climbing in south of france
climbing in south of france
home/mountaineering/tuan's corner
climbing in south of france
by
tuan
it is difficult to say which are the best cliffs since there are
so many, in a short distance (aix-en-provence, marseille, nice,
and the verdon) are all within 2 hours and half drive from each
other. some generalities:
most of places are too hot in summer, perfect in other seasons.
limestone
all the places listed have several hundreds of routes
with some exceptions (traditionnal equipment = pitons, possibly rusty and
distant), the routes are (well) bolted
french sport climbing: you look for the name of the route at the base of
the cliff (it will be painted), you climb it using only a set of
quickdraws following the bolt line, when you finish the pitch, you will find a
belay anchor, usually two bolts and a chain, from which you get lowered down
by your partner. a rope of at least 65m is useful.
the topos are mainly drawings and ratings, so you generally don't need to
read french to understand.
some good places
provence
1. les calanques (between marseille and cassis): a great place for the
scenary. some of the cliffs are directely above the see, in a very
picturesque setting which has conserved a certain wilderness character, and
makes a great vacation destination. there are many different spots which are
all different. it is not generally speaking a sport climbing area, since the
routes are several pitches, and have sometimes a (relatively) complicated
access, and (relatively) traditionnal uncertain equipment. cassis is the most
beautiful calanque, but also the most turistic. sormiou offers well equiped
climbing directely above the see. grande candelle, because of its remoteness,
is always crowd-free and offers good routes too. get the new (multilingual)
guidebook. for pure climbing it would not be my favorite destination. there
are several moderate multipitches routes though, which is not the case of all
cliffs. farther from the coast les goudes, saint michel... have sport climbing.
you don't need a car for en vau: take the train to cassis, walk to the harbor,
take a boat to en vau. from there, you can reach grande candelle in a half a
day hike, and sormiou in a day, this makes a nice hiking/climbing combination.
if you intend to stay in the calanques for several days, take plenty of water,
since it is not easy to find, if possible at all.
2. buoux (near apt): the mecca for hard sport climbing. tremendous amount of
technical routes in the 5.11 5.12 5.13 range. the place is usually rather
crowded. in summer will be too hot and its a pain to hitch to the crag
- stay at les cedres camping in apt as this is where all the climbers (with
cars) hang out if they're not staying in gites
3. sainte victoire (near aix): sport climbing at the bottom of the cliff,
one the first pitch (often the second has trad equipment).
beautiful and very numerous slabs. the top part of this high cliff has
also some long routes with old equipment, and is not too popular, apart from
"le grand parcours".
4. dentelles de montmirail (avignon): sport climbing, one to three pitches.
prealpes
1. verdon gorge (castelanne): the most spectacular place. the cliff is
vertical over several kilometers large, and more than 300 meters high. the
climbing is extremely good, but there is not much to climb under 5.9. there
are two categories of routes. the first ones climb only the *last(s)* pitches
and are sport equiped (but verdon standard is 5-8 m, which is more than
usual). great to experience the void (scary rappels) but be sure to be able
to do the climb if you decide to lead. the second ones start from the bottom
to climb the whole cliff, which makes for long routes. there are traditionnal
crags (natural pro often useful) and modern routes as well, but only three of
these routes are easier than 5.10c. verdon is too cold in winter.
multilingual topo (ffme). good swimming is only a hitch
down the road at moustiers where the gorge opens out onto a lake - the jump
from the bridge is a good challenge - 45ft into deep water.
- stay at jean paul's campsite in the village of la palud
- take a grade or two off your normal leading standard to get used to the
place
- you're a long way up!
- smile for the cameras when you top out - millions of tourists drive
round the loop road at the top of the gorge and watch the climbers!!
2. presles (grenoble): this cliff shares some characteristics with verdon.
the access is only by the base, and thus there is no short routes. the rock
is not as solid as in verdon, and therefore a helmet would be useful in
popular periods. there are however a number of great routes. the equipment
is pretty good.
3. orpierre
not awesome climbing but pretty good and very user-friendly: bolts three
feet apart on 5+'s - a good place to push your grade from 6a - 6c not so
good for 7+ grade climbing. very pretty spot.
cote d'azur = french riviera
1. la loubiere/tete de chien (monaco): sport climbing. several
different cliffs, the place is nice though a little urban. big variety, has
a lot of overhangs, but slabs and crags as well. there are a few routes
of two or three pitches, but most of them are very hard. in the one-pitch
style, all the levels are well represented.
anything at la loubiere's main crag is nice. it has a variety of levels.
the crag next to it "dalle a l'oiseau" has a lot of easy routes. in the
level 5+/6a, there is a lot of good stuff near "dalle a jules", which gets
less crowds than the two previous. next to this spot are perhaps the most
famous and beautiful routes, like "passagers du vent". i haven't climbed them
(too hard). if you want to climb in the shade, there are some stuff on the
"north face", and in the "secteur jacob" (only hard, overhanging stuff. seems
to be the favorite place of local hardmen). less difficult overhangs are
in "secteur des surplombs". the site can be accessed without a car, from
la turbie (which is a turistic place deserved by busses).
2. saint-jeannet (nice):
la source: a sport-climbing area of short climbs
which is over-equiped. it is sometimes in the shade and
makes relaxed climbing. there are some very good stuff there, though (ratings
tend to be more severe too).
south face: several one-pitches routes on this large and high face which is
in fact not vertical: a walking trail leads to the base of each of the four
little cliffs which are staked one above another.
you can pick up a route in each of them, and you end up to the top.
sometimes modern, sometimes old equipement, different styles of climbing,
including cracks and chemneys
sw face: long routes (4-7 pitches). traditionnal
equipement (= rusty pitons) and lose rock in some routes, modern one and
excellent climbing on others, be careful. i recommend peril jaune,
directissime, jardin suspendu, tonton walker, all 5+/6a. easier classics are
mallet, and dominante. the hard classic is maffia, it is supposedly very
sustained and beautiful (haven't climbed it). ask locals if you can, because
it is not that easy to find the start of the routes, as well as the way down.
the place is accessible by busses.
nice/ coco beach: you can climb in nice, and this an excellent summer spot
(and a summer only one !). go at "coco beach" which is after the harbor. at
the east side of this beach, there are overhanging blocks which are above the
water. under the most overhanging part, there is enough water and no rock, so
you can fall head first. i have a friend who used to do most of his training
there (seems to pay, he climbs 8b now), and tried unsucessfully to teach me
knee jams there.
there are also cliffs in esterel (between saint-raphael and cannes),
vallee du loup (gourdon-greolieres), near toulon (some of them very
important), in brief, everywhere.
briancon
lots of small climbing areas that are great in summer if climbing is
getting hard down here. all levels and lengths.
some faqs:
how do i get to the cliffs ?
to my knowledge, public transportation should work for some spots (mentionned
in the description) for the
other places, a car is needed, but hitchiking is not too bad.
the guidebooks contain relevant information about access and lodging.
where can i find a partner ?
the practice of finding one's partner at the cliff is not extremely popular
in france, mainly because there are a lot of climbers and associations,
which makes it easy for people to have partners. however, in sport climbing
areas, there are a lot of people at the base of the cliff, where the routes
are very concentrated, and thus it is quite easy to hook with a group.
remember however that a lot of frenchmen do not speak english. verdon and
buoux have an internationnal frequentation which makes meating people easy
at the campsite.
guidebooks ?
get them locally. climbing is very popular in france and most sport
shops
will have them !
to plan your trip, these might be useful:
rock climbing
guide to europe, by david jones,
french rock,
by birkett.
a traveller's viewpoint
the following was written by barry romberg (brom@erols.com). it offers
advice that i cannot give since i've always climbed in france as a
"local".
the only way to travel is with a rental car. we were there for a
month,
so we ended up living out of it. there are relatively few climbing
area's close enough to major cities to do the train thing. if you
plan
on hitting more than 1 or 2 areas, the car is your best bet.
make sure you reserve the car from the us, well before your departure.
you will find the rates to be up to 3 times as expensive if you wait
to
do it over there. we rented mid size car for 30 days, put over 9000
kilometers on it, and spent only $900 !!! seems expensive at first,
but
it is a small price to pay to be able to lock up your stuff, have the
mobility to get to scattered climbing areas, and do 120mph on the
highway. we pretty much lived out of the car, spending every third
night or so in a bed & breakfast ($40-$100/night). be aware that your
domestic auto insurance company will not cover your insurance abroad,
but, if you reserve and pay for the car with any gold visa or
mastercard, your insurance is covered. don't let the rental company
sell you any more insurance!
about the highways, gas it about $4-$5 us per gallon (equiv), ouch.
tolls on the autobaun type roads will cost about half the price of
gas.
some try to take the backroads to avoid this - not recommended. the
time you will save by going 100+mph will be well worth the price of
the
toll.
ok, enough about transportaion, lets get to the climbing. damn there
is
a ton of climbing in france. the whole country is bolted to the hilt,
however. the only trad we found was at 11,000 feet in chamonix. many
of the "sport" routes are actually mixed routes, however. so bringing
a
few small-med. sized cams is a great call. guidebooks, try to buy
the
guidebooks you plan on needing here in this county. that is the only
way to ensure they will be written in english. we sort of explored
our
way around without a definite iteinerary, so that wasn't an option.
our
weak translation cost us a few scarry rappels and routefinding
mistakes.
while in chamonix, don't miss the awsome alpine trad. "the mont blanc
range topo guide" is available in english at many of the local
bookstores and climbing shops. if you plan on buying any hardware for
your trip, it might be worth waiting until you get there to buy it. i
found hardware prices 20%-40% cheaper in chamonix (even with a poor
4.9
fr/$ exchange rate). soft goods (clothing) was about the same or more
expensive. make sure you stop by the patagonia shop in downtown
chamonix. great local beta available from those folks! (in english).
as a final note, try to get to
marseille (riviera) to a place called les calanques. we climbed a 5
pitch 5.10 on sun bleached limestone in "bec de sormiou" the route
started on a beach and ended at the top with an incredible view of the
mediternaian. its a must climb called "le couchant/couloir tanner".
view or add comments
get me back to
the personal montaineering page !
home/
mountaineering/
tuan's corner
climbing in south of france Précédent 610 Précédent 609 Précédent 608 Précédent 607 Précédent 606 Précédent 605 Précédent 604 Précédent 603 Précédent 602 Précédent 601 Précédent 600 Précédent 599 Précédent 598 Précédent 597 Précédent 596 Précédent 595 Précédent 594 Précédent 593 Précédent 592 Précédent 591 Précédent 590 Précédent 589 Précédent 588 Précédent 587 Précédent 586 Précédent 585 Précédent 584 Précédent 583 Précédent 582 Précédent 581 Suivant 612 Suivant 613 Suivant 614 Suivant 615 Suivant 616 Suivant 617 Suivant 618 Suivant 619 Suivant 620 Suivant 621 Suivant 622 Suivant 623 Suivant 624 Suivant 625 Suivant 626 Suivant 627 Suivant 628 Suivant 629 Suivant 630 Suivant 631 Suivant 632 Suivant 633 Suivant 634 Suivant 635 Suivant 636 Suivant 637 Suivant 638 Suivant 639 Suivant 640 Suivant 641