Welcome aboard Bon Voyage Airline, bound for your destiny. Your flight time may be long, and undoubtedly frightening. Some turbulence is expected, and the outcome is more than uncertain.
Once upon a time, there was a route in Annot, in the hinterland of Nice, established by James Pearson at the beginning of 2023, and repeated for the first time by the one and only Adam Ondra in February 2024. After months of reflection, James proposed the grade of 9a/E12, making it one of the hardest trad routes, if not the hardest, in the world. This route is called Bon Voyage, and it lives up to its name: the process, with all its twists and turns, that I experienced clearly looked like a good journey!
The route starts with a beautiful crack and then traverses left onto an impressive and blank wall. The idea that a route could be climbed free on cams on this wall is akin to magic. A big bravo to the magician James for having the vision and perseverance to see his "Bon Voyage" through to the end!
The difficulty of the route begins after about twenty meters of climbing: 12 intense and complex moves, demanding on the fingers, ending on an incredible arête far to the left. The section itself could probably be rated 8c or 8c+, and it is quite committing. However, as Adam said, it is "probably safe" with a good belayer. Nevertheless, there is a rocky peak, a "guillotine", a few meters below the final arête, which is rather intimidating. I believe that a bad fall at the wrong time, with just a bit too much slack in the rope, could likely result in a severe impact.
I first tried Bon Voyage in April 2023 for half an hour after my flash ascent of its easier variant "Le Voyage". I was immediately captivated by the route and decided it would be one of my main objectives for 2024.