May 26, 2025
In Pont-en-Royans: day two
Today is Bourne Gorge Day. Jacquie announces that she's feeling better at breakfast, this morning, and well enough to take a shot at biking up the Bourne Gorge as an out and back, the most accessible from our hotel of the big climbs. Al climbed up there yesterday but is happy to ride it again; and he made it sound manageable enough that Susan decides to give it a shot herself and tags along with them.
I'm the odd man out here. I'm climbing the Borne Gorge too, something I feel more confident about after my Goulets experience yesterday - but instead of climbing all the way to the top I plan to branch off at the midpoint for the road east to Saint-Julien, the first place Rachael and I stayed the first time we came to the Vercors ten years ago. After that I'll return to the gorge along an alternate road that drops me higher up in it before finally dropping back to the hotel again.
I'm not very far up into the gorge when I start seeing familiar sights. On our second visit to the Vercors five years ago we followed this same route to Saint Julian, and then kept climbing to the top of the Combe Laval - but unfortunately weren't able to drop down it because it was closed to clear up the effects of a recent landslide.
It's a justifiably popular cycling route: not too steep and physically difficult, not busy at all (at least during the middle of the week), but really beautiful. And just as it was five years ago, the weather is ideal. It's warm but partly overcast - just enough to keep things comfortable on the climb, with the bonus that the lighting conditions and sky really show the gorge at its best.
And it's a good thing that I decided to ride on my own, because I don't feel conflicted by how often I feel compelled to stop and haul out the phone for another shot.

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About ten miles into the ride I come to Le Balme de Rencurel, a sleepy village that looks like it had some life to it at some point in the past. And there's less now than five years ago when I took photos of the same buildings and the curtains were in much better repair.
Le Balme de Rencurel sits at a crossroads between the Bourne Gorge and a long lateral road that runs perpendicular to it along a trough that more or less splits the Vercors in half. I turn east here toward Saint-Julien, but I could just as easily have gone the other direction toward Rencurel and had a very similar experience.in both directions, the road climbs away from the river for several miles and eventually tops out at a pass at around three thousand feet. The climb I take today isn't bad, but climbing at around 8-9 percent, it's the most challenging part of my ride today. It gives me plenty of time to stop and smell the flowers and commune with the cows.

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2 weeks ago
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I turn back when I come to Saint-Julien-en-Vercors and reflect on the hotel we stayed at ten years ago and stood here together looking at five years ago. Ten years! In some ways it seems like it's so long ago - so much has happened and changed in our lives since then - but in other ways it feels like only yesterday. Time is so strange.

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2 weeks ago
The first time when we stayed here was different. I didn't take a photo of the outside of the hotel for some reason, but the interior and especially the fireworks outside were definitely worth a shot. You might look at the following day when we rode down the Comb Laval, another astonishing ride I'd love to repeat.
https://www.cycleblaze.com/journals/geneva2015/to-saint-julien-en-vercors-in-which-we-receive-a-bonus-pass-at-no-extra-charge/
2 weeks ago
And then comes the reward - fifteen miles of freewheel and brake action as I drop two thousand feet on the way back to the hotel. I stop at a few spots for stills - especially on this other road that I've never ridden before - but mostly I let the GoPro do all the work and just thrill to the ride.

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So I have no idea how often folks out there stop to check out the videos, but you might want to take a look at this one to get a feeling for what this gorge is like. And when you watch you might reflect on the fact that the Combe laval, the Goulets, the Goege du Nan and several other dramatic rides are just a few miles away. If you haven't been to the Vercors before you might want to put it on your map.
Sound track: Adams's Apple, by Wayne Shorter
So that's my day. Rocky's afoot today also, and hikes south from the hotel down into the area I biked yesterday after dropping out of the Petits Goulets. I recognize several of the shots in her slide show from my own ride. She enjoys her hike, especially the goats and geese - but it starts out frustratingly when the route I mapped for her asks her to ford the Bourne River. Instead she contents herself with a good look at the waterfall before doubling back to a safer crossing.
Sound track: Jardin d'Hiver, by Stacey Kent
The menu at our hotel is reasonable enough but limited, so we're all more than ready to check out the only other option in town, at Beau Rivage - a family run restaurant hotel. It's about a third of a mile away, far enough that I decide to bike there instead of putting my knees through all that walking nonsense. And it's an excellent evening, sitting outside listening to the river rushing below and talking over the day with friends.
Today's ride: 29 miles (47 km)
Total: 923 miles (1,485 km)
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