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TR Haute Maurienne steepish (part 1) * now with added Part 2...

 Poster: A snowHead
Poster: A snowHead
After 2 weeks of seriously unsettled weather, the forecast finally started to look more predictable, so Will, Greg & I set about plotting a short trip. We decided to avoid the honeypot effect of Chamonix, and headed instead for the peace & quiet of the Haute Maurienne, hoping in particular to ski the North face of the Grande Ciamarella, a classic steep descent, with 500m at about 50º.

The beauty of spring skiing is high access on the roads, which combined with last week's cold temperatures and snowfall meant we only had to walk 5 minutes from l'Ecot before putting skis & skins on to climb up to the Evettes refuge:



Approaching the refuge it became clear the Grande Ciamarella was far from skiable, with the face almost entirely in grey ice:



The refuge is unguardianed midweek, so we set about warming the place up... Will improvising with his ice axe (we discovered the axe & chopping block outside the next day...):



After a good meal, Greg discusses routes with a new friend:



Setting off at 5 a.m. the next day morale was low, Greg was laid up with a stomach bug, and the early mist turned into 45 minutes of heavy snowfall as we skinned up the lower glacier:



Finally as we climbed higher the weather started to clear, and the surrounding summits started to reveal themselves:



The day's objective was the North East face of the 3637m Albaron, a steep and slightly exposed descent from this classic Mauriennais peak.
Skirting crevassed areas on the skin up to the Selle de l'Albaron:



Below the North East face. The ski descent takes the obvious hanging slope before traversing hard skier's left above the cliffs to pick up a couloir in line with the summit:



Tomorrow's line on the Petite Ciamarella - the Face Nord Directe, takes the sunlit shoulder then the exposed rampline through the cliff band (more logical than it seems from this angle!):


Looking across at the upper face from near the Selle de l'Albaron:


A nice scramble up the ridge to the summit:



Will on the summit of the Albaron:



Looking down the face:



Will at the bottom of the first pitch (having just come back from Chamonix where if you wait for 5 seconds someone else has skied your line Will had a little trouble adjusting to the fact that noone else was around...).
Perfect snow conditions, 10-15cm of powder on a chalky packed powder base:



Questing off on the traverse:



The traverse turned out to be straightforward, not the rocky scrape we had expected, and put us high up in the central couloir. More great skiing followed with steep chalky snow down to the narrows which gave 5m of icy sidelipping around rocks before opening onto the lower face.
Looking back up at the main face, Will bottom right of picture:



Below the exit gullies, great snow all the way... powder to the bottom of the gullies, then perfect spring snow all the way back to the refuge:



An easy slide & skate across the Evettes flats and a short skin through hordes of Marmottes took us back to the refuge for a welcome lunch and an afternoon lazing in the sun and plotting the next day's trip...

Alpenglow on the Grande Ciamarella:



Video of the day to follow...


Last edited by Poster: A snowHead on Sat 22-05-10 8:12; edited 1 time in total
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 Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
that looks great!
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 Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
double post


Last edited by Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see? on Fri 21-05-10 14:19; edited 1 time in total
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Amazing so much is still skiable.
I did the Albaron about 20 years ago - skinning up from the Criou Refuge above Bonneval and skiing down the South face to the Averole Refuge (big sastruggi all the way). Your way looks more interesting.

For a REALLY steep slope in the Haute Maurienne how about the top of the East face of La Dent Parrachée (photo taken from Val Cenis)



Shocked
Our guide Zeb has skied it but I have no ambitions in that direction!

However we have skied the valley starting from the Col down the skyline to the left - down to Termignon. Very nice.


Last edited by You need to Login to know who's really who. on Fri 21-05-10 14:30; edited 2 times in total
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 Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
snowball, possibly one of the most aesthetically pleasing slopes in the valley!!! We got shut down on it by weather about 4 weeks ago which was a bummer as it was in top condition... scoped it through binos yesterday on the way back & looks like you need an abseil now in the top face + running out of free time sadly.

There are steeper things yet in the valley - Dom Jean Maurice NE face is bigger & steeper & a full-on gnarl-fest by all accounts, & north face Grande Ciamarella. E face Parrachee still firmly on the wishlist though (as is the Couloir Roche on the north face) - just a shame the weather has been so bad for the last 2 weeks... Lots to do in the Maurienne valley!!
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Good work.

Not sure that I'd rate 50* as only "steepish" myself Shocked
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 Then you can post your own questions or snow reports...
Then you can post your own questions or snow reports...
Mosha Marc, yeah, more like free fall.
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 After all it is free Go on u know u want to!
After all it is free Go on u know u want to!
Mosha Marc wrote:
Good work.

Not sure that I'd rate 50* as only "steepish" myself Shocked


I thought that. Shocked
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You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
Looks like same axes as me... haven't used them for log splitting yet though Laughing
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Ski the Net with snowHeads
Very, very nice. Another for the wish list Smile
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snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
Day 2 of our Maurienne trip.

After a lazy afternoon and an early night it was another 5 a.m. start to head for the Petite Ciamarella.
For the first time in weeks the skies were clear from the word go which made a pleasant change. The summit is centre in the picture below, with the normal route skirting left before traversing back right to the summit. The line of descent was by the 'Face Nord Direct' dropping straight from the summit to the cliffs below before following a ramp-line through the cliffs, giving the most direct descent from the summit.



On the way up, approaching the mid-height seracs:



View north into the Vanoise - Mt Pourri on the left, Grande Sassiere & Tsanteleina on the right, with Mt Blanc behind:



The summit in sight:



Grande Ciamarella through a breche on the summit ridge. The North face dropping left (and currently very icy):



Not far now:



Looking across at yesterday's line on the Albaron:



A quick scramble was needed to get onto the summit block....Greg trying the direct (and overhanging) variation:





Petite Ciamarella summit:







Perfect snow on the upper shoulder, chalky, grippy, smooth...



Looking back at the line from below. Following the shoulder gives the best fall-line from the summit, and despite a slightly crusty ramp-line the Direct avoids having to traverse hard right or left as per the standard descents...:



Video to follow...
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And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
Oh that Maureen - she's steep!

Nice one.
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 So if you're just off somewhere snowy come back and post a snow report of your own and we'll all love you very much
So if you're just off somewhere snowy come back and post a snow report of your own and we'll all love you very much
Fabulous. As before I'd have loved all the downhill but I'm not sure I'd have paid for it with all that uphill.
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 You know it makes sense.
You know it makes sense.
sweet.
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