Thru-hikes are expensive

Take a Long Hike has a sobering post …

… Let’s consider the Appalachian Trail, 2178 miles long. The days of averaging a dollar a mile are long gone, although it can be done. Twenty-three years ago, Roland Mueser, in his later book, Long Distance Hiking–Lessons from the Appalachian Trail, came up with an average cost of $3200.00 dollars or about $1.50 a mile. But that was 1989. …

So what about today? Figure about $2.50 a mile, or $5500.00 for the A.T., and that is conservative. One recent blogger said he wouldn’t feel comfortable unless he had saved $10,000 for the hike. …

Take a Long Hike – Thru-hikes are expensive

Ouch.

Thule wins Adventure Race Worlds

Thule won it all in Tasmania, to nobody’s surprise.

It took more than five days of racing and, despite the extremely tough course being largely dominated by Team Seagate, the Swedes pipped rival teams at the post, thanks to a four-hour penalty time that Seagate had to serve out.

Team Silva took second place with Seagate coming in third after serving out what must have been a very long four hours.

79 teams from all corners of the world began the adventure race with six of those teams forced out. The remaining teams continue to race through Tasmania’s rugged wilderness and wet weather across a 700km course. …

Outer Edge

Mimi must be the #1 woman in AR 2011. Congratulations.

Thule Adventure Team — Martin Flinta, Per Vestling, Jacky Boisset and Myriametjacky Myriam.

In fact, 4 Swedish based teams finished top 6.

hiking Macao

trip report by site editor Rick McCharles

I was in Macao only for 2 days, camping at Hac Sa beach. And was pleased to get out for even one hike.

With no guidebook, I headed directly to the A-Ma Statue atop Alto de Coloane (176m). It’s a 20m-high white jade statue of the goddess who gave Macau its name erected in 1998.

I worked my way randomly through two contiguous Parks, the signage and maps quite helpful.

I decided to leave a Summit Stone atop the boulder right … but found I couldn’t scramble it.

In the end, I tossed the Stone up top, a reward for the next bolder boulderer than I. 🙂

The hiking was much better than I expected. Yet uncrowded.

In 3hrs I saw only one other hiker, and one trail runner. It was perfect November weather on a Saturday.

Seems people do not go to Macao for walking, even though it’s next door to the hiking Mecca of Hong Kong.

See more photos from my day hike.

best hikes Hong Kong

If you research the topic, very quickly you’ll find this list:

MacLehose Trail (100km)
Lantau Trail (70km)
Hong Kong Trail (50km)
Wilson Trail (78km)

Some actually do those long trails end-to-end with backpacks. Staying at hostels or tenting (free).

Fragrant Campsite, Tai Mo Shan Country Park

But I’d recommend day hiking Hong Kong, cherry picking the best sections. It’s terrifically convenient to take public transport to and from trailheads.

In November — prime hiking season — special hiking events are scheduled. For example, FREE guided hikes are offered for tourists. (Sign up at Tourism Board Visitor Centres by Friday at 4pm.)

Without question Hong Kong is the best major city for urban hiking. Are there any other cities even close? … Leave a comment if you know of one.

A free booklet is widely available called The Inside Guide to Hikes and Walks in Hong Kong, in several different languages. It was all I used.

It recommends:

New Territories:
• MacLehose Trail – sections 1 & 2
• MacLehose Trail – section 2 (Tai Long Wan)
• Shing Mun Reservoir (TRIP) (highest section of the MacLehose Trail)

Hong Kong:
• Dragon’s Back (TRIP)
• Peak Circle Walk

Lantau Island
• Tung Chung

vista from atop Mt Davis

Highly addictive, mildly dangerous: four hiking gurus come clean about their obsession

The best related article I’ve found is on CNN GO – Best hiking in Hong Kong

Leave a comment if you have favourite hikes in Hong Kong I’ve not mentioned.

Shing Mun Reservoir hike, Hong Kong

trip report by site editor Rick McCharles

On advice of the The Inside Guide to Hikes and Walks in Hong Kong booklet distributed free by Hong Kong Tourism, I set off for what they call “Shing Mun Reservoir” (11km) in the New Territories.

It’s easy to get to the trailhead by public transit — except on Sunday afternoons in November when the bus is PACKED. Huge groups were organizing barbecue parties in Shek O Country Park.

I checked in first at the small Tai Mo Shan Country Park Visitor Centre and was greeted by these local critters …

That’s a Barking Deer. Weird.

It’s an easy up from the Visitor Centre on well marked and maintained trails.

But at one point, the trail became a paved road. Not awesome. I opted to detour instead under the peak passing the Youth Hostel. This turned out to be the right decision.

Since I never got to the top of the mountain, I left a Summit Stone in this outcropping, my lunch stop.

Here are my favourite cookies. Buy them.

Once past the hostel, I saw only these two other hikers the rest of the day.

I was off-trail of course, yet some kind of path was flagged all the way down.

It led me to a Chinese graveyard.

Many memorials had tables and stools to welcome visits from surviving family and friends.

Eventually I found my way to a bus stop. And back to the subway. It’s not all that easy to get “lost” in Hong Kong, one of the advantages of an urban hike.

Great adventure. … On my advice another couple from the hostel tried the same thing — and also had FUN times inventing their own route down the mountain.

See more photos from my day hike.

Te Araroa – the long pathway

Is finally opening officially.

Te Araroa is a foot trail stretching from Cape Reinga in the North of New Zealand to Bluff in the South.

mapOpening at the end of 2011, Te Araroa is one of the world’s longest walking trails. Hundreds of volunteers have helped create the continuous 3000 kilometre-long route.

Down the coastline, through the forest, across farmland, over volcanoes and mountain passes, along river valleys, and on green pathways through seven cities. …

official website – teararoa.org.nz

Buzz Burrell:

Leave it to the Kiwi’s to come up with a clever slogan:

“Because it wasn’t there.”

(via Adventure Blog)

best hikes in Japan

UPDATED with information from Wes Lang, editor of Hiking in Japan.

by site editor Rick McCharles

If you were to plan a hiking vacation in Japan, here’s my advice.

First, get a copy of Lonely Planet Hiking in Japan, the best guidebook in English.

Plan your itinerary scheduling more time than you expect getting to and from trailhead. (It’s easy to miss a bus connection and get stuck overnight somewhere.)

You’ll almost always lose a day due to bad weather.

An ideal trip, in my opinion, would include these 4 routes:

1) Tate-Yama to Kamikochi (6 to 10 days)
“Hike the length of the North Alps — top hike in Japan!

2) Daisetzu-zan Grand Traverse (4-7 days)
The ultimate long hike across the roof of Hokkaido.

3) Kita-dake to Huiri-dake (2-10 days depending on route)
Rough and remote traverse the length of the South Alps

* Mt Fuji is a must too, of course.
A wise man climbs Mt Fuji …

climbing Fuji - photo by Matthieu LIENART

To do all of those you should be there July – September. … you can get away with going in June if you’ve got a pair of light crampons. May if you’ve got skis.

Questions? Suggestions?

If you’ve hiked Japan, what do you think?

top travel destination is … ICELAND

According to Lonely Planet Best in Travel Readers’ Choice Awards.

… ‘Incredibly friendly, amazingly beautiful and one hell of a good time. Bars followed by geothermal hot springs.’

‘Iceland is the place to be in 2012 to see incredible displays of nature! The country of Iceland is currently experiencing two “maximum cycles”: One to do with increased volcano activity and another to do with the increased aurora activity for 2012.’ …

… ‘The wonders and creativity of nature at its best – untouched by humans…to this point. Geothermally heated pools to refresh the soul, literally seeing the rift valley between the American and European geological plates, visiting glaciers, seeing a real volcano, walking on terrain that cannot be seen anywhere else in the world…AND who wouldn’t want to see a puffin!!’ …

details on Lonely Planet

Marines climb Mt Etna

… On the morning of Oct. 25, about 20 Marines with Special Purpose Marine Air Ground Task Force 12 scaled its slopes.

… SCTT-2 is one of four specialized Marine teams in Italy as part of a newly formed unit tasked with mentoring African militaries dealing with regional terror threats. Their time spent in between missions, leaders have stressed, doesn’t have to go to waste.

The hike was designed to teach the Marines a lesson in the rigors of operating in a mountainous environment. …

read more on dvids

Some packs were as heavy as 40kg (88lbs)

_____

This is all good. But I can’t think of the American military in Italy without fuming (again) over the Cavalese cable car disaster of 1998.

… The disaster, which led to the death of 20 people, occurred when a U.S. military plane cut a cable supporting a gondola of an aerial tramway. …

The victims’ families got money but not much else. Another sorry episode in American military history.

It’s also known as the Strage del Cermis (“Massacre of Cermis”).