High, Wild & Untamed Mountains : Climb the Ecrins Giants

3 beautiful mountains which are wonderfully remote and completely free of lifts!

Charlie Boscoe

Images

Pelvoux Hut.jpg
Pelvoux Hut

by chripell

Licence Free

Mont Pelvoux.jpg
Mont Pelvoux

by Manuel Menal

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Beautiful summit view.jpg
Beautiful summit view

by chripell

Licence Free

Mont Pelvoux.jpg
Mont Pelvoux

by Jerome Bon

Licence Free

Barre des Ecrins from Glacer Blanc.jpg
Barre des Ecrins from Glacer Blanc

by Manuel Menal

Licence Free

Barre des Ecrins and the Refuge.jpg
Barre des Ecrins and the Refuge

by Stefanos Nikologianis

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View of the Barre from the hut.jpg
Looking at the Barre from the hut

by philippe

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Your peak with a party visible on the glacier.jpg
High on the glacier looking down the way you came.jpg
The Barre from the S, with the Meije in the distance.jpg
A long shot of the Barre.jpg
A long shot of the Barre

by *pascal*

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Final steps to the hut.jpg
Final steps to the hut

by µµ

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Les Bans from the hut.jpg
Les Bans showing ENE Ridge top L.jpg
Les Bans showing ENE Ridge top L

by Olive Titus

Licence Free

Description

If you like easy access, lift-served one day alpine adventures which allow you to climb all day and sleep in the valley every night, then the Ecrins is not for you! If, on the other hand, big adventures in remote and wild mountains is your thing, then you have found the Massif you've been looking for.

The Ecrins is legendary for its lack of infrastructure and the fact that in order to climb virtually any mountain in the range, you have to walk every vertical metre from the valley to the summit and back again. The only cable car in the Massif - the legendary La Grave Télépherique - was built in the mid-1970s and the locals were so outraged that there was a bomb planted in the lower station to try and destroy the facility the year after it opened. Nobody was ever proved to have committed the "terrorist" act but it's generally accepted that environmentally conscious Ecrins locals, trying to make their case in the strongest possible terms that the mountains should remain wild, were responsible. The local authorities in the area obviously took note because the lift at La Grave remains the only uplift available to climbers in the whole of the Ecrins.

This guidebook contains 3 peaks (and the relevant hut approaches) which encapsulate what Ecrins mountaineering is all about - high, wild mountains whose summits are hard won. There's the highest and possibly best-known mountain in the range - the Barre des Ecrins (the most southerly 4000 metre peak in the Alps) - and 2 smaller but equally deserving summits in the heart of France's wildest mountain range. There's "only" 6 days of hiking and climbing in this guidebook but once you've experienced your first Ecrins approach and descent, you'll see why you might need more than a week to get these 3 done - rest days are a vital part of a trip to the area!

The Ecrins range apparently gets 300 days of sunshine per year so getting the weather you need is not likely to be a problem, and there are countless charming little villages to explore and lakes to jump in on your rest days.

Adventures