Kirsten has a background in Kinesiology and Health Science She has been involved in cycling from the community and grassroots level to professional cycling's biggest races She began her sports journalism career with Cyclingnews as a North American Correspondent in 2006 Kirsten became Women's Editor – overseeing the content strategy race coverage and growth of women's professional cycling – before becoming Deputy Editor in 2023 Become a member here We use cookies to improve your browsing experience It's the final opportunity for the stage hunting teams to nab a stage win before the race heads into the mountains July 16Distance: 159.5km Start location: Remiremont Finish location: Morteau Start time: 11:30  CEST  Finish time: 15:45 CEST  The sixth stage of the Tour de France Femmes begins in the Vosges region of France in the town of Remiremont The origins of the town date back to the seventh century when it was founded as a monastery by Saint Romaric and Saint Amé highlighting the town's religious and cultural history To celebrate Remiremont's community spirit each year the town comes alive with its traditional carnival which is inspired by the famous Carnival of Venice there are parades and processions that wind through the streets of Remiremont the carnival won’t be the only time of year when there will be a procession through town this celebration will be on two wheels as the Women’s WorldTour rides out of Remiremont towards Morteau It’s the last of the hilly stages before the big mountains come into view so the last chance for the puncheurs of the peloton to secure a stage win if they have not done so far but most of it is packed into the second half of the stage with one category four climb The only climb in the first half of the stage is the Col du Mont de Fourche a 3.2km climb with an average gradient of 5.9% The second half will wear down the legs of the riders The La Roche du Prêtre is the toughest climb of the day and is 5.5km-long with an average gradient of 5.6% so could we see a solo winner or a sprint from a select group of escapees Liane Lippert and Emma Norsgaard are riders who Movistar will pin hopes on winning a stage Noorsgard in solo fashion (something she could try and repeat on stage six of this year's race) and Lippert in a sprint Lippert was third on stage five with Norsgaard sixth so both are showing good signs of winning form Kristen Faulkner (EF Education-Oatly-Cannondale) is still showing her strength post-Olympics triumphs The American has just been outside the podium once on the ITT and then came fourth in the challenging stage five with this being the last chance for one of the team's riders to secure a victory before the big mountain stages we expect she'll be an active rider on this stage who placed fifth on the lumpy stage to Liège as well as Magdeleine Vallieres and Alison Jackson Fenix-Deceuninck continues to be very active throughout this race and stage six provides them with another opportunity for a stage win Puck Pieterse continues to lead in the polka dot jersey and with five categorised climbs littered throughout this stage we expect she'll want to get into the break Last year's stage winner Yara Kastelijn could be a rider for the team Visma-Lease a Bike's Fem Van Empel could also be a contender She looked good in the three-rider break which formed on stage five featuring Loes Adegeest (FDJ-Suez) and Julie Van de Velde (AG Insurance-Soudal Team) who could also be celebrating a stage win on this stage Lucinda Brand could also be a contender to get into the break and go all the way to the line Yellow jersey Kasia Niewiadoma (Canyon//SRAM) does have the option to race this stage more defensively but she is a rider who puts in the effort and therefore could take this opportunity to widen the gap between herself and Demi Vollering (SD Worx-Protime) Depending on how Vollering feels after the crash she was involved in on stage five she may try to solo herself to victory to get herself back into yellow before the final weekend We're back Emma Norsgaard to take the stage win in Morteau Rouleur takes a look at the contenders to win the Maglia Rosa in Italy this month Alexander Vinokourov's team are making the impossible rather quite possible All the essential information about the first Grand Tour of the year While the former Olympic and World champion is relishing new ventures in retirement she is keen to ensure more support is in place for those.. From SD Worx-Protime's continued success to Canyon-SRAM's disappointment Rouleur takes a look at how each squad performed at the Spring Classics Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines Join today for exclusive content from independent journalists This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply Cédrine Kerbaol became the first French rider to win a stage in this race and moved up to second in the GC 1. Kasia Niewiadoma (Pol) Canyon-SRAM, in 15:32:31 2. Cédrine Kerbaol (Fra) Ceratizit-WNT, +16s 3. Kristen Faulkner (USA) EF-Oatly-Cannondale, +19s 4. Puck Pieterse (Ned) Fenix-Deceuninck, +22s 5. Juliette Labous (Fra) dsm-firmenich PostNL, +56s 6. Thalita De Jong (Ned) Lotto Dstny, +1:04 7. Shirin van Anrooij (Ned) Lidl-Trek, +1:07 8. Pauliena Rooijakkers (Ned) Fenix-Deceuninck, +1:08 10. Demi Vollering (Ned) SD Worx-Protime, +1:19 16 Aug 202416.27 CESTReuters – Cedrine Kerbaol became the first-ever home stage winner of the Tour de France Femmes after a late attack on the hilly sixth stage from Remiremont to Mortgeau on Friday Kerbaol (Ceratizit-WNT) broke clear on the descent of the day’s final climb with 15km to go winning by 21 seconds from the pursuing group Her daring ride lifted her to second in the general classification 16 seconds behind yellow jersey wearer Katarzyna Niewiadoma who took the lead on the previous stage following a crash involving then leader Demi Vollering Dutch great Marianne Vos sprinted to second on the stage to take over the green jersey Saturday’s 164-km stage features five categorised climbs CEDRIIIIIINE 🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀HOLY SHIT#TDFF2024 #WatchTheFemmes 1. Cédrine Kerbaol (Fra) Ceratizit-WNT, in 4:04:41 2. Marianne Vos (Ned) Visma-Lease a Bike, +21s 10. Juliette Labous (Fra) dsm-firmenich PostNL, all at same time Updated at 16.37 CEST16 Aug 202415.51 CESTCédrine Kerbaol wins stage six of the Tour de France FemmesShe’s the first ever French winner of the rebooted Tour de France Femmes À JAMAIS LA PREMIERE 🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷#TDFF2024 l #WatchTheFemmes l @GoZwift l @CedrineKerbaol pic.twitter.com/Djn8tcuXiU Updated at 15.54 CEST16 Aug 202415.50 CEST1km to go: Kerbaol is hurting but holding them off to above 30 seconds. She will enter the town and then that final, fateful hill. Surely she’s got this one in the bag. 16 Aug 202415.47 CEST3km to go: Kerbaol is still flying, and is virtually second on GC with a lead of 37 seconds. She’s a solo specialist, but needs to save her energy for a final, 700m climb. Updated at 15.47 CEST16 Aug 202415.45 CEST5km to go: Demi Vollering is in the main peloton, and will be ready for the mountain stages that await this weekend. Grace Brown is pulling the chasers along. 16 Aug 202415.43 CEST7km to go: Kerbaol is a devil-may-care descender, flying down. And opening up a lead to huge roars. The French rider has the town of Morteau on her side. Niewiadoma is safe in the pack but here, with all the road furniture, is where the danger begins. 16 Aug 202415.39 CEST10km to go: This descent is rapid, and there’s a break on. Cédrine Kerbaol has surged into the lead, with plenty of chasers, including Marianne Vos. The gap is around 20 seconds. 16 Aug 202415.34 CEST15km to go: Marianne Vos, after being up the front, is struggling to stay on the back of this lead group up this final, climd, the Cote de Fins. Puck, back up the front, is there or thereabouts as the mountain points are handed out. Now, here come the attacks on the descent. 16 Aug 202415.31 CEST16km to go: Suddenly, some attacks from the peloton. Juliette Labous is amongst it, and one of the riders caught out is Demi Vollering, who like on Thursday, seems short on help. The breakaway is no more. Now, can there be another to replace it? The gradient is 9%, riders being spat out the back, the yellow jersey in mix. 16 Aug 202415.29 CEST21km to go: The bonus seconds race – like yesterday – is barely contested. The gap to the peloton is dwindling. Kristen Faulkner has dropped back for bottles, so is either full of energy or taking a day off. She’s more likely to have a plan in mind. Updated at 15.37 CEST16 Aug 202415.23 CEST23km to go: Fisher-Black takes the mountain points and Ghekiere reaches the second and falls back having collected the polka points she desires Updated at 15.26 CEST16 Aug 202415.08 CEST28km to go: Vos can’t keep pace, and it’s Fisher-Black, Brown, Paladin, Ghekiere and Gutierrez who are the leading group now. Vos is 25 seconds down. Huge crowds as they climb up and up. 16 Aug 202415.06 CEST30km to go: As expected has staged a break from the lead group but is pulled back is digging for her Lidl team in the peloton ⛰️ PROFIL - LA ROCHE DU PRÊTRE ⛰️2️⃣ cat.📏 5,5 km🥵 5,6%5️⃣ QOM points#TDFF2024 l #WatchTheFemmes l @GoZwift pic.twitter.com/Y6IMoPsLjN Updated at 15.06 CEST16 Aug 202414.53 CEST35km to go: A category 2 climb beckons - La Roche du Prêtre – 5.5km long and finishing with 26.1km to go. That’s not the last of the action – there’s a sprint for bonus points followed by a cat. 3 climb. No rest for the wicked. 16 Aug 202414.45 CEST40km to go: Through bending, weaving Woodland road they go, with the peloton catching up with the breakaway group. Movistar are leading the way for the chasers. They did the same on Thursday, only for that crash to break the rhythm of an expected sprint. 16 Aug 202414.39 CEST46km to go: The descent gets very fast and dangerous over this point though the speed of the race allows little room for caution The previous climb wasn’t too strictly contested but may mean a change of polka wearer come the end of the day Justine Ghekiere won the Queen of the Mountains at the Giro and has become a strong contender 16 Aug 202414.27 CEST55km to go: The gap is 1’ 36” dead as they near the summit of this climb. That means Niewiadoma is back in yellow. But it’s touch and go. Kool is again dropping back on a climb. She said earlier that yesterday was one of her worst ever days in the saddle. 16 Aug 202414.18 CESTVos takes the intermediate sprint59.3km to go: She’s now level with Kool on points Updated at 14.28 CEST16 Aug 202414.06 CEST65km to go: Vos, Ghekiere and Koch attacked out of the breakaway close to the summit of Col de Ferrere but have been pulled back into that 18. Charlotte Kool is deep in the peloton and may well be on the wrong side of Vos’ ventures at the head of the field. The intermediate sprint comes next. Updated at 14.07 CEST16 Aug 202414.01 CEST70km to go: Let there be light. The TV pictures are with us, and that gap has dropped to two minutes, meaning Marianne Vos’s virtual yellow is fading. She’s also got a decent hit at the points classification. 16 Aug 202413.44 CESTA gap has opened up such that Marianne Vos is in virtual yellow, the breakaway has a lead of 2’35”. “Which, unlike a lot of other sports, is not at a fixed location, but along a course open to the public. That makes our capture team a travelling company.” Most importantly, putting all those resources in place costs a lot of money. Switsers: “Putting racing on screen is an expensive production - that is the reality now. Broadcasting a 5-hour race in full, that creates a high technical and personnel cost. We have to use our resources as efficiently as possible and logically focus on the final.” 16 Aug 202413.30 CESTMarianne Vos has joined the lead group alongside Niam Fisher-Balack, Soraya Paladin and Grace Brown. That’s a big enough group to stay away. 16 Aug 202413.19 CESTWhen two become 14: Cordon-Ragot and Blanco have been joined by Van Empel Updated at 13.27 CEST16 Aug 202412.53 CESTTwo riders have staged an early breakaway Audrey Cordon-Ragot is the French time trial champion 16 Aug 202412.38 CESTEurosport – and others – deciding not to show this event until it has 100km left They’re currently showing a documentary on the Tour of Norway Arctic Race of Norway with Carlton Kirby trying to be voiceover man and at one point dropping into a Yorkshire accent for no particular reason Les Femmes have meanwhile been through the town of Mélisey 16 Aug 202412.08 CESTVia the official site, the climbs of the day. They’re already on the first of these. Km 11.7 - Col du Mont-de-Fourche (Cat. 3, 3.2km at 5.9%) Km 90 - Col de Ferrère (Cat. 4, 2.6km at 4.7%) Km 106 - Côte de Laviron (Cat. 3, 5.7km at 4.1%) Km 133.1 - La Roche-du-Prêtre (Cat. 2, 5.5km at 5.6%) Km 144.3 - Côte des Fins (Cat. 3, 1.8km at 6.9%) 16 Aug 202411.55 CESTAway we go...The race is underway there’s no live TV coverage anywhere to be found across the globe 🚩 Real start / Départ réel 🚩Direction ➡️ Morteau #TDFF2024 l #WatchTheFemmes l @GoZwift pic.twitter.com/RQjAGpgqh6 Updated at 11.56 CEST16 Aug 202411.43 CESTJeremy Whittle on what caused the withdrawals today. 16 Aug 202411.37 CESTHere’s the jersey wearers ahead of Stage 6 16 Aug 202411.19 CESTInjury news: Demi Vollering news, from her team: “Demi Vollering was examined at the hotel by the Team SD Worx-Protime team doctor after her fall in the fifth stage of the Tour de France Femmes She suffered minor bruising and superficial abrasions to her lower back and buttock.” “Stage 5 from Bastogne to Amnéville at the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift was marred by a massive crash with many riders hitting the deck. Despite the setback, Puck Pieterse stayed strong and kept both the white jersey and the polka dot jersey,” Fenix-Deceuninck said following the stage. 16 Aug 202411.19 CESTPreambleAfter yesterday’s thrills and spills and the loss of the yellow jersey as a result of those spills we have a highly significant stage to look forward to Demi Vollering has over a minute to find to get back in the race and Charlotte Kool blew up on the terrain too There is so little margin for error in this event Distance: 159.5km Start location: Remiremont Finish location: Morteau Start time: 11:30 CEST Finish time: 15:45 CEST 1 K Niewiadoma (Pol) CANYON//SRAM Racing 11h 27ms 29ss 2 K Faulkner (USA) EF-Oatly-Cannondale +19s 4 C Kerbaol (Fra) Ceratizit-WNT Pro Cycling +47 5 J Labous (Fra) Team dsm-firmenich PostNL +56 🚲 Stage 6 / Étape 6 🚲🚩 Remiremont🏁 Morteau📏 159,2 km⏰ 11:30 CEST > 15:58 CEST⛰ 1x2️⃣c, 3x3️⃣c, 1x4️⃣c💚 km 99,9 #TDFF2024 pic.twitter.com/tP01FknK9y Be one of the first to try our new activity feed Vollering describes 'emotional rollercoaster' since race-changing crash and looks ahead to decisive Alpine stages as her legs respond well to stage 6 attacks While she was suffering after cuts to lower back and buttocks in touch with attacks from rival Juliette Labous (Team DSM Firmenich-PostNL) at the foot of the last hill and a surge from fourth-placed Puck Pieterse over the top so I’m happy about that,” Vollering told Velo and Cyclingnews after the stage Canyon-SRAM and race leader Kasia Niewiadoma may go on to regret not turning the screw and putting the defending champion under more pressure relax a bit and recover towards tomorrow,” the Dutchwoman said I’m very motivated to get the yellow back so today I tried to stay calm as much as possible to give the legs a little bit of a rest for the coming two days.” Demi Vollering was examined at the hotel by the Team SD Worx-Protime team doctor after her fall in the fifth stage of the @LeTourFemmes. She suffered minor bruising and superficial abrasions to her lower back and buttock. The focus of treatment is to recover. It looks positive… pic.twitter.com/t9Nbdmt2PP — Team SD Worx – Protime (@teamsdworx) August 15, 2024 After not receiving team help for a short time after her crash on stage 5, Team SD Worx-Protime put two riders in the break on Friday’s stage 6, with Niamh Fisher-Black moving ahead on the penultimate climb of the Roche du Prêtre in a bid for victory That tactical choice left Vollering isolated in the peloton for part of the last two climbs “We hoped that Niamh could make it to the finish with [fellow escapee] Grace Brown and she could go for the win,” Vollering said “It was sad they didn’t stay out but it was nice because with a girl from the team As Vollering told the media in her press conference after her stage 3 time trial victory in Rotterdam sport is emotion – and hers have been up and down over the last 24 hours also you also feel some insecurities,” she said me and the team are very motivated to try to get the yellow back.” A post shared by Le Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift (@letourfemmes) There seemed to be no bad blood between Niewiadoma and Vollering who embraced at the start of the stage in Remiremont Asked about whether she was surprised at seeing negativity towards her about riding in the stage 5 finale after Vollering’s crash race leader Niewiadoma answered: “To be honest I definitely saw some comments but I didn’t dive into it “I know that there’s always split opinions on some things and we were racing I’ve never seen a bike race where the peloton would wait for someone in the last six k[ilometers] especially when half of the bunch was unaware of what happened.” The climbing ramps up this weekend as Tour de France Femmes  comes to its final two stages which will decide the race. Saturday’s stage 7 between Champagnole and Le Grand-Bornand in the Alps contains 3,100 meters altitude gain during the race’s longest stage of 166.4km The race ender to Alpe d’Huez packs in 3,900 meters of elevation There’s no doubting that this time round Vollering said that she has ridden the final stage’s hors-category horrors Col du Glandon twice and Alpe d’Huez three times in training really hard stage so I’m also a bit scared for it,” she said I’m sure others are much more scared for it.” What’s it like to be an American cyclist living in France Watch to get professional road cyclist Joe Dombrowski’s view “Our approach enabled us to read a text that was hidden beneath corrosion, perhaps for hundreds of years,” said co-author Alexandre Locquet of Georgia Tech-Lorraine in Metz approaches that access such information without damaging the object are of great interest to archaeologists.” According to the authors this approach is also useful for studying historical paintings measuring the thickness of automotive paints and making sure turbine blade coatings adhere properly a variety of cutting-edge non-destructive imaging methods have proved to be a boon to art conservationists and archaeologists alike Each technique has its advantages and disadvantages ground-penetrating radar (radio waves) is great for locating buried artifacts while lidar is useful for creating high-resolution maps of surface terrain Infrared reflectography is well-suited to certain artworks whose materials contain pigments that reflect a lot of infrared light Ultraviolet light is ideal for identifying varnishes and detecting any retouching that was done with white pigments containing zinc and titanium although UV light doesn't penetrate paint layers THz imaging fills a critical gap in frequencies ranging from about 100 GHz to 10 THz according to co-author David Citrin of Georgia Tech The technique gives researchers the ability to image a large object quickly and cheaply extract useful information about that object THz radiation can penetrate paints and glazes without damaging the objects being imaged Citrin has compared the technique to how seismologists identify various layers of rock in the ground by emitting pulses of sound and then measuring the returning echoes THz imaging uses high-frequency pulses of electromagnetic radiation in much the same way measuring how that terahertz radiation reflects off the various layers of paint This latest project builds on Citrin's 2017 work applying terahertz scanners and data processing to examine the layers of a 17th-century painting: the Madonna in Preghiera attributed to the workshop of Giovanni Battista Salvi da Sassoferrato and the scanner emitted pulses of THz radiation every 200 microns across the canvas measuring the reflections to discern layers between 100 to 150 microns thick But it was the combination of the THz imaging with a signal processing breakthrough to eliminate noise courtesy of graduate student Junliang Dong that enabled the team to distinguish layers just 20 microns thick because most paintings created before the 18th century have extremely thin layers of paint This enabled the team to quantify six distinct layers on top of the canvas support: a binding layer (the gesso) an imprimatura base layer that serves as a sealant “It is thought their purpose was to seek a person’s absolution from sin The data collected from the initial scan produced raw images that were too noisy to reveal much additional detail. But Dong was once again able to come up with a solution, subtracting and piecing together data from different frequencies to restore and enhance the image. This finally revealed a Latin inscription written in cursive Carolingian minuscule Vacheret identified the words and phrases as being part of the Pater Noster: tuum fiat voluntas tua We hope our work opens up the study of other lead objects that might also yield secrets lying underneath corrosion.” DOI: Scientific Reports, 2022. 10.1038/s41598-022-06982-2  (About DOIs) Vos wins sprint for second and takes green jersey Cedrine Kerbaol (Ceratizit WNT) wins stage 6 of the Tour de France Femmes 2024(Image credit: Getty Images)Cedrine Kerbaol (Ceratizit WNT) wins stage 6 of the Tour de France Femmes 2024(Image credit: Getty Images)Cedrine Kerbaol (Ceratizit WNT) on the attack on stage 6 of the Tour de France Femmes 2024(Image credit: Getty Images)Cedrine Kerbaol (Ceratizit WNT) on the attack on stage 6 of the Tour de France Femmes 2024(Image credit: Getty Images)Grace Brown winning stage 6 by attacking just after the last climb of the day Pauliena Rooijakkers (Fenix-Deceuninck) followed her but Kerbaol rode away from the Dutch climber on the downhill to Morteau Kerbaol increased her advantage on the chasing peloton to up to 40 seconds even putting the yellow jersey of Kasia Niewiadoma (Canyon-SRAM) in danger before Niewiadoma's teammate Neve Bradbury and FDJ-Suez' Grace Brown and Léa Curinier reduced the gap again keeping the Polish allrounder in the maillot jaune Kerbaol could celebrate on the finish line taking the biggest victory of her career so far Marianne Vos (Visma-Lease a Bike) won the sprint for second place ahead of Liane Lippert (Movistar Team) and Karlijn Swinkels (UAE Team ADQ) taking the green jersey off Charlotte Kool (DSM-Firmenich PostNL) I hope that I will still progress and become even stronger I have never been so close to the best riders either my teammates were always there to put me in the best position possible I reminded myself to be patient because I often attack a little too early I said to myself that I was not going to go for the bonus sprint and just focus on trying to go for the victory There was a little moment where it was flat I knew that I could make the difference on the descent and saw right away that I had a gap And then I put myself in time trial mode," Kerbaol described the stage The 23-year-old is now only 16 seconds behind Niewiadoma and promised that she would go all-in on the last two stages so now we are going to try everything and see what happens Covering 159.2km from Remiremont to Morteau Justine Ghekiere (AG Insurance-Soudal) attacked on the first classified climb and took the QOM points before being caught by a group of nine riders Audrey Cordon-Ragot (Human Powered Health) and Yurani Blanco (Laboral Kutxa-Fundación Euskadi) got away Maaike Coljé (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) and Anniina Ahtosalo (Uno-X Mobility) bridged to the front duo and Soraya Paladin (Canyon-SRAM) made it across a little while later the 28-year-old Belgian continued to pick up mountain points Vos won the day's intermediate sprint to equal the points tally of green jersey Charlotte Kool (DSM-Firmenich PostNL) and at the bottom of the second-category climb of La Roche du Prêtre the breakaway was still 1:20 minutes ahead Mavi García (Liv-AlUla-Jayco) attacked from the peloton but was eventually reeled in again while the breakaway fell apart on the 5.5-kilometre climb and Ghekiere at the front one kilometre from the top Fisher-Black's attack immediately dropped Paladin and Gutiérrez and also distanced Ghekiere and Brown though they were able to come back after the QOM sprint Paladin and Gutiérrez were a minute behind Marion Bunel (St Michel-Mavic-Auber 93) attacked from the peloton on the plateau at the top but was reeled in again and Brown won the bonus sprint ahead of Ghekiere and Fisher-Black What remained of the peloton – a group of about 30 riders – was 38 seconds behind Brown attacked into the final climb of the day and local rider Juliette Labous (DSM-Firmenich PostNL) made her move from the peloton in the 'virage Labous' where her fans had assembled Puck Pieterse (Fenix-Deceuninck) attacked on the last part of the climb to take the QOM points Niewiadoma followed her move which prompted Vollering to go after them as well Pieterse won the QOM sprint but still lost the polka-dot jersey to Ghekiere and Kerbaol made use of the indecision to launch her attack 14.5km from the finish line Only Rooijakkers jumped onto Kerbaol's wheel but could not follow her down the descent where Kerbaol used her local knowledge to increase her advantage second by second Kerbaol was 23 seconds ahead while Rooijakkers had been caught by the chasing group Kerbaol increased the gap to 40 seconds before Bradbury and Curinier were able to claw back a few seconds again Passing the flamme rouge with a 30-second margin the stage victory was certain for Kerbaol who sat up a few metres before the line to celebrate Vos – who had been dropped on the climb but returned to the chase group in the final – won the sprint for second place to take the lead in the points classification Results powered by FirstCycling Lukas Knöfler started working in cycling communications in 2013 and has seen the inside of the scene from many angles Having worked as press officer for teams and races and written for several online and print publications he has been Cyclingnews’ Women’s WorldTour correspondent since 2018 Coline OKLes vacances au ski quand on vit à Paris tu penses que ce n’est pas faisable à moins de poser une semaine de vacs parce qu’on t’a trouvé des destinations où aller tâter du flocon à quelques heures de Paris  Accessibles en moins de 3h de train depuis Paris représentent le meilleur compromis pour aller skier à moindres frais celles-ci offrent une super vue sur le lac de Gerardmer et sont situées en plein dans le parc naturel du Ballon des Vosges pour déconnecter à vitesse grand V.  #glacial ❄ï¸Â #vosges #ski #dreamday #endoftheyear #happyday #happiness #montain #lake #beautiful #landscape #photography #love #withfriends Une publication partagée par Lucie Plaisant (@et_cie) le 31 Déc Comment y aller ?Gerardmer : TGV Paris Gare de l’Est / Epinal (2h15) ou Remiremont (2h40) + 45 à 30 min de bus = environ 3h15 au totalLa Bresse : TGV Paris Gare de l’Est / Remiremont (2h40) + 25 min de bus = environ 3h05 au total  Faussement considérées comme trop éloignées de Paris pour y passer un week-end sache que certaines stations des Alpes demeurent facilement accessibles en train Une publication partagée par Arthur (@arthurshelbyjr) le 14 Janv Comment y aller ?Villard-de-Lans : TGV Paris Gare de Lyon / Grenoble (3h10) + 40 min de bus = environ 3h50 au totalLa Clusaz : TGV Paris Gare de Lyon / Chambéry (3h) + 1h de voiture = environ 4h au total Si celui-ci reste relativement galère à atteindre en transports restent accessibles en à peine 4h30 de voiture depuis Paris on enfourne sa combi dans le coffre et c’est parti  Une publication partagée par Pierre MATHIEU (@pierre_adventure) le 14 Janv Comment y aller ?Paris / Le Mont-Doré : 4h40 en voiture le combo artistique gagnant pour les 16-28 ans à La Seine Musicale Cette rando au bord de la Seine vous entraîne dans les pas des Impressionnistes