bivacco Alpe Drocaccia m.1442
1.0
1,440m
Piedmont, Italy
About
Bivacco Alpe Drocaccia sits at 1,440m on the eastern slopes of the Ligurian Alps in Piedmont. Reach it from the Val Borbera near Piacenza—most hikers start from Rezzoaglio and climb northeast for roughly 3–4 hours through beech forest to the alpe. A faster approach from Carrosio takes 2.5 hours. The location works as a base for ridge traverses toward Punta Tre Vescovi and Rocca Monticello, or as a waypoint on longer valley-to-valley routes.
This is a unmanned bivvy shelter, not a staffed rifugio. It offers basic emergency refuge only: a stone hut with roof and walls, space for a handful of people, no water, no heating, no catering. Bring your own sleeping gear, food, and water. Check condition before relying on it—maintenance varies. Open year-round in theory, but winter conditions make access dangerous above 1,200m most years.
Do not expect a reservation system. The hut is managed by local CAI groups (check cai.it for updates). Carry a headtorch, spare water, and a map—GPS signal can be weak at this elevation. Winter ascents require winter gear and avalanche awareness. This is for self-sufficient mountain users only.
This is a unmanned bivvy shelter, not a staffed rifugio. It offers basic emergency refuge only: a stone hut with roof and walls, space for a handful of people, no water, no heating, no catering. Bring your own sleeping gear, food, and water. Check condition before relying on it—maintenance varies. Open year-round in theory, but winter conditions make access dangerous above 1,200m most years.
Do not expect a reservation system. The hut is managed by local CAI groups (check cai.it for updates). Carry a headtorch, spare water, and a map—GPS signal can be weak at this elevation. Winter ascents require winter gear and avalanche awareness. This is for self-sufficient mountain users only.
Frequently Asked Questions
Bivacco Alpe Drocaccia is unmanned and free to use on a first-come, first-served basis—no booking required or possible.
It's open year-round as an unstaffed emergency shelter; expect it to be most reliably accessible June to September, though winter snow can make access difficult.
From Rezzoaglio, climb northeast through beech forest for 3–4 hours; the faster route from Carrosio takes 2.5 hours. Both approaches gain roughly 800m vertically.
Expect basic shelter, roof, and walls only—no water, food, heat, or beds; bring a sleeping bag and be self-sufficient for water and meals.
No—this is a basic emergency bivvy for experienced hikers doing ridge traverses or multi-day mountaineering; families and beginners should use staffed rifugi instead.
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