A truly great trail winds into the essence of a place, so when
assembling this list of the world’s great hikes we kept an eye on more than the
footpath. We looked for walks that travel deeper into a location’s history and
culture. Sure, there’s outdoor adventure on each of these 20 hikes, but the
trails also tell a rich story. So here they are, the holy grails of trails
across the world. — Doug Schnitzspahn, National Geographic.
Mount Kailash Pilgrimage,
Tibet
|
Best
For: Yogis and others seeking
spiritual enlightenment.
Distance: 32 miles.
Legendary mountaineer Reinhold Messner was
once awarded a permit to climb Kailash, considered sacred to five religions.
According to Hindus, the perfect pyramid of the 22,028-foot peak is where the
god Shiva sits in meditation. The mountain is also a holy place to Buddhists,
Jains, the Ayyavazhi branch of Hinduism, and the ancient Bon religion of Tibet. Messner
decided not to deconsecrate the summit, which has never been attained by human
beings. When a Spanish team planned to climb it in 2001, Messner suggested that
they go find a more difficult summit. It remains unclimbed, although in recent
years the Chinese government has begun to build a road on the sacred pilgrimage
path, known as the kora.
While the mountain itself is forbidden,
traversing 32 miles
around it is an important ritual. All this religious significance means that
while Kailash is not a place for mountaineers, it does draw crowds of pilgrims
seeking its powerful good grace. It’s also a first-class Himalaya trek encompassing
meditation sites at waterfalls, the sacred cave of Zuthal Puk,
and 18,600-foot Dolma La Pass.
When to Go: April through September. Numerous companies
offer tours that deal with the logistics of getting into Tibet and driving to the base of Mount Kailash,
which can be crowded with pilgrims.
Insider Tip: After you complete the kora, take a
dip in nearby Lake
Manasarovar. At 15,060 feet, it’s one
of the highest lakes on the planet. According to Hindus, the waters purify
bathers, and ablutions here complete the Kailash pilgrimage.
Israel National Trail,
Israel
|
Best For: Long-distance hikers with a love of both
ancient and contemporary history.
Distance: 580-620 miles.
Passing through vast empty desert and winding
into kibbutzim, the Israel National Trail (INT) delves into the grand scale of
biblical landscapes as well as the everyday lives of modern Israelis (with
opportunities to stop in the cities of Tel Aviv and Jerusalem). But beyond the
immense sense of history and breaking news, the trail powerfully connects to
something that often gets lost in all the headlines—the sublime beauty of the
wilderness of the Middle East. The southern end of the trail crosses the harsh
and lovely Negev, still populated by wandering
Bedouins and long-horned Nubian ibex and filled with wildflowers in spring.
There’s not much water to drink along the way, though the trail crosses plenty
of wet spots. It dips into the 600-foot-below-sea-level waves of the Sea of
Galilee, flanks the baptismal River Jordan, and runs along
Mediterranean beaches north of Tel Aviv. The southern terminus ends in the
resort town of Eilat on the Red
Sea.
Of course, the INT does take hikers to spots
that have immense significance in the Judeo-Christian world and beyond. Among
these is the sheer climb up the 1,929-foot peak of Mount
Tabor, where Barak and 10,000 Israelites defeated Sisear and the Canaanites as
recorded in the Bible’s Book of Judges. The heights of Mount
Carmel are sacred to Jews and Christians as well as to Ahmadiyya
Muslims and followers of the Bahá'í faith. More modern sites, such as the
Metzudat Koach memorial, commemorating 28 soldiers who died taking a fort in
the 1948 Arab-Israeli conflict, speak to the still ongoing tensions between
Israelis and Palestinians. But life on the trail is safe and far from current
hostilities. In fact, the joy of the trail is meeting the Israelis hiking it
and spending some time in small kibbutzim where the local people will take
hikers into their homes. On the trail, there is peace and friendship.
When to Go: The early spring (February to May) is the
best time to enjoy the trail. Avoid the heat of summer.
Shortcut: The trail is divided into 12 smaller
sections, each of which makes a worthwhile shorter trip. For a one-day
excursion, the three-mile climb to the top of Mount
Tabor and the Church of the
Transfiguration overlooks the Jezreel Valley to Mount Carmel, the Galilee, the Golan
Heights, and Mount Hermon.
Insider Tip: The biggest blessing here comes in the form
of “trail angels” along the INT who give a helping hand and often offer a place
to stay free of charge to thru-hikers. The updated list of trail angels with
contact information is located here.
North Drakensberg
Traverse, South Africa/Lesotho, uKhahlamba/ Drakensberg Park
|
Best For: This is a big, long backcountry hike with no
true trail that requires both outdoor skills and some familiarity with travel
in Africa. Many travelers here book guides.
Round-Trip: 40 miles, from Mont-aux-Sources to Cathedral Peak.
The Zulus call these peaks uKhahlamba,
“barrier of spears.” A vertiginous escarpment of volcanic basalt bursting from
ancient sedimentary rocks, the Drakensberg is the highest mountain range in South Africa,
crowned by the Amphitheater, a three-mile-long, up-to-3,280-foot-high wall of
rock. The range forms the border between South
Africa and eastern Lesotho and the
uKhalhlamba/Drakensberg Park is protected by UNESCO as a World Heritage site,
as well as by various local designations.
A trek across this epic landscape begins by
ascending chain ladders to reach the top of this barrier and the plateau of
Mount-aux-Sources, where the Tugela
River plunges 3,110 feet off the top
in a series of five cascades that make for the second highest waterfall in the
world. From here, the trek crosses the high plateau—broken by rock formations,
views out across the cliffs, and the huts of Sotho herdsman—before it works its
way down past more waterfalls and river crossings before meeting up with the
welcome civilization of the Cathedral Peak Hotel.
The Drakensberg is also filled with caves.
Some, like the aptly named Rat
Hole Cave,
are claustrophobic. Others are massive, like the infamous Cannibal Cave,
which sheltered San who were persecuted by Zulus and white settlers. They left
behind an artistic legacy of cave paintings that illustrates their connection
with these unique mountains and makes the Drakensberg one of the most important
archaeological sites on the continent. Emerge from one of the caves and look
out over the land and you will feel the true timelessness of this place.
When to Go: Late summer and fall (March to May).
Shortcuts: The 12-mile Mont-aux-Sources, which requires
clambering on chain ladders, is the first section of the full trek and a worthy
day trip. The long day hike to Tugela Falls
covers 13 miles
to reach the world's second highest waterfall. Cathedral Peak
can be hiked and scrambled on a six-mile jaunt from the Cathedral Peak Hotel.
Insider Tip: The most popular campsites can be targets for
petty crime, so set up tent a bit off the beaten path or stay at a hut or
hostel. It's not a good idea to hike alone.
Cinque Terre, Sentiero Azzuro, Italy
|
Best For: Families (if kids tire you can always take
the train between towns); romance seekers; Europhiles; older hikers.
Distance: It’s about seven miles between the five towns
on the direct (and popular) Sentiero Azzuro, the Blue Trail. It's also
possible to make the hikes between towns longer (and steeper) by heading up the
trails into the hills.
Ever since guidebook author Rick Steves began
gushing about the charms of the Cinque Terre two decades ago, the place has
jumped to the top of European travel itineraries. In fact, it can be absolutely
overwhelmed with tourists eager to hike the Blue Trail, also known as Trail No.
2, the path that connects the five colorful villages—Monterosso al Mare,
Vernazza, Corniglia, Manarola, Riomaggiore—perched on the Mediterranean.
But somehow the charm of the place has survived. Despite all the tourism, the
towns still feel left back in time and many of the locals still only speak
Italian. Vernazza especially feels straight out of a fairy tale, with its
bright little buildings crowded onto a spit above the blue sea.
It's the hike itself, however, that's the
real draw of the place. The Blue Trail hugs the rocky Ligurian coastline, which
is so sheer here that the Cinque Terre can only be practically accessed by
train or foot. The path wanders through vineyards and serves up postcard views of
the towns. The sun, the fragrance of wild herbs, and the slow crash of the Mediterranean all combine for a romantic aura that will
soften even the most unsentimental of cynics.
Beyond the Blue Trail, other paths climb into
the hillsides, an escape from the hordes and often a necessary detour around
occasional closures caused by the elements temporarily wiping out the Blue
Trail. Take your time—the true secret to the trail is not the walk, but the
dose of dolce far niente you can indulge in when you reach one of the
towns and relax with a glass of local Cinque Terre white (you just passed the
grapes that made it) and a slowly savored meal.
When to Go: The spring and especially the fall are best
because there are fewer tourists and it’s cooler. Summer is hot and miserably
crowded. Don't even think about August.
Insider Tip: Since it is not directly on the water but
perched on a hill, sleepy Corniglia is the best bet for a last-minute room when
other spots are booked. It’s also nicely situated about halfway along the walk.
Yoshida Trail, Mount Fuji, Japan
|
Best For: Anyone who wants to
take part in what has become a Japanese cultural tradition.
Distance: There are several trails to the
top of Fuji but
the most popular, the Yoshida Trail, covers about eight miles.
Many hikers would put the climb of Mount Fuji
on the list of worst trails in the world. Quite simply, the 12,389-foot
volcano—the highest point in Japan—is
one of the most climbed mountains in the world, with over 300,000 hikers
looking to reach the summit each year. And it’s quite easy to access since its
four major trailheads can all be reached via public transport from downtown Tokyo.
But it’s the crowds themselves (a third of which are foreigners) that
make Fuji, made
iconic by the 19th-century wood prints of Katsushika Hokusai, such a memorable
climbing experience. You can stop for noodles and a seat in front of a fire in
the huts along the way, and if you want to watch the sunrise from the summit
you’ll most likely do so with over a thousand new friends. Wilderness
experience? Certainly not. But it is a once-in-a-lifetime cultural trip. Just
remember what the Japanese say: “You are wise to climb Mount
Fuji once but a fool to climb it twice.”
When to Go: The official season
is July through August. The crowds are smaller in June and September, but the
huts may be closed and public transport slows down. In the winter, Fuji requires technical
mountaineering and snow safety gear.
Insider Tip: You won’t escape the
crowds but you certainly will have fewer people on the trail in front of you if
you try one of the less traveled paths to the summit, such as the Gotemba
Trail, covering about ten miles and 4,723 vertical feet.
Santa Cruz Trek,
Cordillera Blanca, Peru
|
Best For: South American
travelers and trekkers who want an experience beyond the Inca Trail; trekkers
looking for high elevation without traveling to the Himalaya.
Distance: 30-plus miles.
While the Himalaya get all the attention when it comes to high-altitude
trekking, Peru's Cordillera Blanca offers the solitude of big mountains with
far less of the hassle of the premier routes in Asia. It's also a less-crowded
alternative to the hordes headed to Machu
Picchu on the Inca Trail. The mountains take
precedence here—the Cordillera Blanca are one of the most concentrated
collections of big peaks in the Western Hemisphere, with 33 summits topping 18,000 feet and 16 over
19,500 feet,
including 22,205-foot Huascarán, the highest mountain in Peru, all squeezed
into a 13-mile-wide, 112-mile-long corridor.
There are numerous epic treks that delve into these subtropical,
glaciated peaks, but the Santa Cruz
serves up a little bit of everything in four days. It may be the easiest way to
experience high altitude, if such a thing is possible, since it crosses over
15,580-foot Punta Union Pass,
which is higher than any peak in the contiguous U.S. The path crosses the dramatic
backbone of the continent, but it’s not all altitude-sickness-inducing
wilderness. The hike begins in the lively city of Huaraz, often referred to as
the “hiking capital of Peru,” where you can hire guides or simply meet up with
like-minded souls looking to venture out on the Santa Cruz unsupported or try
more ambitious routes like the 11-day Huayhuash Circuit that crosses 18,012-foot
Punta Coyoc.
When to Go: April through
September. The weather can be incredibly reliable here for such high mountains.
Shortcut: There are numerous
day hikes out of Huaraz that get deep into the heights of the Cordillera
Blanca. You can reach the stunning blue waters of 14,600-foot Laguna Churup via
a 6.4-mile round-trip hike and scramble.
Insider Tip: In Huaraz, Cafe
Andino is the place to grab a coffee and gather beta on the route from fellow
hikers and adventure travel company La Cima Logistics, especially
since recent landslides have covered parts of the Santa Cruz.
Hayduke Trail, Utah and Arizona, USA
|
Best For: Desert rats; hardcore hikers
looking to spend several challenging months alone in the wild; red-rock fans
who want to explore the area in shorter trips.
Distance: 800-plus miles in 14 sections.
Named for Edward Abbey's fictional eco-warrior (introduced in The
Monkey Wrench Gang), the Hayduke traverses six stunning national parks of
the Colorado Plateau—Arches, Canyonlands, Capitol Reef, Bryce Canyon, Grand
Canyon, and Zion. It clambers up to around 11,420 feet on Mount
Ellen near Capitol Reef and then plunges to the bottom of the Grand
Canyon at 1,800
feet. Along the way, it hops down the plateau’s famed
Grand Staircase—layers of sandstone and limestone excavated by the region's
rivers that tell a geologic story of ancient oceans and sand dunes buried by
time.
Though the megatrail brings hikers to wonders too numerous to count,
from the sweeping views of the Grand Canyon’s North Rim to the secret ruins in
Dark Canyon, be forewarned: The Hayduke is only a "trail" in the
roughest sense. Much of it is unsigned and unmarked as it works its way into
slot canyons and across slickrock. It’s a celebration of the landscape that
captured Abbey’s imagination and fueled an environmental philosophy to keep the
place free of developers and government.
When to Go: Spring and fall are
best, since the summer is too hot and water then is too scarce. Snow can be an
obstacle in winter.
Shortcut: Each of the 14
sections is classic in its own right. If you can only do one, try section two,
which covers 47 miles
along the Colorado River and in the Needles
District of Canyonlands National Park.
Insider Tip: The trail crosses
numerous highways and dirt roads, offering ample opportunity to cache food and
water.
Laugavegurinn/Fimmvörðuháls Pass, Iceland
|
Best For: Vulcanists and hikers who want
to see Icelandic wilderness while spending the night in huts.
Round-Trip: About 48 miles.
One of the most popular hiking routes in Iceland
was closed when the Eyjafjallajökull volcano erupted in spring 2010, bringing
air traffic across the Atlantic to a halt. The
first eruption actually occurred on Fimmvörðuháls
Pass—the high spit of
land between Eyjafjallajökull and the larger Mýrdalsjökull ice cap—covering the
trail in volcanic rocks, which is just a small part of what makes this route so
magical. But a reroute of the trail has opened since the volcano stopped
erupting in May 2010. It is even better for taking in the new twin craters of
Magni and Móði, which were named after the sons of Thor, the hammer-wielding
thunder god. But the chance to peer into recent volcanic destruction is just a
small part of this route’s appeal.
A quarter of the population of the island claims to believe in elves or
other mythical creatures, and after hiking through the lava fields and
mountains of this route, you may begin to believe as well. It's a visceral
landscape, with the ice caps of two glaciers and the raging North
Atlantic on the horizon. The route winds down into Thórsmörk
(literally “Thor’s wood”), a park that even harbors a few trees, a relative
rarity here. Along the way, well-maintained huts house foreigners and plenty of
native Icelanders. The final walk from Fimmvörðuháls to Skógar runs along a
ravine filled with waterfall after waterfall and ending in the massive
200-foot-high cascade of Skógafoss. If Katla does erupt, the trail could be
closed or change, so do this hike soon.
When to Go: The huts are open
from late June to mid-September. It's an Icelandic tradition to hike Fimmvörðuháls Pass on the summer solstice, so you’ll
have company then. In fact, the whole route is so popular that it’s referred to
as “Laugavegur,” the name of the main boulevard in Reykjavik.
Shortcut: You can also simply
hike Fimmvörðuháls
Pass from Thorsmork to
Skógafoss, covering 12 to 14
miles over a long day.
Insider Tip: Despite the remote
location, buses run from Reykjavik
to the starting point at Landmannalaugar hut during the summer.
The Way of St. Santiago via the French Way, Spain
|
Best For: True pilgrims and
hikers looking for a long walk through Europe.
Distance: 472 miles.
The Way of St. James, or the walking path to the cathedral of Santiago
de Compostela in northern Spain,
which is thought to house the remains of St. James, has been a trade route
since ancient Roman times and a Christian pilgrimage since the Middle Ages. All
that foot traffic has made it not just a sacred journey for the devout, but
also one of the best walking paths in Europe.
There are numerous "ways" to travel to the sanctuary, many of them
maintained, but the most popular is the French Way, which begins in
Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port in France
and rambles across the Pyrenees into the heart of the Galician countryside, taking
in cities like León and Pamplona,
the latter famed for its running of the bulls in July.
Since it sees so many hikers, the French Way, which has been declared part
of a UNESCO World Heritage site, is well maintained and signed with the
exploding star that is the symbol of the pilgrimage. Though ample
accommodations and easy access to supplies make it possible to speed hike, it's
more fun to savor glasses of rioja and stop in small towns along the way or to
hear the stories of pilgrims and the prayers they hope to have answered (or
sins washed away). If you’re walking at night, be sure to look up at the
sky—the Way of St. James route parallels the path of the Milky Way.
When to Go: In spring and fall
the weather is cool and crowds lighter. Stay away in August, when all of Europe goes on vacation.
Shortcut: The English Way, traditionally taken by
pilgrims who took a ship to Spain
from England
and then walked to Santiago de Compostela, is a much shorter trail, just 45 miles from the seaport
of A Coruña to the cathedral.
Insider Tip: If you are in fact
doing the Way as a religious gesture, you can purchase a pilgrim's passport,
which is like a coupon book good for low prices on accommodations and meals
along the trail.
Continental Divide
Trail, Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, USA
|
Best For: Dedicated
thru-hikers, but it can also be appreciated in smaller sections by all levels
of day hikers and backpackers.
Distance: 2,268 miles of
completed trail, 832 unconstructed.
When Lewis and Clark crossed the Continental Divide at a spot in the
Bitterroot Range in 1805, the expedition defined America
as a country spanning from the Atlantic to the
Pacific. The Continental Divide Trail (CDT) crosses the backbone of the
continent, the mighty Rocky Mountains from New Mexico to Montana, which still
harbor that sense of untamed wilderness that fueled (and sometimes slowed down)
the nation’s manifest destiny.
Unlike its eastern cousin, the Appalachian Trail,
the CDT is still quite rough and incomplete in parts, requiring bushwhacks,
hikes down dirt roads, and odd, circuitous rambles. (Sadly, the Continental
Divide Trail Alliance, which put volunteers to work building and maintaining
the trail, shuttered its doors in December 2011 due to financial difficulties.)
But it’s wilderness that’s at the heart of this trail that cuts through
Yellowstone and Glacier
National Parks. At some
points the divide is breathtaking, as when it crosses the high, trailless crags
of Colorado's Indian Peaks Wilderness and Rocky Mountain
National Park. At others,
it’s oddly subdued, especially in Wyoming's Red Desert,
where it runs around a basin that doesn’t drain into either the Pacific or the Atlantic.
When to Go: Timing is the
biggest challenge in a region where snows can block trail all season long. Most
thru-hikers begin in New Mexico
in the spring and hope to reach the Canadian border before the fall storms roll
in.
Shortcut: There are endless possibilities
to bite off chunks of the CDT. Some of the best lie in Montana,
where the trail cuts through little visited wilderness areas like the Centennial Mountains
and the Italian Peaks.
Insider Tip: To avoid some of the
official trail’s tedious detours, the Continental Divide Trail Society has
defined a route that doesn’t follow the official trail as marked by public land
managers.
Bibbulmun Track, Australia
|
Best For: Pretty much anyone—from
families to hardcore speed hikers—who want a sense of the wonders and people of
southwest Australia.
Distance: About 600 miles from Kalamunda
to Albany on
the south coast. The track is divided into 58 sections. There are 49 shelters
along the track for thru-hikers.
Southwestern Australia's answer to the Appalachian
Trail is quite new. The 600-mile walk is the brainchild of a local
hiker who wanted people from the city to "go bush.” It was first opened in
1979, but did not reach its present complete state until 1998 (thanks in part
to construction by prison crews, oddly harkening to Australia’s history as a penal
colony). But it is based on much older Australian traditions—the walkabouts
that the continent's aboriginal people still undertake, often for months at a
time, into the bush. The Bibbulum is, in fact, named for the indigenous people
of the area (the Bibbulum or Noongar people who still live here), and it winds
into the land of the original inhabitants and the wonderland of Australia's
endemic flora and fauna.
Hiking out of Kalamunda, 45 minutes east of Perth, the track begins in forests of marri
and jarrah, the most common eucalypts in the area, which shelter many snakes,
the symbol of the Bibbulum. It’s common to find snakes, ranging from the death
adder to the tiger snake, nonchalantly sunning or slithering along here. Along
the track, there are also rare creatures like the numbat, a termite-eating
marsupial that looks like a cross between weasel and opossum, and the chuditch,
a quoll or carnivorous marsupial, that is threatened by nonnative, and very
poisonous cane toads. Along the Donnelly
River, 250-foot-tall
karri eucalyptus shelter purple-crowned lorikeets squawking far above in the
canopy.
Besides all that wildlife, though, it's the social aspect of the trail
that makes it most Australian. At the campsites you will meet hikers from
around the globe as well as regular Australians who have fulfilled the original
promise of the trail and are spending time simply walking for weeks to better
understand themselves and the unique place where they live.
When to Go: The austral spring
(September to November) and fall (March to May) are the best times, with hikers
starting in spring heading north-south to avoid the heat and those in fall
making the trip from south-north to outrun the winter.
Shortcut: It's easy to access most
segments of the Bibbulmun Track for day trips or shorter overnight jaunts. The
Bibbulmun Track Foundation even offers Day Walk Map Packs to make it easy to do
so. One of the best spots for day walks is in the giant karri forests of the Donnelly River.
Insider Tip: It’s worth taking
time out of the hike to explore the “track towns” it passes by and/or near.
Pemberton, in particular, has been developing its wine industry since it was
made an official wine region in 2006, so stop and taste some of southwest Australia’s Shiraz and chardonnay (which is particularly
good here).
West Highland Way, Scotland, UK
|
Best For: Anyone in decent
hiking shape who wants a taste of the remote Highlands.
Round-Trip: 96 miles from Milngavie to Fort William.
Opened in 1980 as the first of Scotland's system of Great Trails,
the West Highland Way
(or Slighe na Gàidhealtachd an Iar) dives straight into the heart of the most
rugged and romantic swath of the Scottish landscape. It cuts through the Highlands that kept out the Romans in ancient times and
have helped the Scots retain their national character throughout history.
The trail can feel big and windswept at times, taking in the rocky peaks
and rolling grasses of Glen Coe and climbing the Devil's Staircase path on the
Aonach Eagach ridge. But the route also takes in more subtle beauty, including
the bogs of Rannoch Moor and the shores of bucolic Loch
Lomond.
Along the way, it stops in villages such as Rowardennan, where hikers
can spend the night in a warm bed, take time out from the trail to tour the
loch, and perhaps dare to sample authentic Scottish haggis washed down with
local Glengoyne single malt. And if this hike does not feel long enough for
you, it just became a part of the International Appalachian Trail, so you could
continue your trek from here up into Greenland through Canada and all the way
to Maine, since these mountains are part of the same primordial range as the
Appalachians in the U.S.
When to Go: Scottish weather can
be notoriously bad, even in the summer, but warmer months are best, if not
crowded.
Insider Tip: Though it’s not
officially part of the way, the trail skirts along Ben Nevis, the highest point
in the United Kingdom
at 4,409 feet.
Despite that distinction it’s a fairly easy diversion to spend a day ascending
about 4,000 vertical feet from Fort
William to the top via
the Tourist Route.
Shackleton's Route, South Georgia Island, South
Atlantic/Antarctica
|
Best For: Explorers; history
buffs; travelers already on guided Antarctic journeys.
Distance: 22 miles from King Haakon
Bay to Stromness,
including glacier travel.
Stuck in the pack ice of the Weddell Sea
for more than nine months in 1915, Ernest Shackleton and his men abandoned
their ship, The Endurance. After floating in a camp on the ice and then
taking to their lifeboats, captain and crew ended up on Elephant Island
just off the Antarctic mainland. From there, they had to engineer their own
rescue, jerry-rigging a lifeboat so that Shackleton and five of his crew could
cross 800 miles
of the roughest seas on the planet and land at a whaling station on South Georgia Island. The only problem? A storm
beached the boat on the opposite side of the island from the station, meaning
three of the party had to cross the mountains and glaciers to finally reach
help. They succeeded, putting nails through their boots for crampons and using
a carpenter's adze as an ice axe.
Hiking part of Shackleton's route across South
Georgia is a true epic, crossing over unpredictable,
crevasse-covered glaciers. On the black-sand beaches thousands of penguins and
elephant seals squawk in their nesting grounds. It's a bird-watcher's
paradise—countless species breed along the route, including the light-mantled
sooty albatross, giant petrel, and arctic tern. The traverse of South Georgia ends in the same spot where Shackleton and
his crew finally ended their epic, at Stromness, which is now abandoned but
filled with gentoo penguins.
When to Go: The Antarctic summer
runs from December 20 to March 20 and offers the best window of weather.
Shackleton made the crossing in May.
Shortcut: You can cut out the
glacier travel and hike 3.4
miles, a half-day trip from Fortuna Bay
to Stromness. This was the last leg of Shackleton’s trip across the island and
is accessed by many commercial tour operators, who dub it the “Shackleton
Walk.”
Insider Tip: You will most likely
need the services of an outfitter, as the marine navigation is perilous. It’s
also expensive, if not impossible, to stay on the island. But so many people
want to hike “Shackleton Walk” that the British government has limited party
sizes to a hundred—so you may not be alone.
Shipwreck Coast/Shi Shi Beach, Olympic Peninsula,
Washington, USA
|
Best For: Pretty much anyone.
It’s an easy trip in good weather and an ideal family backpack adventure since
the “trail” is beach walking in most places and there are numerous tide pools
to poke around in and random surprises in the flotsam and jetsam.
Distance: It’s 20 miles from Rialto Beach
to the Lake Ozette Ranger Station. From Lake
Ozette, you can tack on another 15 miles from the ranger
station to Shi Shi Beach.
The whole trip can be completed with a shuttle or as a massive out-and-back
70-mile trek.
America’s Manifest Destiny never reached this far north and
west on the continent. The Olympic coastline is as it has been for eons—wind-and-wave-hammered,
isolated, and strewn with massive logs and giant strands of kelp. All that
makes it one of the most unique backpacking adventures in the lower 48: a
wilderness beach hike untrammeled by resort homes and boardwalks.
But it’s not a spot for sunbathing and bodysurfing, either. It has been
dubbed the “Shipwreck
Coast” for good reason.
Hiking up from Rialto Beach, you’ll pass the Norwegian Memorial, erected in
honor of the 18 young men who perished and were buried here in the 1903 wreck
of the Prince Arthur, and the Chilean Memorial, burial site of a dozen
others who perished in the 1920 sinking of the WJ Pirrie.
And yet it’s not all doom and gloom. The beachscape, which is part of
the 2,408-nautical-square-mile Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, is full
of life and always changing: low tides expose tide pools filled with orange and
purple stars, urchins, sea anemones, and other intercoastal life. Black bears
and Roosevelt elk sometimes range onto the
beach. Sea lions and seals bark from the offshore sea stacks. You can spot
whales on the horizon. Those massive marine mammals are an essential part of
the culture of the Makah, the native people who still live here north of the
park and are in legal negotiations to continue to hunt the whales from cedar
canoes. Spend a few days here and you’ll feel as if you’ve traveled to a time
before the U.S.
coastline was tamed.
When to Go: You can expect bad
weather any time here (the annual rainfall averages up to a hundred inches),
but, in general, August and September are when high pressure systems make for
blue skies.
Shortcut: Simply park at one
of the trailheads at Rialto,
Ozette, or Shi Shi and take as long or short of a walk as you would like on the
beach.
Insider Tip: The raccoons are
relentless along the coast. Be sure to hang your food at night.
GR 20, Corsica, France
|
Best For: Hikers who aren’t
afraid of heights and enjoy ending the day with a nice meal.
Distance: 112 miles.
The greatest of Europe's Grande Randonnées, or GR trails as they are
more commonly known, is on an island in the Mediterranean.
But Corsica, known best as the birthplace of
Napoleon, offers up some of the steepest mountains on the continent, including
the 8,878-foot Monte Cinto jutting up from the sea. While the GR 20 is a right
of passage for European hikers, it has remained off the radar for most North
Americans, who would be shocked to find treacherous mountain traverses on this
island famous for its beaches.
Though technically part of France,
Corsica claims its own language (closer to
Italian) and culture, which is often openly at odds with the French government.
This has led to terrorist acts and assassinations over the years. But there are
no politics on the trail, which is a melting pot of European and other hikers,
all looking to enjoy the mountains and spend time tasting cheeses and chestnuts
at the refuges at the end of each trail section. Here, weary hikers can sip
local wine and sleep in a warm bed, making the GR 20 the most luxurious
adventure walk on the planet.
When to Go: Summer. It can get
quite crowded in July and August, but the refuges are not always open in June
or September. Winter
brings snow.
Shortcut: If you don't have
time for the entire trek, visit the Cirque de la Solitude, where the trail
is so steep that hikers need to cling on to chains in the rock to keep from
tumbling down into the abyss.
Insider Tip: If you want a bed
in one of the refuges, you’ll need to get an early start. But even if you sleep
late, you won't need to pack much food since you don't need to be staying at
one to eat there.
Copper
Canyon/Tararecua Canyon, Mexico
|
Best For: Desert rats looking
to move on from southern Utah and the Grand Canyon; hikers who want wilderness
mixed with indigenous culture.
Distance: About 40 miles and 20,000
vertical feet.
Copper Canyon is actually several
canyons in Mexico's Chihuahuan Desert carved by six rivers that merge
into the Rio Fuerte. While none of the canyons are bigger than the Grand
Canyon, several of them are deeper (the deepest, Urique Canyon,
drops 6,165 feet).
Stretching over 25,000 square miles, the region is far larger than its northern
neighbor. A railway line chugs through the canyons, and the native Tarahumara
(also known as the Rarámuri) live in towns in some of the most remote reaches.
The Tararecua
Canyon, which cuts down 4,675 feet, is one of
the best spots in the complex for wilderness hiking, especially because of the
thermal springs at the bottom, ideal for recovering from the big hike. A hike
across the canyon and back stops for a soak in Recohuata Hot Springs, crosses
several rivers, and requires a bit of canyoneering savvy. There are steep
bypasses and spots where a rope could come in handy. It also stops in the
Tarahumara village
of Pamachi.
The Tarahumara have inhabited the canyons since long before the
conquistadors and still live according to many ancient traditions, the most
well known in the U.S. being their prowess as long-distance runners. Their
barefoot running technique and the Copper Canyon Ultramarathon were made famous
in Christopher McDougall's Born to Run, which precipitated the current
trend of minimal or barefoot running. But, of course, you don't have to go
without hiking boots to experience the canyons alongside their native
inhabitants. Just remember to leave a small gift, a sign of respect in
Tarahumara culture.
When to Go: This is a prime
shoulder-season hike, with temperatures most accommodating from March to April
and October to November.
Insider Tip: “Bring a jacket,”
says Will Harlan, the only non-Tarahumara to win the Copper Canyon
Ultramarathon. “The 4,000-[foot] differential between canyon floor and rim
means large temperature fluctuations. It can snow on the cooler canyon rim
while being balmy on the canyon floor below.”
Great Himalaya Trail, Nepal
|
Best For: Epic adventure
seekers.
Distance: The Nepal
section covers over a thousand miles in the high Himalaya,
broken down into ten relatively easier-to-manage sections. The trail can be
completed in four to six months if all goes according to plan and the weather
complies, and it’s been speed hiked in under 50 days.
Though the concept of the Great Himalaya Trail (GHT) is new, the
footpaths are not. Truly the GHT is not a trail at all but a vision that
connects the highest route across the Himalaya—through India, Pakistan, Tibet,
Nepal, and Bhutan—on existing trekking trails and ancient trade and pilgrimage
paths. While it is still a concept in other countries, in Nepal the GHT has
been turned into a reality: a thousand-mile adventure walk that takes in many
of Nepal's 8,000-meter peaks—including Everest—that was first completed by a
team taking 162 days in 2009. The grand plan of the trail is to promote
responsible tourism here in the midst of political instability in Nepal
and ever-increasing masses of tourists looking to trek to and climb the world's
highest peaks.
Along the way, the trail takes in the trips of several lifetimes. There
are the famed peaks, but they’re the backdrop—the true challenge is ascending
and (worse on the knees) descending the high passes, including the imposing
trio of Sherpani Pass
(20,128 feet),
West Col (20,154 feet), and Amphu Laptsa
Pass (19,193 feet) between
Everest and Makalu.
And beyond the mountains, there’s the chance to see wildlife such as the
endangered snow leopard, herds of blue sheep, and yaks in the peaks, and takins
and red pandas in the forest. There are guest huts, monasteries, and teahouses.
There are Sherpa people who have lived here for centuries and Western
mountaineers looking to make a name on alpine routes. The dream of the trail
(which will stretch over nearly 3,000 miles from Pakistan
to Bhutan
when completed) is coming true. It is representative of a new globalism that
puts people on the same long path even in one of the most extreme natural
places on the planet.
When to Go: Weather is always
iffy in the high Himalaya. April and October
are best bet months. Trekkers
need to work around the summer monsoon season.
Shortcut: Any one of the ten sections of
the trail makes for a once-in-a-lifetime adventure. The Annapurna and Mustang
Trek, in the shadow of 8,000-meter giants Dhaulagiri (26,798 feet) and
Annapurna (26,545 feet),
is one of the most popular in Nepal—for good reason—and takes about three
weeks.
Insider Tip: If the trail sounds
too intimidating, but you still want to traverse Nepal
and the Himalaya, try the Green Route, a parallel, lower version of
the GHT that avoids the highest passes, which can require technical skills and
be closed by weather. It's possible to move back and forth between the lower
and upper trails as a contingency plan.
Benton MacKaye Trail, Georgia, Tennessee, North
Carolina, USA
|
Best For: Long-distance hikers
who want to experience the way the founder of the Appalachian Trail wanted that
hike to be.
Distance: 300 miles.
It may at first seem ironic that the newest (and by many accounts best)
long-distance hiking trail in the South is named after a Harvard-educated,
government worker from New England. But Benton
MacKaye, a co-founder of The Wilderness Society, was also the man who came up
with the idea for one of the South’s biggest outdoor legacies—the Appalachian Trail. The new Benton MacKaye Trail (BMT),
which officially opened in 2005, recaptures the vision MacKaye had for the AT.
It’s a lonely, steep, sometimes nebulous route that starts along with the AT at
Georgia’s Springer Mountain
and ends back on the AT after crossing Great Smoky Mountains National
Park, rambling through eight Wilderness and
Wilderness Study Areas along the way and celebrating MacKaye’s desire to
preserve ecosystems without human tampering. There’s neither a social scene nor
crowds as on the AT, just high Appalachian wilderness and a few like-minded
souls out to explore it.
There’s more here too for creative hikers. Since the BMT starts and ends
at the Appalachian Trail and crosses it just before it enters Great Smoky Mountains National
Park, forming a massive, bottom-heavy figure
eight, it allows for hikers to make a variety of loops. The southern loop
(combining BMT and AT) is 364
miles and the upper loop covers 158 miles in the park.
Tracing the entire figure eight racks up over 500 miles. It’s also
possible to intersect with other long-distance trails for options such as the
Georgia Loop (a steep, rugged 55-mile hike that follows the BMT), the Duncan
Ridge Trail, and the AT.
When to Go: Beat the heat by
hiking in spring and fall.
Shortcut: A 20-mile backpack
from Beech Gap on the Cherohala Skyway to the Slickrock Trailhead on U.S. 129,
including the Citico Creek and Slickrock/Joyce Kilmer Wilderness Areas in North Carolina and Tennessee,
takes in old-growth forest and steep trails.
Insider Tip: Pack a fly rod.
There’s fishing for a wide range of native and introduced species along the
trail, including rainbow, brook, and brown trout as well as largemouth,
smallmouth, and redeye bass.
The Snowman Trek, Bhutan
|
Best For: The hardest of hard cores.
Distance: Over 200 miles, usually a
25-day trip. By law you must travel with a guided tour company in Bhutan.
The Snowman is quite simply the most difficult long walk on the planet.
Though it covers just over 200
miles, much of the route is higher than the highest
points in the continental United States, crossing 11 passes over 16,000 feet and topping
out at 17,388 feet
on Rinchen Zoe La Pass. At
that elevation weather is unpredictable and altitude sickness a real concern.
Barely half of the people who start the Snowman end up finishing. Plus, the
trek is in Bhutan,
a constitutional monarchy that carefully regulates tourists to keep the country
timelessly unspoiled but tough to navigate and lacking many technological
advances.
All those difficulties, however, add up to what simply may be the best
hike in the world. Bhutan's
strict tourist policy means you won't bump into many other travelers as you
would on treks in Nepal.
Instead, you'll feel like a modern Heinrich Harrer, a visitor to a Buddhist
kingdom untouched by iPhones and traffic. The trek passes through places like
Laya, home of the indigenous Layap people, and the village of Thanza
at 13,700 feet,
where guides exchange horses for yaks to tackle the even more difficult terrain
ahead. Then there are the peaks themselves, more than 7,000-meter giants that
reach above the clouds, such as Zogophu Gamp and Masang Gang. But change is
coming to Bhutan—the
nation is allowing more tourists in and slowly meeting the West, so go soon.
When to Go: The window of
opportunity here is very small, with October and sometimes April being the only
months to avoid the snow and rain that will close the high passes.
Shortcut: The trek around
soaring 24,035-foot Jomolhari peak is a challenging weeklong adventure in the
high Himalaya. The Druk Path takes five days
and crosses the high range between the town of Paro,
site of the country's international airport, and the capital city of Thimphu, which famously
has no traffic lights.
Insider Tip: The government of Bhutan imposes a minimum tariff of $250 per day
on foreign visitors to Bhutan.
Though that includes things like accommodations, prepare to spend at least
$8,000 for a Snowman trek. There is no budget or self-guided option.
International Appalachian Trail, U.S., Canada,
Greenland, Scotland, Spain, Morocco
|
Best For: Appalachian Trail
thru-hikers looking to beef up their resumes; hikers with a fondness for
primordial geology.
Distance: The current trail includes
approximately 1,862 trail miles from the end of the U.S. Appalachian Trail in Maine to the North American trail terminus at Crow Head, Newfoundland.
The IAT is an attempt to connect a primordial mountain range that
traversed part of the supercontinent of Pangaea more than 200 million years ago
before separating into multiple ranges. What remains of those peaks in North
America has become the famed Appalachian Mountains of the United States, but few of the Appalachian
Trail's thru-hikers will want to admit that the mountains continue on into Canada—and
don't stop there. The remains of those mountains stretch from Labrador to
Greenland and then down to the European continent, with vestiges in Scotland, France,
Spain, and even across
Gibraltar to Morocco.
More than a geological odyssey, the trail was the brainchild of former Maine
Governor Joseph Brennan, who wanted to connect the cultures spanned by the
mountains.
The result is a trail that currently rambles through the rough ranges of
the Canadian seaboard, taking in the habitat of moose and caribou, as well as
belugas and other migrating whales in the Saint Lawrence. The trail connects
the cultures of both continents as well—symbolically so at the UNSECO World
Heritage site at L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland,
where Vikings first reached North America 500 years before Columbus. Make it all the way to the newest
northernmost section of the IAT in Uummannaq, Greenland,
and you’ll most likely need to travel by dogsled. Follow through to the
theoretical conclusion in Morocco
and you may need to travel by camel. More than any other footpath, the IAT may
be the symbol of the globalism of the new millennium.
When to Go: The season for the
IAT is shorter than that for the standard Appalachian
Trail and requires ocean crossings, so it is best done in summer
or in chunks.
Shortcut: Quebec's
Gaspésie National
Park represents one of the biggest chunks of wilderness on the
Eastern seaboard and a walk on the IAT in its Chic-Choc
Mountains puts hikers high above the Saint Lawrence River in the midst of rare woodland
Atlantic-Gaspésie caribou.
Insider Tip: The Chic-Chocs
Mountain Lodge (or Auberge de Montagne des Chic-Chocs), operated by the province of Quebec, offers a first-class respite
from nights in shelters and tents, replete with a hot tub and sauna.