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Running through the Valais: Trail Verbier St-Bernard’s X-Traversée

Running through the Valais: Trail Verbier St-Bernard’s X-Traversée

Jul 27, 2018

The miracle was not that you finished, the miracle was that you had the courage to start.
(Matthieu Girard, at Trail Verbier St-Bernard pre-race briefing).

The steep, narrow Col des Avouillons comes 50 km in to the X-Traversée. (Photo courtesy of Trail Verbier St-Bernard.)

I’ve always agreed with that sentiment. I suspect it resonates with each of us who dares to enter a challenging mountain race. To that quote, I’d add a corollary: Too often, events conspire against you to keep you from the start line. Schedules, injuries, obligations… life, in short.

That was certainly my story for Trail Verbier St. Bernard. For years now I had wanted to run one of their races. The routes run through an area that’s one of the most beautiful in the Alps. The race has a deserved reputation for being well-organized, yet it manages to stay low-key and free of the big-business feel of a number of high-profile trail races on this side of the Atlantic.

This year, my chance finally came – and TVSB didn’t disappoint. I ran the 73-km X-Traversée route, which wends its way through some of the most striking terrain the Alps have to offer: Alpine lakes, snowfields, the 2,695-meter high point of Col Fenêtre, past the legendary hospice at Col du Grand St. Bernard, under the shadow of the 4,314-meter high Grand Combin, over Col des Avouillons, across a 240-meter long suspension bridge (no running allowed!), to Cabane FXB Panossière. The final third of the course included a free-falling, fast descent, a chance to catch your breath and resupply in the village of Lourtier, a gut-wrenching 1,192-meter climb up “The Wall,” and finally more fun, fast single-track into Verbier.

Col du Grand St. Bernard, as seen from above the Italian side of the Swiss-Italian border. Both the X-Alpine and X-Traversée pass this way. (Photo courtesy of Trail Verbier St-Bernard.)

Picking favorites is an unwise idea in Alps trail running. Every trail and race has its unique qualities. At the risk of falling into that trap, I’ll say that Trail Verbier St. Bernard is on my short list. And it should probably be on yours, too.

A few observations from my fourteen hours running in the X-Traversée:

*The scenery is magnificent. Switzerland’s Val Ferret is one of the most lush, striking valleys in the region. Scattered throughout are the enormous Herens cows. (True: Each year, a cow is elected Queen by the local farmers!) It’s an inspiring scene to take in as you climb towards Col Fenêtre. Stop for a moment and take it all in. It’s time well spent.

*Passing through Col du Grand St. Bernard is always special. How often does one get to walk along Roman-built paths, in the steps of pilgrims and traders who traveled through the region for centuries?

*TVSB gets alpine – and in a big way. The X-Alpine route crossed the striking ridge of Catogne, while X-Traversée takes participants throughout some of the most wild and rugged regions of the Valais.

*Lots of trail races promote themselves as having great single-track. But, TVSB really delivers here. There’s hours-worth of flowy, narrow, un-eroded tracks through high Alp pastures.

*Through it all, TVSB is well organized, with a friendly and warm spirit. A variety of races offer distances from 29km to 111km. Sunday morning, there’s even a kid’s race through the streets of Verbier.

*TVSB has all of the qualities that one wants in a “big time” Alps trail race – stunning courses, great organization, and an authentic vibe all of its own. Whilst too many times such events come with baggage – strict rules, long lines, event organizers more focused on profits than experience – there’s none of that at TVSB, and that alone is reason to recommend it. In a region that is arguably the original home of trail running in the Alps, TVSB carries the Valais’ strong trail running tradition forward. Here’s to another great decade!

Runners at the Cabane FXB Panossière, high above the Corbassière glacier. (Photo courtesy of Trail Verbier St-Bernard.)

Tiphaine and Matthieu opened the 73 km race by sharing the poem If from one of my favorite writers, Rudyard Kipling. It struck just the right chord for those of us about to embark on a great adventure. I’ll leave you with the same thought, wherever your mountain adventures take you next:

If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two impostors just the same:
If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they are gone,
And so hold on when there is nothing in you
Except the Will which says to them: “Hold on!”
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,
And – which is more – you’ll be a Man, my son!

For More Information:

Trail Verbier St-Bernard Race Page 

author
Doug Mayer
Doug Mayer is the founder of Run the Alps and lives in Chamonix, France with his labradoodle, Izzy. He is the author of The Race that Changed Running: The Inside Story of UTMB and writes for Outside Online and Ultrasignup News. His upcoming book is a graphic novel about Italy’s 330km long Tor des Géants trail race.