Well I have now burnt the bridge of employment (technically just on fire as I will still be working until August). This means that the biggest obstactle to the E4 walk, time, has now been removed and that, theoretically, I can do it.
Have got a lot more information on the walk, have plotted it on Google Earth (haven't worked how to publish it) and the detail of it makes it even more interesting. I should be able to work out a start date soon and when I expect to have arrived at key points along the way.
Based conversations so far, some objectives for the walk have started to emerge, namely:
• complete the walk - get from Tarifa to Budapest (although the option of the eastern Hungarian border has been suggested)
• build up a network of people interested in the route (and beyond Hungary) and want to participate at some level
• promote cultural activities associated with the route
• link communities
• build a resource which can be used after the walk has been finished (a web-site, a book)
• raising money for charity
The best long distance footpath in the world?

Is the the E4 Euro Path the best long distance footpath in the world? Well it could be.
Starting on the Atlantic Coast and at the southern most tip of Spain (at Tarifa) you begin a journey that takes you through some of Europe's most stunning scenery.
You cross Andulucia through a series of national parks with a northern and southern option in the middle (the northern option takes you higher into the Sierra Nevadas while the southern one is closer to Granada).
The next section, Murcia, is about 300 Km long and takes you through the spine of the province, from west to east, and includes the landscapes of the Spanish high plateau and the fertile plain of river Segura.
The next section takes you north through Pais Valencia along 550 km trek inland but on a track which parallels the coast.
The final Spanish part of the E4 takes you through Catalonia, from Fredes in the south to La Seu D'Urgell in the Pyrenees. One guide suggests that the 367 km can be covered in 92 hours and 15 mins!
The French section is 1,100 km long and crosses three national parks (Haut Languedoc, Cevennes and Vercours), and southern park of the Massif Central, the Rhone Valley and then on into the French Alps, crossing into Switzerland.
The Swiss part of the walk takes you 300 km through the Jura Park, through limestone classic limestone and along 180km ridge walk known as the the Chemin des Crêtes du Jura, or Jura High Route. At From Dielsdorf, the E4 continues along S shores of Lake Constance via following settlements to village Rheineck at German borders. (150 km)
Through Austria the route follows the Alpine Route 1, high level for most of the way with glacier and other bits of challenging walking. As well as stunning scenery you get the chance to stay in Austrian Hutte, a fairly unique experience. The Austrian part of the walk is 1100 kilometres.
Still working out the extent of my ambition in Hungary. Could stop just north of Budapest or walk on the Hungarian border and complete E4 as far as it goes in western Europe. Either way you travel along the Blue Way which, for a Hungarian, is the No 1 walking experience.
So is this the best walk in the world and is walking it in one feasible or just a mad idea. Still got a lot of work to do on the route but at the moment its looking like 190 days walking.
The Idea
I'm thinking of walking from Tarifa in Spain to Budapest in Hungry along the route of the euro path, the E4. In total it's about 5,500 kilometers. As far as I can tell no one has walked this far along the route so I might be the first to do it, hence the title of my Blog "Am I the First".
I don't mind if I'm not the first to actually walk the route because there are a number of things which I would like to try which are genuinely new and first time.
Perhaps the most important thing I would like to achieve is a collaboration. I would like family, friends, colleagues and hopefully lots of people I haven't met yet to help me do the walk. I would like to collaborate in its planning and execution including people actually joining me for parts of the walk.
I'm interested in Web 2 and Social Media. I push others to use it as part of my day job but to be honest I'm not an expert in its detailed application. I want to explore how social media can be used on a collaborative venture like this and develop my own Web 2 expertise.
The plan at the moment is to start from the Tarifa end in the spring of 2011 leaving about 18 months to get ready.
I don't mind if I'm not the first to actually walk the route because there are a number of things which I would like to try which are genuinely new and first time.
Perhaps the most important thing I would like to achieve is a collaboration. I would like family, friends, colleagues and hopefully lots of people I haven't met yet to help me do the walk. I would like to collaborate in its planning and execution including people actually joining me for parts of the walk.
I'm interested in Web 2 and Social Media. I push others to use it as part of my day job but to be honest I'm not an expert in its detailed application. I want to explore how social media can be used on a collaborative venture like this and develop my own Web 2 expertise.
The plan at the moment is to start from the Tarifa end in the spring of 2011 leaving about 18 months to get ready.
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