On Saturday I was on the Rochers de Chalves in the Chartreuse. A speed ascent… 1130 meters in 2 hours with quite a lot of horizontal as I had a lunch date with my wife at 12am in Grenoble (at the wonderful Toneau de Diogene). Starting from Pomarey just 14km from Grenoble and at just 730m the road was a ski piste. At around 850m I left the road for the Tenaison trail. The track had been made by snowshoers and I crossed a couple of fit looking young ladies. There was a brief stoney section which I would take my skis off for on the descent then a traverse of the Grand Champ (there is a wooden refuge here but it looks very cold) then onto the steeper wooded slopes of the Chalves.
The snow was crusty on the south-east section. The trail climbs through cliffs, I’d prospected the route with Anny a couple of summers back and given the dense woodland (just skiable) and crust I wanted an alternative for the descent. At 1500m the snowshoe track disappeared to be replaced on the upper slopes of the Chalves by a vague ski trail, someone had skied down to the treeline before climbing back up, they had probably climbed from the Grande Sure side.
Snow was powder on the upper east facing slopes but you had to aim for the surface that looked like a golf ball (neige tassee), then into the trees and I took a change to descend towards the north-east. The map showed some large cliffs but with the chance of a passage via the vallon de Rochasse. The woodland was sparse and skiable with powder. Lower down I traversed under the cliffs, a bit sketchy as I was skiing on 50 degrees flagstones with 10-20cm of snow at one point - the base between the stone and snow was water and I was worried about the whole snowpack sliding down the mountain. The advantage with this traverse was that it took me to another shaded gully I’d spotted on the climb which lead into the top part of the Grand Champ. Then a short ski down through the forest to reach the Tenaison road and just half an hour late for my lunch date.
The route was much better than I’d imagined in the summer when the woodland is overgrown. The only black spot - I lost my camera on the climb.
Today (Sunday) we were in St Hilaire de Touvet. A snowstorm with fresh powder on the piste. It snowed down to 600m with snow sticking from 800m. Probably about 5-10cm of fresh at high elevations.