For
years we have wondered what it would be like to cycle the Pyrenees, so this
year we have made it a reality. Landing in Pau on July 4th we would
venture out on a two-week adventure that would take us over many of the famous
Tour de France "cols" and dipping us into Spain. This grand
circuit would be destined to tax us but the ultimate reward was the adventure
itself.
7/6- Pau to St. Savin
We rolled out from Pau on a cloudy morning and not more than ½ mile down the road our front tire blew up. Great start. The entire group had to stop while we changed the tire then off we went. With testosterone flying high we climbed over 3,000 feet before hitting the base of the famous Col d’Aubisque. This was a relentless climb that was our toughest ever. The reward was a fog-laden summit. The descent was cold and wet but the next climb, the Col d’Soulor brought incredible green valley vistas making it all worthwhile. The day’s totals were one of the biggest we have ever done with over 7,300 vertical feet of climbing.
The beautiful Parc Beamount in Pau
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Do you think the tour went up this climb? |
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The valley before the Col d'Soulor climb |
7/7- St. Savin to Gavarnie
The “tour” was easy on us to day, or so we
thought. A mere 22 miles but over 3,000
feet of climbing up a beautiful gorge to the small ski village of Gavarnie, at
over 4,000 feet elevation. From here we
did a short hike to view the famous “Cirque de Gavarine”, a gorgeous semi
circular shaped group of mountains with a thousand foot waterfall coming from
the top, truly spectacular. Great meal
at our small hotel, roasted veal and the local Bearn wines.
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The best Nicoise sandwich we've ever had |
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Cirque de Gavarine |
7/8- Gavarnie to St. Lary-Soulan
This was the day we all had feared yet were
ready to suffer through, the climb up the Col d’Tourmalet. It was 50% longer than the Col d’Aubisque but
surprisingly forgiving up until the last kilometer where the Garmin registered
grades of 13-16%. It was clearing as we
hit the summit but after a few quick pictures we headed down in treacherous
conditions of heavy fog, roads caked with cow manure and “animanux liberte”,
freeing ranging animals. Just before Le
Mongie about halfway down out of nowhere appeared a dozen large cows in the
middle of the road. Cold and wet we made
it to the village of Campan for a hot beverage.
It had been a long day already and we still had a picnic lunch and the
Col d’Hourquette d’Ancizan to climb. A
memorable day and another 7,000+ feet of climbing.
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The fruits of our success |
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Picnic at the base of the Horchette climb |
7/9- St. Lary-Soulan to Gesset
After our worst breakfast on the trip we
started climbing right out of the gate up the Col d’Azet, another one of this
year’s TDF climbs. While steep, it
afforded incredible views of the mountains that we had climbed over the day
before and the green velvet covered mountains ahead. At the summit, it was crystal clear and we
could see across the valley to our next climb the famous Col
d’Peyresourde. The Pyresourde started
out as our friend but as always it tortured us at the top. We were rewarded with a tasty omelet of
“jambon et fromage” and frites with our favorite French “moutarde”. The descent down the Peyresourde was FAST and
clear for once. Our final destination
would be in Gesset, a small village in the middle of nowhere with a lovely
three star hotel with a true gourmet meal, tres bon!
Picture perfect day riding up the col d'Azet
Summit
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Great crepe shop at the top of the Peyresourde |
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A well deserved omelet and really good |
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Top of the Col d'Peyresourde looking out to the next range of mountains |
A well deserved rest day of doing absolutely
NOTHING. We almost missed breakfast as
we slept in until 8:45 am. As I type
this now I’m enjoying a Makers 46 from our trusty flask. Tomorrow we ride again….
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Our hotel in Gesset |
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One of the nicest dining rooms on our trip |
7/11- Col d’Portillon loop ride
It was time to ride after a rest day so we
reviewed the map and decided to make a run to Spain through Bossost and then
climb the Col d’Portillon back into France to Bagneres d’Luchon. This ended up being one of the best rides of
the trip. It started with a 15 mile slight
descent down a beautiful canyon into Spain.
The Col d’Portillon was taxing but not over the top as we climbed
through pine trees to the summit at a
little over 4,000 feet. It was foggy at
the top but not too wet as we sped to our pizza lunch stop in Bagneres de Luchon. This city is the finish for the TDF stage out
of Pau and will be the deciding stage of this year’s tour.
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Our first time in Spian |
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Bossost, Spain, a real change in architecture and feel |
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A the summit of the Col d'Portillon. I'm pointing at the 17.8% grade we will be descending |
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The town of Bagneres de Luchon all dressed up for the tour |
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We couldn't resist a shot with Mr. Frite! |
7/12- Gesset to Lestelle Betharram
Our longest stay at one place came to an
end. Today looked like it would be easy
compared to the many cols we had already climbed as we headed west over the Col
des Palomieres to Lourdes where we had a magnificent vista of the valley ahead. Lourdes is the city famous for its healing
waters. The city was filled with people
in wheelchairs and a bit depressing, yet to many it brings hope. The small road through the “Foret de Lourdes”
was an adventure in and of itself. It
was one long day and our hotel situated in a lovely agricultural valley was a
welcome relief.
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On the way to the Col des Palomieres. One green valley after another |
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Great view of the valley to the west at the top of this col |
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Fabulous lunch in Bagneres de Bigorre |
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Maria's omelet- the fluffiest eggs you've ever had with mushrooms |
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I couldn't resist the taste citron with a hard meringue top |
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Navigating Lourdes |
7/13- Lestelle Betharram to Oloron
Today we would tackle the Col de Marie
Blanque. This climb was unique as it
averaged only 5% but most was 8-10% with a beautiful flat section near the
top. Climbing it afforded views of the
Aubisque and the other jagged peaks to the south. Many decided to ride up the Aubisque and
Soulor from the other sides, but one Col was enough for us. The descent was the fastest of the trip at 53
mph. Unfortunately the road surface was
a little rough or we might have set a new top speed record! Lunch landed us at a great wood fired (feu de
bois) pizza place in the village of Asap, then on to Oloron St. Marie for two
days.
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View to the backside of the Aubisque and Soulor halfway up Marie Blanque |
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Always a welcome sight |
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A surprise wood fired pizza restaurant "feu de bois". Not bad. |
Another welcome day of rest. We slept in and then walked to LeClerc food
store and shopped lunch for 10 of us back at the hotel. Lots of fun.
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A small part of the fresh fish section at Leclerc |
7/15- Oloron to Isaba, Spain
We were very excited to ride into Spain. But, we didn’t expect what may have been the
most difficult climb of the entire trip, the Col de Pierre St. Martin. This climb had several “triple chevrons” with
grades at 15%+. It was relentless. At one point about 2K from our lunch stop
near the top we stopped and Maria walked and I rode. Tough, tough, tough. Our lunch stop was great as the hosts bought several
rotisserie chickens from a few villages back and we feasted hoping to gain
enough strength to finish the climb and blast the 26K decent into Isaba. Spain’s roads were the best of the trip;
perfectly clean and well engineered. The
last 26K went by in a flash as we raced to our hotel ready for a well deserved
beer. Our hotel was quite modern but the
food was a let down. We were expecting so much more.
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Food loading for the Col de la Pierre St. Martin |
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Hard to believe we were smiling. This was the toughest climb we've ever done. |
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Ripping descent for 13 miles. Beautiful road condition |
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On the way down to Isaba |
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Our hotel in Isaba |
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A delicious plate of olives at our hotel in in Isaba, Spain |
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Local wines
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716- Isaba to St. Jean Pied de Port
We had to start the day climbing back up what
we had descended the day before. The
grades today were kind to us. We topped
the first Spanish col at Laza with smiles on our face knowing that this day
would be easy compared to the one before.
We decided to make a lunch stop in the village of Auritz for a true
Basque lunch, which was memorable on many fronts. One more climb through Roncesvalles, an
important city on the Camino de Santiago, the religious trek across Spain to
Santiago de Compostella, then a lovely descent into St. Jean Pied de Port. We would spend two nights here and enjoy
another day of rest.
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A very "civil" climb compared to what we had been riding |
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Great lunch stop for some true Basque food |
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The Basque version of a chili relleno |
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Probably the best flan I have ever had. |
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The road out from lunch in Auritz |
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We were surprised to find we were on the famous Camino de Santiago |
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The nicest hotel of the trip and hands down the best food. |
7/17- St. Jean Pied de Port- rest day
Sleeping in was a real luxury today in our
most posh hotel of the trip, a Relais & Chateaux hotel, Les Pyrenees. These were easily four star digs with hands
down the most extravagant meals of the trip.
Truly first class. We walked
around the village, shopped and of course had a great lunch of whole Durade
fish and a trout ceviche. Yumm. Tomorrow would be our last day of riding back
to Pau.
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Display cases in the hotel. Very cool knives from the area |
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Incredible collection of Michelin Guides dating back to the early 1900's |
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Old town one street away from our hotel |
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Entry into the old town |
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Interesting spice shop |
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Coffe three ways for dessert….incredible |
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Big, big area for fois gras. Not my fav, but the presentation was exceptional |
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Local area wine, not bad |
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Incredible "entree" first course |
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Trout ceviche |
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Whole Durade fish |
7/18- St. Jean Pied de Port to Pau
What a great trip. We climbed mountains we have only seen in the
tour de France and suffered on others that have never been mentioned. The pure beauty of the Pyrenees was unmatched
by any other mountain riding we’ve done.
Just when you swore at the step grades, you sat up and were in awe of
the green velvet mountainsides and the jagged rocky peaks, truly spectacular
and memorable. Tres bon, l’amour Les
Pyrenees.