
5. Stage 6: Orcières - Ancelle

For this last stage, you can gently limber up as far as Serre-Eyraud. The slope then rises and you need to call on your reserves to make your way up to La Croix de la Vire (with a panorama rewarding your efforts)!! The big climb is now behind you, and you can enjoy the end of the adventure with an easy return trip to Saint-Léger-les-Mélèzes and Ancelle.
Description
- At the spring, make for Serre-Eyraud along an easy and hilly track. Continue climbing the Serre-Eyraud road and then turn right into a long track leading up to Combeau.
- Above the "Tante Yvonne” cabin (don’t go near the shepherd’s cabin, where the sheep are guarded by Pyrenean Mountain Dogs) /!\) you arrive at La Croix de la Vire (1900 m) with its superb panorama over upper Champsaur! After a well-deserved rest, go down a fairly steep track /!\ that gradually gets easier.
- After a first crossing where you continue the descent (keep right), the track arrives at a hairpin bend leading to a second, bigger crossing, where you turn left. The road leads to the short climb to Libouse.
- From Libouse, head for Saint Léger-les-Mélèzes along a small path and cross the village near the church. After passing a group of houses and a large beech forest (along a sports trail), you arrive at the top of the Plateau d'Ancelle. One last descent into the Village and the tour is complete!
- Departure : Base d'Orcières
- Arrival : Ancelle
- Towns crossed : Orcières, Saint-Jean-Saint-Nicolas, Saint-Léger-les-Mélèzes, Ancelle, and Chabottes
7 points of interest
Serre-Eyraud - Parc national des Ecrins - CDTE05 HistorySerre-Eyraud
Serre-Eyraud is both a mountain village and a winter sports resort which overlooks
the Champsaur and the confluence of the Drac Noir and the Drac Blanc, 1,450 metres above sea level, opposite the Champoléon valley.
The resort was created in 1962 by a handful of inhabitants: eight runs lead through a larch forest which is exposed to the north, which helps to conserve the snow cover. Serre- Eyraud is the smallest ski resort in the Champsaur valley.Chenopode du Bon roi Henry - Marcel Chaud - PNE Know-howPastoral plants
Around the shepherds' cabins can be found plants with pale colours that are useful in the kitchen : nettles, which cause rashes, but are used to make delicious soups, wild spinach, also known as Good King Henry , a plant eaten as a gratin (the famous 'oreilles d'âne' (donkeys' ears) dish), with the sour leaves of the Alpine dock. For dessert, the petioles of Monks' rhubarb leaves are served as jams and compotes.
Station Orcière-Merlette - François Labande - PNE HistoryOrcières 1850
Thanks to Camille Ricou, the mayor of Orcières, and a handful of visionaries, in January 1962 the Orcières-Merlette ski resort was born. Soon, buildings, shops and ski lifts were built. Even though the 1960s architecture has not aged well and the pylons disfigure the landscape, the pioneers have achieved their aims: they were able to stay in the region, guarantee their children a future and create jobs.
Truite fario - Parc national des Ecrins FaunaTrout
Fishing fans have always loved the Drac. You also need some hiking skills to follow the course of the river or reach the high-altitude lakes. Whether you prefer lure fishing, spoon casting or fly fishing, here you'll find all kinds of trout: brown trout (Salmo trutta), Mediterranean in origin, and rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) from North America.
Patou surveillant le troupeau - Jean-Pierre Nicollet - PNE FaunaPatou
The patou is once again being used in the Alpine pastures by breeders and shepherds, following the reintroduction of wolves. Its role is to protect the sheep, not to herd them together like a sheep dog. The dog lives with the sheep from a very young age and considers them as members of its family. It barks and stands between the flock and whatever it sees as a threat. Since it is very protective towards the flock, hikers should make sure they keep their distance.
Alpage de Combeau - Parc national des Écrins - Marc Corail PanoramaThe Combeau alpine pasture
The Combeau alpine pasture, lying 2,000 metres above sea level.
Don't miss the superb panoramic view from the Croix de Combeau belvedere.La plaine d'Ancelle - Marc Corail - PNE Geology and geographyThe Ancelle plateau
After the retreat of the glaciers flowing from the Durance and Roanne valleys, the frontal and lateral moraines formed a natural dam at the end of the Ancelle basin. Over time, a large glacial lake was created. Between the fifth and sixth centuries, the lake dried out. The forest then took over the fertile plateau, and it was only in the eighth century that it was deforested by man for crops.
Altimetric profile
Sensitive areas
Golden eagle
- Impacted practices:
- Aerial, , Vertical
- Sensitivity periods:
- JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAug
- Contact:
- Parc National des Écrins
Julien Charron
julien.charron@ecrins-parcnational.fr
Source

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