8th and 9th May 2015
Digne-les-Bains to
Moustiers-Ste-Marie
Section 31 miles
Total 1907 miles
More blue skies. Headed south towards via Riez and on to
Camping St Clair, just south of the hillside village of Moustiers-Ste-Maries,
close to where the Verdon exits the Gorge de Verdon and enters the Lac de St
Croix. I was going to stay at an Aire at Riez; but, the free Aire has shut down
and a new fee paying Aire has opened up. The campsite was only 14 euro a night,
I think the Aire was about 6 euro a night. Reckoned the pension could stretch
the extra 8 euros for a couple of nights. Also wanted an internet connection
and electric hook-up, to cut my hair, so opted for the campsite. Good, basic, very
shady campsite with really pleasant staff on reception. Stayed a couple of
nights, on the second day I followed part of the GR4 (GR=Grande Randonee -
French long distance footpath, all of which are numbered and clearly blazoned
in red and white). Involved climbing up a very step path up through the
limestone cliffs, for about about 500m or 600m, that block the end of the Gorge
de Verdon. Great views over the Lac de St Croix and across to the west.
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Moustiers-Ste-Marie - GR4 Walk - Exit of the Verdon Gorge into Lac St Croix |
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Moustiers-Ste-Marie - GR4 Walk - Lac St Croix |
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Moustiers-Ste-Marie - GR4 Walk Wooded cliffs that the path managed to find a way through |
10th May 2015
Moustiers-Ste-Marie to
Trigance
Section 32 miles
Total 1939 miles
Blue skies and hot in the afternoon, about 26C. I have
driven both the north and south coniches around the Gorge de Verdon on a couple
of previous visits to the area. So, I just did the first section of the
northern route this time. Whilst stopping to take some photographs of the gorge
and river below, I saw a small group of about six Ibex at the base of the
cliffs, just above the road. I had never seen these large wild goat like things
before. Unfortunately, I didn't have the telephoto lens with me, so I guess
they don't show up too well on the photographs. The 'stag' (or whatever you
call the head male honcho ibex) had massive ridged horns. Then headed towards
Rougon (where the road goes along the side of an off-shoot from the main Verdon
gorge) and down to the hill top village of Trigance for an overnight stop at
the Aire (5 euro charge - but includes un-metered electricity). Great views
over the valley from the Aire. The castle above the town has been restored and
turned into a hotel - so no entry - but enjoyed a pleasant wander round the
village. A day of twisty roads and steep drops! I don't think I went above
40mph all day.
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Gorge de Verdon - lowest part the specs in the river are rafts |
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Rougon - Ravin de Baou from the D952 |
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Trigance - Great panorama from the Aire |
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Trigance - Chateaux (restored as a hotel) |
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Trigance- Street Scene |
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Trigance - Another village street |
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Wrought iron Bell Tower - Trignance |
11th May 2015
Trigance to Annot
Section 37 miles
Total 1976 miles
Weather remains great, just some high thin cloud. Followed a
'white' road on my map to get to Castellane. The signs that said maximum length
8m and no caravans should have given some hint of what was to come. The last
six or eight kilometres down into Castellane were pretty hairy - over-hanging
rocks, sheer drops and very tight hairpin bends - along what was mainly a
single track road. I couldn't stop to take any photographs in case some one
came whizzing round a bend - no pull-ins either. Castellane is a cool place
with a church on top of a massive lump of rock on one side of the town. First
stayed there in about 1994 when I was doing a cycling tour of the
pre-Alpes. Carried on past the
impressive Lac de Castillon (with a large hydro plant) towards Annot via the
Col de Toutes Aures and the impressive Clue de Rouaine (scary drops down the
down to the river on the RHS of the road - especially as there was no barrier
at all as it was being rebuilt). I just love this part of France . Ended
up at a free Aire in some pine woods just on the outskirts of Annot. Annot's a
large village in the bottom of the valley with twisting, narrow streets and
shady arcades in the old part of the town. The Chemin de Fer de Provence has a
station here (opened in 1908), some how the line manages to work its way from
Nice through the mountains to Digne-les-Bains with tunnels and viaducts going
up to around 1500m. Oddly, this line never became part of SNCF and is a
separate railway company from the state owned lines. The south facing valley
seems to trap the heat, really hot this afternoon.
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Trigance - View Departing RN202 coming down the Clue de Rouaine towards Annot |
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Annot - Les Gres de Annot |
12th May 2015
Annot to Colmars-les-Alpes
Section 23 miles
Total 1999 miles
The east side of the valley, above Annot, is topped by
limestone escarpments and littered with bizarrely shaped, house sized plus
lumps of limestone - referred to as Les Gres de Annot. In the morning climbed
up about 400m along a path through the wooded slopes, past les gres and on to
the top of the escarpment, where there were good views down to the village of Braux in the adjacent valley to the
east. The three or four hundred metre sheer drop is not for the vertiguos -
which includes me - I had to keep back from the edge. Got back to the van after
about four hours walking. After lunch, moved on towards Colmars-les-Alpes via
the Col St Michel (1500m). The road drops steeply 500m along the east side of
the Verdon valley, north of the Lac de Castillon, to re-join the main road in
the valley bottom. Arrived about 16:00 and had some time to look around this
walled village, with a castle to the north and some sort of blockhouse to the
south. In the evening wandered up to the Cascade da la Lance. Even the French
seem to have taken to Health and Safety with a warning notice about not
stopping on the path because of the risk of falling rocks!
13th May 2015
Colmars-les-Alpes to
Vars-les-Claux
Section 51 miles
Total 2050 miles
Northwards to Allos and then the Col d'Allos (2247m) to get
from thr Verdon valley across to the l'Ubaye valley (last encountered at La
Beole on the 5th/6th May) at Briancon. Turning a bend at what I though was
nearly the bottom of the col, I looked down and saw the road hugging the side
of a totally unstable looking slope for about another 500m! Oh well, take a
deep breath and carry on. No wonder there were signs in Allos showing a 3.5t
weight limit and 7m length restriction for the pass. Got to the Aire in Briancon
- but it was very hot and oppressive in the valley bottom - decided to head on
north to Vars-les-Claux (1900m) via the Col de Vars (2111m). Unfortunately, the
Col de la Bonnete (2809m), which is the highest road pass in Europe, was not
open (presumably still blocked by snow) other wise I would have detoured south
through the Mercantor NP for a couple of days. Vars-les-Claux turned out to be
a skiing resort, including the typical eight or ten storey apartment/hotel
blocks and all the paraphernalia of ski lifts and the eroded scars of pistes.
These places probably look great in winter; but, are complete ghost towns in
the summer - no one around and nearly every thing shut down. Good mountain
views from the Aire until it clouded over in the late afternoon.
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Just when I thought I was near the bottom of the Col d'Allos - Turned a hairpin and saw the 500m down
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Col de Vars - Mamot - there were about half a dozen running around |
14th/15th May 2015
Var-les-Claux to Lisanza , Italy
Section 182 miles
Total 2232 miles (31.6
mpg)
I could easily spend all summer in France; but, the
intention on leaving Edinburgh had been to head towards the Dalmatian coast of
Croatia for a few weeks 'on the beach'. Looking at the map this morning it
looks miles away, about 500miles according to Autoroute 2013, and the Cote d'Azur is a lot closer...anyway, decided to
bite the bullet and head off towards Croatia . Planning on taking a side
trip to a few places in Northern Italy on the
way. I have only been through on the train and visited places like Verona , Venice and Bologna in the past.
A long days drive via Briancon, the Col de Montgenevre
(1850m) into Italy, down to Oulx to join the Autostarda (to get some miles on
and avoid the roads around Turin) to the southern end of Lago Maggiore. It was
thirty euros well spent on tolls as the driving on the autostrada around Turin was hairy and congested
at times. Not being sure of Aires in Italy . I headed for a campsite on
the shore of the Lake at Lasanza ( Camping Lido OK - sounds a bit naff; but
actually immaculately clean, trimmed hedges and flowers abound - even the
garbage disposal area is under cover with lino - which the staff wash!).
In the mounatins the autostrada was on a constant downhill
grade of between about 1% and 2.5% for what seemed like about 200km and
littered with so many long tunnels I lost count - many were between four and
about eight kilometres long. All well lit - possibly so that fashion conscious
Italians don't have to take off their designer sunglasses enroute.
Once settled in, the evening became over cast and
oppressive. Rumbles of thunder and odd lightning flashes during the night
resolved themselves the next morning into more or less continuous heavy
thundery rain - although the really pleasant owner insisted it was only for Friday
and sunshine was promised again for Saturday. The temperature dropped to a
chilly 11C in the afternoon; fan heater in the van sorted that out. Got drowned
going to get bread for a late breakfast. Oh well, plenty of practice camping in
the UK
in that sort of weather and at least a chance to get the blog updated.
She was correct, blue sky and warm sunshine on the Saturday
morning and a chance to actually see across the lake to snow capped mountains
on the horizon.
Note
on Fuel: The mountain passes have been hard on diesel! When I filled up
yesterday, at Briancon and checked, the average mpg for the trip has fallen to
31.6 mpg and since last filling at Sisteron, on the 5th May, where most of the
passes started, it was down to 26.4mpg. Italian diesel is bloody expensive
typically1.49 euro/litre - at around
1.08 £/litre nearly the same as the ![]() |
Driving towards Briancon - a very murky looking Massif de Ecrins I walked around it, 120km, on the GR54 in about 1997 |
16th May 2015
Lisanza to Jesolo di
Lido
Section 225 miles
Total 2457 miles (31.6
mpg)
Initially planned to head to near Venice
stopping overnight at Lake Garda and near Trent
in the Dolomites; but, driving down the autostrada towards Verona the weather to the north in the
mountains looked really stormy with heavy dark clouds. So decided to cut the
trip into the mountains, to avoid even more thunderstorms, and decided to drive
onto Jesolo just to the north of Venice .
A long days drive of 225 miles; but, easy on the very flat
autostrada over the Lombardy Plain - a pleasant change after all those cols in France ! And,
surprisingly cheap tolls (especially compared to France - a total of about 21.5
euros for around 210 miles).
The camping (Camping Park dei Dogi) still has an ASCI Card
rate of twelve euros a night even though it is some sort of Italian holiday
week - I noticed at reception that the rack rates are higher than normal for
this week. No wonder the autostarda was so busy with italian cars and
motorhomes on the way from Lake Maggiore . The
campsite pretty busy too - with lots of Italian families - its just across the
main road from the beach. Again really clean and looked after and pleasant
receptionist with excellent english.
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Lake Maggiore - From the Camping Lido OK just before leaving on Saturday Improvement over Friday's thunderstorms |
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Lake Maggiore - Camping Lido OK I keep tripping out the electricity - blew four connections! |
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