The Bassiès Lakes
A first hard climb past flower pasture and old silver workings, then a high pass and the lakes open below.
You'll walk 97 kilometres through the Ariège Pyrenees, from a thermal-spa village to a mountain railway station — over the Port de Bassiès and into a chain of high lakes, then along the airy Crête des Isards before the long descent. A route that earns every metre of its 5,550 metres of ascent.
Your trail divides naturally into three parts — not by day, but by the character of the country. You climb first into the lake basin of the Bassiès, drop back through forest cols and a pastoral plateau, then commit to the long high crêtes that carry you to Mérens.
A first hard climb past flower pasture and old silver workings, then a high pass and the lakes open below.
Forest cols and stone hamlets, broken by a long climb to a plateau with a panorama in every direction.
The trail's highest and most committed section — three cols above 2,000 metres, an airy ridge, and the long drop to Mérens.
Included with every trip
Everything you need for every day of your trail — built around your exact itinerary. Your route, your accommodation, your packing list. Ready before you leave, works offline when you're out there.
Tonight's accommodation
Check-in time, room type, phone number and directions — all in one place
Day-by-day trail description
Route map, elevation profile and written description for each stage
Packing list and pre-trip checklist
Everything you need, nothing you don't. Tick items off as you go
Works offline
Open it once with data and it's yours — no signal needed on the trail
Included with every trip
Your custom GPX file is built around your exact itinerary — day by day, door to door. Load it onto any device or app before you set off and navigate with confidence.
Works with
This section is the one I usually point people to when they want a real Pyrenean week without committing to the full GR10. Six walking days, a thousand metres of ascent on most of them, and two nights in refuges that earn their place in the mountains. Don't underestimate the daily climb.
Craig has spent over ten years in adventure travel — most of it talking walkers through trails like this one. He's helped customers plan their GR10 section by section, knows where people misjudge the daily ascent figures on a Pyrenean week, and has the calls in his pocket from walkers who came back from Mérens the week before.
If you want to talk through your timing, your fitness, your pace, or anything the planner can't answer — call. Most of our customers do, and Craig's the one who'll answer.
The things walkers ask us most often — answered plainly, so you don't have to ring to find out.
Still not sure? Ring us on 0131 560 2740 — Craig usually answers.
If you've scrolled this far, we need to help you get onto this trail. The bit the planner can't help with — "is the pace right for me?", "is August really that busy?", "can we add a rest day in Keswick?" — that's a two-minute phone call. Most people who book the GR10 Section 6: Aulus les Bains to Mérens ring first.