Note: This is part 3 of a 3-part spotlight on our Grindelwald, Zermatt and Chamonix Hiking Tour. Please follow these links to read part 1 and part 2.
After availing ourselves of the best hikes in Zermatt, we say “au revoir” to Switzerland and climb aboard a series of cog wheel mountain trains which convey us across the French border to Chamonix-Mont Blanc, France.
The Massif du Mont Blanc is the cornerstone of Europe. At its core is Mont Blanc, the highest peak in Western Europe at 15,781 feet/4,810 meters above sea level. In 1760, a Swiss geologist and explorer named Horace Benedict de Saussure offered prize money to the first person(s) to successfully summit Mt. Blanc. Saussure’s challenge attracted climbers and adventurers from around the world and alpinism, as it’s known today, was born in the Chamonix Valley.
Mont Blanc is immense and stunning, but to focus solely on Europe’s highest peak does a disservice to the surrounding landscape. Mont Blanc is not just one mountain, it is part of a complex and intriguing group of imposing peaks called the Massif du Mont Blanc. Within this massif, rocky spires, airy ridge lines, cascading glaciers and foreboding cliff faces dwarf the surrounding countryside. Extending from the Mont Blanc massif, too, are a series of idyllic valleys that retain centuries of alpine history, essentially functioning as cultural treasure chests for the Mont Blanc region.
Before tourism, the valleys of Mont Blanc nurtured a mostly agrarian life for thousands of years. A few of the major valleys that make up the region include, in France, the Vallée de l’Arve (home to Chamonix), the Vallée de Mont Joie and the Vallée des Glaciers. In Italy the Val Veni and the Italian Val Ferret stretch out beneath the southern face of Mont Blanc. In Switzerland, the Swiss Val Ferret, the Val d’Arpette and the Val Trient invite hikers to explore their secrets.