The Tour du Mont Blanc (TMB) is one of the most famous hikes
in Europe, covering 165km over 10-11 days.
Here is a map of the route (we went anticlockwise starting and ending in Chamonix).
DAY 1: CHAMONIX TO
LES CONTAMINES
The TMB starts from a town called Les Houches which is a
short bus ride from Chamonix.
Unfortunately we didn’t get to the trail head in Les Houches until 11.30
am. We had stayed up until 1 am the
night before unpacking bags and preparing our hiking backpacks. By the time we got up, had breakfast and
bought lunch supplies for the first couple of days we found that the next bus
to Les Houches didn’t leave until after 11.
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At the trail head. So calm and relaxed.... |
As we had anticipated that the first day might involve a
later start we had decided that we would take the shorter and easier of the two
routes available. We were glad that we
did as we still arrived at Les Contamines completely exhausted 6 hours
later. There was a steep ascent for the
first 2 hours and an equally steep descent at the end. The views were good – predominately looking
across hillsides to ragged mountains above and in the distance. We also walked
through wonderful forest at the end.
However the views to come were even better.
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I just love these slate roofs |
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This dog knew how to beat the heat |
Les Contamines is a charming alpine village and we stayed in
a delightful gite called the La ferme de bon papa. It is an old farm house that has been
wonderfully renovated. Our room had its
own separate toilet and bathroom and the proprietresse had added charming
touches like placing toy rabbits on the pillows. We ate breakfast upstairs the following
morning in the living area with the proprietresse. We had a lovely conversation in French and
discovered that her son had spent 12 months studying, working and travelling in
Australia to improve his English. She
also explained that the farm had belonged to her grandfather (bon papa) and
that she and her husband had spent 6 years renovating it.
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Nemo, the shadow manager at the gite |
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La Ferme de Bon Papa |
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Some interesting paintwork in the eves of the church |
DAY 2: LES CONTAMINES
TO LES CHAPIEUX
This was a long and difficult day that involved an ascent of
about 1000 metres to the Col de la Croix via the Col du Bonhomme followed by a
very steep descent of 900 metres. My
ankle started to feel quite sore from the start of the day and I was in agony
by the time we reached the Col de la Croix.
The views were however great as we looked back down to the valley that
we had come from, across to more ragged mountains. This was the only day that we also had to
walk across quite a large expanse of snow.
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The long and winding road |
At the Col du Bonhomme we had a discussion with an American
couple about where the path went next and the guy was convinced that we were
actually at the Col de la Croix instead.
He didn’t seem to be convinced by Dale’s explanation of the map so I
decided that I would ask a French teenager who was nearby and he confirmed that
we were indeed at the Col du Bonhomme and that the Col de la Croix was still
higher up (while very politely making it clear to me how I should be
pronouncing Col du Bonhomme). This
seemed to convince our American friend although there were no thanks for saving
him from heading off in the wrong direction.
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The view back down the valley we had just ascended, with Les Contamines a tiny cluster in the middle to the left |
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Lac de la Gittaz |
We had a revitalising picnic lunch at the Col de la Croix and I
discovered that I didn’t have any ankle pain if I took my boot off. This lead to me trying something stupid,
which was to head off down a steep descent wearing a thong on one foot and a
hiking boot on the other. I made it a
surprisingly long way down before coming to grief by slipping on loose rocks
and cutting my big toe on a sharp rock.
Dale bandaged my toe and we decided that the only sensible option was to
put the boot back on and take lots of Panadol.
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The thong and winding road |
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Just above Les Chapieux |
We made it down to Les Chapieux and really liked it. It only consisted of the Auberge de la Nova,
where were staying, and a little general store.
We were able to pick up some local produce for our picnic lunches: pork saucissons, frommage and fresh tomatoes.
The Auberge de la Nova is quite large and it seemed to be
full. So full that the owners asked if
we wanted to pay more for our own room rather than sleep in a dormitory and we
immediately said yes. The Auberge had a
separate building where everyone had to leave their hiking boots and
batons. All these boots
hanging on pegs were quite a sight.
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The less said about the smell the better |
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Liquid pain relief |
We had a hearty 3 course meal (a common aspect to all the refuges is that they include a set menu 3 or 4 course dinner and breakfast) and they placed all the
Anglophones together at one table. We
met John and Helen (from Canberra) and Tom, Jeanette and Wendy (from Ottawa) and
we kept crossing paths with them for the rest of the tour.
DAY 3: LES CHAPIEUX
TO RIFUGIO ELISABETHA
This was the day that we crossed from France into Italy at
the Col de la Seigne. I was able to walk
up a bitumen road in my thongs for the first hour and after that my ankle was
relatively ok when I was climbing. Going
downhill was still a problem but I felt much better than the day before.
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The rain brought out lots of these broad based snails. It didn't help them when the buses ran them over. |
The ascent to Col de la Seigne was very long and we wondered when we might ever get there.
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A relief to reach the Col de la Seigne, but no view as a reward |
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Plenty of snow still around on the ground |
In this region France and Italy are separated by
the mountain range that includes Mont Blanc and as a result the geography is
very different on each side. On the
French side it is very rugged and remote while the Italian side opens into wide
valleys and sloping mountain sides, which are still steep but not to the same
extent as on the French side. This is
apparently because at one point the European and African continental plates
collided here and the European plate slid under the African plate creating the
rugged granite mountain range (predominately in France) which glaciers have
then taken millennia to carve valleys into.
On the Italian side the old sea bed was pushed up and the earth is
softer. Both sides are stunning!
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Mip |
We saw a number of marmots and also a squirrel-like creature,
which ran across the path with a mouse in its mouth. Unfortunately it was moving too fast to
photograph.
Our destination was Rifugio Elisabetha, which sits
dramatically on a hillside overlooking the long beautiful valley below while
being dwarfed by the steep mountain range behind.
Almost as soon as we arrived the heavens opened and there
was a magnificent thunder storm.
Everyone who arrived after us was wet and bedraggled.
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Nice and dry inside |
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So remote |
We spent a lovely afternoon in the dining room drinking
coffee and hot chocolate and reading and writing. We had met a young French (she) and German
(he) couple during the day and we crossed paths with them the following day as
well. We shared a small dormitory with
them at Rifugio Elisabetha because although they were camping, they were driven
inside by the bad weather. She was
lovely and very chatty with us and told us that she’d spent a year in New
Zealand in order to improve her English. He was extremely remote and we were
barely able to get a murmur out of him. He
was however amazingly fit and would race up and down the track even though he
was carrying a large backpack including a tent. His girlfriend was slower (she
was also carrying a larger pack than either of us) and he would often race off
way ahead of her or alternatively sit down and let her get way ahead of
him. The following day we caught up to
him while he was sitting down having a smoke (who says it’s bad for your
health?). We asked where his girlfriend
was and he pointed into the distance at a tiny green speck (her back
pack).
While drinking our hot chocolate and coffee we also had an
interesting chat with an English guy and his German girlfriend who were
spending their vacation mountaineering.
They explained that the atmosphere in the mountaineering refuges is very
different from the hiking refuges. They
said that among mountaineers there is a class system, which operates according
to how high you are able to ascend, and which in turn, makes the refuges less
convivial.
I should mention the showering system that operated at
Rifugio Elisabetha. We were given a
token, which would supposedly cost 2 Euros, and which we had to put into a
token box in order to take a shower.
Dale’s token didn’t work, which meant that he had to get redressed and
go to reception for help and while my token worked, getting out of the shower
cubicle was a real challenge. These
seemed to be ongoing problems as I heard other people talking about both issues
and each time I passed the shower room someone seemed to be off getting help to
get one shower working or there was banging and swearing coming from someone
trying to get out of the other one.
Interestingly we were never actually charged the 4 Euros and we think
that the payment system was designed to keep out the hikers who camp nearby and
try to sneak in for a shower.
There was also a regimented way of organising dinner in
order to make sure that the campers didn’t also sneak in for a free
dinner. Everyone was kicked out of the
dining room before dinner and then you had to wait for your name to be called
out and you were shown to your allocated seat.
We were again seated predominately with Anglophones but also
with a lovely French couple from Marseilles who may have been just a little
older than us. The woman couldn’t speak
English so we got to have a great dinner conversation in French. We may have been murdering French grammar but
we were able to have a decent conversation covering a broad range of topics –
which I think is pretty much what you’re aiming to do when you learn another
language. They were very well travelled
and love to spend their holidays overseas and hiking and skiing in the French
Alps. They had been to lots of French
speaking countries such as Canada, Morocco and Vietnam (as well as to Brasil
and China). It made me think about how
everyone finds travelling much easier if they speak the same language but also
that there are other disparate collections of countries that share a language
other than the Anglophone world. It’s
easy to forget that there are also huge populations that speak Spanish, German
and French outside those countries. They
also told us about a mad ultra-marathon that people run, around the TMB, including in the dark. They must finish in 48 hours and the record
is 20 hours. It seems unbelievable but
each day we saw several people running along the route, presumably in training.
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Very fit.....but insane |
DAY 4: RIFUGIO
ELISABETHA TO COURMAYEUR
In addition to the standard route on this leg, it was also
possible to get a bus to the Italian alpine resort town of Courmayeur or to
walk via the more gentle valley route.
As my ankle and the weather both seemed to be improving we decided to
take the regular route via Mt Favre Spur at 2430 metres. I was so glad that we took this route because
we got fantastic views of the Mont Blanc range even though the very top was covered in
cloud. Our guide book had indicated that
this was the day when you would get closest to the Mont Blanc range if you went along this
route.
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From R. Elisabetta down to Lac de Combal |
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Aig d'Estellette. I love the fine thread look of the snow on the rock |
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Lac de Combal |
As we passed around the spur we enjoyed the close up views of the Mont Blanc range.
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We were shocked to see how far the glaciers of the Mont Blanc range had retreated. In this shot there are 3 glaciers, all showing exposed rock where once there was ice. The one on the left used to curve around and meet the one in the middle, so you can see how much has gone. |
About an hour later the clouds rolled in. Although it didn’t rain seriously we spent a
couple of hours walking with very limited visibility, which was quite
spooky. We would see vague shapes
appearing ahead of us and we had to get quite close before we could work out
whether they were trees or houses. For a
little while we thought we were lost but eventually we stumbled across the
Rifugio Maison Veille where we sat at some tables and ate our usual picnic
lunch. When the French-German couple
caught up with us a little later they said that they had not even seen the
Rifugio because the cloud was so dense.
This was the most animated I had seen the man as we explained that they must
have passed within several meters of the Rifugio.
The descent into Courmayeur was murder. It was steep, rocky, muddy and slippery. We arrived in Courmayeur exhausted and my
ankle was incredibly sore again.
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Courmayeur from the ski fields above |
Courmayeur is a very chic town and everyone seemed to be
terribly well dressed. Courmayeur is so
chic that the cable car that runs up to the adjacent ski resort is sponsored by
Armani.
I felt completely out of place in the limited hiking
wardrobe that was available and I assume that I was probably offending
people by appearing in public so poorly dressed in my synthetic fibres. Of course the other side of this coin is that
I think there were a lot of people decked out in very fashionable hiking wear
who hadn’t ever set foot outside the town.
I really wanted pasta for dinner and we found an excellent
restaurant using Trip Advisor. We were
shown upstairs to a mezzanine level where I could just stand up straight and
Dale had to stoop down. There was room
for about 20 people upstairs and it was completely full. Both the food and the ambience were
wonderful. While we were there John and Helen
(the couple from Canberra we’d met a couple of days earlier) also came into the
restaurant. When we said hello they very
kindly said that they had been thinking about what to do about my ankle and
that I might try taking some nurofen.
They and the Canadians called it ‘Vitamin I’ – an essential hiking
medication! I bought some the next day
and it certainly helped.
Next time: More Mont
Blanc
Sounds like you're having a great time, despite the ankle, much mire energetic and communicative than us!
ReplyDeleteElisabetta is a real highlight of the TMB. I concur that the descent into Courmeyeur is horrendous, the worst on the whole tour (including the last one) it did for my knees! We had the Ultra-Trail runners for 2 days - seriously mad/annoying. The winner of the 168 race (there are 4 distances) finished in 20 hours 36 mins!
ReplyDeleteshow nice picture thank you for sharing.......
ReplyDeleteTour de Mont Blanc