Afgelopen twee weken
+ 28
Combe à Marion
Route voor off-piste skiën
Informatie
2,28 mi
2.521 ft
An exciting ski tour in one of the wilder parts of the Aravis.
The Col des Aravis is a well known landmark and has featured in the Tour de France several times. Having driven up it in winter you are likely to be cured of any desire to cycle up it, but there's no doubt that it is a spectacular and somewhat desolate place.
This tour starts from the Col itself (where there is ample parking) and climbs up a steep bowl and then into a hidden couloir. The skin from the Col gradually steepens as it climbs towards a small section of trees, and then stays consistent at 30 - 35 degrees for most of the way once past the treeline. (The angle is ideal for avalanches, so only come here when you are sure that the route will be safe.)
For the final few hundred metres of ascent you are skinning up a wide couloir with high rock walls either side of you and the top section of this couloir is, at times, so steep (35 - 40 degrees) that bootpacking might be easier than skinning.
At the top of a couloir is a broad col from where you can enjoy great views across the peaks of the Beuafortain. Once you're done soaking in the view, clip into your skis and reverse (roughly) the ascent route, moving left or right of your skin track throughout to find the best snow and terrain.
Keep a bit of a speed for the final section back to the Col!
Written by Charlie Boscoe
The Col des Aravis is a well known landmark and has featured in the Tour de France several times. Having driven up it in winter you are likely to be cured of any desire to cycle up it, but there's no doubt that it is a spectacular and somewhat desolate place.
This tour starts from the Col itself (where there is ample parking) and climbs up a steep bowl and then into a hidden couloir. The skin from the Col gradually steepens as it climbs towards a small section of trees, and then stays consistent at 30 - 35 degrees for most of the way once past the treeline. (The angle is ideal for avalanches, so only come here when you are sure that the route will be safe.)
For the final few hundred metres of ascent you are skinning up a wide couloir with high rock walls either side of you and the top section of this couloir is, at times, so steep (35 - 40 degrees) that bootpacking might be easier than skinning.
At the top of a couloir is a broad col from where you can enjoy great views across the peaks of the Beuafortain. Once you're done soaking in the view, clip into your skis and reverse (roughly) the ascent route, moving left or right of your skin track throughout to find the best snow and terrain.
Keep a bit of a speed for the final section back to the Col!
Written by Charlie Boscoe