cornercorner

Favorite Hikes?

Discuss everything from climbing Machu Picchu, expeditions in the Outback, rafting the Zambezi River, hiking the Pacific Crest Trail, shark diving in the Bahamas, or anything that offers a little bit of excitement in the great outdoors.

Favorite Hikes?

Postby Arre » February 23rd, 2007

Last June, I hiked the Inca Trail with my family and it hit me that trekking/hiking appeals to me a whole lot more than I had realized.

What are your favorites? There's obviously the Inca Trail, as well as: Kilimanjaro, Everest base camp, the Long Trail, Appalachian Trail, etc. I've heard of a week-long (?) trek on Tasmania... help me out!

Which (multi-day) hikes have you done? Which were your favorites?
Thronging of the thousands up that labour under sea
White for bliss and blind for sun and stunned for liberty.
-Lepanto, GK Chesterton
User avatar
Arre
Holds PhD in Packing
 
Posts: 232
Joined: January 26th, 2005


This thread doesn't have any tags.

You can still check out the tag index though.

What are tags?

Postby post_fetus » February 24th, 2007

The best hike I've ever taken was through Mahoosuc Notch. You rarely set foot on the ground - it was all rock hopping, which I LOVE. Plus the last site we stopped at before we hiked out - it was a reserve where students stayed. The tent sites overlooked a lake cradled in a valley, and it was turning fall (up there, anyway) so the foliage looked amazing. The students that stay there for a week or two take care of the compost and hike it out. Since it's a reserve, you're not allowed to pee in the woods, and since they do compost, you're not allowed to pee in the outhouse, so you have to pee on the trail. Ironically, we had a bunch of boyscouts camping with us that night so I kind of decided to hold it until we got outta there. I always thought it'd be awesome to be one of the people who maintained the site, though.
User avatar
post_fetus
Thorn Tree Refugee
 
Posts: 9
Joined: February 19th, 2007

Postby Skimaxpower » February 26th, 2007

I would be amiss if I did not tout the Pacific Northwest Trail.
User avatar
Skimaxpower
World Citizen
 
Posts: 1262
Joined: March 25th, 2005
Location: Republic of Cascadia

Postby gettingouttahere » February 26th, 2007

The Great Walks in New Zealand are all incredible. I have only done 3 (Routeburn, Kepler, and Abel Tasman) and they were all RIDICULOUS.

I am going to do the Inca Trail next year, and I could not be more excited. Did you go on your own or with a guide when you went with your family? Did you plan it ahead of time or arrange details when you got there?
www.mytripjournal.com/kahn

We are finally getting outta here!
User avatar
gettingouttahere
Holds PhD in Packing
 
Posts: 279
Joined: October 4th, 2006

Postby zaab » February 27th, 2007

The Torres del Paine Circuit in Chile is easily the most beautiful and adventurous trek I ever tried. Everything about it--the wind that knocks you on your ass, the mountain scenery that also knocks you on your ass, and the rugged hiking--is epic.
Argentina pics:[url]http://www.flickr.com/photos/zaab70/sets/[/url]

Argentina Blog
User avatar
zaab
Holds PhD in Packing
 
Posts: 109
Joined: April 2nd, 2006

Postby jv » February 28th, 2007

One of the most underrated is the Skyline-to-the-Sea Trail in the Santa Cruz mountains of California.

It's about 50 km, and takes two or three days to go from Castle Rock state park downhill to Big Basin state park. You begin hiking in barren scrub brush, then slog through a dank primeval forest of massive redwoods, and finally end by strolling through a meadow of wildflowers that leads you to the beach.

Also in California, Yosemite Nat'l Park has some outstanding backcountry trails. I've only done three or four, but the ones around Tuolumne Meadows have got to feature some of the most beautiful scenery in the world. Best part about it is that only about 5% of Yosemite visitors actually get out of the Valley, so even in summer you'll have some space.
User avatar
jv
Mod Squad
 
Posts: 1432
Joined: December 23rd, 2004
Location: Phnom Penh

Postby Dezafinado » March 1st, 2007

From Tuolumne Meadows one can hike south on the John Muir Trail to Mt. Whitney. This 211-mile trail is one California and America's classics.
User avatar
Dezafinado
Holds PhD in Packing
 
Posts: 127
Joined: November 29th, 2006

Postby halfnine » March 1st, 2007

quote:
From Tuolumne Meadows one can hike south on the John Muir Trail to Mt. Whitney. This 211-mile trail is one California and America's classics.


Except to do the full 211 miles you'll have to start around 20 miles and 4000 feet lower down in Yosemite Valley.
halfnine
World Citizen
 
Posts: 1081
Joined: December 5th, 2005
Location: London or Chicago

Postby Dezafinado » March 2nd, 2007

True, the hike should really begin in Yosemite Valley. But once you've seen much of the valley, it's nicer to launch from TM to avoid the crowd.
User avatar
Dezafinado
Holds PhD in Packing
 
Posts: 127
Joined: November 29th, 2006

Postby Saricie K » April 4th, 2007

I would also say Inca Trail is my favorite...

Hopefully I can take Simien Mountain trail (in Northen Ethiopia) some day. I heard it is very beautiful...
===========================
Visit my bilingual website at http://travel.saricie.com/index_en.html
Or
http://www.MySpace.com/saricie
User avatar
Saricie K
Holds PhD in Packing
 
Posts: 281
Joined: February 3rd, 2007

Postby foreststone » June 3rd, 2007

Adventure of the Yangtze, Mekong and Salween is ideal for adventurous exploration.
Originating from the Tangula mountains in Tibet, the Yangtze, Mekong and Salween rivers flow from west to east through the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. At the juncture of Yunnan, Tibet and Sichuan, blocked by a great fault fracture caused by the plateau’s collision with the Indian sub-continental plate, the three great rivers are forced to turn south, all flowing through Northwest Yunnan, sometimes at distances as close as 66km apart.
...........
http://www.edward-adventures.com/Article_Show5.asp?ArticleID=18
Trekking Yunnan
www.forest-cafe.org
User avatar
foreststone
Holds PhD in Packing
 
Posts: 147
Joined: January 29th, 2005
Location: Yunnan.China

Postby Asheai » June 4th, 2007

I haven't personally done it yet (but soon hopefully), however a bunch of my family and friends have gone on the West Coast Trail on Vancouver Island, BC. It is about 7 days and looks amazing gorgeous! That and the Juan De Fuca trail are my goals...
User avatar
Asheai
Holds PhD in Packing
 
Posts: 228
Joined: December 20th, 2004
Location: Singapore

Postby Haci Richard » June 8th, 2007

My two favorite two-day hikes have been Mount Olympus in Greece and Mount Kinabalu in Malaysia. Both are incredible climbs -- several thousand vertical feet in each case and pass through incredible varieties of scenery and flora. I'd do either one again in a heartbeat.
__________________________
"Suppose you're thinkin' about a plate o' shrimp. Suddenly someone'll say, like, plate, or shrimp, or plate o' shrimp out of the blue, no explanation. No point in lookin' for one, either."
User avatar
Haci Richard
Jackson's Dad
 
Posts: 6402
Joined: September 11th, 2006
Location: Jackson Heights, Queens

Postby Landire » June 8th, 2007

Sadly I'm stuck on day hikes. (Can't get past that whole needing a toilet thing.) My favorite place to hike is in the Redwood National Park in Northern California. Lovely scenery plus you never know if you'll stumble on a dinosaur or an Ewok.

My dream hike, the one I've wanted to do most of my life and have done parts of many times is the Pacific Crest Trail. A 2,600 mile long trail that goes from the Mexico border into Canada. An interesting fact about it, less people have completed the entire trail than have climbed Everest. One day I will take it on!
User avatar
Landire
Holds PhD in Packing
 
Posts: 252
Joined: October 12th, 2006
Location: Dublin, Ireland

Postby Skimaxpower » June 8th, 2007

quote:
Originally posted by Landire:
Sadly I'm stuck on day hikes. (Can't get past that whole needing a toilet thing.)
Try this guide!
quote:

My dream hike, the one I've wanted to do most of my life and have done parts of many times is the Pacific Crest Trail. An interesting fact about it, less people have completed the entire trail than have climbed Everest. One day I will take it on!
Don't just dream ... practice your squatting and go do it!
User avatar
Skimaxpower
World Citizen
 
Posts: 1262
Joined: March 25th, 2005
Location: Republic of Cascadia

Next

Return to Adventure Travel

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest




closer