmYuQYWImoomALB5
73.
Source: beersofeurope.co.uk
Link:https://www.beersofeurope.co.uk/spirits/style/calvados/?srsltid=AfmBOor-bvfzetRX9fxqYRN8xz5e8VTCms905uPmvgzb9PAKjvJsvhjh
74.
Source: fieldandfawcett.co.uk
Link:https://www.fieldandfawcett.co.uk/collections/calvados?srsltid=AfmBOooHGm84XTOTIxWaYSkJ5d8jIxxeOFaQzCCkY0e23P2KI16an7sW
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