“Another great project done,” said Benjamin Vedrines. The French speedster had just crossed the Queyras massif in the French Alps, on the Italian border, in two days.
Vedrines skied 12,330 vertical meters over 138km on January 6 and 7. To better immerse himself in the Guil Valley and around Mount Viso, the area’s most famous landmark, he avoided all roads and villages. The region he skied lies right behind the Vedrines family’s backyard.
On social media, Vedrines admitted that this was the greatest challenge he faced since he astonished the climbing community by climbing Broad Peak in 7 hours!
Right weather, right conditions
Vedrines waited for the right snow and weather conditions. He left the Vars mountain hut and skied nonstop for 12 hours, enjoying “the crazy landscape and my mom’s great sandwiches.”
After a short break, he set off again under the full moon toward the climb of Le Villard, above St-Crépin.
“With 6,350m of elevation, I had to stay focused to enchain the 13 ascents along the way,” Vedrines said.
In fact, he had time for all of that and even some extra peaks. These include the Grand Glaiza. At 3,293m, it was the highest point of the traverse.
He only stopped as the snow ended — the Alps are dramatically dry and warm this season. Vedrines then continued on foot back to Villard, 14 hours after the second day started.
Check this IG post for his complete itinerary. It includes references and vertical meters, in case someone wants to compare their own ski touring time across the Queyras area.