My GR5 Adventure
Started 27th June 2018 - Finished... i'll let you know what I get there!
...what is the GR5 Trail?
The GR5 is a famous alpine trail from Lake Geneva to the Mediterranean, traditionally ending in Nice.
The route is around 620km.
None of the guide books or stories I had read could have made it sound more spectacular than it really is. All the hiking in the Pyrenees can not compare to the beauty of this walk.
Every day is different and each one a different challenge. Mostly I have been lucky with the weather but I have also had torrential rain and heavy mist. Mostly it's lovely and hot and sunny so it is best to get up early and be on the trail by 6 or 7 so most of the hard work is done before it's too hot. A very hot day can turn into a very cold night high up.
The meals in refuges are basic but good and Really expensive because of the difficulty of getting it up the mountain. The flowers are wonderfully diverse and such pretty colours. Eagles soar above and marmots bigger than cats chirp and scuttle about. The path necessarily is either going up or down and both are really strenuous, I can never decide which is worse, it always seems to be the one I am hiking!
Some days are high up in the snow and some in beautiful green valleys. Most are a mixture of the two with hard rocky ascents or descents in between. There are hundreds of enormous waterfalls everywhere as the snow melts. Usually one can see the trail for miles ahead. The sign posting always gives the distances in hours to walk and it's a challenge to keep to those times and usually I cant.
Yesterday was a real snowy walk with the trail going up and over snow a lot of the time, I had my crampons on and was the envy of other less well equipped hikers with the ease of my descent as I strode past!
All the people I meet are really friendly and helpful and most speak some English. The refuge hut guardians are very patient with my attempts at French! I often meet the same people several nights running and they feel almost like friends until they overtake me. I am not the only lone female hiker at all but the only UK one so far.
Often I am high in the mountains with very basic facilities, other times usually at lower elevations it is slightly more civilised. In popular locations there can be up to a hundred people staying in or near one hut and so 2 showers aren't really enough! I usually prefer my tent but sometimes I have stayed in the dormitory when it's been bad weather. A real treat is my own room in a gite.
One night the thunder and lighting were tremendous, I was fine in my tent but the next morning parts of the trail were a mass of mud rocks and broken trees where flash floods in the night had brought stuff down the mountain.I was up to my ankles in soft mud.
I am making slow but reasonable progress through France, I am very proud of myself and loving every minute ( well almost!)
26th July - I am now just about half way along the trail and starting my fifth week.
All the experiences and challenges I have had have amazed me and I'm sure will continue to do so. As I expected it has almost become a way of life and a continuous long-distance hike is so absorbing because it is such hard work. What is Wonderful is that every day is both similar and yet completely different. It's easy to think ' seen one view, seen them all' but here in amongst the Alps it is staggering how beautiful it all is.
The other amazing factor is how friendly everyone is. Hikers always seem to talk to each other and with my very rudimentary French I manage well as when I begin the other person almost always replies in English, whatever their nationality. It's important to smile and greet people on the trail as one may well be sharing a table or a dormitory at the next refuge!
I am now a very efficient camper as I camp often which requires lots of organization...I am brilliant!
Most days consist of a huge mountain to be climbed or descended depending on where I have spent the night. The trail is usually very steep, up or down and I don't like either but the reward of a col at the end of a grueling climb is So exhilarating it is all worth it.
To look back and see the amazing height I have achieved and the spectacular view of the valley and surrounding mountains and to see a new vista of a completely different range of mountains before me is a fabulous experience and this happens most days.
Because of the height of these mountains I don't cover a lot of crow miles each day and I can get very tired especially if the descents are very long. I am so often overtaken and so far, I think I have only overtaken a fat lady and a family with little kids! If the trail says 4 1/2 hours I know it will take me 6 and that's Enough!
One day I misread a sign post, these are measured in hiking Times and not Distance, and there are so many paths everywhere, I ended up taking a short cut which was also a 300 vertical meters extra climb. I became short of water and there was a little building ahead, I thought I could ask there for some.
As I tiredly came around the corner it turned out to be a cafe! Hurray I sat in the sun and had an omlette and raspberry tart!
The sun went in, storm clouds gathered as they often do in the afternoon, and I helped the cafe owner quickly put the chairs away. I couldn't carry on in bad weather, so I put up the tent behind the cafe and stayed in it for the next Five hours of thunder, lightning and heavy rain. About 9 pm the rain stopped, and the full moon and stars shone beautifully.
The next morning, I looked out onto the snowy mountains glowing rosy pink in the sunrise. Happily, I could then hike the high route across the crests of several peaks. After a short steep climb up, a couple passed me and said they thought they were brave to do the route until they saw elderly me with a rucksack. So, then I felt brave until I was passed by an ,8-year-old boy and his grandad hiking the same peaks!