La cabane de Rif Meyol
Le Périer

La cabane de Rif Meyol

Fauna
Flora
Pastoralism
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The climb takes you through a softwood forest and leads to the Rif Meyol pastoral hut.

There is no lake here, no impetuous stream, no glacier but a silent cirque that is far from busy, where the fauna, as well as the exuberant vegetation impress by their abundance and diversity. A wild but calm environment synonymous with a protected area. 

Bernard Nicollet, warden in the Valbonnais area 


9 points of interest

  • Flora

    The history of pine and spruce

    The two fir trees that can grow up to 40 metres high, not only live together on the north facing slopes of the mountains, but also look very much like each other. Their ancestors appeared on Earth 250 million years ago, 100 million years before the main flowering plants, which in this respect means they are honourable peers of the forest. Both reproduce later in life thanks to seeds contained in cylinder-shaped cones that grow at the end of the branches.
  • Flora

    Pine or spruce

    Pinecones are impossible to move and stand like large candles, but they are not easy to see perched high up towards the treetop. On the other hand, spruce cones hang from the end of the branches and finally fall when they are ripe. Concerning the foliage, spruce needles prick; which is not the case for pine needles, which stay a characteristic dark green to the extent that a colour "vert-sapin" (pine green) is named in reference to them.
  • Fauna

    Black woodpecker

    The forest's estate agent, the large black woodpecker that has a red crest and a long pale beak, reduces the large tree's vermin-inhabited tree trunk to sawdust. Here, it feeds, lodges and shelters before moving on and leaving the trunk to other opportunistic lodgers such as martens, bats or forest owls (pygmy or boreal owls) Sometimes it is possible to hear the young squawking as the feeding parent approaches.
  • Know-how

    Timber harvesting

    Forests of large conifers are still an important resource for small mountain districts. Periodical harvesting, which is difficult due to the relief and the slopes, involves harvesting growth in volumes of wood. Walking through a forestry plot shortly after timber felling or skidding sometimes gives a sense of desolation but nature quickly takes its course again.
  • Flora

    Forest regeneration

    North facing forests rapidly recover - from timber felling - thanks to the speed at which the trees regenerate, the rotting of the tree stubs and recolonising of the ground by grass and moss. Man is not the only responsible party for renewing the forest. From the start of the footpath, at the Confolens waterfall, gaps and windfalls caused by the gale on 5th January 2012 shows that Mother Nature is sometimes harsh with her subjects.
  • Fauna

    Hazel grouse

    It is so discreet and devoted to the forest cover that anyone who should chance to see it is very lucky. It hardly ever flies and prefers to run off on foot to flee danger. It lives on buds, willow catkins and mountain ash fruit. It is not surprising that it has chosen this habitat.
  • Fauna

    Broad shouldered adenostyle leaf beetle

    This insect, the same kind as the well-known potato beetle (that devastates potato plants), is mainly interested in adenostyles leaves, regardless of the species. The beetle is recognisable by its shiny elytra that generally vary from blue to green. In the summer, its voracity and it proliferation leads it to make "plant lace" out of its host. The broad shouldered leaf beetle also prevails on the leaves of butterburs and occasionally masterwort.
  • Pastoralism

    Bovine pastoralism

    Until the 70s, every family that lived in the mountain valleys owned a few cows which supplied them in milk, butter and meat. Today, in valleys and high pastures, cattle has been replaced by sheep. In spite of this change, the valley of Rif Meyol still hosts in free mountain pastures, a small herd of aboriginal cows, as they roam less than sheep. In the alpine pastures, their reference and reunification point is the hut where the farmer fixes his heard, using salt that he scatters on the ground or on flat stones. A great opportunity for the chamois who take advantage of this unexpected supply of salt. Be very quite when you approach, you may spot them !
  • Flora

    « La rhubarbe des moines » - Monks rhubarb

    « La rhubarbe des moines », or rhubarb of the Alps (Rumex pseudoalpinus in Latin) is the mountain cousin of our cultivated rhubarb. It was introduced in Europe by Marco Polo at his return from his journeys to Asia. 
    This subalpine plant by nature, is faithful to it's place on the cattle’s resting spots in the pastures. It pushes all of it's neighbors aside thanks to it's great size. Only the stinging nettle gets away with this invasion. It is no help today for the hiker. It will even soak him up to his thighs with dew from it's very wide leaves. In the Middle Ages, a part of the leaves was served as a bitter dish to the farmes. The rest of the plant was given to the pigs.

Description

After taking a small forestry track, directly from the Confolens waterfall car park, the first two-thirds of the route go through a beech and pine forest to reach the bottom of the high grass pastures. From the old half-ruined stone hut, the meandering path leads up to another altitude "pessière" (spruce forest). You will then reach the pastures, in the true sense of the word, which form a patchwork of rhododendron and blueberry moors, green alder thickets, adenostyles alpinas, raspberry plants and meadows of fleshy grasses. Now at the subalpine stage, there are few trees to obstruct the view over immense greenery surrounded by rocky ledges in the distance. The Rif Méyol is not far. It is discreetly located in the relief and surrounded by large splashes of dark green that are monk's rhubarb. 

  • Departure : Confolens waterfall car park or Périer village car park
  • Towns crossed : Le Périer

Forecast


Altimetric profile


Recommandations

For early morning walkers, do not forget your gaiters to protect against the abundant dew. 

Is in the midst of the park
The national park is an unrestricted natural area but subjected to regulations which must be known by all visitors.


Information desks

Maison du Parc du Valbonnais

Place du Docteur Eyraud, 38740 Entraigues

http://www.ecrins-parcnational.fr/valbonnais@ecrins-parcnational.fr04 76 30 20 61

Reception, information, temporary exhibition room, reading room and video-projection on demand. Shop: products and works of the Park. Free admission. All animations of the Park are free unless otherwise stated.

Find out more

Transport

Transière bus Line 4120 Chantelouve-La Mure Bus stop at Périer (village) 


Access and parking

From la Mûre: follow the D114 (for 1.5 km) then the D26 and the D526. From Bourg d'Oisans, follow the D526. There is a first car park above the Grissard graveyard (altitude 1001 m). It is possible to continue up to the Salsette, where there is a second car park near to the Confolens waterfall.

Parking :

Confolens waterfall car park or Périer church car park

Source

Parc national des Ecrinshttps://www.ecrins-parcnational.fr

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