From Valsenestre to Désert-en-Valjouffray
Côte-Belle
Côte-Belle - Christophe Albert - PNE
Valjouffrey

2. From Valsenestre to Désert-en-Valjouffray

Fauna
Flora
Geology
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The hight of this stage is definitively the arrival at the limestone columns of Valsenestre, flakes of limestone and a veritable geological curiosity. 
This stage leads to the Côte-Belle pass via a winding path. With plenty of shade and flowers in summer, this ascent is an opportunity to cross different natural environments, revealing the adaptation of vegetation to the ground and altitude. Before descending to the Désert, enjoy the view of Valsenestre limestone columns , which give the impression of arriving on another planet. 

Description

From Valsenestre, follow the track along the Torrent du Béranger, past the boundary of the National Park and on to the Pont des Touches.
  1. Follow the path to a fork in the road and take the right-hand branch. The path enters a small coniferous wood, then runs alongside the stream at the bottom of the gorge, eventually diverging to the left as it gains altitude. Continue into the forest on a winding path up to the limestone columns of Valsenestre.
  2. Wide switchbacks take you to the pass and its panoramic views. The descent to Le Désert follows a path through old meadows.
  3. A narrow gorge leads to the torrent de la Laisse, past a paravalanche. Continue on to the village of Le Désert-en-Valjouffrey.  
  • Departure : Valsenestre
  • Arrival : Le Désert-en-Valjouffray
  • Towns crossed : Valjouffrey

14 points of interest

  • Prairie de fauche
    Prairie de fauche - Marc Corail - PNE
    Flora

    Natural Hayfields

    Agricultural specialists consider a meadow as natural if it has not been ploughed or fertilised over the last ten years. This is the case for those that you will see, surrounded by hedges, at the start of the hike. The meadows have an important variety of plant life and consequently attract multitudes of pollinating insects, including domesticated bees of course.
  • Mégaphorbiaie
    Mégaphorbiaie - Pierre-Emmanuel Dequest -PNE
    Flora

    Tall herb fringe communities

    Tall herb fringe communities form a landscape linked to very precise conditions in terms of climate (wet summers and snowy winters), topography (long ubac slopes where névé sometimes remains on the ground deep into the summer), altitude (subalpine tier from 1600 to 2100 metres) and soil (unsaturated soils with large water reserves).

  • Barrages du torrent du Béranger
    Barrages du torrent du Béranger - Samy Jendoubi - PNE
    Water

    Timber dams

    In the Combe des Echarennes, as you take the path to the left, you can see, in the gorges of the Béranger mountain stream, wooden dams made by the RTM (mountain terrain restoration department of the National Forests Office) to hold back the flow of debris carried down from the mountains during heavy rain and floods.

  • Aconit paniculé
    Aconit paniculé - Bernard Nicollet - PNE
    Flora

    Monkshood

    This is a typical plant in tall herb fringe communities, measuring 50 to 100 cm. It has royal blue flowers shaped like helmets and grouped together in loose bunches. Their particularity is that they are highly toxic! Herbivores are aware of this and don’t eat them.

  • Pleurosperme d'Autriche
    Pleurosperme d'Autriche - Bernard Nicollet
    Flora

    Pleurospermum austriacum

    This robust hardy perennial with a thick, hollow and grooved stalk belongs to the parsley and carrot family, and can grow from 60 to 150 cm high. Its large umbels of white flowers bloom from July to September. Very little known, in France it only grows in the Alpine areas and for this reason is worthy of attention.

  • Ancolie des Alpes
    Ancolie des Alpes - Mireille Coulon - PNE
    Flora

    Alpine columbine

    This is an uncommon and protected species, measuring 30 to 60 cm. The flowers are quite large and have a magnificent blue colour, blossoming at the head of the stem, and are the only ones with afive petals in the corolla. They are not to be confused with the common columbine, which has smaller flowers and is more widespread.

  • Les orgues au col de Côte Belle
    Les orgues au col de Côte Belle - Lucien Tron - PNE
    Geology and geography

    Côte Belle organs

    A striking geological phenomenon, the big organs , also known as the big library, were formed when the Alps were born. They were formed by thin grey-blue limestone sheets and by more highly eroded soft schistose marl. A series of perpendicular cracks in the layers divide the slabs into remarkable columns.

  • Troupeau de brebis
    Troupeau de brebis - Mireille Coulon - PNE
    Pastoralism

    Flock of sheep

    A flock of sheep belonging to local farmers graze at the summit of the mountain pass near the Pic de Valsenestre. In summer these animals with their thick woolly coats can enjoy the shade of the willows that you can see just before arriving at the col (alt. 2220 m).

  • Saule soyeux
    Saule soyeux - Bernard Nicollet - PNE
    Flora

    European violet willow

    This is a shrub in the subalpine tier. It is less than one metre tall and grows in small groups on the ubac. At lower altitude, it may grow taller. You can recognise it from a distance through its characteristic shiny, silvery colour and its growth in circular beds. Adult leaves feel very silky on both sides.

  • Pic de Valsenestre
    Pic de Valsenestre - Bernard Patin - PNE
    Panorama

    Landscape of the cirque de Valsenestre

    From the mountain pass, climb the little summit above to  better see  the landscape  which shows the  cirque de Valsenestre : on the left is the Signal du Lauvitel (2901m) and the Clapier du Perron (3169m), the mountain pass at  Muzelle (2613m) where the GR54 is. At this level you can really see a geological fault separating the Grandes Rousses which are granite from the Muzelle block in gneiss. On the right, the principal summits are the Roche de la Muzelle (3465 m), and the pointe Swan (3294m). Le col de Côte-Belle separates the  Pic de Valsenestre (2752m) on the left from the l’Aiguille des Marmes (3046 m) on the right.

  • Edelweiss
    Edelweiss - Marie-Geneviève Nicolas - PNE
    Flora

    Edelweiss

    In Latin léontopodium signifies the foot of the lion which is the general shape of the edelweiss. By looking at it closely, you realize that it is not one flower but a group of 5 to 10 flowers grouped in a flower head. The edelweiss is in the   astéracées family like dandelions. It is a white plant, milky and perennial growing in rocky alpine meadows at subalpine level up to 2900 m. It often mixes with the Alpine Aster. The emblem of numerous guides, it symbolizes the high mountains and represents strength in the language of flowers...

  • Lézard vivipare
    Lézard vivipare - Damien Combrisson - PNE
    Fauna

    Viviparous Lizard

    The viviparous lizard can be distinguished from the wall lizard by its rounded muzzle. It is  capable of living at an altitude of 2500m and you will most often see them in the meadows. It likes to warm itself in the sun, resting on the grass or the dry moss to hunt grasshoppers, crickets or spiders. During the winter, it buries under the ground where in a lethargic state it can survive negative temperatures. The viviparous lizard is named like this because the females keep their eggs in their abdomen up until they hatch. So the young are completely formed when they are born, it is an adaptation to the cold environment.

  • Geology and geography

    New path

    The last section of the path allows access to the mountain pass has required numerous days of maintenance since its creation. In fact the unstable character of the soil associated with the steepness of the slope have made it necessary for the rangers to create wooden benches to contain the weight of the earth.. In Autumn 2012, it was decided to create a new section of the path by using part of a sheep track further East in the direction of the Marmes mountain pass. The work was carried out by a team creating 50 m per day during 26 days with pick-axes and courage. In total, it is a section measuring 1300 m which has been created, which makes the path less steep and much more stable.

  • History

    Paravalanche

    In 1961 and 1962 big avalanches descended as far as the riverbed of the Bonne, threatening the houses in the hamlet at Désert en Vajouffrey. In 1982 major works enabled the construction of a paravalanche in order to increase the safety of the hamlet and the prairies, by diverting possible threats coming from the Côte-belle valley.


Altimetric profile


Sensitive areas

Along your trek, you will go through sensitive areas related to the presence of a specific species or environment. In these areas, an appropriate behaviour allows to contribute to their preservation. For detailed information, specific forms are accessible for each area.

Golden eagle

Impacted practices:
Aerial, , Vertical
Sensitivity periods:
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAug
Contact:
Parc National des Écrins
Julien Charron
julien.charron@ecrins-parcnational.fr

Recommandations

Is in the midst of the park
The national park is an unrestricted natural area but subjected to regulations which must be known by all visitors.


Information desks

Maison du Parc du Valbonnais

Place du Docteur Eyraud, 38740 Entraigues

http://www.ecrins-parcnational.fr/valbonnais@ecrins-parcnational.fr04 76 30 20 61

Reception, information, temporary exhibition room, reading room and video-projection on demand. Shop: products and works of the Park. Free admission. All animations of the Park are free unless otherwise stated.

Find out more

More information


Source

Parc national des Ecrinshttps://www.ecrins-parcnational.fr

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