Purky
Intermittent Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Reality is frequently inaccurate
For centuries it was done like this: during late spring the shepherds of the plains of Camargue and Crau in the Provence, France, would gather their sheep and start the "transhumance à l'anciennes". Thousands of sheep and their herdsmen would walk almost 400 kilometers to the Stura Valley in the south-west of Piedmont, the province of Cuneo, Italy. A voyage to the succulent grass of Italian mountain pastures. And when the summer ended, they would walk back again. The journey was known as La Routo, and stretched between Arles and Pontebernardo.
Until this old tradition was forbidden about sixty years ago. The old way hindered modern life: quite literally, because the sheep got in the way of present day traffic. From the fifties and sixties on the sheep would be transported in huge trucks to the foot of the Alps, where the shepherds would take over for the last bit and walk their herds to higher ground. Transhumance became a rush job.
Patrick Fabre, director of the 'Maison de la Transhumance' in Domaine du Merle, spent ten years studying and identifying the original route. He is convinced that the old pastoral practice of transhumance has merit (and not just agricultural) and is sustainable, unlike the new way of raising livestock. And to promote this view, the 'Maison de la Transhumance' was involved in the development of a new French grande randonnée: the GR 69.
From Arles to Borgo San Dalmazzo, La Routo now offers a 480 kilometer trail (400 km on the French side). Antoine de Baecque (historian, critic, writer and enthusiastic hiker) is also on board of the promotion train, as he walked this route for a 2018 ARTE documentary by Pascal Cardeilhac: "Sur la route des bergers". With only a little stretch of the imagination you can consider this a pilgrimage to nostalgia, the rediscovery of the old ways.
As if my bucketlist wasn't already long enough...
'La Routo' website: http://www.larouto.eu/sur-les-pas-de-la-transhumance/
Maison de la transhumance: http://www.transhumance.org/
The map: http://www.larouto.eu/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/LaRouto_carte_2015-modif.pdf
Documentary (available until 8th April 2019) : https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/082733-000-A/sur-la-route-des-bergers/
Until this old tradition was forbidden about sixty years ago. The old way hindered modern life: quite literally, because the sheep got in the way of present day traffic. From the fifties and sixties on the sheep would be transported in huge trucks to the foot of the Alps, where the shepherds would take over for the last bit and walk their herds to higher ground. Transhumance became a rush job.
Patrick Fabre, director of the 'Maison de la Transhumance' in Domaine du Merle, spent ten years studying and identifying the original route. He is convinced that the old pastoral practice of transhumance has merit (and not just agricultural) and is sustainable, unlike the new way of raising livestock. And to promote this view, the 'Maison de la Transhumance' was involved in the development of a new French grande randonnée: the GR 69.
From Arles to Borgo San Dalmazzo, La Routo now offers a 480 kilometer trail (400 km on the French side). Antoine de Baecque (historian, critic, writer and enthusiastic hiker) is also on board of the promotion train, as he walked this route for a 2018 ARTE documentary by Pascal Cardeilhac: "Sur la route des bergers". With only a little stretch of the imagination you can consider this a pilgrimage to nostalgia, the rediscovery of the old ways.
As if my bucketlist wasn't already long enough...
'La Routo' website: http://www.larouto.eu/sur-les-pas-de-la-transhumance/
Maison de la transhumance: http://www.transhumance.org/
The map: http://www.larouto.eu/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/LaRouto_carte_2015-modif.pdf
Documentary (available until 8th April 2019) : https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/082733-000-A/sur-la-route-des-bergers/
Last edited: