The Vésubie Valley is a geographical anomaly. If you start drawing straight lines across the map you might be fooled into thinking it is quite close to Nice. You would be wrong. Somehow the valleys and mountains twist and turn to make the route in and out long and torturous. Each year riders make the pilgrimage there for the Trans-Vésubienne, a hellishly tough, big-mountain XC race that links the high peaks of the Vésubie to the beach below.
My main memory of that race, beyond the suffering, is always the cold beer at the end. You see, it’s not just any beer. It is called Biere du Comté. Brewed in Saint Martin, the finish line for the prologue, it takes its unique flavour from the water running down off the mountains. Yet it is that same water that brought disaster to the brewery and the community around it last year.
On 2 October, 2020, Master brewer Laurent Fredj went to work like any morning. Sure, there had been weather warnings, but up here in the mountains they are used to harsh weather. As he says: “here, when it rains, it really rains.” As the rain beat down on the metal roof, his small team busied themselves with the latest batch, getting ready to bottle the beer. But by lunchtime he was starting to worry a little; this was a big storm, bigger than normal.
Gathering his men, he advised them to take a moment to move their cars to higher ground. As the afternoon began, the noise changed. It mounted, getting more urgent, more worrying. It was a Friday and they would knock off at half-past-three anyway, so he sent his team home and locked the doors. The waters were rising higher and higher and he left with a head full of worry about how bad the damage would be, how long it would take to dry everything out, how much production time he would lose.
BIBLICAL DELUGE
This story is from the August 2021 edition of Mountain Bike Rider.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the August 2021 edition of Mountain Bike Rider.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Best places to ride with your kids
Five top venues to keep the nippers entertained this summer
CANNONDALE MOTERRA NEO CARBON 2
It’s got more suspension tunes than a Hitchcock movie, but will this Moterra thrill us or chill us?
100% GLENDALE GLASSES
When it comes to eyewear, having a large lens not only offers a lot more protection from trail splatter, it puts the frames further out from your field of view, allowing you to focus on the terrain in front of you. The Glendale is absolutely vast, and actually has a lens size akin to a full downhill goggle, so you literally can’t see the top or sides of the frame.
DMR STAGE 2 MTB RAIL SADDLE
DMR's new Stage 2 MTB Rail is one of those new/old products. The shape and construction are identical to the existing Oi Oi saddle, but the company has wrapped it in a new skin and added some harder-wearing reinforcement to the edges. It's also toned down the lairy graphics; this saddle only comes in plain black.
STRAIGHT TORQUING - GUY KESTEVEN
Has tech taken the hard work and fun out of mountain biking, or should we embrace evolution and roll with it?
STORM FORCE
Manon Carpenter may have retired from downhill competition, but her new role as a trail advocate is achieving results far beyond the race track
SWEAT AND SLATE
We ride 140 miles through Snowdonia on Cycling UK's newest and gnarliest long-distance trail
HEAD SPACE
New guidance reveals how to spot concussion, and how best to treat it
LATE SUMMER LOVIN'
Classic UK holiday hotspots that really shine when the crowds have gone
HOT STUFF
WHAT WE'RE EXCITED ABOUT THIS MONTH