For the ultimate in picturesque, outdoorsy getaways, check out these long walks from across the globe.
From Lonely Planet's Stepping out: the world’s best long walks!
Forget planes, trains and automobiles – the greenest and greatest way to travel is to use your own two feet. It immerses you in a country like nothing else. and, with time and a bit of fitness, you can traverse whole counties, countries – even continents. Here are a few trails to get your feet itching…
Waitukubuli National Trail, Dominica
Start/finish: Scotts Head to Cabrits
Length: 184km
The Caribbean’s first long-distance hike tip-to-toes the rugged, rainforested isle of Dominica – the alternative Caribbean, where nature still rules and you’re more likely to pass parrots than people. The trail is divided into 14 sections: pick a couple – the Boiling Lake bit, or bird-rich Morne Diablotin – or do the lot, using homestays en route.
St Paul’s Trail, Turkey
Start/finish: Perge to Yalvac
Length: 500km
Heard of Turkey’s coast-tracing Lycian Way? This is its offbeat brother – a wilder, inland ramble dotted with Roman ruins and mooching tortoises. Beginning near Antalya, it wends north, following St Paul’s first missionary foray into Asia Minor. Waymarking is complete, signposts non-existent – bring a compass and a sense of adventure.
Baekdu-Daegan Trail, South Korea
Start/finish: North Korea border to Cheonwang-bong
Length: 735km
This hike should be twice as long: it follows the Baekdu-Daegan ridge, which dragon-backs the Korean Peninsula for 1,400km. Only North Korea’s not keen on hikers… so stick to South Korea’s stretch. Here, the ridge is deeply spiritual – a symbol of nationhood – and small shrines dot the mountainscapes: to walk this path is to tread on Korea’s soul.
Bibbulmun Track, Western Australia
Start/finish: Kalamunda to Albany
Length: 964km
Waugal lead the way on this epic Aussie tramp: a rainbow serpent from the Aboriginal Dreaming, it’s depicted on the Bibbulmun’s waymarkers, ever-present amid the granite peaks, tingle forest and Southern Ocean beaches. Good but basic campsites are handily spaced every 20km – just watch out for the snakes…
South West Coast Path, UK
Start/finish: Minehead to Poole
Length: 1,008km
It started because of smuggling: in the 19th century banditry was so rife that guards had to patrol England‘s entire south coast. Today, those old patrol paths are the UK’s longest National Trail, tracing every cove, cranny and cute fishing village in Somerset, Devon, Cornwall and Dorset. It takes eight weeks, non-stop, including 35,000m of climbing: a good excuse for fuelling on a pasty or two.
Via Francigena, Europe
Start/finish: Canterbury, UK to Rome, Italy
Length: 1,700km
The Via Francigena is the ‘other Camino’. While many medieval pilgrims embarked for Spain‘s Santiago de Compostela, some set off to worship saints Peter and Paul in Rome. Few use this way now, but it can still be walked – across England, France, Switzerland and Italy: an 80-day hike back in history.
Great Himalaya Trail, Nepal
Start/finish: Kanchenjunga to Humla
Length: 1,700km
Mountain walking doesn’t get much better: a traverse of the world’s highest range. Launched in 2010, the GHT spans the Nepalese Himalaya, passing rhododendron forests, high-altitude lakes, 8,000m peaks and the remote communities that call them home – providing vital income and support. Do the lot in 160 days, or choose one of ten tantalising sections.
Continental Divide Trail, USA
Start/finish: Antelope Wells, New Mexico to Glacier NP, Montana
Length: 4,960km
Connect Canada and Mexico via 5,000km of backcountry walking along the north-south spine of the USA. The Continental Divide follows the Rocky Mountains, dissecting New Mexican badlands, the gold ghost-towns of Colorado, the geyser-spews of Wyoming and the granite massifs of Montana. The trail is only 70% usable (though some have walked its entirety); dip in – at Yellowstone National Park or the San Juan Mountains – for a fine taster.
Trans Canada Trail, Canada
Start/finish: St John’s, Newfoundland to Victoria, British Columbia
Length: 22,000km
Got a spare few years and a very sturdy pair of boots? The grand dame of grand rambles is an east-west traverse that also shoots north to take in Canada‘s Arctic reaches. It’s a work in progress, currently comprising 400 mini trails in every province: chose from blueberry walks in Nova Scotia, gold-rush history in the Yukon – or do the whole lot…
Showing posts with label turkey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label turkey. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
The world’s best long walks
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Monday, August 8, 2011
Stone Age man created a massive network of underground tunnels
This is intiguing! Got this info from MailOnline.
Going underground: The massive European network of Stone Age tunnels that weaves from Scotland to Turkey
- Evidence of tunnels has been found under hundreds of Neolithic settlements
- That so many tunnels have survived after 12,000 years shows that the original network must have been enormous
Last updated at 3:45 PM on 4th August 2011
Stone Age man created a massive network of underground tunnels criss-crossing Europe from Scotland to Turkey, a new book on the ancient superhighways has claimed.
German archaeologist Dr Heinrich Kusch said evidence of the tunnels has been found under hundreds of Neolithic settlements all over the continent.
In his book - Secrets Of The Underground Door To An Ancient World - he claims the fact that so many have survived after 12,000 years shows that the original tunnel network must have been enormous.
Evidence of Stone Age tunnels has been found under hundreds of Neolithic settlements all over Europe - the fact that so many have survived after 12,000 years shows the original tunnel network must have been huge
'In Bavaria in Germany alone we have found 700metres of these underground tunnel networks. In Styria in Austria we have found 350metres,' he said.
'Across Europe there were thousands of them - from the north in Scotland down to the Mediterranean.
'Most are not much larger than big wormholes - just 70cm wide - just wide enough for a person to wriggle along but nothing else.
'They are interspersed with nooks, at some places it's larger and there is seating, or storage chambers and rooms.
'They do not all link up but taken together it is a massive underground network.'
Not for the claustrophobic: Most of the tunnels are just 70cm wide - just wide enough for a person to slowly wriggle through
Some experts believe the network was a way of protecting man from predators while others believe that some of the linked tunnels were used like motorways are today, for people to travel safely regardless of wars or violence or even weather above ground.
The book notes that chapels were often built by the entrances perhaps because the Church were afraid of the heathen legacy the tunnels might have represented, and wanted to negate their influence.
In some cases writings have been discovered referring to the tunnels seen as a gateway to the underworld.
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