Wow!
Shot from a chopper.

original photo on flickr uploaded by Bajy
It’s also part of the Gadling travel photo pool to which we subscribe and contribute.
Wow!
Shot from a chopper.

original photo on flickr uploaded by Bajy
It’s also part of the Gadling travel photo pool to which we subscribe and contribute.
Ausangate Circuit, Peru
Our favourite hike in Peru is still one of the least well known.
It’s wonderful, but dangerous.
Ausangate Circuit is 70km (43.5mi) plus sidetrips. It’s recommended only for confident, self-sufficient hikers experienced at high altitude. If you tolerate cold & altitude symptoms, the trails themselves are little trouble. Some route finding is necessary, but it’s entirely above the treeline with vast views.
Most groups hire pack animals, at least to get them up to the first pass. Worst case scenario — altitude sickness — you can ride your horse back down to lower elevation.
Details on our Ausangate Circuit information page.


Alpacas and Ausangate
… but that’s just an excuse to post a cute panda photo.
One of the great things about flickr is the ability to overlay “notes” and graphics.
Here photographer Jerry Lee has added a Christmas touch.

original – flickr
Sunshine to Assiniboine
This is our favourite hike in the Canadian Rockies. Mt. Assiniboine is Canada’s Matterhorn.
Mountaineers dream of climbing Assiniboine. But this is also a great hiking destination for kids and grandparents who can access the high alpine Assiniboine Lodge, Naiset cabins or wonderful Lake Magog campground via helicopter.
“Base camp” hiking doesn’t get any better than this:
Our recommended route for serious hikers is 56km (34.8mi). Bus from Banff, Alberta to the Sunshine Ski Resort. (This puts you almost on top of the Continental Divide to start.)
Wander lush Sunshine Meadows, winding your way towards beckoning Assiniboine.

view of Assiniboine from the Lodge – Assiniboine Lodge Photo Gallery
From the new Wilderness Trailcraft blog:
… a moose is quite a bit more agile than it looks. When this moose made it up to the log he paused for only a fraction of a second and leaped over it. (And) … they can swim; underwater.
A short time after this trip I was traveling through Yellowstone and I had a chance to talk to a ranger about my experience. She told me that she wasn’t surprised about the moose swimming but she was surprised at how stupid we were. She said the rangers consider the moose to be the most dangerous animal in the woods. Moose are very unpredictable and frequently aggressive.
So there you have it. They weigh close to 1500 lbs, they can run faster than you, they can swim faster, jump over logs and they are aggressive and unpredictable. That’s worthy of being filed away as important knowledge!
I’ve seen video of moose diving for particularly succulent plants. And I understand that new born calves can swim immediately to escape predators who sometimes wait on pregnant cows.
The real worry about moose, in some parts of the world, are vehicle collisions. This is exactly the wrong animal to hit.
North Circle
The Glacier National Park circuit includes Highline Trail / Ptarmigan Tunnel loop and Many Glacier – Waterton via Highline.
This is a fabulous hike-of-a-lifetime in every possible way. In fact, there is almost no downside — aside from the very short hiking season. (And mosquitos early in the season.)
Bears are a worry. Hikers have been killed in this park.
The complete North Circuit is 65miles (104km) plus side trips, though many only hike sections. Parts are very accessible to all levels of fitness and experience. Much is pristine wilderness unchanged for hundreds of years.
If interested in doing the entire North Circle, check the annotated photos posted by besthike editor Rick McCharles: North Circle trip report, 2005. His was a 7-day solo hike in September after the first snowfall of the winter starting and finishing in Waterton. Don’t miss him spooking a moose at Kootenai Lake.

Highline Trail – Geoffrey Peters
I apologize for being flippant in the past.
I spent time, back in the day, on nude beaches, after all.
Rick, the Nudehiker, contacted me. He’s a Vietnam Vet, IT guy since the ’70s, and a specialist on Information Security.
He edits an excellent blog dedicated to nude hiking and soaking in the Pacific Northwest. (The soaking part sounds great.)
I linked and subscribed immediately.
Rick has links too to key organizations like the Naturists Society and the American Association for Nude Recreation. He has a lot of good content on advocacy, etiquette, nude resorts, hikes, etc.
I learned that the nude outdoor recreation movement is under represented on the internet. Nudists are a tad skittish in a culture that feels traumatized after a brief glimpse of Brittany or Janet.
If we really want to get more profile for nude hiking, Rick, there’s a simple solution. Female hikers.
Check it out for yourself: Nudehiker

Kilimanjaro
If you are going to Africa for just one climb, this is it.
The standard Marangu route is 64km (40mi) plus sidetrips if you make the summit. The majority of those who try, do not get to the top.
Technically the trek is not challenging. But anywhere between 2-10 hikers die each year from altitude sickness. It’s difficult to acclimatize while ascending 4,600m (15,000ft) from the plains to 5896m (19,344ft).
If possible take one of the alternate (longer, more expensive) routes on Kilimanjaro to allow more days to acclimatize.
Details on our Kilimanjaro Marangu Route information page.
And get a good guidebook early. Over 80% of Kilmanjaro hikers book their trip from home, not in Tanzania.

Kilimanjaro: The Trekking Guide to Africa’s Highest Mountain – 2nd Edition; Now includes Mount Meru
Ten million steps is the incredible story of a 10-month walk from the Florida Keys to Quebec.
“Eb” Eberhart has another book, Where Less the Path is Worn: First Trek O’er Appalachians of North America, recounting a 347-day trek, over 5000mi, from Belle Isle, Newfoundland to the tip of Key West, Florida.
After getting medical advice he needed a pacemaker, Eb instead he walked over 17,000mi since 1998. If you see him on the trail, he goes by the monicker of Nimblewill Nomad. Age-68, he is not slowing down yet. He did the Lewis and Clark Trail in 2006.
NimblewillNomad.com – official website
(via Two-Heel Drive)
This is the first time I noticed our site and blog listed top of the page after a browser search for “best hike”.
