Gorges du Toulourenc
— Walking a beautiful gorge in the Vaucluse in the shadow of Mont Ventoux…”

- Location: Veaux, near Malaucène, Vaucluse
- Length: 10km
- Difficulty: scrambling, some deep water, some steep slopes
This walk formed part of our holiday Grandes vacances 2009: South of France
The day had long since transformed itself from a little wander up a sparkling streambed to an increasingly technical assault on deep water and slippery rock walls.
We’d left the picnickers behind and we’d passed tired, vexed faces coming the other way, each of them looking like soldiers returning from the front.
Then, in the third or fourth section of chest-high water I remembered my wallet was still in my pocket.
Everything was rising. The water, the rocks and the sun highest of all! I felt my neck burning and I saw J’s poor arms were headed the same way.
After who knows how long, we finally spotted the GR91 running down the left bank. Hoisting ourselves up and onto it – a bit prematurely, as far as the map was concerned, but we wanted to dry off – we took a breather then set off on this long thread of nicely surfaced terra firma, quietly relieved to find the oppressive canyon was now at our feet rather than towering above us.
Larger map of this route at GoogleMaps
Almost as soon as we had dried off, we started to dry out. With Mont Ventoux bald and implacable and high off to our left, we toiled up the vertiginous slopes of the valley. The heat shortened our breath even as the panoramas lengthened.
Of course, as soon as I was sure I had the car in sight – still several kilometres away down by the valley meadow – I breathed deeply and finally understood this rando for what it was: one of the highlights of our holiday.
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May 14th, 2012 at 11:31
Hi
Nice piece, visiting Provence in June with family and wondering if its a nice walk for us – children aged 6 9 and 11 all very fit and agile (far more than their parents!).
RSVP
May 14th, 2012 at 12:11
Ahoj, Kieran!
It’s a fantastic walk and we saw some groups of children happily romping through the water and over the rocks. However, those with very young children tended to stop, enjoy a picnic and turn back afterwards.
The water can be pretty deep in places, about adult chest high even in the dry summer months. I had to wade through sections carrying my rucksack above my head. Thanks to the type of rock in the region, the deepest sections of water are milky so you can’t see your feet. However, the current is very placid.
Elsewhere there are some fairly technical bits of climbing to do, which would probably mean one adult having to go up first and then another adult handing up the young ones. This climbing element would make things very difficult if you needed to turn back for any reason.
I noticed that one walk organiser online would not take kids under 15 years old, which I think is much too cautious. Others simply insist on armbands for those who aren’t competent swimmers. Some good photos can be seen of kids tackling the deeper sections on the website of this French school though unfortunately they don’t show the climbing parts.
Best wishes and enjoy your trip!
Mike