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Roads to Ride: Mont Salve
One of the steepest roads in France, this is a selective climb for the Tour de France. If its not as fierce as the Angliru or Zoncolan, it still sits in a category of particularly steep climbs deserves to be explored in this series and ought to be raced more. So far its played a greater part in art history than the Tour de France.The RouteThe D45 road climbs out of the village of Le Coin in the Haute-Savoie department of France. It is 4.7km with an average gradient of 11.2%. At the top is the Col de la Croisette, a crossing point in a dip along the ridge.The FeelThis is one of those climbs you can see from afar. Photos dont do the vertical gain justice. It looms with a cliff face some 800 metres tall. Apparently the name is derived from the Latin salire, to rise up or jump. Today in French it sounds like a lve or it rises. You scan the mountain and know theres road up but cant figure out how it will work, just a vertical wall to scale.The official climb might be only 4.7km long but to get there theres a three kilometre ride mostly uphill too, it averages 5% but its irregular with flat passages and 12% ramps, climbing past the suburban villas and chalets of Archamps and Vovray. This is France but Switzerland is nearby, freshly-washed cars with Swiss plates sit on driveways.A ramp into Le Coin has your reaching for low gears and here you start the climb proper, passing the last few houses to reach a farm building at the first hairpin, the switch for town to countryside. This is where the forest begins and if you struggled to spot the road from afar its because it climbs up inside the woodland. And boy does it climb. Youre onto 12% ramps right away.There are signs every kilometre for cyclists, a nice touch to value the road and warn of the constant double-digit gradients to come. It snakes up and the hairpins are even steeper. Its the opposite of Alpe dHuez, with its wide and flat bends in between each ramp. Here the corners are the steepest part of the road.Climbing this on a late afternoon in June it had been freshly resurfaced for the Tour. But it was already scored by vehicles grounding their chassis on the inside of the bend because of the slope. There was some commuter traffic, people hurrying home. One van came past just before a bend and as it cornered clockwise around a hairpin its rear wheel on the inside was briefly hanging in the air before the van finished the bend and got all four wheels lined up on the slope.It wasnt busy or crowded but clearly used by some people in a hurry to get home, a daily rally that cant be easy, or even an option, if it is dark and icy in winter.Its steep but inconsistently so with 11% here, 14% there. Only theres not a moments rest, it rarely eases below 9% and so makes for a constant winching effort. The changes in slope are never abrupt either.Its punishing going up but barriers along the road have extra panelling to stop cyclists sliding out beneath so perhaps ascending is the better idea? Being in the woods means there are few views but occasionally you get a view and can appreciate how much youve climbed in a short distance.Clear the final hairpin and theres still a way to go. Eventually the woodland gives way to grass pastures a small ski lift dangles in the wind but the slope still pins you back with double-digit gradients. Once at the top there are some buildings at the crossroads but look straight ahead beyond the railings for views of the Alps including Mont Blanc. This is one of those climbs with a payoff at the end, this time the panorama.The VerdictA climb just to get to the start. Once you climb out of Le Coin its harder still. Is it as hard as as Monte Zoncolan or the Mortirolo and other climbs we cite as references? No, but it does belong with them in a bracket of persistently steep climbs, the kind where it pays to think about your gearing because whatever works for normal Alpine climbs of 7-9% may not be sufficient.Its strictly a rural climb with woodland but does havea big population nearby. Its a gateway climb, the city of Geneva and its surrounding suburbs extending in France sit on one side so locals can climb and find a new landscape beyond.Ride MoreHaving scaled the cliff face there are some cafes and bars, plus a water fountain. You can turn left or right to ride along the crest top of the mountain to enjoy the views more before descending and being able to ride around to the start.If you do go straight on, and down, you can find a way towards Annecy for more Alpine roads. Or try a hipster version of the 2026 Tour de France stage by going via the climb to the Plateau de Glires to take its grave road before tackling the Plateau de Solaison summit finish.HistoryIn terms of geology this is part of the Jura mountains. The cliffs of Mont Salve have long inspired artists. In 1444 Konrad Witz depicted biblical scenes in The Miraculous Draft of Fishes but each painting has a backdrop with recognisable landscapes, including the Salve whose striated cliffs are on the top right of the painting here. This is regularly cited by art historians as the first work to accurately depict recognisable landscapes.The image at the top of this post is by landscape artist Thodore Rousseau, who features in a recent Substack post of Edward Pickering, the former Cycle Sport and Rouleur editor.In 1815 Mount Tamboura erupted in what is Indonesia today and this is said to be the most powerful in recorded human history. It propelled so much rock, dust and gas into the atmosphere that the following year the debris reduced the sunlight around the world, causing temperatures to plunge and what was since branded a year without summer. Crops failed, people rioted. Amid this a 19 year old Mary Shelley was staying in Lord Byrons villa near Geneva and she complained of the incessant rain. To pass the time indoors they told scary stories and from this Victor Frankenstein was born and two years later her story was published. Part of the story sees Frankstein pursue the hideous monster he created across treacherous terrain:I thought of pursuing the devil; but it would have been in vain, for another flash discovered him to me hanging among the rocks of the nearly perpendicular ascent of Mont SalveTour de France HistoryThe Tour de France first climbed this mountain in 1973 and via the same steep road too. It was a crucial stage as Luis Ocaa won and took the yellow jersey which hed keep to Paris.The stage finish was in Aspro-Gaillard. Dont look for it on a map because Aspro was a brand of aspirin. Its factory was in Gaillard, one of the first to mass-produce aspirin pills in France. The company sponsored the Tour de France, funding ambulances and medics at the race and quid pro quo it got a stage finish and start outside the HQ. A few other stages have had place names altered for sponsors but mercifully its rare.The last time it featured in the Tour was in 1992. The Critrium du Dauphin Libr, in its pre-ASO ownership days, used it in 2008. The surprise is that it isnt used more often by bike races. The Tour organisers have been trying to hunt out steep roads for a long time and this is the first time that its tackled during Christian Prudhommes time as race director.Travel and AccessGeneva in Switzerland is the nearest city with good rail, road and air connections. Its not a climb to travel a long way just to try by itself but sits at a transport crossroads with traffic from France, Switzerland and Italy passing by so worth stopping to enjoy the views at the top.More roads to ride at inrng.com/roadsThe post Roads to Ride: Mont Salve first appeared on The Inner Ring.
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