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TM
The Way Less Taken
Snow Safari, French
style
by
Charles Leocha
We are at the top of a precipitous ridge. Above
us, jagged peaks tower starkly against a cobalt blue sky. Behind us, the
groomed trails and lifts of Valmorel, France, stretch languidly down to the
modern resort. But we turn our backs on the trails normally taken, determinedly
set our edges and drop down across frozen crust. We know that now, our only way
back to civilization is down through capricious, uncertain, exhilarating
backcountry.
As far as the eye can see, almost 6,000 vertical
feet of untouched snow drops across wide-open pitches, then curls around
outcroppings, disappears into small valleys and winds through tight trees and
brush.
In an instant, we leave the world of civilized
skiing behind. Now, not a chairlift is in sight, not even another skier outside
our small group. After crossing the icy ridge, there are no more children
calling out to their friends, no ski instructors lining up their beginning
classes, no clusters of skiers relaxing at mountain chalets, no lift lines, no
droning grooming machines. All we hear is the wind whistling across the
early-morning crust. The sun begins its silent softening of the snow. Above us
the ominous peak of Le Cheval Noire seems to rear in anticipation.
Yesterday our group gathered in France from
Canada, Sweden, Denmark, the U.S., and the U.K.all English-speakers. Today,
with fluent English-speaking guides, we test our radio peeps and prepare to
cross over the divide from the lift-served, groomed and patrolled terrain of
Valmorel into a parallel world of raw, natural, untamed pitches and
ever-changing snow. This is the best of all worldstaking a resorts lifts to
the ridge separating the untamed from the groomed, a chance to enjoy a touch of
backcountry skiing without arduous hiking and climbing.
The 9 Vallèes guides call this adventure
soft. That means most reasonably fit skiers can manage the skiing, short
climbs and traverses needed to reach virgin pitches and move with the sun.
Unlike groomed, lift-served trails, nothing is predictable in this backcountry
worldnot the pitches, not the snowpack, not the path. A cloud blocking the sun
causes temperatures to drop and snow quality dramatically changes every time
one skis from brilliant sunshine to mountain shadow.
This is a morning most skiers find only in their
dreams. But it is an adventure virtually every skier, from intermediate to
expert, can discover. Though backcountry valley-to-valley skiing once was the
exclusive province of the expert, deep-powder skier and boarder, with expert
guides and todays equipment (such as wider skis), more and more skiers can
savor the solitude and get to know the intimate personality of the Alps.
This valley-to-valley adventure continues in a
new venue every day for a demanding week. In the late winter and spring, the
snow varies dramatically. Tomorrows descent would never, could never
mirror todays. This is an opportunity for downhill skiers and snowboarders to
ski the hidden stashes of powder and steep couloirs known only to those who
intimately understand these mountains.
Day One --We traverse and climb for more than a
hour to find untouched powder and perfect slopes linking Val dIsère and
Tignes.
Day Two -- We pick our way across fields of
untamed ice to gingerly ski untracked crud through naked rocks above Valmorel.
Day Three -- We step out of our skis and pick
our way along a streambed through breakable crust to find an obscure lift that
links us to the Trois Vallées. Back on skis, we traverse from the traditional
town of St. Martin de Belleville to Les Menuires, which looks like a spaceship
forced down during an intergalactic mission. From here we cross the ridge to
Méribel, the another ridge to Courchevel, then drop through untracked trees to
Bozel.
Day Four and Five -- We take a backdoor lift to
La Plagne where the off-piste possibilities seem endless. Theres gladed skiing
below the main villages and wide-open, above-tree-line, hair-raising 3,600-foot
descents from the Bellecote glacier.
Day Six -- After a night in a mountain hut, the
final foray over winding mountain trails and short steep pitches brings us to
Les Arc where guides direct us down 6,000 feet of non-stop vertical starting
across treeless snowfields and ending along a narrow path through trees.
Nearly every day, lunch was a lavish picnic on
the slopes. It was either provided by guides or prepared by mountain men who
had hiked up narrow paths from the valley below and awaited with fresh bread,
sausages, paté, cheese and wine. Or else we dined in mountain restaurants
oozing with atmosphere. Every evening dinner was a French delight from raclette
to entrecôte and truite. We all recounted stories of adventures
in the backcountry and compared routes taken by each group before dropping off
exhausted into deep sleep.
In Canada, forest service permits, remote
resorts, environmental restraints and poor transportation from far-away valleys
makes backcountry skiing other than heliskiing a real test of endurance. You
not only have to find your way to the skiable terrain but, if you drop off the
backside of a resort into the unknown, you most likely will have to hike miles
to find your way back to your hotel or condo. In Europe, the resorts are more
closely knit and the traditional transportation system along the valley floors
allows backcountry adventurers easier movement between accommodations by bus,
van and train.
Even with a more favorable infrastructure,
skiers in Europes backcountry need guides who know their way around the region
and who understand the snow as it changes during the day. They also need a
system of moving their belongings from town to town while they ski the
untracked slopes between resorts.
Many skiers have heard of the Haute Route
linking Chamonix with Zermatt and Saas Fee. For some this route has become a
Holy Grail of ski mountaineering in Europe, but for most, it is far too arduous
and requires too much preparation and specialized equipment. The Ski Safaris
organized across Frances Tarantaise Alps provide a a skiing adventure one
could never do on his own with the comfort of fine-tuned organization.
Our trip was organized by the Association 9
Vallées, a team of guides which has led skiers and snowboarders through the
untracked valleys dividing many of the major Alpine resorts. They offer these
valley-to-valley, resort-to-resort backcountry experiences for skiers from
basic intermediates to super-experts. They also have programs for snowboarders
who can free-ride and can handle all types of snow, terrain and traverses.
Their most popular tour is called the Tarentaise
Ski Safari. It can be organized for every level of skier. Depending on
conditions, skiers will visit Val dIsère, Tignes, Les Arcs, La Plagne,
Courchevel, Méribel, Les Menuires, St. Martin de Belleville and Valmorel. It is
a trip avid skiers will never forget.
This Association 9 Vallées safari experience is
virtually snow-assured. The Tarentaise mountains always have plenty of snow at
upper altitudes. More importantly, backcountry routes for differing levels of
skiers can be found at all times of the year. The guides all speak English, and
they are local guides who add a native flavor to the tours. The entire
experience becomes more than simply a ski tripit is a life experience.
Association 9 Vallées also organizes tours to
the Dauphiné region south of Grenoble connecting Alpe dHuez, Les Deux Alpes,
La Grave and Serre Chevalier; through
the Dolomites of Italy to resorts such as Val Gardena, Sella, Canazei, and
Arabba; to the Italian side of the Alps joining four major valleys with Zermatt
in the shadow of the Matterhorn; as well as Heliskiing in the Valgrisenche of
Italy.
The bottom line is that every tour is customized
for each group. As the guides get a feel for new skiers, they may break the
group of ten into two of five. Both will enjoy the same Savoyard hospitality
and cuisine in every new valley.
Prices for these tours range from about
FFr6,5006,900 for the Tarentaise Ski or Snowboard Safari to around FFr6,000
for programs to the Dolomites, Chamonix, the Dauphiné and Monte Rosa. Ski
touring with skins costs FFr4,500 for the Haute Route from Chamonix to
Zermatt. These rates include your
guide, lift tickets for all resorts, half-board accommodation with breakfast
and dinner based on double occupancy, luggage transportation from hotel to
hotel, avalanche beepers and powder leashes. You are responsible for your own
ski equipment, single supplements, drinks with meals, lunches, mountain rescue
insurance and cancellation insurance.
For more information contact: Association 9
Vallées, Hameau Le Franchet, 73320 Tignes, France. Telephone: (033)
479.06.51.77 Fax: (033) 479.06.44.89. They speak English and German as well as
French.
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