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  Monday morning 7 am : the first gunshots can be heard in the
  distance. As the morning progresses they come closer and one can hear
  the hunting dogs clearly. A bit later four or five white mini-vans
  race up the road and turn to get to the ridge of the mountain, each
  having one or more dogs inside. Fifteen minutes later, we have
  eyesight contact with “les chasseurs” and the gunshots are
  so nearby that one might consider taking cover … A typical
  sunday in l'Ardeche-Cevenolle (I know, it is monday but yesterday
  the weather was just too bad and luckily for them it's a holiday
  today).  
The weather is really nice and as every other
  addicted cyclist I want to seize the opportunity because it is highly
  uncertain that there will be another dry day this week. I would like
  to do my favourite round-trip : to Dompnac, then Pourcharesse and back
  via St-Melany.   
  
  If you ever did this you will never forget the
  Dompnac-Pourcharesse part of the trip : it is merely 4km but if you
  know how to read a map you will understand what I mean. Unfortunately,
  afterwards one has to descend to St-Melany crossing the hunting
  forests of the community and I have no desire to end up in the
  statistics as one of the over 70 deads or seriously wounded by
  hunting-accidents in France every year …  
So, I did
  choose the second hardest (but safer) route : first to descend to the
  bridge below and then climb to Sablieres (takes 15 min), descend to
  the Drobie (4 mins) and then the serious climb to the highest road in
  the vicinity at Peyre (takes 45 min) and back. The first time I did
  the 'col de Peyre' I had to stop three times but now I know
  one has to divide the thrip into three parts : the first part,
  climbing to 'Le Mas' is fairly hard and by far the longest
  part, after Le Mas one has a km which isn't that steep and one
  needs to use this to recuperate a bit because the last part, when you
  have the ridge of the mountain in sight, has still some very steep
  streches. As this was my first cycling trip in the mountains in over
  two months it was still pretty hard and I was glad to see the stone
  pillar indicating the summit.  
There was hardly any traffic :
  7 cars and just 1 other cyclist. But I came across quite a few hunting
  dogs that had lost their group. At first it is a bit scary to be on a
  lonely road facing an unescorted dog but these hunting dogs are
  usually rather nice. On the final climb back I met one who just turned
  round and followed me whole the way back to LeTravers and stayed there
  for the rest of the afternoon.   
Later on, another lost dog
  turned up and decided to stay as well. The local etiquette then
  demands that you phone the owner(s) (the telephone numbers are written
  on a collar they wear), which we did later on when we thought 'la
  chasse' was ended for the day and the dogs were picked up around 8
  pm. Unknowingly we did exactly the right thing to get our yearly piece
  of fresh wild boar (to be continued)…
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