that formed its western wall. The slope steepened, I kicked the toes of my boots into the crust, leaned on my axe and heaved myself out of the shadows of France and into the sunlight of Spain. From darkness into light; from winter into summer.
Across the head of the Ésera valley, the Maladeta massif bared its glaciers and snowfields, above one of which rose the pristine Pico de Aneto, highest of all Pyrenean summits. For this very moment I had dreamed all winter long.
At last! The Promised Land.
5
UP AND OVER
At 3404m Pico de Aneto (‘Nethou’ to the French) has the highest summit in the Pyrenees. First climbed in 1842, the standard route takes about five hours or so from the Renclusa refugio via the Aneto glacier, which these days is shrinking fast. In June 1973 it was somewhat different when we made a north to south traverse of the mountain. It’s just one of a number of ascents I’ve made in the Maladeta massif over the years, but it remains one of the most memorable.
Dawn broke as we topped the ridge separating the Maladeta’s glacier from that of Aneto, giving the perfect excuse to pause for a moment, to settle our breathing and watch as the sun climbed out of a distant hollow to cast its light on mountains filling every horizon. To the east the Forcanada shrugged its way out of a sea of cloud, and beyond that double-pronged peak one summit after another paid homage to the new day.
On the ridge wind-scuffed snow made for a cautious walk along the crest, where we skirted the insignificant Pico del Portillon Superior to reach the gap of the portillon itself. Peering into the gully that would lead onto the glacier, we discussed the need for crampons, but gambled on our ability to deal with the hard-packed snow-ice without them.
All the way from the foot of the gully to Aneto’s summit appeared to be an unmarked snowfield masking a glacier; and beyond a mound, which we took to be a pile of rocks, our ascent would take a direct route to the top of that graceful cone on a vast sheet of untrod powder whose pristine qualities both invited and excited us.
What’s more, we had the world to ourselves, for we’d seen no-one since arriving in the valley five days ago. The Renclusa refugio was still locked and shuttered, and the squalid annexe next door had received no visitors for weeks. It was too late for ski touring; too early for walkers and climbers. Unaware of our good fortune we’d arrived in a period of transition; we had winter’s purity above 1500m, but the first flowers bursting into life below the snowline where we’d left the tent. Summer was still some way off. Now on Aneto’s snow-covered glacier we had perfect conditions – and not a single boot print to follow.
As we prodded for unseen crevasses, the only sounds to disturb the morning were the squeak and scrunch of boots on the frozen crust – and our breathing. Despite the rising sun our breath steamed, but by the time we were halfway across the glacier the temperature was soaring and the soles of our boots balled with softening snow. The rhythm of ascent was interrupted now by the need to tap those balls free with our axes.
Above the Collado de Coronas the narrow ridge of the Pont de Mahomet brought us back to reality, for here the rocks were glazed with a winter’s worth of hard ice, and we were glad of the rope. Minutes later, and five hours after leaving the tent, I stood beside the summit cross and took a long, much-needed drink from my water bottle. Keith handed over some chocolate, and only then did we examine the vast array of peak, ridge and valley that fell away in every direction. So much was new to us; so many peaks unknown, untrod; so many valleys containing secrets. I felt a buzz of excitement in the sheer mystery of the world laid bare before us. On Aneto’s summit dreams were born, ambitions took shape. The Pyrenees, surely, would supply all the outdoor adventure a man could need, and I was ready for it.
Dragging myself out of dreams, I was aware that the sky was changing, so with our plan to make a north–south traverse of Aneto still intact, we studied our downward route on the south side of the mountain, comparing reality with its depiction on our map, and prepared to leave.
Retracing our route across the Pont de Mahomet to the Collado de Coronas, we then cut down to the left onto a little glacier tilting steeply into a basin. According to the map there were tarns down there, but as everything was plastered with snow we could only guess where they might be and trust that, should we wander across them, their covering of ice would be strong enough to support our weight. Taking a cold bath was not on our list of things to do that day.
Down we went, with an occasional involuntary glissade, losing height quickly until the gradient eased. There we unroped, stashed the rope on top of my rucksack and, looking back up the slope towards the summit cliffs (so different this side of the mountain), we noticed that the sky had disappeared and a grey wash of mist was spilling over the ridge. Morning’s promise had run out.
But we were past caring now. As the snow softened, thinned and turned to mush on our continued descent, we knew the day was ours. There were more ice-coated tarns, easy to avoid with water showing round their edges; there were streams and marshy areas; soldanellas – those tiny, tassle-headed harbingers of spring – poked through spatters of old snow. There was avalanche debris, a few spindly trees, then woods of pine and fir, and as the first crack of thunder sounded and rain began, we spied a glass-fronted hut and made a beeline for it.
Our timing, for once, had been impeccable.
6
THE LAST GREEN VALLEY
In the central High Pyrenees the Ésera valley had a rare perfection that called me back many times. By going early in the season we had both the mountains and the valley to ourselves; there was an air of untouched purity that was too good to last. But in the late summer of 1975 reality had invaded…
Snow lay most of the way down into the valley, becoming soft, shallow and patchy as we lost height. Where it was melting, tan-coloured grass was speckled with tiny soldanellas. Streams gurgled and a breeze carried the sound of a cascade we could not see. Below the last patch of snow two fat salamanders waddled across our path as though on sore feet, their vivid orange and black markings defying any attempt at camouflage.
We found a terrace of dry ground on which our tent would not only give a view of the Maladeta but would enable us to see downvalley to the peaks of Literole. Behind it ran a clear stream, in the midst of which lay a flat rock on which I would sit and dream or draw water for cooking. From the tent a small defile focused attention onto a lower terrace where, that very first day, I watched an izard (the Pyrenean chamois) drinking from the same stream – our stream.
Within moments of our arrival Keith had gone hunting for pine tufts. A stand of low-growing conifers stood a short distance from our terrace; there was also a riot of juniper that smelled sweetly when crushed, and clumps of alpenrose waiting to erupt into bloom. But it was pine he was after. He returned with an armful of tufts taken from winter-damaged trees; these he spread on the ground before pitching the tent over them, so when we settled to sleep at night we had a soft mattress beneath the groundsheet, and the fragrance of pine was disturbed each time one of us turned over.
When mosquitoes visited at dusk, he’d erect a tripod of tent pegs at the open door. From the tripod he suspended another tuft, under which he lit a stub of candle; not too close, but near enough to singe it, sending a wisp of smoke rising in the doorway to keep the mozzies at bay, and at the same time adding to the fresh smell of pine inside the tent.
For two weeks we had the valley to ourselves. Not just the valley, but the mountains that walled it. We’d climb all day and see no-one, returning late in the afternoon to discover new flowers emerging from the grass around the tent; there were trumpet gentians, primulas, two types of orchid and a scattering of dog’s tooth violets. We’d walk for hours through open meadows of flowers; the tiniest of blue butterflies would drift around us; we’d hear marmots calling fresh from hibernation, and watch as a small herd of izard loped across a snowslip. Alpenrose buds now opened, and our tent was surrounded by colour. The valley became a valley of flowers, a valley of rare perfection. And for two unforgettable weeks it was our own private playground.
We got to know the mountains through personal