La Grave

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Commune of La Grave

La Grave
Location
Longitude 6° 18' 24" E
Latitude 45° 02' 49" N
Administration
Country France
Region Provence-Alpes-Côte-d'Azur
Department Hautes-Alpes
Arrondissement Briançon
Canton La Grave
Mayor Jean-Paul Durand
(2001-2008)
Statistics
Altitude 1,135 m–3,976 m
(avg. 1,520 m)
Land area¹ 126.91 km²
Population²
(1999)
455
 - Density (1999) 3,6/km²
Miscellaneous
INSEE/Postal code 05063/ 05320
¹ French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 mi² or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
² Population sans doubles comptes: single count of residents of multiple communes (e.g. students and military personnel).
France

La Grave is a municipality of the Hautes-Alpes département. It is a small ski resort in the French Alps, dominated by La Meije.

[edit] Ski

The area is famously unpisted and although patrolled, has no formal avalanche control. The area is dangerous to ski unless supported by a guide, including much glacier travel at the very top.

Unsurprisingly, La Grave is a mecca for off-piste and extreme skiers, offering some of the most exciting and challenging lift-served terrain in the world. The vertical drop totals 2,150 m, although it is possible to ski below the resort to the road and increase the vertical descent to 2,300 m.

Mechanical access to the mountain is limited to a closed, two-stage, pulse gondola system. The first lift starts at 1450m, runs through one intermediate station (known as P1 at 1800m) then terminates at Peyrou d'Amont (2800m). The second stage of the gondola runs directly from Peyrou d'Amont to the Col des Ruillans (3200m). The top of the gondola then allows access to two further T-Bars (one of which is the worlds only fully suspended surface lift) to reach the top of the Girose Glacier. The Girose Glacier can also be reached from the resort of Les Deux Alpes on the other side, although this entails a one to two kilometer walk (between certain hours transport across is provided).

There are two main routes of descent available, with many offshoots and couloirs available. To the skier's right of the gondola station at the Col des Ruillans are 'Les Vallons de La Meije', a variation of which leads to the infamous Trifides couloirs, and ultimately to the valley bottom and the Romanche River. Skiers can also make leftwards traverses to return to Peyrou d'Amont or P1 to avoid skiing the lower section which can be rocky or even grassy meadows in poor snow conditions.

To the skier's left from the Col des Ruillans is known as the Chancel route (also accessible from the Girose Glacier) which leads to several couloirs (the Banane, Patou, Couloir du Lac) around the Lac de Puyvachier and the Refuge Evariste Chancel. Below this point skiers can either traverse right to return to P1 or descend directly to the valley floor and village of Les Fréaux via the steep Fréaux Couloir, the entrance to which is easily confused with the top of an icefall so should be treated with care.

Alternative descents include various routes to the south of the highest point of the lifts (the Dome de Lauze, at the top of the T-bar) in the Vallon du Diable. These lead to the picturesque village of St Christophe en Oisans from which alternative transport must be arranged in order to return to La Grave or to join the Deux Alpes lift system and return via the top of the Girose Glacier. There are several direct routes from the top of the Girose Glacier to the valley such as Chirouse and Orcières; these involve complex routefinding and sometimes abseils. Other classic routes are the Pan du Rideau and Y-Couloir, reached via a short walk from the top of the first T-bar; they involve a steep ski down onto the Glacier du Rateau then rejoin the Vallons de La Meije.

There are restaurants at Peyrou d'Amont and the Col des Ruillans and food is served at the atmospheric Refuge Evariste Chancel. Beds at both the Refuge and in a sleeping space in the Col des Ruillans restaurant are available for overnight hire by prior arrangement. In April of 2006, extreme skier Doug Coombs died while trying to save a friend in the Couloir de Polichinellein.

[edit] Ice Climbing

In recent years La Grave has also become a popular location for ice climbing. The steep sided valley receives little sun in winter and many icefalls form on the valley sides. Climbing routes range from under 100 to over 300 meters long and are climbed in a number of pitches. Routes range from easy La Gorge II/3 to very hard Diabolobite II/5+.

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: