Ashley Judd poses for a photo in Switzerland.Photo:Ashley Judd/Instagram

Ashley Judd

Ashley Judd/Instagram

Ashley Juddis reflecting on her “stunning recovery” after her severe leg injury in February 2021.

On Saturday, theDouble Jeopardyactress, 55, shared several photos taken in Switzerland of her walking the Alps and exploring some stunning views — now two-and-a-half years after sheshattered her legin the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

“Walking. Switzerland. After 5 breaks in right leg, a paralyzed foot, possible amputation, all while hemorrhaging, my leg and I have come far in 2.5 years since my accident in Democratic Republic of Congo,” Judd wrote to her fans.

“We came far up these Alps, for the sheer joy of it, confidently. Ongoing gratitude of profound proportions to the Congolese who saved me, and the surgeons, neurologist, and physical therapist who set me up for this stunning recovery. How are you celebrating your blessings?”

In the images included in her Instagram carousel, Judd showed off the bright blue sky, butterflies, hiking sticks, waterfalls and other picturesque views from her time in the outdoors.

Judd previously revealed that in February 2021, she broke her leg in multiple places after tripping over a tree, and underwent an eight-hour surgery in a South African hospital. She spent monthsin intensive physical therapy.

At the time, Judd was visiting the African country for research on the endangered ape species, the Bonobos.

“My leg will never be the same. She is a new leg. And I love her. We are buddies,” she wrote. “We have a come a long way and we have a fabulous life ahead.”

On the 11-month anniversary of the fall in 2022, she took on a 25-mile hike in the Appalachian Mountains, writing that her “heart is open and eager.”

Ashley Judd shares photos from Switzerland.Ashley Judd/Instagram

Ashley Judd

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Back in October, Judd told UCLA professor Dr. Jonathan Flint in a lecture series that she also fractured the leg due to grief-associated clumsiness following her motherNaomi Judd’ssuicide. She suffered the femoral condyle over the summer in 2022, and “healed in two months, lickety-split.”

“It was what it was,” she said at the time. “Clumsiness is associated with grief, and there were other people in our family, after mom died, who fell down stairs and had accidents, and that’s just what mine happened to look like. It really allowed me to grieve. It really allowed me to stop what I was working on at that moment and to grieve.”

source: people.com