introducing the Overland Track, Tasmania

Famed in Australia, but not so well known around the rest of the world, The Overland is one of our top 10 hikes in the world.

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Frank was just there, updating his excellent eBook – How to Hike the Overland Track.

His latest post has a nice overview of highlights for those who don’t know it:

• a great “beginner’ bushwalking trip
• regularly spaced huts
• track is well marked and in good condition
• in season there are rangers
• scenery is spectacular and varied
• side trips
• the weather

… OK, he must have been joking mentioning the weather.

read more – Our Hiking Blog – Why hike the Overland Track in Tasmania?

Check our Overland Track information page, too.

my BearVault is stuck

I love my clear plexiglass BearVault, happy to carry the extra weight for the convenience of tossing my food anywhere I like.

But if I tighten the lid enough for the simple plastic clip to “click”, it can be tough to open. Sometimes I need strip down, call on super human strength, and sit on the thing to squish it a little bit oblong.

Turns out that’s normal for this gear. Check this rant from thruhiker Crow:

It was 4am and I was lying in my frosty tent in the Sierras, thinking how splendid a hot beverage would be right now. I was hungry as I hadn’t eaten dinner the night before because I was low on food and one of the ways I ration my food is to skip dinner.

I was thinking: for the same weight as the bear canister I could have brought my stove, pot, fuel canister, and 5 snicker bars. Right now, I could be drinking a hot beverage and eating a snicker bar. That would be good, but instead I have a bear canister.

I reached out of my tent, grabbed my frosty bear canister, tried to open it—it didn’t budge. I straddled it and tried to open it, it wouldn’t turn a bit–it was completely locked up. And that is when I renamed my BearVault 450 bear canister: my “G…

read more – Gear review: BearVault 450 bear canister

I too leave mine as threaded as possible, but not quite locked.

Tongariro Crossing in 3min

If you claim Tongariro is the WORLD’S BEST DAY HIKE, we won’t argue.

It’s awesome. And awesomely crowded.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

That comes via The Professional Hobo. Thanks.

Check our Tongariro Crossing information page 13km (8mi). If the hordes turn you off, no worries … Do the Tongariro Northern Circuit 34+km (19+mi), instead. It’s our #3 hike in the world.

World Trails Conference, Korea

#Jeju #JejuOlle

by site editor Rick McCharles

Regarding the World Trails Conference held recently in Jeju, Korea.

We heard presentations from:

• John Muir Trail, California
• The Way of St. James (Camiño de Santiago), Spain
• Cotswold Way, England
• Bruce Trail, Canada
• The Great Ocean Walk, Australia

We listened to speakers from the Shikoku island in Japan, Swiss tourism and the China Volkssport Association.

The representative of the French Rambling Association (Féderation Française de la Randonnée Pédestre) taught me a lot.

I was personally very keen on learning of the Hong Kong Great Outdoors initiative, including free guided tours of the MacLehose Trail (100km), one I’ve not yet done there. (I’m thinking of hiking Japan in Oct. 2011, followed by Hong Kong and Jeju in November. An Asian tour.)

Hong Kong is a surprisingly excellent hiking destination:

MacLehose Trail #2

maclehose 146

By the end of the 3-day conference our host, Jeju Olle Trail, had struck partnership agreements with The Bruce and Cotswold. Nice.

There was much discussion regarding a possible World Trails Network.

My main take away from the World Trails Conference was that construction and management of trails worldwide varies wildly. But they all rely on a lot of volunteer labour. Labour of love.

Over the coming weeks I’ll be posting specifically on some of the walks presented.

how to build a hiking trail

#Jeju #JejuOlle

In your lifetime you’ve known people who scorch the earth. Dominate a room. Inspire everyone around them to action. …

Here’s one, Suh Myung-sook from Korea. Founder of the Jeju Olle Trail.

photo credit – Jeju Weekly – Healing Powers of an island trek

Don’t be fooled. This little lady can out hike you. Then out drink you late into the evening. She is vivacious. A whirlwind.

She started less than 4yrs ago to build a hiking trail on the small island of her birth. Today her personal map has over 339km of trails (that number keeps increasing as villages request to be added) attracting perhaps a quarter million walkers a year.

It’s a huge success story in Korea. She started what’s been called a “hiking boom”.

Did she convince the government to build? No, she and her brother picked up shovels. And set out. The rest is history.

I love her life story.

Suh Myung-sook was a sometimes controversial career woman, shattering glass ceilings for women in the publishing industry. But after 23yrs, she felt tired. To rejuvenate, she made a pilgrimage to walk The Way of St. James (Camiño de Santiago). Then published a travelogue on that journey in Korean.

A fellow pilgrim in Spain first suggested the idea of a spiritual walking route in Korea, as it’s so industrialized. As the Korean people work so hard.

Suh Myung-sook made it happen. Out of the sheer power of her personal determination and charisma.

Jeju Olle map - quite outdated

Suh Myung-sook is almost exactly the same age as me. But she’s accomplished so much more.

If you want to build a trail, get consensus of the local people, and build it. Start small. Recruit volunteers. Once you have some success, politicians will come looking for you.

On my best hikes I leave a Summit Stone at the highlight location. But on the Jeju Olle, I gave the Stone to Suh Myung-sook. She’s the spiritual centre of this new world class walk.

Note: her name is sometimes translated Suh Myeong-suk or Suh, Myungsook.

vote Jeju – 7 Wonders of Nature

#Jeju #JejuOlle

I spent 4 days hiking the lovely Jeju Olle Trail in Korea. At the very start of the intended 339km (and growing) walking path is Sunrise Peak (Seongsan Ilchulbong).

Very weird. Unique in the world. I found it fascinating. See more interesting photos tagged Seongsan.

Jeju is a small, rural island. And a popular tourist destination in Asia. Yet it’s not well known outside Asia.

Jeju Island 제주도

Let’s correct that by voting Jeju Island to the new list of 7 Wonders of Nature. The island is already listed a World Heritage Site: Jeju Volcanic Island and Lava Tubes.

Here’s an instructional video explaining how to vote for your top 7. (You need choose your 7 wonders first, before registering.)

related: Visit Korea – Jeju Olle

hiking Sintra, Portugal

trip report by site editor Rick McCharles

In 1809 Lord Byron wrote to his friend Francis Hodgson, “I must just observe that the village of Cintra in Estremadura is the most beautiful in the world.”

Tourists today feel the same way. Sintra, a World Heritage Site, is a must visit side trip by train out of Lisbon.

… Attractions include the fabulous Pena Palace (19th c.) and the castle Castelo dos Mouros (8th or 9th century, reconstructed in the 19th century) with a breath-taking view of the Sintra-Cascais Natural Park, and the summer residence of the kings of Portugal Palácio Nacional de Sintra …

Almost everyone exiting the train hops on a bus tour. But much better is the short walk through town and up to the Castle of the Moors.

Here are a few photo of my jaunt up the mountain, starting in town.

hiking Sintra, Portugal

Signage of the goal …

hiking Sintra, Portugal

The walk up is evocative. You can imagine yourself hundreds of years in the past.

hiking Sintra, Portugal

Gate guard at the Castle playing with a feral cat.

hiking Sintra, Portugal

I played with the weird animals at Parque da Liberdade on the way down.

hiking Sintra, Portugal - Parque da Liberdade

I can’t add it to our list of the best hikes in Europe, but a walk up from the train station is far preferable to taking the cattle tourist bus.

See more of my photos from this day hike.

More interesting photos of this destination.

best hike Peneda-Gerês, Portugal

UPDATE: Rob sends us GPS coordinates for hikes in this Park. For 10 different routes!

_____ original post:

The best hiking region in Portugal is Peneda-Gerês National Park. All agree.

But what’s the best hike there?

That’s a difficult question. Most agree that the southern portion of the small U-shaped Park is the best section.

That’s where I hiked, on a number of different short trails promoted by the Park, yet badly signed. I’m not particularly inclined to recommend them.

Some guiding companies offer a multi-day itinerary called The Shepherds Way, but that’s actually a series of different day hikes. (That tour looks good, actually. People love this region.)

I based myself out of the small town of Campo de Gerês near the biggest and most popular hostel, Vilarinho das Furnas. And I’d recommend you stay there too as it’s easily accessible by bus.

If you have your own vehicle, the nearby campground looked great. And ideally located for the short government signed trails.

Driving in rural Portugal is challenging, though. Click through to this trip report:

… big and full of rolling, wooded moorland and stark granite mountains.

Every so often you come across gorgeous hickeldy pickeldy farming villages with tiny streets next to no cars but lots and lots of mini herds of creamy brown cows all wearing big brass bells! At night the cows stayed in barns but during the day they didn’t have fields but were driven from place to place so over the next two days we were surrounded by bird song and jingling cows! At dusk on the first day though we were in for a surprise turning a corner and coming face to face with the first herd. As the lane was very narrow we retreated to the car where the dogs sniffed and snorted loudly in the back and the cows smeared their noses on the windows….

Walking in Peneda Geres

But the best hike, in my opinion, would be to carry a tent and head on up on to the ridges to wild camp. This is not legal, as I understand it. But if you buy a map in Lisbon, start walking towards those areas with the least road access. Camping’s not likely to be a problem if you set up in the wilderness after dusk. The park is mostly used for seasonal grazing.

(Don’t try that during Autumn, though. The definition of “National Park” is different in Portugal. There it’s an area to fatten up birds and game until hunting season.)

Peneda-Gerês National Park, Portugal

This is not a wilderness park. There are use trails between ancient villages. And livestock trails everywhere.

Rurality

Many of the villages have nobody left younger than age-60. The young people move away. Tourism can revitalize, though. You can organize farm stays in 700yr old buildings. How rustic is that?

Reservoirs and waterfalls are the highlights for many hikers.

Natureza virgem

See interesting photos tagged Peneda-Gerês

Leave a comment if you know of an established best hike in the Park.

_____

Tips:

I found that very few locals speak any English. Best learn the basics in Portuguese or you’ll be troubled finding out when the next bus comes past.

It’s no hardship getting to Peneda-Gerês. Convenient and inexpensive trains run from Lisbon to Porto. And from Porto to Braga where you catch the bus to the Park. You’ll want to tour both cities, sampling as much Port along the way as possible.

Winos will not be able to resist a wine tour in the Douro Valley.

washed out hiking Portugal

trip report by site editor Rick McCharles

I’ve always seen northern Portugal on lists of the best hikes in Europe.

Yet I knew nothing about it.

Miserable after a couple of weeks in rainy Netherlands, I booked a next day flight to sunny Lisbon, Portugal, my first visit.

How did that work out for me?

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Record rainfall, I was told.

Unflapped, I headed north to Peneda-Gerês National Park (PGN), the only National Park in the nation. … Certainly this squall would blow itself out quickly.

… An important feature of the landscape is the constant presence of water. Brooks and waterfalls are common at every mountain slope and the park is crossed by several rivers, namely Cávado, Lima, Homem, Rabagão, Castro Laboreiro, and Arado. There are dams across most of these …

My first day I took 2 day hikes, learning by the second to bring along an umbrella. This was my only photo in perhaps 7hrs walking. (I didn’t want to get the camera wet.)

Stashing a Summit Stone atop the boulder at this reservoir lookout:

Peneda-Gerês National Park, Portugal

I wanted to take photos like this of the famous stone granaries, protecting the corn harvest. They look like tombs.

Soajo Granaries

It rained all night and continued next morning. Here are a couple of pics of my day hike up to the top of one of the ridges. A group of photographers had driven up, attracted by the weird light.

Peneda-Gerês National Park, Portugal

Peneda-Gerês National Park, Portugal

Could the weather finally be clearing?

This long trip might have been a complete wash out, … except that I was rescued by a couple of students from Canada, one now living in Portugal.

Peneda-Gerês National Park, Portugal

Suddenly life improved. The rain stopped. And we enjoyed a terrific hike and scramble, finally able to see the entire vista.

Peneda-Gerês National Park, Portugal

more of my photos

We could easily claim we were in the U.K.

My memories now are of PGN are of a wonderful chance encounter with new friends, rather than of wet, mildewed clothes.

photos tagged peneda-geres hiking

Peneda-Gerês National Park photo group on flickr