Alpinism autonomy course

Have you already discovered the joys of mountaineering and feel comfortable with the basic techniques of roped walking on glaciers and climbing, but want to go further and deepen your expertise in these practices?

Our courses for experienced climbers will help you reach a new technical level, opening up access to new summits and wild high-altitude areas in the company of our teams of mountain guides, who will share their experience and passion with you.

MOUNTAINEERING MYTHICAL ASCENTS

MOUNTAINEERING MYTHICAL ASCENTS

Climbing the legendary peaks of the Alps, surpassing the 4,000-meter mark: an adventure, a dream for all mountain lovers.
Taming the rock, snow, and ice, facing the challenges that await all those who attempt the high mountain adventure, and earning the pleasure of reaching the summit, the ultimate goal.
The beauty of the gesture and the emotions experienced when attempting the ascent roped together with a guide who will share with you their passion for an extraordinary world is also what you will remember when you return from a high-altitude climb.


From Gran Paradiso to the Matterhorn, via Mont Blanc and the peaks of the Monte Rosa massif, the playground is endless in the Alps. Follow in the footsteps of illustrious predecessors who braved the fear inspired by these sharp peaks and “cursed glaciers,” as in the first ascent of Mont Blanc in 1786 by J. Balmat and M. Paccard.  In the 19th century, mountaineering took off thanks to the enthusiasm of the British and its illustrious climbers such as A. Mummery and E. Whymper.       

Mountaineering then became more athletic during the 20th century, with winter ascents and increasingly shorter time slots. But completing a major route will always remain, for those who achieve it, the fulfillment of a dream, an ideal imagined and transformed into reality through training and self-sacrifice. In these intense moments, perhaps what everyone is seeking deep down is a return to the essentials: a communion with nature and the elements from which one returns transformed.