| country: | France |
| location: | French Alps |
| departures: | This trip can be tailor made any time from May - October |
| price: | From €363 - €1044 (8 days) excluding flights, depending on accommodation choice. Includes: 7 nights accommodation in a choice of self catering, bed and breakfast or hotel accommodation. Camping is also possible. |
| vouchers: | Gift vouchers can be used with this holiday |
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the amazing things you'll be doing
Choose from a variety of accommodation and activity options to tailor make your perfect activity holiday.
Activities:
Kayaking: This is a great trip across the the Lac du Sautet - a deep blue lake with a stunning mountain backdrop - there aren't many better places to paddle your canoe. Canyoning: Run or slide down wet slabs of rock, jump off blind escarpments, scramble up rocks, splash around in pools and abseil down drops. Horse Riding: Ride through the alpine forests and meadows and even take your horse for a swim in the lake! Mountain biking: 1/2 a day guided mountain biking off road on cross country tracks adapted to the groups' level and ability. It is possible to upgrade to a day or have a session down-hilling at the bike park. Paragliding: Get the best view of the valley as you fly in tandem with an instructor. Please note paragliding is an extra €45 per person. High Ropes Adventure: Hurtle down a zip wire, climb up a spider net, negotiate the wobbly log staircase, tip toe across the tightrope wire. High Ropes Adventure Courses are designed to challenge you vertically, horizontally and personally! Walking: 1/2 a days walk in the mountains with a mountain leader to show you where the marmots are hiding! It is possible to upgrade to a full day. Caving: Discover the underground labyrinth of the limestone Devoluy Massif. Giant Tyrolean Zip Wire: Travel at speeds of up to 140km per hour head first through the Alps. An extreme adrenalin buzz on the largest tyrolean zip wire in Europe! Via ferrata: If you like a challenge and like being in unusual situations, you'll love via ferratas! Climb across exposed rock faces and through narrow gorges, across precarious rope bridges safe in the knowledge that you are securely attached! Night in a Refuge: There is a whole network of mountain refuges scattered over the Alps. They are there to provide food and a place to sleep to walkers and mountaineers as they journey in the mountains away from the luxuries of civilization! You don't need to walk for hours to get to one and experience the 'mountain refuge' ambience and it's a pretty special experience! Trip Includes: 4 activities of your choice from the list above (paragliding carries an extra supplement). Maps and route advice for local walks and things to do in the area.
For your free days or where there are no scheduled activities, we will give you maps and advice on self guided walks or bike rides where you can explore the area’s wildlife and fauna. We can also advise on places to go where you can meet local people, find local produce or see the local producers in action: collecting berries for argousier juice, making cheese or taking their sheep up to pasture, depending on what time of year you are here.
Some of the activities do have age limits, varying from age 6 - 12. Please ask us for more information when you make your enquiry. We can also arrange child care and babysitting for you as a part of your holiday.
If you would like to stay in a different accommodation, add another activity or do something that isn't in the list, please let us know when you make your enquiry and we will put together a personalized quote for you.
If you like flowers, the best time to come is June when all the spring flowers are out. Walk through alpine meadows teaming with butterflies as they flutter amongst them. We have over 60 species of orchids, orange lilies and a huge diversity of other species for you to feast your eyes on!
For Ibex spotting, the best time is spring – May or June when they are in the lower pastures making the most of the recent snowmelt! For peace and quiet and the place to yourself come in September when the weather is still hot but all the children have gone back to school.
If you want a more sociable experience come in July or August when it is hot – although not sweltering and always cooler in the evening so you can sleep!
Activities:
- White Water Rafting:
For your free days or where there are no scheduled activities, we will give you maps and advice on self guided walks or bike rides where you can explore the area’s wildlife and fauna. We can also advise on places to go where you can meet local people, find local produce or see the local producers in action: collecting berries for argousier juice, making cheese or taking their sheep up to pasture, depending on what time of year you are here.
Some of the activities do have age limits, varying from age 6 - 12. Please ask us for more information when you make your enquiry. We can also arrange child care and babysitting for you as a part of your holiday.
If you would like to stay in a different accommodation, add another activity or do something that isn't in the list, please let us know when you make your enquiry and we will put together a personalized quote for you.
best time to go
If you like flowers, the best time to come is June when all the spring flowers are out. Walk through alpine meadows teaming with butterflies as they flutter amongst them. We have over 60 species of orchids, orange lilies and a huge diversity of other species for you to feast your eyes on!For Ibex spotting, the best time is spring – May or June when they are in the lower pastures making the most of the recent snowmelt! For peace and quiet and the place to yourself come in September when the weather is still hot but all the children have gone back to school.
If you want a more sociable experience come in July or August when it is hot – although not sweltering and always cooler in the evening so you can sleep!
travellers' tales
All the activities were special (trekking, cycling, horse riding and via ferrata). The two peaks we climbed were highlights for me. (more)
how this holiday makes a difference
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We take special care to choose activities that have a minimal impact on the environment and only use local guides and instructors to ensure the local economy is supported by our activity. Our list of activities only include those which have a minimum impact on the environment, such as walking, rafting, etc.
Environment We respect and support local conservation / erosion projects by following guidelines issued by the Ecrins National Park and ensuring our clients are made aware of any specific guidelines that may affect them. E.g. carrying rubbish down from refuges / high mountain walks. All accommodation suppliers are vetted according to their professionalism and their approach to responsible tourism (using local produce, respect for the environment and promoting the culture of the region). Several of the gites have strong environmental criteria with regard to recycling and reducing their environmental impact. We are about to make a deal with Gite de France to use their eco certified gite suppliers. We don’t promote motorised sports. All our guides are fully trained in environmental sustainability as a part of their diplomas and they educate our clients about the mountain habitat during the activities. We don’t print brochures and keep paper use to a minimum in the office preferring electronic distribution as our main means of communication with clients. We provide detailed information on how to behave within the park such as carrying out all litter, no free camping and adhering to the rules of the park. Tree climbing is an example where you will get a unique insight into the local mountain flora and fauna. We also promote it because of it’s environmental ethos. Unlike high ropes adventure courses, where elaborate rope bridges and obstacles are fixed in the trees, tree climbing leaves no impact on the forest. The guides set up their ropes in the trees just for the activity. After you have gone the ropes are removed and it’s as if you were never there. During the activity you will really get to know the trees and particularly the difference between the various species that grow in the Alps, as some are typically a lot more technical to climb than others. You’ll perhaps meet some of the animals that depend on the trees and forest habitat and will certainly leave with a better understanding of how it fits into our ecosystem! Community Every activity has it’s own charm and insight into the local mountain habitat and culture. For example, you could walk up to a mountain refuge accompanying the donkeys taking up supplies, helping to pay for the journey (otherwise done as a favour to the refuge guardian). By eating in the refuge you will be supporting the guardians who live there for the season and make their living just on the food they sell to tourists. The price for staying the night is for the club alpine francais (CAF) for CAF refuges and doesn’t go to the guardian. The guardian is also the local expert on flora and fauna and will show you where the local marmots, chamois or Ibex are hiding out. We work closely with the Tourist Office and support their projects for sustainable tourism and in particular the impact of tourism on local agriculture (the traditional way of life in the area). We include local events that support and promote farming traditions, food production and markets in our itineraries and advice for things to do for our clients to help support the farming community and raise awareness of their culture. We are committed to promoting the culture of the region and ensuring that tourism has a positive impact. Through supporting the refuges and giving clients detailed information about how to behave when in the national park we try to ensure that people behave with respect for the environment and local people. This information includes warnings against free camping, ensuring that people eat in the refuges, carry out their litter and adhere to the rules of the park. We are committed to promoting the food of the region and advise people on local delicacies and where they can be purchased. We promote a local organic juice supplier who make Argousier (a local wild berry) and give all clients a bottle when they arrive with information about the berry. |
Tourism can be good and bad for destinations & local people. We carefully screen every holiday against our criteria for responsible travel. 'Look behind the brochure' to find how each holiday makes a difference (see left). We don't claim to be perfect - there is no global accreditation - but we've led the way since 2001 and screened 1000's of holidays. We invite every traveller to write a review about their experiences and responsible tourism. This valuable feedback is sent to the people who run the holidays. We keep a very close eye on it and take off holidays that don't live up to our standards. |











