I crossed the Alps on my bike – via the Great St Bernard Pass. While hardly the Andes by frog, as far as my modest cycling achievements go – in an absolute sense (of metres climbed and time spent climbing) it’s one of the biggest and also most memorable. It was made all the more special by finding out only the day before that my grandfather used the same route, albeit it in the opposite direction, some sixty-five years before me on his European cycle travels. While I had hoped to cross the Alps by bike on this trip – it was further east on an off-road route taking several days that initially had my interest. But as I no longer wanted to wait so long to head into Italy, this route looked the best option.
While I’ve had the odd big day of climbing on the bike, I’ve never attempted two thousand metres with no downhill respite before. As such, I had no idea how I’d go – with or without a laden bike. My small amount of research beforehand, while checking exactly where to go, told me that the gradient wasn’t too steep, only kicking up a bit at the end after the main road enters the tunnel and the original road continues to the pass. I wasn’t overly concerned, but prudence had me up early just in case it turned into a really long hard day. Another reason for staying in a hotel the night before, besides getting a decent sleep, was the free breakfast – well fuelled up, I headed out into the nicely overcast morning.
It was cool seeing the road signs giving such options as the pass, Chamonix or Verbier. Another time, in different circumstances I could have been in either of those last two mountain-biking or even skiing. But there was only one objective for the day. The climbing started straight away, but it was easy to stick to my plan of just spinning away, and not wearing my legs out early by using a gear slightly harder that would have me really pushing on the pedals. It just happened that it was the weekend, so there were few trucks/lorries on the road – all the cars, motorbikes and coaches gave plenty of room too as there was rarely a cycle lane.
Eating breakfast I had seen a couple of mountain-bikers ride through town, I caught these two up sometime later. The pair were from Germany and heading to Nice with all their luggage carried on their backs. It was nice to chat about our respective trips and good ways for carrying luggage on a MTB. We parted ways as they headed towards Verbier to ride a different route with more off-road over – I was tempted to join them, but the mention of significant hike-a-bike and staying in a hut many kilometres short of my intended destination put me off; plus emulating Grandad’s ride was also a priority. With so many hours to while away going up one hill, there was plenty of time to think of grandparents and all the stories and things I could have learnt from them if I’d have spent more time. But I suppose that is the way – you don’t realise such things when you are younger.
Still pleasantly mild, the cloud hadn’t lifted much so my view was limited to my immediate surroundings. I didn’t bother to take a photo until stopped at some roadworks. Down to single-lane traffic and long traffic light phases, this gave the nice affect of spacing the traffic passing me out thereafter into something like y = (sin x) + 1 (I had a lot of time to think).
I carried on my merry way as the cloud started to dissipate, concentrating on tucking my elbows in a bit thus relaxing my shoulders and therefore the lower neck that always seems to get so tight. As it threatened to get rather warm (most of the way it had only been 15 oC) I was sent into a few kilometres of galleria – those tunnels open on one side. While cool in there, it did amplify the noise and made that aspect less pleasant – especially with large coaches or packs of motorbikes passing. The main road left for the tunnel and those not simply transiting through the Alps were left on the road to the summit.
The Ogre resting in the sun, briefly escaping the galleria.
The road kicked up a bit, some sections apparently up around ten percent gradient – but I happily span away with gears to spare. Every so often at significant milestones (2000 m for example) I promised myself some water or a snack – I was surprised later to realise that I did all of this on a Snickers bar, a few handfuls of nuts and about a litre of water; a good breakfast sure does help.
Napoleon had crossed the pass in 1800, so there were occasionally signs and large pictures of attesting to the event. I was pleased not to be bringing forty thousand troops with me. Since the galleria, a pair of Germans on road-bikes also on tour (smaller backpacks than the mountain-bikers) had been around. I was slightly slower than one, but happy to be slightly faster than the other. Only now, with a couple of hundred of metres left to climb did I relent and use my easiest gear – even so, I rarely had to stand up and push the pedals; only sometimes standing briefly to have a little relief from the saddle.
There wasn’t a lot to see at the top – but at least there was a sign to pose with. While not the hardest climb or ride I’ve ever done on a bike – being back in such big mountains (it’s been too long) and getting such an ascent completed was vastly satisfying. I hope Grandad can understand that I’ve done so – although I strongly suspect that he had it a lot tougher riding up from the Italian side in the forties. I’ve no idea how much he was carrying on his European tour, but for all I know his bike back then could have come close to mine in mass.
The view down to the lake on the other side of the pass was quite nice. The buildings at the other end are just over the frontier in Italy.
I resisted eating at the top, preferring to start the exhilarating descent down the road to Aosta – often sitting at fifty kilometres per hour, sometime breaking sixty, it was all a little surreal on my bike. Only pedalling to pass cars, such fun, I had to stop every so often to take in the view. At such speed, the wind was amplified so in brilliant sunshine the arm-warmers and then my jacket went on. I passed a small eatery that seemed to be built in a hovel in the side of the mountain – it looked good enough that I turned around and rode back up the hill. A hearty country meal of many small spicy sausages and polenta hit the spot.
Stopped at more road-works – outside the village, Saint Rhemy, that Grandad records in his album as the last heading out of Italy.
Further down the valley, the roofs had changed again.
Although I could have bypassed Aosta itself as I was going a little down the Dora Baltea valley, I wanted to get at least a brief look of this largest city in the Aosta Valley region. The region, in the extreme north-west of the country, is the smallest and least populated of all the Italian regions – it is so small, it is not even divided into provinces. It’s obviously mountainous and has the Italian slopes of Mont Blanc (now Monto Bianco), Mont Rosa and the Matterhorn on its borders. Aosta had a large piazza in its centre that was very busy for a Saturday afternoon. Down in the valley it was a lot warmer with a strong wind blowing up from the east. I didn’t need much excuse for an ice cream.
Finally, as I rode into that wind for ten or so kilometres, my legs started to voice their opinions on the efforts of the day. Climbing off the valley floor my cycling day ended when I found the family-run vineyard at which I will spend a week. More of that in due course, that rounds out the biking related events of what I expect will be a day memorable to me for many years to come.