Col de Macuègne

The Col de Macuègne (1,068 m (3,504 ft)) is a mountain pass located in the Dauphiné Prealps, on the northern slopes of Mont Ventoux between Montbrun-les-Bains and Séderon in the Drôme department of France. The road over the col is used occasionally by the Tour de France cycle race with the tour crossing the pass on Stage 16 of the 2013 Tour.[1]

Col de Macuègne
Col de Macuègne
Location of Col de Macuègne
Elevation1,068 m (3,504 ft)
Traversed byD542
LocationDrôme, France
RangeMontagne d'Albion / Mont Ventoux
Coordinates44°10′55″N 5°30′36″E

Details of the climb

The climb commences at Montbrun-les-Bains (west) from where it is 9.2 km (5.7 mi) long, climbing 470 m (1,542 ft) at an average gradient of 5.1%.[2] From the east, the climb starts at Séderon, from where there are 5.5 km (3.4 mi) to the summit of no great difficulty.[3]

From the pass, a minor road crosses the Col de l'Homme Mort (1,212 m (3,976 ft)) en route to Sault.[3]

Tour de France

The tour has crossed the pass twice before 2013, on Stage 16 of the 1956 Tour and on Stage 14 of the 1970 Tour; on both occasions, it was not classified for the King of the Mountains competition.[4]

On 16 July 2013, the pass was crossed on Stage 16 between Vaison-la-Romaine and Gap. It was ranked as a Second Category climb. The leader over the summit was Johnny Hoogerland.[1]

gollark: You can do trees easily with a Vec.
gollark: I mean, apart from the nice syntax.
gollark: > I wrap all my rust code inside an unsafe blockWHY EVEN PROGRAM RUST THENWHYWHYWHYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY
gollark: > if unsafe = unlegal iirc the langauge becomes turing incompleteNope.
gollark: As I said, extremely unlegal.

References

  1. "Stage 16: Vaison-la-Romaine / Gap". Le Tour de France. Archived from the original on 27 May 2013. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  2. "Col de Macuègne: Montbrun-les-Bains". climbbybike.com. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  3. "Col de Macuègne (1068m)" (in French). lemontventoux.net. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  4. "Le col de Macuègne dans le Tour de France" (in French). ledicodutour. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
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