If you don't like meeting people, don't walk from Munich to Venice. If you want to be on your own, prefer solitude, not seeing anyone from dawn till dusk, choose Spain and try the GR1, the subject of my first guide. If, on the other hand, you don't mind bumping into the same people every evening and enjoy engaging with a multi-national community all sharing an ambition to reach the same destination, then you should think about the 'Traumpfad'.
Cycling in Chile & Argentina - the Lake District
Getting away to the sun and cycling in January is a brilliant way to escape cold grey Britain and it's now established as a regular feature in our calendar. After three excellent trips in south-east Asia, we wanted a change from the traffic and the endless Buddha statues and decided to go to Chile and Argentina. Another first for us, we booked our trip with Skedaddle, the cycling holiday specialist from Newcastle. So what's involved and would you enjoy it?
From Puerto Varas |
The trip involves cycling on road and gravel tracks for two weeks in Patagonia's 'Lake District'. The scenery is spectacular and surprisingly varied. While huge lakes are a common theme, the landscape is lush, forested and green on the Chilean side of the Andies and like a desert in Argentina and comparisons were made with both British Columbia and Nevada. Particularly spectacular were the snow-capped volcanoes (this is the land of 'fire and ice') and, on a smaller scale, the monkey puzzle forests.
Munich to Venice - how tough is the Traumpfad?
One of the first question's most people ask before deciding to go on a trek like Munich to Venice is 'can I do it?'.
To be honest I had a bit of a 'discussion' on this issue with Cicerone who felt that only the experienced should attempt a walk across the Alps. The trouble was this didn't fit with the sort of people I met on my transalpine journey many of whom had never done a long distance hike before. All sorts of walkers were doing the trip: lots of young people with very little money; lots of older people, particularly the recently retired on their first post-work adventure; and, as well as couples, lots of single people, including solo women. It wasn't hiking experience that these people had in common, it was a sense of adventure.
To be honest I had a bit of a 'discussion' on this issue with Cicerone who felt that only the experienced should attempt a walk across the Alps. The trouble was this didn't fit with the sort of people I met on my transalpine journey many of whom had never done a long distance hike before. All sorts of walkers were doing the trip: lots of young people with very little money; lots of older people, particularly the recently retired on their first post-work adventure; and, as well as couples, lots of single people, including solo women. It wasn't hiking experience that these people had in common, it was a sense of adventure.
A sense of adventure the key requirement |
A Walk Among Ghosts – A Norwegian on the GR1 Sendero Historico
A Guest Blog from Tarjei Næss Skrede
There’s a world of walking opportunities out there, but what led me to a remote pass in the Parque Regional de Picos de Europa in Spain? Some years ago, after walking the Camino Frances to Santiago de Compostela, a spark was kindled inside me. Other trails followed, the GR20 on Corsica, the GR10 crossing the Pyrenees, the Baekdu Daegan in South-Korea, the list goes on. Always looking for new trails, until one day a series of pictures flickered across my screen. Pictures of abandoned and remote villages in Spain set in stunning locations.
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At the start of the GR1 Sendero Historico, Puerto de Tarna |
Munich to Venice - what's the Traumpfad route like?
There is more to the Traumpfad than a north-south traverse of the Alps, but the mountains cannot help but dominate the experience.
The whole trip will take most walkers 30 days to complete and it only takes two and half, walking alongside the River Isar, to get from Munich to the mountains. You are then in the Alps for the next 20 consecutive days (depending on the choices you make about how you stage your journey). When you emerge you follow the River Piave and it takes another five days of flat walking to get to Venice.
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The Hintertux Glacier in the Zillertal Alps |
The Traumpfad - Munich to Venice
Introducing the first English Language Guide to Munich to Venice
If you ask a German hiker how to get to Venice the chances are they would tell you to go to Munich, find the Marienplatz, then head south across the Alps on Der Traumpfad (the Dream Way). Thirty days later after the trip of a lifetime, you’ll have swapped the crowds of Munich’s busiest square for what Napoleon described as the ‘drawing room of Europe’, the Piazza San Marco.
Der Traumpfad has the same must-do status for German walkers that the coast-to-coast has for the British. Each year hundreds of people take up the challenge and set off from Munich on a trans-alpine adventure.
New Zealanders on the GR1
A Guest Blog from Rob and Debby McColl
A GR1 adventure 28 April – 17 June 2016
We surprised ourselves in 2012 by completing the 3000km Te Araroa Trail from top to bottom of New Zealand just a few months before Rob turned 70 and Debby turned 60! Everyone kept asking us what’s next, so we felt obliged to keep going.
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