
The Tor des Géants is often described through numbers: immense distances, dramatic elevation, days without sleep. Yet beyond the statistics lies something quieter and deeper. This legendary mountain race is, above all, a journey through the most authentic soul of the Aosta Valley and, inevitably, into oneself.
To follow the Tor, in any form, is to move along ancient paths that have shaped life in these mountains for centuries.
The race unfolds along the historic Alte Vie, high mountain routes once used to connect valleys, villages and alpine pastures. Long before becoming trails for runners, these paths carried shepherds, traders and families moving with the seasons. Today, their stones still remember those footsteps.
Events like the Tor des Géants help keep this fragile network alive. The care required to prepare and maintain the trails ensures their survival, preventing abandonment and preserving access for future generations. What might seem like a modern sporting challenge becomes, quietly, an act of conservation.
Along the way, runners pass through a constellation of alpine hamlets tucked beneath some of the highest peaks in Europe. Pastures open wide under the sky, streams cross the trail with clear, icy water, and alpine lakes appear like sudden mirrors. Each stretch feels less like a racecourse and more like an open-air archive of landscapes, where wilderness and memory coexist.
Scattered along the routes are mountain huts and bivouacs, essential points of refuge in a land where weather can change in minutes. These simple structures are more than shelters. They are places of encounter, where languages mix, stories are exchanged, and fatigue is met with warmth.
Volunteers and hut keepers become quiet guardians of the mountains during the race, offering help, encouragement and human presence in remote places. The continued use of these bivouacs, even during extreme events, helps preserve a vital safety network for all who travel the high mountains.
Ultra-distance trail running here reflects a form of sustainable, conscious travel. Athletes and their companions explore the region slowly and deeply, guided by effort and curiosity rather than speed. Villages awaken, local life intersects with passing footsteps, and the mountains are experienced not as a backdrop but as a living environment.
Each stride becomes a small declaration of trust in the future of these landscapes. Maintenance, care and respect are woven into the experience, linking sport to stewardship.
As the Tor des Géants continues its epic loop through valleys and summits, it celebrates more than physical endurance. It honours a territory that still speaks through its trails, its shelters, its communities.
The mountains wait, patient and ancient, holding their stories close. Those who walk or run their paths are not just crossing terrain. They are listening.








All was really good
All was really good
Nice and friendly hotel, great breakfast
Nice and friendly hotel, great breakfast
All the comfort you need when enjoying this charming town.
All the comfort you need when enjoying this charming town.
Easter Ski Trip
Easter Ski Trip
Happy Vacation in Hotel L'Aiglon.
Happy Vacation in Hotel L'Aiglon.
Nice location, great value
Nice location, great value
Excellent séjour à l'hôtel l'Aiglon!
Excellent séjour à l'hôtel l'Aiglon!
Friendly familystyle hotel
Friendly familystyle hotel
Fabulous return visit
Fabulous return visit
Another GREAT stay
Another GREAT stay