Sue and Martin's Big Adventure
Day 5 - Friday 30 July 2004 - Stage 4
Postcard Summary
Deserted gîte to wild camp atCol
d’Ispeguy
Superb ridge walk, cloudless afternoon, camp at 685 metres. Good views – 7.25 hours, 14 km, 1300m ascent
Last night nobody else arrived at the gîte, which looked as if it normally housed masses of school kids. We had a lovely meal at the local restaurant. Tonight will be our first night cooking in the tent (or near it, it’s very sunny here). The tent is at a ‘wild camp’ just above theCol d’Ispeguy. We can use facilities at the col. We have good views into both France and Spain .
Today’s route was great. We climbed up to a summit at 1044m, where it was still enough to brew up. The ridge narrowed and the views widened as we dropped below the cloud. Had a favourite lunch today – tins of fish! The ridge continued all afternoon and the sun came out, making it all quite steamy. There are pigs here, snouting through the bracken, and horses who obviously like to be fed. We should see sunset from the tent.
Deserted gîte to wild camp at
Superb ridge walk, cloudless afternoon, camp at 685 metres. Good views – 7.25 hours, 14 km, 1300m ascent
Last night nobody else arrived at the gîte, which looked as if it normally housed masses of school kids. We had a lovely meal at the local restaurant. Tonight will be our first night cooking in the tent (or near it, it’s very sunny here). The tent is at a ‘wild camp’ just above the
Today’s route was great. We climbed up to a summit at 1044m, where it was still enough to brew up. The ridge narrowed and the views widened as we dropped below the cloud. Had a favourite lunch today – tins of fish! The ridge continued all afternoon and the sun came out, making it all quite steamy. There are pigs here, snouting through the bracken, and horses who obviously like to be fed. We should see sunset from the tent.
Col d'Ispeguy postcard - our tent was in the grass mid left |
After a night alone
in quite a large gîte, we had the place to ourselves for breakfast - yoghurt
and banana - and the now customary 8.15 departure.
The cloud was
down over our route. Sore feet meant we were both in trainers (mine stayed on
all day due to a sore ankle from the new boots).
Traffic noise on
the main road below was slowly diminishing, and no one else was on GR10, which
we followed for most of today. A very pleasant 20°C here, but cloud hovering
ominously despite this sun trying to shine through. Go through a rocky area
before reaching a grassy plateau at about 740 metres at 10 am.
Lots of circling
vultures, ravens and smaller birds of prey, possibly kestrels. Shepherds are
moving the huge flocks of sheep around. Perhaps they are up here overnight.
There's a cool breeze,
but the sun looks as if it may be winning. We reach our first 1000 metre peak
of the trip at 11.05, 10 minutes ahead of Georges Véron's 3 hour estimate.
Two French day walkers pass, and two backpackers who
Sue thinks are American. It is Pic d'Iparla (1044 metres).
We have a
leisurely half hour brew in the lee of the breeze, hoping for the cloud to
lift. We just get occasional glimpses of hazy vistas. But from now on the cloud
did lift, we got extensive, if hazy views, and by mid afternoon the sky was
cloudless and we were sweltering in 27°C at 1000 metres.
We stopped for
another half hour - 12.35 to 1.05 - at Col d'Harrieta, 808
metres, after meeting more people. Another brew, only an hour after the last
one, in this pleasant glade. Tins of mussels (me) and sardines (Sue) made for
an excellent lunch, supplemented in Sue's case by Mountain Mix from Unicorn,
which is still going strong.
Sun tan cream
applied, and with Sue now in boots, we move on along the fine but easy ridge,
to gain our second summit of the day -
Pic de Bustencelhay - 1028 metres (that's excluding a number of minor summit
which probably wouldn't make 'Munro' status).
15 minutes here
admiring the views, and with our destination in sight. We would be able to see
the Atlantic , perhaps for the last time, if it
wasn't so hazy.
And so, down to
a col where we leave GR10 and continue along the ridge to Col d'Ispeguy, at 670 metres our highest sojourn
by far. Sue quickly gets cokes and affirmation that we can camp anywhere. We
enjoy more cokes before taking our possessions 50 metres up the slope behind Venta
Ispeguy and spending the rest of the afternoon in the sun.
We arrived here
at 3.30 pm. and can see a diminishing number of car tourists admiring views
into France and Spain . We get
these views from our perch, and there are pigs snouting and Pottocks looking
for food from tourists. We hope we won't be disturbed overnight. The tent is on
a bit of a slope.
Cyclists have a
wonderful freewheel down into France .
Considering we are 100 metres from a road, it's idyllic. Both of us discover more
bites - there must have been mosquitoes in the gîte, where it was too hot for
sleeping bags.
And so - a
leisurely evening in the sun with panoramic views, leek and potato soup,
couscous with lomo meat and chasseur sauce, followed by a beer for Martin, angel
delight ("bonkers butterscotch") and Highlights hot chocolate.
Superb.
On the ridge towards Pic de Bustencelhay |
Following the red and white paint flashes |
The view from near Pic de Bustencelhay |
Camping at Col d'Ispeguy |
2 comments:
Your next to the last photo: you toil for ages uphill imagining projecting yourself into wilderness where maybe man has never trod, then you come over a ridge at the high point and find the domestic scene of cattle browsing. The Pyrenees are very special.
I think they are sctually horses in your photo but no matter.
Yes Conrad, they are horses, this being a Pottock zone, but as you say, no matter...
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