the times Saturday May 28 2022
37
‘Its elegant façade and doll’s
house dimensions manage to
look grand yet inviting’
Susan d’Arcy on Ireland’s revamped Cashel Palace
do, and if you find yourself there on a
sunny June, July or August day — or in
any other European mountain range —
you’ll understand why. Dressed in
vivid green with every wrinkle of
rock visible in the fresh, clear air,
they are such an irrefutable
declaration of nature’s power
that even the gentlest activity
feels heroic: go for a walk and
suddenly you’re hiking; pedal
and you’re chasing the ghosts
of the Tour de France.
Then, when you’re done,
you’ll find few places more
soothing. Slip off your boots
and stick your feet in the nearest
mountain stream for the full, mind-
melting effect — no spa could match it.
Of course there’s more to do than hike
T
he first time I went to the
Alps was for a summer
reading holiday. I was an
undergraduate and the
idea was that we’d pile
into a rickety old chalet
above St Gervais-les-
Bains in France, study hard and get
the odd lungful of mountain air in the
afternoons. There was one problem: the
landscape in which we were supposed
to be working included the Mont Blanc
massif, one of the most spectacular
lumps of rock you’ll ever lay eyes on.
No prizes for guessing what happened
— let’s just say that my academic career
never materialised. Meanwhile I’ve been
back to the Alps a hundred times since.
Often it’s been for skiing. But I loved
those mountains first in summer and still
From yoga and
concerts to hiking
and biking, you
don’t need snow
to enjoy Europe’s
high points, says
Sean Newsom
or cycle. You might pair yoga with
climbing lessons, or walk through a pine-
scented forest before a Michelin-starred
meal. Alongside a new generation of
mountain-bike parks there are high-
ropes courses, rafting companies
on many rivers and musicians
playing in state-of-the-art
concert halls. It’s a rich and
energetic mix. If you chafe at
the inactivity of a villa break
or long for somewhere more
interesting to look at than a
beach, the mountains could well
be your natural summer home.
Here’s our pick of holidays to
wreck your summer reading plans.
Go parapenting
in La Plagne
Summer in the Alps: the best
places to stay in the mountains
Mountain trips next page
Travel
Page
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ALAMY; AIR LA PLAGNE
Grindelwald in the Swiss Alps