Spring/Summer 2026 Information

Check the reopening dates for our areas and sites for the summer season and spring 2026.

Montenvers – Mer de Glace information:

Train closed from May 18th to 22nd, 2026 included
Gondola and Ice Cave closed from May 11th to 29th, 2026 included
Ice Cave closed from May 30th to June 5th, 2026 included

Flégère Chamonix

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All resorts
Chamonix Mont-Blanc
Le Tour - Vallorcine
Argentière
Houches - Saint-Gervais
Megève - Rochebrune

Explore the playground

For a day out with friends or family, a discovery weekend, or a short getaway, our mission is to offer you one of the most magical experiences of your life!

Navigate the map to explore all our high-altitude domains and excursion sites!

In the Chamonix Mont-Blanc Valley, at Les Houches - Saint-Gervais, or in Megève.

Access to excursion sites and areas

The MONT BLANC MultiPass is a new opportunity for “walks & visits”. For total immersion in the high mountains, choose from our exceptional high-altitude areas and our 4 excursion sites.
Excursion sites: Aiguille du Midi, Montenvers - Mer de Glace, Tramway du Mont-Blanc and Skyway Monte Bianco
Walks & Hikes: in Chamonix Mont-Blanc, les Houches - Saint-Gervais and Megève
Mountain Biking: in Chamonix Mont-Blanc and les Houches-Saint-Gervais

I've a pass, I reserve!

Have you thought about reserving your place?
If you have a valid MONT BLANC MultiPass ski pass and have not yet reserved your departure time. You can reserve your place for a departure from Aiguille du Midi (Chamonix) or for the Tramway du Mont Blanc (Le Fayet - Saint-Gervais).

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Without behavioral literacy, vets fall into the trap of "idiopathic" or "behavioral" labels for physical disease. A cat urinating outside the litter box is too often dismissed as "spiteful" or "anxious," when the root cause may be feline interstitial cystitis (FIC), diabetes, or hyperthyroidism. Likewise, an aggressive dog is sedated for a physical exam, missing the torn cruciate ligament causing the pain-induced aggression. Integration of behavior into the general exam is not optional; it is diagnostic rigor.

For a veterinarian, behavior is a vital sign.

The most common complication in veterinary medicine is not surgical infection or drug reaction—it is fear. A fearful patient produces inaccurate vital signs (elevated heart rate and blood pressure), releases endogenous cortisol and catecholamines that impair wound healing, and poses a safety risk to the medical team. relatos porno zoofilia granja new

Feather pecking in laying hens is not a "vice" but a symptom of nutritional deficiency (low sodium or methionine), overcrowding, or inappropriate light spectra. A veterinarian who understands that behavior can adjust the environment instead of culling the birds—a massive economic and welfare win.

The American College of Veterinary Behaviorists (ACVB) and European College of Animal Welfare and Behavioural Medicine (ECAWBM) certify specialists. Their focus includes: Without behavioral literacy, vets fall into the trap

When a dog or cat experiences fear, their sympathetic nervous system triggers a flood of catecholamines (adrenaline, norepinephrine). Here is the medical problem: a fearful patient has elevated heart rate, blood pressure, and glucose levels. A veterinarian might misdiagnose a heart murmur (caused by fear) or hypertension (spike from stress) as a chronic condition.

The Low-Stress Handling® movement, pioneered by Dr. Sophia Yin and carried forward by organizations like Fear Free, has proven that behavior-informed protocols reduce medical errors. These include: Clinics implementing these behavioral protocols report a 40%

Clinics implementing these behavioral protocols report a 40% reduction in staff bite injuries and a 35% increase in client compliance with follow-up care. When the animal feels safe, medicine works.

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Without behavioral literacy, vets fall into the trap of "idiopathic" or "behavioral" labels for physical disease. A cat urinating outside the litter box is too often dismissed as "spiteful" or "anxious," when the root cause may be feline interstitial cystitis (FIC), diabetes, or hyperthyroidism. Likewise, an aggressive dog is sedated for a physical exam, missing the torn cruciate ligament causing the pain-induced aggression. Integration of behavior into the general exam is not optional; it is diagnostic rigor.

For a veterinarian, behavior is a vital sign.

The most common complication in veterinary medicine is not surgical infection or drug reaction—it is fear. A fearful patient produces inaccurate vital signs (elevated heart rate and blood pressure), releases endogenous cortisol and catecholamines that impair wound healing, and poses a safety risk to the medical team.

Feather pecking in laying hens is not a "vice" but a symptom of nutritional deficiency (low sodium or methionine), overcrowding, or inappropriate light spectra. A veterinarian who understands that behavior can adjust the environment instead of culling the birds—a massive economic and welfare win.

The American College of Veterinary Behaviorists (ACVB) and European College of Animal Welfare and Behavioural Medicine (ECAWBM) certify specialists. Their focus includes:

When a dog or cat experiences fear, their sympathetic nervous system triggers a flood of catecholamines (adrenaline, norepinephrine). Here is the medical problem: a fearful patient has elevated heart rate, blood pressure, and glucose levels. A veterinarian might misdiagnose a heart murmur (caused by fear) or hypertension (spike from stress) as a chronic condition.

The Low-Stress Handling® movement, pioneered by Dr. Sophia Yin and carried forward by organizations like Fear Free, has proven that behavior-informed protocols reduce medical errors. These include:

Clinics implementing these behavioral protocols report a 40% reduction in staff bite injuries and a 35% increase in client compliance with follow-up care. When the animal feels safe, medicine works.