YourWay Trek
Would you do it without the gear?
Spicing up my solo adventures with the amazing via ferrata! đ§ââď¸â°ď¸
Itâs about the simple things. When you hike, you move from A to B - safely, and thatâs the primary goal of multi-day hiking.
But all the rest comes as a full package: the growth, the adventure, stepping out of your comfort zone, discovering new places, people, and cultures, and encountering all the challenges and the full range of human emotions.
Itâs where you leave the day-to-day anxiety behind and gain a new perspective. â¨ď¸
đHut-to-hut is the ideal balance.
đBackpacking with camping-- to challenge yourself even further.
What's your preference?
This region is literally the capital of wild shelters. đď¸đď¸
Walking through the Pyrenees, you realize quickly: these mountains look after you.
It feels like there are more wild stone huts (cabanas) scattered here than anywhere else.
Basic. Raw. Just stone walls and a roof to protect you from the elements.
âSometimes, luxury isn't a 5-star hotel --> It's finding one of these open doors just when you need it most.
âQ: Would you spend a night here alone? đ
06/01/2026
I want to share a trek I genuinely love
but Iâll say this upfront: itâs not for everyone.
When I first read about the Zillertaler Runde (some of you might know parts of it as the Berliner HĂśhenweg / Berlin High Trail), I was honestly terrified.
Exposed sections.
Via ferrata bits.
Long days.
I seriously considered switching to something safer or more straightforward.
Whatâs funny is that in hindsight, I remember it as almost perfect alpine route.
Yes, itâs challenging.
Yes, there are ferrata sections.
You donât need gear, but you do need to be comfortable with exposure in general. And no, itâs not one of those trails where you just walk and zone out.
What really surprised me was the balance. Thereâs a beautiful rhythm between demanding trail and calmer sections, even though focus is always required. The terrain keeps changing constantly. Boulders, wide open plateaus, almost flat stretches, gentle ups and downs, streams, sharp climbs, tough descents, and of course a lake. It has everything.
I wasnât bored for a second.
The last day was exhausting, I wonât lie. I broke it by sleeping in a bivouac, which helped a lot. At one point the weather didnât play along, so I briefly detoured into Italy, stopped at a rifugio, then rejoined the route near the lake and continued the loop. That small decision completely changed the rest of the trek and gave me perfect weather afterward.
The landscapes are wild, raw, and deeply alpine.
So no, I wouldnât recommend it blindly.
But if youâre comfortable with exposure, enjoy routes that keep you alert, and like solving little problems along the way, the Zillertaler Runde can be incredibly rewarding.
Sometimes the trails that scare us the most on paper are the ones we remember most fondly.
26/12/2025
Trekking myths busted
High mountains make problems look a whole lot smaller.
Perspective? I guess so.
Trekking involves stepping out of comfort and overcoming challenges.
Multi-day treks allow you to practice it. đŞ
And the views - that's the bonus!
adventure
For me, itâs not just walking.
Itâs struggle.
Itâs challenge.
Frustration. Connection.
Moments of âthis is sh*tâ --> followed by âwowâ.
It's also heavy.Messy.Beautiful.Real.
You doubt.
You continue.
You arrive.
And suddenly you realize-
It was worth it. I did it.
A trek is emotion. An opportunity for growth, for healing.
A journey to reconnect with yourself.
Simple đ
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