Our morning ritual begins: a walk from the hotel along the glacial la Grande Eau river as it makes its way down to join the Rhône. The mountain air carries the fresh promise of pine and wildflowers. One of our guests pauses, breathing deeply, and mentions this reminds her of the Switzerland of 40 years ago. Unspoiled, uncrowded, no hordes of others disturbing our peace or crowding our photographs.
We watch farmers cutting meadows for winter feed just a few hundred metres from our hotel. The rhythm of their work, unchanged for generations, sets the pace for our own wanderings. Mixed woodlands beckon with butterflies dancing between shafts of sunlight and birdsong threading through the branches. As John Muir says, 'Between every two pines, there is a doorway to a new world.'
The devils of old folklore seem very far away as we settle into the gentle cadence of Alpine life. Tomorrow we'll venture higher, but tonight we simply listen to the river's lullaby and wonder why anyone would call this peaceful valley the 'abode of devils.'