Walking in the Alps. Kev Reynolds
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Vallon de Bouchet
Flowing from the north, the Torrent de Bouchet drains the second of Abriès’ valleys. This forks near the hamlet of Le Roux, and forks again a little higher. All the tributary streams come down from the Italian border which arcs around the head of the valley. Le Roux has a gîte d’étape, but no shops, and there’s a campsite at Valpreveyre. Visitors planning to spend a few days here may need to stock up with provisions in Abriès. Once again the Tour du Queyras passes through on its way from La Monta via a high ridge crossing, and next day leaves to cross Col des Thures and Col du Malrif. There are, of course, plenty of other trails worth exploring, including routes from Valpreveyre up to the cols of Bouchet and Malaure, both of which mark the frontier ridge.
The Brunissard Valley
Coming down from the Col d’Izoard, this is the largest of the northern valleys in the Queyras and, accessible by road all the way from Château-Queyras, offers a choice of walking routes. On the way to the col there’s accommodation to be had at Arvieux; the hamlet of La Chalp has a hotel with lower-priced dortoir beds, while Brunissard, at 1746 metres the highest village below the hairpins that lead into the Casse Déserte, has a gîte d’étape and a campsite nearby.
Brunissard, on the descent from Col des Ayes in the Queyras district
Brunissard is sited at the confluence of two streams. The Torrent de la Rivière flows from the north-west, while the Izoard squeezes through a gorge below the road to the col. Two major walking routes converge on the village; GR5 and GR58. The first, having come from Briançon, crosses the blocking ridge at Col des Ayes which, when reversed from Brunissard, would make an interesting excursion, as indeed would a visit to the Col de Néal (2509m), south-west of Col des Ayes. To reach Col de Néal from Brunissard entails following GR5 to the Chalets de l’Eychaillon, then along a gravel road to a second collection of houses shown as Chalets de Clapeyto on the map. Above these you come to some splendid high meadows littered with tarns, beyond which you climb easily to the col and look down on another, larger tarn, Lac de Néal nestling on the far side.
By following GR58 north of Brunissard, one gains good views of the spiky formations of the Casse Déserte before reaching Col du Tronchet, a 2347 metre pass in the dividing ridge that separates the main Brunissard valley from a glen that drains down to Château-Queyras. Midway down that glen the hamlet of Souliers has a gîte d’étape used by trekkers on the Tour du Queyras. Instead of, or before, crossing Col du Tronchet and descending to Souliers, it would be worth bearing left along a footpath spur that leads to Lac de Souliers. This tarn enjoys a superb situation below Pic Ouest and the craggy Crête des Oules. Pic Ouest itself is accessible to any fit walker with a head for heights. From the summit a full circular panorama includes Monte Viso, of course, a maze of peak, ridge and hinted valley of the Écrins and, farther away, La Grande Casse in the Vanoise.
This brief summary of valleys has done little more than scratch the surface of possibilities available for keen mountain walkers. It will be evident that much awaits those who are drawn by country that has seldom been fashionable, whose villages, glens, peaks and ridges are largely unknown outside a small circle of enthusiasts, yet whose landscape quality is as rich and varied as almost anywhere in the Alps. If there’s one sure way of having that variety unfolded day after day, it will be by following that multi-day route already referred to several times in the preceding paragraphs, the GR58, better known as the Tour du Queyras.
Tour du Queyras
The standard circuit of about eight days remains entirely within France and is thus parochially contained by the boundaries of the Queyras district, but there are assorted variations available that stray beyond these boundaries and even follow a short section of the Italian Tour of Monte Viso. Since it is my intention in this book to offer the best walking and most spectacular scenic viewpoints throughout the Alpine ranges, the following outline tour will include some of these variations, thereby increasing the length to one of 12 stages. It’s a route that would appeal to first-time trekkers in the Alps since some of the stages are rather modest in length. Accommodation is available at the end of every stage, with meals provided during the main summer season. But as there are few shops along the way there will be many sections where food will need to be carried for several days at a time to provide refreshment along the trail.
Montdauphin-Guillestre to Ceillac
The ‘official’ start of the Tour du Queyras is made in Ceillac, but Alan Castle, author of the English-language guidebook to the circuit on which the following outline is largely based, suggests Montdauphin-Guillestre in the Durance valley as being more appropriate, since most trekkers will approach the district by rail. His guide, therefore, begins the route at the railway station and makes as his destination of this initial stage, the Refuge de Furfande set in a verdant pastoral basin below Col St-Antoine on the west flank of the Guil valley, not far from the Chalets de Furfande, the only mountain farms in the district not accessible by road. For a first day of a multi-day walking circuit it’s quite demanding, with almost 20 kilometres to cover and two cols to cross, Col de Moussière (2354m) and Col St-Antoine (2458m). The ascent to Col de Moussière is long and will, no doubt, be fairly punishing to those who are not yet in full mountain-fitness. But the change of landscape on reaching the col will be reward enough, for there’s a transformation from forest and pasture to true mountain austerity marked by craggy crests rising from apparently barren screes. It should be noted that there are no accommodation alternatives between Montdauphin-Guillestre and Refuge de Furfande, and that a full day’s walking of about eight hours should be allowed for this stage.
Having begun the tour by heading roughly eastward, the second stage joins the GR58 proper and follows it southward, across the main Guil valley to Ceillac along what is normally taken as the final section of the ‘official’ Tour du Queyras. Should our walker prefer to follow the standard tour, however, the first day’s route outlined in the preceding paragraph should be ignored, and instead Ceillac reached from Montdauphin-Guillestre railway station by bus, there to begin the walk in earnest.
Coming as we are though from Refuge de Furfande the day begins with a descent to Les Escoyères, a hamlet overlooking the gorges of Combe du Queyras. The route goes down to the main valley road and crosses the river by footbridge. There follows a steady climb, much of it through woodland, to the Col de Bramousse (2251m), but an alternative to this crossing exists, being the one adopted as a GR58 variant as well as by the GR5 later on. The variant leaves the main trail at the hamlet of Bramousse, which is reached by road from the Combe de Queyras, then skirts eastward through the Bois de Riou Vert into the glen of the same name, through which the trail climbs to Col Fromage, there to join GR5. Col Fromage (2301m) lies to the east of Col de Bramousse along the Crête des Chambrettes. As noted earlier, there’s a fine linking trail along this ridge, although as our route is quite long enough in itself, few trekkers will be tempted by this diversion.
Col de Bramousse, with its fine view south to the Pics de la Font Sancte at the head of the Vallon du Mélezet, makes an obvious