Skip to main content

Thwarted by snow

Driving over the Col de Cayolle is a must As one of our guidebooks-to-nice-things-in-France tells us, it’s a beautiful pass. So that’s where we went (where the trip marker colours change).


It is true, it is a great drive and as it’s tight, the bigger stuff can’t get up from either side.



These guys did; 2CVs manage to do most things. Also this solo driver from Germany was here. You couldn’t miss him as the sound from his 911 Classic Porsche was something else. It’s a 1980 model and he told me it was a hard drive as he has no servo steering. It made our 110 seem positively modern by comparison.





It seemed as though a walk into a mountain bowl was in order and we armed ourselves with provisions for a few hours and donned the boots.

As soon as we rounded the corner, the noisy pass was out of earshot and we left people behind.

One walker did advise that if we could get up to Petite Cayolle then the rest of the walk to the beautiful frozen lakes would be straightforward. 

We imagined what might happen and started to focus on a snow slope in the distance.




It was a lovely walk, the path was dry except in a few parts and the streams easy to cross. Flowers were pushing through but it’s high and ‘late’ up here.






As we get nearer, the back wall of the mountain got steeper and we decided that lunch was in order as we contemplated things.

A solo walker came over the col and very slowly made his way down, making full use of his batons. We don’t have suitable walking poles, as we’ve never got around to sorting out two full pairs. Also they need that spreader thing at the end, to prevent them from digging into snow.

During lunch we were alerted by a noise behind us and to the side. A very large rock was making its way downhill, thankfully we weren’t in its path. It seemed to roll in slow motion and took an age to stop.  If necessary we would have got behind the boulder we were sitting on.

After lunch we decided to try to go up, by either walking in previous steps or making our own. However the shape of the slope was such that as we stepped onto it from the rocky path, we were already a 100m above the bottom of the snow patch. So a slip would be a slide down. It might have been fun.

Just for scale, a person standing on the col would have been a small speck on the skyline  



So we turned around, not so much because ascending was tricky; it wasn’t so bad. The thought of trying to stamp steps coming down without slipping though was more concerning.

We came off the snow and I tried a scree slope up the side but again it was disconcerting. It wasn’t easy to decide if the rocky traverse higher up was going to be exposed or an easy-feeling scramble.

That was that. We didn’t conquer Petite Cayolle but then no one else did either in the few hours we were there. Later we did see someone come onto the col from the far side but during our longish walk back to the road there was no sign of them actually trying to descend our side.

Comments

Mark M. said…
Sounds like you are having a great adventure. Take care.

Popular posts from this blog

On y va

Hooray. We are off. The ferry was booked a few weeks ago and the pressure was then on to get all sorts of jobs finished on the house and Landy. Major cosmetic work was to cover the grey front doors with paint that matches the rest of the vehicle. On the engine a coolant leak had developed behind the water pump and so the P gasket and adjacent core plug were renewed. Also a cheapy head unit from those Chinese people replaced the old Sony fm radio. Now we have opened up the wonders of Car Play and all that comes with it. Finally the 9th gen iPad with WiFi became a 9th gen iPad with WiFi and ‘cellular’. This means we can use OsmAnd Maps which need no data and get their gps position off the ‘cellular’ chip in the iPad. More on this useful map in subsequent posts. We headed towards Portsmouth for a mid morning ferry via our old neighbours in S-I-V. There we had a great few hours updating each about our families and then proceeded to save the NHS, the country and the world too. I mean why no...

Onwards

You can’t visit a classic car enthusiast without admiring their car and we got our timing right, as it was the monthly club meet on Sunday. This was held at the Hippodrome in Maisons Laffitte, so it was just up the road. The definition of ‘classic’ here is 30 years and so many of the vehicles there looked very familiar to us 😳. TR5 and TR6, MGB, RR, BMW, Maserati, of course the Jensen Interceptor that our host drives, 2CV, Caterham 7, a beautiful Austin Healy 3 litre and then this… This is identical to mine, a Fiat 850 Sport Coupé, that I owned from 1978-81. Seeing it, brought back memories of welding, brazing, stripped driveshaft splines, clutch on the M1 and many miles of amazing touring. We drove around France on a camping road trip for all of September 1978 and the following year did the Ardennes for a month too. Here’s Nige’s Jensen… Maisons Laffitte is a very nice area to the west of Paris centre. The mansion is now owned by a trust I think and is a beautiful building. All we ne...

Towards Savoie

We stayed on the motorway, which for us is unusual in France but we have experienced the traffic calming in the towns and villages. A direct and fast journey was planned and achieved, with  a  nice morning stop and appropriate accompaniments. We arrived at Saint-Jean-de-Chevelu which is a little west of Lac du Bourget, the huge lake which has Aix- les-Bains on its eastern shore. We went to a previously researched campsite, Camping des lacs. This is a lovely spot of about 100 places for a mix of tents, camper-vans and smaller motor homes. There are also cabins and some that were a bit like shepherd’s huts. It’s situated next to two small lakes (surprise!) and there’s a ring of small mountains around. These would have been peri-glacial lakes 🥸 back at the last ice age and have now become a joint playground and eco place. You can swim, fish and respect ‘nature’ here but need to get in the right part at the right time to do what’s allowed. A lady pecheur told us of carp and ...