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Bivouac · 1448 m

Le vieux Chéppy

Bivouac at 1448 m in Val Veny, Aosta Valley. Data from OpenStreetMap; verify opening before setting out. Practical info: bivouac at 1448 m in Val Veny, with unstaffed shelter.

Exterior of Le vieux Chéppy

Altitude

1448 m

Valley

Val Veny

Where it is

45.9411, 6.8064 · 1448 m

What to bring

Everything you need to be self-sufficient: sleeping bag and mat (often absent or minimal), food and water or a small stove, layered and windproof clothing, a headlamp, a first-aid kit. No money is needed — the bivouac is free. Carry out all your waste.

What to do there

If you stay overnight, enjoy the silence and the starry sky far from any light. The reward for climbing this high is dawn from altitude: wake early, while the air is still clear, and watch it set the ridges alight. Which summits and passes you can reach depends on the area — check the routes on the trail pages above.

What is a bivouac

A bivouac is a small unmanned shelter, always open and free, placed at high altitude where a staffed hut could not exist. It was conceived to break up long traverses, to wait for first light before a climb, or as an emergency shelter in bad weather. There is no keeper and no services: you find what those before you have left. Hence the golden rule — leave it as clean and tidy as you would wish to find it.

Nearby peaks

Community gallery

Photos are published immediately. JPG/PNG/WebP, max 6 MB.

Source: OpenStreetMap contributors

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