This was, by far, the most brutal hike I've ever done. The first segment was only about a mile, but it took well over an hour. It was something like 1200 feet of rise. I think that I spent more time resting than I did actually hiking. The second segment was about 6 miles, relatively strenuous, which I did in a little over 2 1/2 hours.
A stream that runs under the bus stop.
The view up the main lift to Alpe di Siusi (11 euro).
After I got up the main lift, I had a bratwurst and water (4.80 euro), caught a bus (2 euro) then took a chair lift (7.50 euro) up the side of the valley. Here is a view from the chair lift.
It apparently gets so cold there that they need canopies on their chair lifts. It was certainly cold while I was there, even in early September. I'm pretty cold tolerant, and I still had to buy a fleece (40 euro) when I got off the lift. I'd guess that ambient air temperature was something like 55 degrees. It was comfortable in the sun, but as soon as you stepped into the shade or the wind started blowing (and the wind was pretty much always blowing) it got very cold.
This was the first leg of my hike, up to that outcrop on the left. There is a road/path that winds around the hill and up the backside, but I just went straight up the hill/ridge that is on the right. It was tough going, sometimes on all fours, but I didn't come all the way to Italy to walk around on a road, dammit. The second picture shows the road/path, which I did use to walk back down. It was pretty treacherous, very steep and lots of loose gravel. I saw one guy lose his footing and do a very painful looking back plant.
I saw this guy on the way up the hill.
This was the path up the backside.
Once you get up to the outcrop, this is the path the rest of the way up the mountain. If you zoom in, you can see the people (indicated with the pin). I really wanted to hike up "until I ran out of green" but it just wasn't going to happen.
People use stones to write their names or make pictures on the small flat meadow on the outcrop. I just brought a few stones home with me.
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