Tag: bike ban

  • To the ends of the valley

    Riding under the Tete de Balme chair

    OK, it can get a bit insular here in Chamonix. The steep valley walls cut off any sight of the outside world and, as long as you’re only paying attention to mountain sports, then everything you want is on your doorstep.  It’s a bit of a change to look out of the valley occasional and be reminded that the outside world exists, but to do it twice in less than a week, madness.

    To cut a long intro short, the bike ban’s started, so most natural trails are now out of bounds thanks to Arrête Municipale (n° 124/2004) which prohibits bikes from all trails other than those listed on it. You can get round this a few ways (click on the “bike ban” tag to see other posts) but pretty much the easiest, most sure fire way is just to leave the Chamonix commune and hit some other trails, hence the trips to Les Houches and Le Tour.

    Luke getting to grips with the lack of grip

    Les Houches was wet, and as a result, so were we. The trails down at this end of the valley are particularly clay like and things get pretty slippy pretty quickly when it rains. This wasn’t putting us or a couple of Welsh lads on holiday with big Lapierre DH rigs off, you just need to blink a bit more often to get the mud out your eyes.

    Not the best shot I know, but when you see this wee chalet, hit the trail that goes past it's back door!

    After a few front face laps group-think decided we should drop off the back and down to St Gervais on one of the longer “enduro” style runs. Great for us locals on our “enduro” style bikes, but hard work on a DH bike. Lorne & I had ridden “Hugh’s Way” last summer, getting lost near the top but finding the lower section fine. This time we found the upper trails (see photo above, it’s very easy to miss) but completely failed to get the turn off we’d managed fine last time. Go figure. Either way, it’s a good trail down to St Gervais and great to see some different scenery on the way down.

    Some folk are just better at killing time

    With 30 minutes to kill in St Gervais before the last tram we went to hit the skate park. If you’re in a similar situation here’s a top tip. Don’t bother. It’s surfaced with a frictionless surface and bikes are apparently not allowed.

    From the valleys to the valley, Welsh lads on tour

    With the Bellevue lift not running this summer due to cable damage the tramway is the easiest way to get up to that side of the Les Houches hill where the old DH trails started from. They’re in a fairly bad way now, but still worth the blast if you’re up that way. The new trails should be open in a week or so though. Hopefully.

    Lorne deep in the Les Houches jungle

    Fast forward a few days and Lorne & I are up at Le Tour. The weather is hot and sunny, the trails are dusty. All in all a pleasant change. We head up the gondola & chair, traverse round past the Col de Balme refuge to the Tete de Balme chairlift and are in Switzerland, neutral in the face of war, gold and bike bans.

    The Catogne descent which drops down from here is one of my favourites, even more so at the moment as so much of the riding this summer has been deep in the trees, the alpine riding only recently escaping from the snow.

    That's a full size Lorne in the shot, not a model

    The pictures do the talking again here, narrow singletrack through open alpine terrain, before plunging into the trees. What’s not to like? Well if I’m being picky I’d say the Vallorcine DH track being closed, along with most of the land under the Vallorcine gondola, for the whole summer whilst work is done and that once back up on the Vallorcine gondola and having pedalled up to the Col de Posettes you can’t ride the Aiguillette de Posettes trail due to the bike ban. But that’s just me being picky.

    But why be picky when you have trails like this

    Instead the Le Tour DH track under the gondola is a reasonable substitute. It’s had some work done on it which has baked in well and it’s riding very well at the moment, definitely worth hitting for a few laps, just watch out for the livestock…

    Finally, the bike bus has started back up for July & August, so if you want to save driving up to Le Tour, or just want to be able to ride back down at the end of the day, details are here.

    The hills are alive with the sound of...

    What next to escape the clutches of the gendarmerie? I feel a road trip coming on.

    It's a hard life

  • 2 shades of grey

    Hmmmm

    There’s a few techniques used locally to deal with the bike ban. You can ignore it, you can give up on the mountain bike, you can stick to the man-made trails and you can go elsewhere. You can also have a look at the Arrete du Maire, try and find a loophole, and hope for the best.

    The arrete lists 12 exceptions to the July & August bike ban, most of which are listed in the official Chamonix bike map (which you can also get a paper copy from the tourist info and bike shops around town) but there’s 2 in particular which aren’t.

    Chalet Caillet descent

    So, armed with a paper print out of the arrete should I stumble across any gendarmes, I headed up Brevant and dropped into the “Couloir du Brevant”. There’s a few trails down from the Brevant lifts via the couloir, Sentier des Gardes probably being the best of the permitted ways (bikes are completely banned from the national park that the trails from the top lift pass) however the path leaves the couloir, so instead I stayed on the tech rocky singletrack all the way down. Verdict? A nice change from the man-made tracks in the valley, I didn’t get arrested and all the walkers I met were very friendly, but you do feel like you’re missing the best riding.

    Climbing on the James Bond track

    A couple of evenings later Rob & I headed up by the Montenvers railway to test the grey areas further. The arrete lists “sortie de la VALLEE BLANCHE” as a green light for bikes. The infamous James Bond track, a 4×4 path used both to access the Roches de Mottets buvette and as a descent into Chamonix from the Vallee Blanche ski in winter, is probably what was meant but I’ve sortied from the Vallee Blanche a lot of ways, so….

    Start of the descent

    We headed up to Chalet Caillet at a relaxed pace, passing a few walkers in the opposite direction and hoping to let the last few descend the path before we started. Whilst the climb up to the chalet is mostly on 4×4 track, the descent is pure singletrack, and one of the best circular loops in the valley.

    Natural trails rock

    If you want to give the Caillet a go, and it’s completely at your own risk if you do, definitely go either before the Montenvers railway opens or leave it till the evening. The descent track isn’t wide and  much better if you’re not stopping every 20 meters. It’s a popular walk and in the middle of the day that’s also what you’ll be doing.

    And if you get caught and the “but officer, this IS a descent from the Vallee Blanche” argument doesn’t work, don’t blame me!

  • Crisortunity….

    Pop culture has it that the Chinese have the same word for crisis as opportunity (they don’t, but it makes for an easy intro to the blog if we pretend they do). The idea that a forced change, whilst unwelcome, can be for the better. It’s much the same just now in Chamonix with the start of the July & August bike ban. No one wants to stop riding the trails they enjoy, but it’s good to be made to think outside the box a little and try some new places too. That and the trails are generally that hoaching with walkers it’s difficult to get any real flow.

    Aig Posettes

    If you want to stay in the valley, there’s still plenty of trails open for bikes, enough keep anyone visiting busy for a few days at least. The Chamonix Bike Guide has written an excellent summary of these trails here: http://www.chamonixbikeguide.com/2012/06/july-august-bike-ban-whats-rideable.html

    As for the other option, trying some new trails, well, why not? Here’s some links to some bike friendly uplift within 1hr (well, 1hr ish) of Chamonix. Should keep us busy for 2 months…..

    Verbier

    Portes du Soleil:  http://en.portesdusoleil.com/mountain-bike-trekking.html

    Grand Massif: http://www.grand-massif.com/ete/appreciez_vtt.php

    Portes du Mont blanc: http://www.combloux.com/fr/activites/ete/la-montagne/vtt.html

    Verbier: http://www.verbierbikepark.ch/

    La Thuile: http://www.lathuile.net/datapage.asp?id=191&l=3

    Pila: http://www.pilaturismo.it/en/index.cfm/mountain-bike.html

    Courmayeur

    And if you’re not wanting to spend the money on a lift pass (you spent it all on the Chamonix pass?) then a bit further afield is Saas Fee and Tignes, both with FREE uplift this summer!