hiking the Ribeiras, Cape Verde

On That’s a Moray Alex posted an excellent trip report:

… the best hike I have ever done.

We went to Sao Antao, the island across the channel from Mindelo. On Sao Antao there are the ribeiras (ribs), jagged mountains which traverse the length of the island. The ribeiras are what remains of a volcano after millenia of erosion. To me they looked like the backs of wrinkled dinosaurs. …

img_0608.jpg
larger original

click through to read the rest and see more photos – Hiking the Ribeiras

And where is this hiking wonderland?

cape-verde.jpg

Cape Verde – Wikipedia

the Lumemo Trail, Tanzania

Every once in a while I click on to The Backpacker website:

thebackpacker.jpg
The Backpacker – home page

It’s an old school static page that turns me off at first glance. Especially the double underlined ad links. Those infuriate me. Normally I boycott any site that was lame enough to use them.

But there is some good stuff on The Backpacker if you avoid hovering your mouse over the double underlined words.

Here’s a sample trip report, for example, by Ian Williamson.

The Lumemo Trail: A Tanzanian Wilderness Experience

There are no hotels or lodges here. This is a National Park with no roads. This park is a series of mountain rangers and interlocking valleys and only experienced hikers can mange this difficult terrain. These mountains are pristine and largely untouched by humans.

The Udzungwa Mountains National park was created primarily for the protection of flora rather than fauna. The park was registered in 1992 and is the first of its kind in Tanzania. This park is a series of mountain rangers and interlocking valleys – ranging from the top of the Kilombero Valley at 300 meters above sea level to peaks of around 2,570 meters above sea level. Only experienced hikers can mange this difficult train. Making these mountains pristine and largely untouched by humans.

The Lumeno trail is 65km long and follows the path of the Lumeno River, which is sourced in the heart of these mountains. There are three campsites along the trail that are roughly spaced at 7 to 8 hour walk intervals. They are basic campsites. Remember in Africa basic means just that, basic — simply a peace of ground cleared for your tents. It usually takes three to four days to complete this hike.

The trail passes through three types of vegetation: Miombo Woodland, Grassland and forest. Some of the wildlife you may see on this trail is the, red colobus & black and white colubus monkeys, yellow baboon, sykes monkey, sanje mangabey, bushbuck, waterbuck, bush pig, buffalo, elephant and red duikers. …

We recommend hiking of this trail to be done in the dry season — June to November — as in the rainy season the river becomes swollen and turbulent making the river dangerous to cross. The flooding can also hide crocodiles, which can be a greater danger than the swollen river.

This is not an experience for the faint hearted, however, if you love the wilderness this is an experience not to be missed.

The Lumemo Trail: A Tanzanian Wilderness Experience

Also check out their backpacking tips page. Their USA Trail Reviews by State. And much more content uploaded by their community.

africa.jpg

related: Lumemo River Trail – Authentic Tanzania

top 10 trekking destinations

Top 10 Hiking/Trekking Vacations – Overall

Annapurna Circuit, Nepal

Appalachian Trail, USA

Santa Cruz Trek, Peru

Kilamanjaro National Park, Tanzania

Tour de Mont Blanc, France/Italy/Switzerland

West Coast Trail, British Columbia

Overland Track, Australia

Torres del Paine, Chile

John Muir Trail, California

Camino de Santiago, Spain

iExplore Hiking

201905832_d9112ad4e4.jpg
larger original – Camels Hump in Vermont – flickr – broken_images

Astonishingly similar to our own besthike top 10 treks in the world.

Many quality blogs have been linking to this list.

Steep – extreme skiing movie

Just watched the film. Highly recommended.

The history of extreme skiing.

steep.jpg

… The movie, photographed in high-definition video by Erich Roland, is an undeniably impressive visual spectacle that follows the sport from Wyoming to France, British Columbia, Iceland and Alaska. Like that of its sister sport, surfing, extreme skiing has a history of one feat topping another as techniques are developed and challenges devised.

The worldwide search for the highest wave is paralleled by the search for the steepest, wildest, most dangerous slopes and for perfect snow. Perfection is to be found, according to the movie, in the extreme-skiing mecca of Valdez, Alaska, where the white stuff has the texture of velvet.

“Steep” arbitrarily begins its history with a lone descent of Bill Briggs in 1971 on Grand Teton mountain in Wyoming. His accomplishment, witnessed by no one but attested to by aerial photographs of his ski tracks, was all the more remarkable because he was born without a hip joint, and multiple surgeries had left him with a limp.

Since then a widening search for adventure has sparked the popularity of what is called big mountain skiing, two of whose hubs, visited by the movie, are Chamonix, in the French Alps, and Valdez. The sport’s popularity has been spread by video, with Greg Stump’s 1988 film, “The Blizzard of Aahhh’s,” cited as a seminal work. …

Movie Review – Steep (2007) – New York Times

Click PLAY or watch the trailer on YouTube.

See more on the official website.

great Lake O’Hara photos

I’ve added some of our best pics to the Lake O’Hara Flickr photo pool. O’Hara is the most photogenic spot in the Canadian Rockies.

Here are a couple of samples from other photographers:

ohara.jpg
larger original – flickr – idatewe

ohara-canoe.jpg
larger original – flickr – Clickr Bee

see more – Lake O’Hara Flickr photo pool

hike Lake O’Hara – besthike information page

shoot yourself on a hike – Stick Pic

Jason Klass on Gear Talk posted a review of an ultra lightweight camera attachment.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

… Whether I go solo or with others, I’m taking the Stick Pic with me every time. I consider it to be even more versatile than my Joby Gorilla Pod because you can do Les Stroud-style videos of yourself as well as still shots. …

Gear Talk with Jason Klass

The Stick Pic – official website

eco-friendly Hilton in hiking destination

Planning on a trek on the Nahuel Huapi Traverse in the Patagonian Andes?

After that adventure you can relax here:

eco-friendly-hilton-argentina-2.jpg

The Portuguese group IMOCOM presented its latest project in Argentina, a Hilton branded hotel in Bariloche (Patagonia) that was introduced as “eco friendly“. According to the company’s CEO, Hugo Canessa, the broad term refers to the hotel layout, which will blend with the mountain it’s located in to reduce visual impact, and the fact that during the building process and later in its operational phase, the hotel will have efficient use of energy and water and “proper management of soil and drainage.”

Besides the green talk, neighbors are concerned about the impact the building will have in this beautiful area. The fact that the hotel is placed in a mountain, is going to get water from the pristine Nahuel Huapi lake, and is surely disposing water nearby, are causes for worry.

Green or greenwashing? Keep reading for more info and pictures. …

Treehugger

16,500mi National Scenic Trails treks

Bart Smith completed over 37 million steps this morning, plus nearly 100,000 photographs in his 16-year shooting trek of all the National Scenic Trails (NTS). No other person can boast this astounding photo/hiking feat, covering over 16,500 miles and 34 states. …

bart-360_beta.jpgAppalachian Trail (AT) – 2,175 miles

Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) – 2,650 miles

Florida Trail (FT) – 1,400 miles

Ice Age Trail (IAT) – 1,000 miles

Natchez Trace Trail (NTT) – 500 miles

Potomac Heritage Trail (PHT) – 990 miles

North Country Trail (NCT) – 4,600 miles

Continental Divide Trail (CDT) – 3,100 miles

To celebrate, Smith flies immediately to Washington, D.C., where he will join the 40th National Trail System Anniversary festivities.

Legacy of 16-Year Trail Adventure Highlights Largest Solo Photo Project in History – PR Web

bart-smith-photo.jpg

I like Bart’s photo site: Walking Down a Dream.

(via Florida Hikes)

paving the Annapurna Circuit, Nepal

Fears of road construction ruining our #8 trek in the world have been somewhat exaggerated.

Hikers are concerned when they see articles like this:

… Late last year, the Australian tour operator Peregrine Adventures, which has organised trips to Nepal for more than 30 years, abandoned the “classic” Annapurna Circuit, which stretches for 300 kilometres and reaches altitudes of more than 5000 metres.

“We’ve dropped that trip altogether because of the road,” operations director Tietse Stelma says. “Ten years ago it was such a beautiful trek going up into the mountains with the Annapurnas in front of you. Now you have more and more traffic on the road and building activity – when you go on a trek, you don’t want to hear that.” …

Rocky road for trekkers – The Age

Annapurna is still a wonderful adventure. But you might want to skip the Jomson Trek, the section where a new roadway is under construction.

Here’s a terrific documentary titled Paving Shangri La which paints the worst case scenario:

Click PLAY or watch it (Part 2) on YouTube. (7.29min)

Part 1 = watch it on YouTube. (7.42min)

The narrator is Andrew Stevenson, author of A Nepalese Journey: The Essence of the Annapurna Circuit and Annapurna Circuit – Himalayan Journey.

I have friends trekking Annapurna in October. I’ll report back on just how much the road construction “ruined” the experience.

Not much, I expect.