Walking in the Cevennes. Janette Norton

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Название Walking in the Cevennes
Автор произведения Janette Norton
Жанр Книги о Путешествиях
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Издательство Книги о Путешествиях
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isbn 9781783621095



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the main track which zigzags up the hill. At the top ignore the track going left but continue round the contour of the hill on a flatter path which then starts to descend. On the corner, there is a gate and a sign on the right saying‘Sentier Communale de Vigan/Avèze’(40mins). The path goes into the open and narrows as it continues through bushes with a vegetation-covered wall left. There is now a good view of the Roc de L’Esparon over on the right (see Walk 3).

      The walled narrow track continues down past an orchard into a shallow little valley with a stream flowing through and a number of vegetable gardens, each with its own wooden hut. The path becomes a grassy jeep track and continues over the pretty little stream at the Pont de Mousse and up to the right along the other side of the valley. It is interesting to note that these allotments are well irrigated as the water from the stream has been diverted into narrow channels between them.

      (6) The track meets the D48A (50mins), which goes up left to the hamlet of Loves. However, go right and continue on the road round a corner (ignore the junction right signposted‘Le Caila’) past some houses to a T-junction at the main road to Avèze.

      (7) Go right on the road (you can see the village of Avèze left) for a few minutes and then left on a quaint stone bridge across the river where there is Camping Municipale on the other side (1hr). The red/white splashes of the GR7 now appear.

      The river here is very attractive as it flows over stones, and there is a stony beach which is a good place for a picnic – beware of broken glass though!

      (8) Turn right after the bridge onto a narrow road, which soon reaches the main bridge from Avèze. Do not cross the bridge but go straight over onto a narrow path, which follows the river all the way to Le Vigan. This is a pleasant flat path where bushes and willow trees border the riverbank – you can hear the traffic over on the left. It crosses a number of watercourses coming down into the river, passing orchards and a pylon opposite a high weir. The river becomes more rapid, and stretches of the cobbled path are raised and man-made.

      The path continues under a metal bridge where there is a sluice gate and an old mill on the other side. The river becomes calmer now before going over another weir. The main river flows to the right round an untidy island of willows, and there is a wide channel beside the path which leads to a dam – the water has obviously been channelled off here to use for some former industrial process.

      Follow the path into Le Vigan, with a disused factory on the left, then go ahead at a crossroads past the Centre Culturale and a swimming pool – on the right is a school. Continue on, crossing a bridge over the road, and turn right onto the Rue Barris, following signs‘Centre ville’to the church and into the main square (1hr 45mins).

      Circuit des Maures

Start point Parking at the Hôtel de Ville (Mairie) of Le Vigan
Height gain 306m
Difficulty Easy – some medium steep uphill to start
Time 3hrs 15mins
Maps Didier & Richard Top 25 2641 ET Mont Aigoual/Le Vigan 1:25,000
How to get there (from Le Vigan) This walk is from the town itself. Park behind the town hall (Mairie) where there is a lot of space.
Signposting Excellent – the GR60A goes to the col where it meets the GR60. Continue on the GR60 until you turn down the mountain. There are also wooden posts with PR21 on them and yellow splashes all the way round the walk – you can’t go wrong!

      A relatively easy walk up to a low pass above the town of Le Vigan and then along a delightful ridge before dropping down to walk along the river. According to legend, when the Saracen hordes invaded this area at the start of the eighth century and destroyed the town of Le Vigan, they came by way of the Col des Maures (Maures meaning‘moor’in the ancient Occitan language), which is now indicated as Col des Mourèzes on the IGN map.

      Le Chevalier d’Assas was born in Le Vigan in 1733 and belonged to a bourgeois family. He became a captain in the Auvergne regiment and died in battle in Hanover at the age of 27. His claim to fame is that when his regiment was ambushed in a wood he led with the fabled battle cry‘A moi Auvergne, ce sont les ennemis’, which has gone down in French history thanks to Voltaire who wrote about the incident in 1768.

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      (1) Take the road up to the right behind the Mairie called Rue de Mareilles where there are red/white signs of the GR60/60A and yellow splashes. After 5 minutes, at a crossroads, continue straight on the Chemin de Gaujac, which narrows where there is a red/white splash on a wall.

      (2) A few metres further on look for another GR splash and a wooden PR21 (PR means petit erandonnée – small walk) post indicating Col de Mourèzes and take a rather overgrown grassy path to the right. It goes up medium steep on an attractive sunken mule track through old stone walls and shady woodland to reach the road again by a small water pumping station (20mins). Cross the road and continue on a stony path upwards through tall bracken and chestnut trees until you reach a jeep track (35mins).

      (3) Turn right and then 30m further on turn up left on a narrow path where there are GR and yellow splashes. You get your first open view of tree-covered hills with the three peaks of the Pic d’Anjeau on the skyline. Continue upwards, passing a ruin to the left and walking along the top of old stone terraces which were previously cultivated.

      (4) The path rejoins the road going up to the pass (40mins). Turn right (look for markings on a telephone pole). On the second corner after a house, turn up left on another slightly rockier path, which again meets the D170 5 minutes later at the Col de Mourèzes (45mins).

      There is a stone here saying that this path is part of the‘sentier André Chamson 1900-1983’, Chamson being well-known as a writer of books about the region. The tourist bureau of Le Vigan inaugurated the stone in 1993. They have created a special Chamson walk from the centre of town to the Serre de la Lusette, which was the subject of one of his books, L’Aigoual, published in 1930, and an area in which the author loved to walk in.

      (5) Turn left on the road (avoid a track up left signed DFCI G-43) and go right on a jeep track signposted DFCI G-41 where there are GR signs, a wooden PR21 post and yellow splashes. Keep on this pleasant track, which soon comes to a fork at an open field where there are lovely views; if you look back you can see two antennae on the tops of the tree-covered hills.

      (6) Go right; there are crosses on trees left (55mins). The track undulates along the summit through kermes oak and box bushes (avoid path to left) and for a time there is a steep slope to the right.

      (7)Careful – when the track turns a corner go straight on a narrower path where there are GR markings and yellow splashes (1hr 5mins). Walk beside an overgrown orchard and then keep straight past a path on the left with a no entry sign. The path narrows as it goes through woodland and open spaces. It gets rockier in places and at one stage there are extended views on both sides and over the outskirts of Le Vigan down on the right. As the landscape opens out the vegetation changes to heather and stunted bushes such as juniper, this change being caused by a geological fold. Keep on the main path, which starts to go down with a crumbling wall initially on the right – there are glimpses of hamlets through the bushes left.

      (8) Take the path down right off the ridge (1hr 25mins) where there is a wooden PR21 post and yellow splashes. Here you leave the red/white splashes of the GR60, which continues along the top. The terrain is initially steep and rocky and would be slippery and difficult in wet weather. Crossing some scree, you get your first view of the hamlet of Paillerols, which is perched on a shoulder below. It looks neat and restored with some cultivated terraces. A rivulet appears from nowhere and trickles down the path itself before veering off to the left. Shortly after there is a small building housing