Summer Activities  
When is the tunnel open?

Roadsign showing Tunnel du Parpaillon, Ubaye

The Conseil Général des Hautes-Alpes publishes a list indicating the state of the Cols and access to sites at altitude (Etats des cols et accès aux sites d'altitude).
See website

Bike Hire

There are plenty of good bike-hire shops spread throughout the valley.
We chose a top-of-the-range ‘VTT tout suspendu’ mountain bike from;
Bouticycle Agnèse Donnadieu
51 Ave. des 3 Frères Arnaud
04400 Barcelonnette
0033(0)4 92 81 23 69

Cyclist approaching the Route du Parpaillon, Ubaye

Which maps to use

We used a 1/60 000 scale walking and leisure map (GPS compatible) showing footpaths, cycle routes and parking places, plus cafés and restaurants:
Carte Libris No.6 Queyras Ubaye.
Price 10,90 Euros, available locally.

When to go...

The Vallée de l’Ubaye has an enviable annual sunshine figure and summers here are generally much more agreeable than for those frying at lower altitudes. If you want to tackle the Route du Parpaillon, then wait until the late June - confirming with the local Tourism Office that the
Tunnel du Parpaillon
will be open
– before you set off…

Route du Parpaillon sign, 1891.

Important

The Route du Parpaillon places demands on both rider and equipment (particularly in hot weather). Be sure that your fitness levels are up to the challenge - or be prepared to get off and walk with the bike on steeper sections.

Kilometre marker with gradient steepness for cyclists, Route du Parpaillon.

Local cycling guides list the Route du Parpaillon as a return journey in one day, which is optimistic, to say the least.
For your first visit we suggest you arrange for a member of your party to drive ahead around the Lac Serre Ponçon towards Crevoux and await your arrival at an agreed location, to transport you back to your accommodation.

Take plenty of drinking water, some energy snack bars and use repeated applications of high-factor sun-block. For much of the Route there is no shade.

Tunnel du Parpaillon - Steel doors and dark tunnel interior.

The Tunnel du Parpaillon is unlit, unsurfaced, potholed and always very cold, so pack a fleece and some form of lighting to help you find your way safely in the icy darkness.

Tunnel du Parpaillon

Enjoy Your Adventure - Safely!

Passions Icon

Where to stay...

Maison d'Hôtes Les Méans
04340 Méolans Revel
+33(0)4 92 81 03 91
www.les-means.com

Garden in summer with dining area.

Unwind in peaceful surroundings and comfortable accommodation with mountain and valley views. Breakfasts are a feast of local and home-made produce served in a stone-vaulted dining room.

Maison d'Hôtes Les Zélés
Hameau de Maljasset
04530 St-Paul s/Ubaye
+33(0)4 92 84 37 64
www.leszeles.com
If you really want to get away from it all, enjoy hiking, cycling and wildlife, this is the place. Picnic baskets are available, and dinner features dishes prepared from fresh local produce.

Find out more...

Services Tourisme Vallée de l’Ubaye

0033(0)4 92 81 03 68
www.ubaye.com
E-mail: info@ubaye.com
You can download .PDF leaflets from the site, including a Cycling Guide with a varied selection of routes.

Office de Tourisme Barcelonnette

Place Frédéric Mistral
04400 Barcelonnette
Tel. +33 (0)4 92 81 04 71
Fax : +33 (0)4 92 81 22 67
info@barcelonnette.com
www.barcelonnette.com

Passions Icon

Advertiser Links
Travel to France by train...

Relax on the TGV Est ServiceTravelling to France this summer can be a much more relaxing affair with .

Enjoy more time on holiday..

Long hours getting to your destination can really spoil the adventure. allows you the freedom to choose how you travel, arriving fresh and relaxed at your destination. Book now on

Self-drive mountain holidays in France

Morzine, MontriondTravel to France by ferry and some of the best summer scenery in the world. Enjoy the freedom of taking unlimited baggage and up to 9 people per car via .
Book your journey with P&O Ferries

Service and Comfort with SWISS

Year round flights from the UK to Geneva offer a huge choice of stunning holiday destinations throughout the Alps.

Alpine wild flowers and mountain track
The route begins innocently enough amid mountain pastures above Chapelle Sainte Anne

In search of the Lost Alpine Route
(by Mountain Bike)...

Once a key route for military supplies, the Route du Parpaillon was abandoned in favour of the lower Col de Vars, which could be kept open in winter. Today, the old route is popular for walkers and cyclists and offers stunning mountain scenery.

If you head south from Briançon you enter the Vallée de l'Ubaye over the famous 2109m Col de Vars, now a classic climb stage in the Tour de France. However, further along the mountain ridge lies an earlier, much higher pass created by the military: the Route du Parpaillon. Long since abandoned, the old trace (which includes a remote and mysterious tunnel) scaled the wild, rugged Massif du Parpaillon and still appears on larger-scale maps. Was it, I wondered, still possible to follow it from end to end? Attempting it on a mountain-bike seemed like the ideal way to find out. The local tourism people, though, feel the time-frame is limited: “The problem is the tunnel; most of the year it’s frozen up with ice and snow. But after the middle of June it should be open... until the snows come again”.

Advertisement

High view of Ubaye valley with the Fort de Tournoux.
The Fort de Tournoux is largely concealed within the mountainsides above Condamine-Châtelard.

Return to Ubaye...

After months of increasingly lengthy training rides, I find myself back in Ubaye, renting a convincingly rugged full-suspension bike and feeling distinctly uneasy about what lies before (and above) me. The Route du Parpaillon originally served the Fort de Tournoux, a vast military complex defending the eastern end of the valley from above the village of La Condamine-Châtelard. From here a tarmac road climbs through a series of tough hairpin bends to over 1800m, passing the family ski station of Sainte-Anne. Not knowing what awaits, I decide to drive this gruelling but hardly undiscovered 6km section until the tarmac finally runs out beside the tiny Chapelle Sainte-Anne, where it’s time to transfer to two wheels.

Mountain spring, with view to cross in pasture.
View of stream flowing through forest.
large stone boulder in middle of track.

Above (left): Wooden cross, Chapelle Sainte-Anne; (centre): Pont de Berard; (right) leaving the tree-line, a large fallen rock.

The Route begins...

The old route begins as a gravel track among lush wildflower meadows, but soon enters dense, echoing forest and climbs steadily up the side of a deep, curving valley. A few minutes’ determined slog on the woodland track brings me to the Pont du Bérard, an idyllic spot where an inscribed stone beside a craggy cascade records, among other things, the altitude (currently 1841m) and distance to the tunnel: 9km 995m.

Waymark at the Pont du Berard, Route du Parpaillon An idyllic spot, but the route will soon leave the forest behind, to climb a further 900m (and more) higher,

Progress now becomes slower and the pulse rate faster on a steep hairpin climb through the tree-cover, from which I finally emerge to confront a cheerful cabin equipped with a gently-humming generator. Unlike the small group of walkers following the GR 6 footpath, I resist the temptations of the Buvette Grill le Petit Clausis and instead press on over a rugged stone and timber bridge spanning the Ruisseau du Parpaillon, which must take a lot of spring meltwater but in summer is little more than a small stream. From here things really open out, the rough track ahead laid out like a dull grey ribbon following the contours of the steep valley sides past the grandly-named Cabane du Grand Parpaillon (2031m), the only obvious man-made feature. The colours of this now-remote landscape are almost surreal, with areas dull, bleached-out shale showing through grass struggling to thrive beneath the burning sun hanging in a deep blue sky.

Stream crossed by stone and timber bridge.
View of mountain refuge.
Warning triangle road sign beside mountain track.

Above (left): The Ruisseau du Parpaillon; (centre): the Cabane du Grand Parpaillon; (right) a clear warning - although of what, exactly, is not specified.

The relentless, steady climb makes progress painfully slow, the combination of hot sun and high altitude compounding the effort required. The scenery, though, becomes ever more amazing, with few obvious clues as to the route’s former importance until I ride over a short section surfaced with intricately aligned stonework. It’s hard to imagine the whole Route having been constructed so painstakingly, or that this would be the only sections to have survived. For now it must remain a mystery.

No let-up

Higher still the track becomes more tortuous, finally tightening into a seemingly endless hairpin ascent, repeatedly crossing and re-crossing a deep gully gouged by torrents of rain and melt-water cascading down to the valley floor far below.

Decayed timber bridge.
Hairpin ascent.
Overview of valley towards the Col de Vars.

Above (left): a hazard worth avoiding; (centre): the hairpin climb; (right) uplifting scenery from the final climb.

Each is spanned by a timber bridge looking more structurally unsound than the last, with gaping holes exposed between sagging, time-worn timbers. There's no way of knowing how old they are, but nothing has an easy life up here in these exposed conditions. Soon the track reaches a section of unstable rocky debris which have clearly slid down the mountainside and look set to continue.

Advertisement

At last, the tunnel appears...

I press on, though, and eventually round what turns out to be the final bend of the climb. In the distance I recognise what must be the legendary Tunnel du Parpaillon, but looking pretty insignificant amid the vastness of the surrounding landscape. But the sight inspires a final burst of energy, acknowledged by a stirring round of applause from a large group of Italian long-distance hikers taking a picnic break.

Tunnel du ParpaillonThe mouth of the dark, mysterious tunnel emerges 60m or so below the Col du Parpaillon – the original mountain pass.

After the demands of the climb I dismount thankfully and begin to take in the incredible surroundings. On the stonework around the tunnel entrance are inscribed its constructors (le Génie, or military engineers) and the altitude: 2643m (almost 9,000ft). This almost cetrainly makes it Europe’s very highest road tunnel. The spot is both uplifting and yet desolate in its remoteness, with little greenery able to survive on the stark, visibly unstable terrain between the tunnel and the Col du Parpaillon looming high above it. Not surprisingly, keeping the Col open (and maintaining the Route’s viability) during winter proved impossible, so the tunnel was bored through the rock 60m or so below the ridge and opened in 1901.

No turning back

Peering beyond a pair of huge steel doors into the entrance, after years of semi-abandonment, is quite literally a chilling experience. A very few metres in, all is total darkness, and echoing around it all there’s an eerie sound of water dripping from between the rocks of the unfaced tunnel roof.

Tunnel du Parpaillon and trail-bikerAn intrepid German trail-biker heads into almost half a kilometre of icy chill and total darkness.

In other words, it's as every bit as unwelcoming as I'd been told to expect. But I'm determined not to turn back, so in the baking sunshine I put on a thermal fleece from my back-pack, along with what was described as a long-range LED head-light, then climb back on the bike. One deep breath later I select a low gear, brace myself and launch off into the tunnel at a steady pace, hoping to keep moving through the deep pools of water I can already see and to aid stability if and when I hit the expected sheet ice.

Chill-Factor

As predicted, the cold inside is chilling and the darkness soon becomes total, as the tunnel course was not bored straight, but actually curves throughout its 468m length. This makes it impossible to see the exit until you’re some way in. Eventually, though, a tiny white dot appears, and I focus upon it while trying to blocking out thoughts of what might be hanging in the darkness overhead. Before long I hit ice, too, but I manage to keep moving.

Unsurfaced track disappearing around bend.The welome view from the other side of the tunnel. From here it's downhill for the next 13km to Crevoux.

When I finally reach the warm sunshine again I have a real sense of elation and personal achievement. A young Italian cyclist and his girlfriend, looking doubtful, ask me if its safe to ride through, but decide against it when I mention the icy cold. For me, though, it's all behind me, and I focus instead on the beauty of the very different landscapes which are now unfolding ahead.

It’s all downhill from here

From here it’s all downhill, on a stony, unsurfaced track which swirls its way between mountain pastures filled with Alpine wildflowers. Things are much softer on this side of the mountain, with none of the almost desolate sense of remote abandonment I'd seen on the long, arduous climb. This is picture-postcard mountain imagery, adding a whole new dimension to what has turned out to be, as I'd always suspected, an epic journey.

Alpine wildflowers.
Timber cross and trees.
Forest beyond rocky mountain pasture.

Above (left):summer wildflowers; (centre): wooden cross marker; (right) re-entering the tree-line above Crevoux.

Eventually, after crossing a fast-flowing stream and passing a few rugged stone cabins and timber crosses, I re-enter the tree-line, in the form of silent conifer forest sheltered by the surrounding mountains. Minutes later the gravel gives way unexpectedly to tarmac before a steep, rocky track forks off, signed to Crévoux. I continue down more sedately to cross the Torrent de Crévoux, emerging into a broad valley above the starkly authentic-looking hamlet of La Chalp.

Small road bridge with trees, meadow and mountain backdrop.In summer, at least, the landscape mellows once again as the route approaches the village of La Chalp.

The journey is almost complete, apart from a final streamside descent beside to the Vallée de la Durance. In the village of Crévoux is a time-worn painted plaque recording the completion in 1891 of a major section of the Route Militaire du Parpaillon by the 6th Group Alpin. Their great adventure made it possible to undertake mine. Passions Icon

blog comments powered by Disqus
Related Pages
Barcelonnette and the Ubaye Valley

We discover the Valley by following the Ubaye river from the Lac de Serre Poncon to its source and the highest villages in Europe .

St Paul sur Ubaye

Cycling
The Mont Blanc Tour

Diary of a mountain biker
riding the Mont Blanc tour.
Cycling in the mountains

Skiing Pra Loup

We visit the family ski resort of Pra Loup, one of several in the Vallée de l’Ubaye, and discover some challenging ski terrain.
Mountains between Pra Loup and Val d'Allos

Grand Touring

From Lac Léman to the Mediterranean on Route des Grandes Alpes.
Touring on the Route des Grandes Alpes

Travel Ideas

Download your essential travel Apps from the

Take the train...

Rail Europe, the UK subsidiary of SNCF French Railways, provides rail travel right into the heart of the French Alps.

Flights

Discover the new and exclusive route to Sion airport in the Swiss Alps.

Ferry Travel

Norfolkline - low prices, quality ferries, convenient schedulesNorfolk Line ferries

Transfers

Need a lift?
Holiday Taxis offer private transfers from airports to ski resorts in the Alps. Whether it's just you or a bunch of friends, they have transport to suit your needs.

Car Hire

Pick up and ski this winter

Forget about queuing for a bus at the airport, low cost car hire - with a ski rack if necessary, will get you to where you want to go with a minimum of fuss. See the

Insurance

Sponsored Links