Col d'Aubisque

Col d'Aubisque
Col d'Aubisque

The Gave de Pau valley and the road seen in the background leading to Col d'Aubisque
Elevation 1,709 m (5,607 ft)
Traversed by D918
Location
Col d'Aubisque is located in Pyrenees
Location of Col d'Aubisque
Location Pyrénées-Atlantiques,  France
Range Pyrenees
Coordinates 42°58′36″N 0°20′23″W / 42.97667°N 0.33972°W / 42.97667; -0.33972Coordinates: 42°58′36″N 0°20′23″W / 42.97667°N 0.33972°W / 42.97667; -0.33972

The Col d'Aubisque (1,709 m.; Occitan: Còth d'Aubisca) is a mountain pass in the Pyrenees 30 km south of Tarbes and Pau in the department of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques (64), in the Aquitaine region of France.[1]

The pass is on the northern slopes of the Pic de Ger (2,613m.) and connects Laruns, in the valley of the Gave d'Ossau, via Eaux-Bonnes (west) to Argelès-Gazost, in the valley of the Gave de Pau, via the Col du Soulor (east). The road crosses the Cirque du Litor, in the upper part of the Ouzom valley. It is generally closed from December to June.

The pass is starting point of excursions and a centre for winter sports. In summer, it is popular with cyclists. It is regularly part of the Tour de France, rated an hors catégorie climb.

Contents

Tour de France

The Aubisque in 1910.

The Col d'Aubisque appeared in the Tour de France in 1910, crossed by François Lafourcade. It has appeared frequently since then, more than once every two years. It was included at the insistence of Alphone Steinès, a colleague of Henri Desgrange at the Tour de France. Steinès visited the man responsible for local roads, the ingénieur des ponts-et-chaussées, who said: "Take the riders up the Aubisque? You're completely crazy in Paris." [2] Steinès agreed that the Tour would pay 5,000 francs to clear the pass. Desgrange knocked the price down to 2,000.[3]

In 1951, Wim van Est was in the yellow jersey – the first Dutchman to wear it[4] and chasing the leaders towards the Soulor when he slipped on gravel and fell into a ravine. He said:

That first bend was wet, slippery from the snow. And there were sharp stones on the road that the cars had kicked up, and my front wheel hit them and I went over. Well, there was a drop of 20m.[5] They've built a barrier there now but then there was nothing to stop you going over. I fell 20 metres, rolling and rolling and rolling. My feet had come out of the straps, my bike had disappeared, and there was a little flat area, the only one that's there, no bigger than the seat of a chair, and I landed on my backside. A metre left or right and I'd have dropped on to solid stone, six or seven hundred metres down. My ankles were all hurt, my elbows were kaput. I was all bruised and shaken up and I didn't know where I was, but nothing was broken.

The team's manager, Kees Pellenaars, took a tow rope from the Dutch team's car. It was too short to reach van Est and so to it he tied 40 racing tyres. It was like that that he was pulled out. Van Est said: "It was all the tyres that Pellenaars had for the team. By the time they'd tugged me up, they were all stretched and they wouldn't stay on the wheels any more! Forty tyres! I wanted to get back on my bike and start racing again. But I couldn't. Pellenaars stopped the whole team."

Van Est told journalists: "I had the feeling that I was taking that bend badly but I so much wanted to keep the yellow jersey, so I went flat out and off I flew.[6] A monument spot 50 years later, on July 17, 2001, says: "Here on 17 July 1951 the cyclist Wim van Est fell 70 metres. He survived but lost the yellow jersey."[7] A newspaper advertisement in Holland showed van Est displaying the watch that he'd worn, with the legend: "My heart stopped, but not my Pontiac."

Details of the climb

The sign at the col

On the west, the climb to the Aubisque starts in Laruns. From there, the Aubisque is 16.6 km and rises 1,190m, an average of 7.2%. The first kilometres, to the spa resort of Eaux-Bonnes, are fairly easy. After the Cascade de Valentin comes a section at 13 per cent. From there to the top, the climb is 8 km at eight per cent average, passing the ski resort of Gourette at 1,400m.

The east side is climbed after the Col de Soulor (1474 m). Starting from Argelès Gazost, the Soulor is 19.48 km. It rises 1,019m, an average 5.2 per cent. It gets tough after Arrens with 10 per cent and more. From the Soulor, the climb is 10.6 km, gaining a further 235m. The road from the Soulor runs along cliffs in the Cirque du Litor, where there are two short, narrow tunnels. From the Cirque du Litor, the climb is 7.5 km at 4.6 per cent, a height gain of 350m. Gilbert Duclos-Lasalle said:

The Aubisque is one of those hors catégorie cols that make the legend of the Tour. The climb is in three parts. The first is fairly easy. The road is good and the specialists use 39 × 19 or 53 × 21. Then, at Eaux-Bonnes, you turn left and get to the real climb. This part, as far as Gourette, is a lot more difficult. The hardest part swings between eight and ten per cent from the seventh kilometre until Pont-du-Goua at the ninth kilometre and you need 39 × 21. Then, after 300m of flat in Gourette, a hairpin goes up to the Hôtel des Crêtes Blanches. Riders use 39 × 17 over four kilometres before going into 39 × 16 in the last two kilometres.[8]

Tour de France stage finishes

Stage 16 of the 2007 Tour de France finished at the summit of the Aubisque. There has been one previous finish at the summit (in 1985). In 1971, stage 16a finished at Gourette on the western approaches to Aubisque.[9]

Year Stage Start of stage Distance (km) Category of climb Stage winner Yellow jersey
2007 16 Orthez 218.5 HC Michael Rasmussen Michael Rasmussen
1985 18a Luz-Saint-Sauveur 52.5 1 Stephen Roche Bernard Hinault
1971 16a Bagnères-de-Luchon 145 1 Bernard Labourdette Eddy Merckx

Rasmussen won stage 16 in 2007, confirming himself as favourite for victory in Paris, but that evening was sacked by his team and thrown off the race.

Passages in the Tour de France (since 1947)

There have been 42 passages over the summit since 1947, making it the second most visited mountain in the race’s history.[9]

Year Stage Category Leader at the summit
2011 13 HC Jérémy Roy
2010 16 HC Christophe Moreau
2005 16 HC Cadel Evans
2002 11 HC Laurent Jalabert
2000 10 2 Javier Otxoa
1999 16 1 Alberto Elli
1998 10 HC Cédric Vasseur
1996 17 1 Neil Stephens
1995 16 2 Stage neutralised
1993 17 1 Claudio Chiappucci
1991 13 HC Guido Winterberg
1990 17 HC Óscar Vargas
1989 9 HC Miguel Indurain
1987 14 HC Thierry Claveyrolat
1985 18b HC Reynel Montoya
1983 10 HC Lucien Van Impe
1982 12 1 Beat Breu
1980 13 HC Maurice Le Guilloux
1977 2 1 Hennie Kuiper
1976 15 1 Wladimiro Panizza
1972 7 1 Wilfried David
1971 16 1 Bernard Labourdette
1970 19 1 Raymond Delisle
1969 17 1 Eddy Merckx
1968 12 1 Julio Jiménez
1967 17 1 Jean-Claude Theilliere
1966 10 1 Tommaso De Pra
1965 9 1 Julio Jiménez
1964 16 1 Federico Bahamontes
1963 10 1 Federico Bahamontes
1961 17 1 Eddy Pauwels
1960 10 1 Graziano Battistini
1958 13 1 Federico Bahamontes
1957 18 1 Jean Dotto
1956 11 1 Valentin Huot
1955 18 1 Charly Gaul
1954 11 1 Federico Bahamontes
1953 10 1 Jesus Lorono
1952 18 1 Fausto Coppi
1951 13 1 Raphaël Géminiani
1950 11 1 Jean Robic
1949 11 1 Fausto Coppi
1948 7 1 Bernard Gauthier
1947 15 1 Jean Robic

See also

References

  1. ^ Chany, Pierre (1988), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, La Martinière, France, p112
  2. ^ Chany, Pierre (1988), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, La Martinière, France, p112
  3. ^ Chany, Pierre (1988), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, La Martinière, France, p112
  4. ^ Vélo, France, April 2005
  5. ^ Other reports put the fall at 70m
  6. ^ Vélo, France, April 2005
  7. ^ Vélo, France, April 2005
  8. ^ Vélo, France, March 2005
  9. ^ a b "Le col d'Aubisque dans le Tour de France de 1947 à 2012" (in French). le dico du tour. http://ledicodutour.perso.sfr.fr/montagnes/cols__a/aubisque.htm. Retrieved 19 November 2011. 

External links


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