Vignemale
The Vignemale is the name given to the mountain massif in French, which also straddles into Spain. It consists of several distinct summits, the predominant ones being Grand Vignemale or Pique-Longue (in French) / Pica Longa (in Occitan and Catalan) / Punda de Comabichosa (in Aragonese) (3298 m), Pointe Chausenque / Punta Chausenca (3,204 m) and Petit Vignemale / Petita Vinhamala (3,032 m). The Vignemale is also the site of the second largest of the Pyrenean glaciers (after the one on Aneto), the Ossoue / Osso (with around 0.6 km), across which the "voie normale", or standard route to the summit travels.
One of its most dramatic aspects is the North Face upon which lie a number of serious ascent routes requiring skill and commitment. Below the North Face is the impressively situated mountain refuge - the Refuge des Oulettes de Gaube / Refugi d’eths Oletas de Gauba. The approach from the north entails a delightful walk up to and around the picturesque Lac de Gaube / Gauba giving increasingly dramatic views of the mountain.
Almost synonymous with the Vignemale is the name of Count Henry Russell, an eccentric of the Victorian era who developed a lifelong passion for the mountain.
The first documented, "official" ascent of this peak was by English landowner and traveller Anne Lister and three local guides in 1838.
Gallery
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Count Henry Russell in front of one of his caves on the Vignemale
References
- ^ "Vinhamala o Comachibosa (3298m) pel corredor de la Moskowa, vall de l'Ara", Muntanyaviva.cat, 2007 (in Catalan with Occitan and Aragonese names). [Accessed 12/05/2019]
- ^ "Anne Lister's Ascent of Vignemale", by Miss Vivien Ingham, Alpine Journal, No. 73 (1968), p. 199-204. [Accessed 12/05/2019]
- ^ "The Life and Loves of Anne Lister", by Rebecca Woods, BBC, 3 May 2019. [Accessed 12/05/2019]
- ^ "Vinhamala o Comachibosa (3298m) pel corredor de la Moskowa, vall de l'Ara", Muntanyaviva.cat, 2007 (in Catalan). [Accessed 12/05/2019]