Me and my buddy want to go trekking for 2 weeks in October, somewhere with wilderness, but we have no idea where.
We're located in Central Europe, but the distance to the destination doesn't matter really.
We thought about Nepal, it seems a bit too advanced though, but maybe we're overestimating it.
Anyone have some suggestions?
something tell me you never trekked before and that maybe sticking to someplace in Central Europed will be a better idea than going to Nepal and the like
No, we have quite the hiking experience in the Alps and some other European mountain ranges as well, but yeah definitely not something remote as Nepal.
The popular hikes in Nepal are logistically the easiest ones you'll ever find. You can trek from guesthouse to guesthouse and buy all the food you need along the way. Carry water, snacks and appropriate clothers and you'll be fine. Kind of like Romania, but even easier. Supposedly the popular routes are very busy in peak season though, but only went there myself during the rather calm shoulder season.
To add: you can also go fully independent on all the popular hikes, and there tons of less popular hikes that may or may not require self-sufficiency. Nepal kind of has it all.
>and there tons of less popular hikes that may or may not require self-sufficiency.
You have any suggestions?
When you went did you get a guide or did you go solo?
Solo, Three Passes Trek (plus Island Peak with guide) in Khumbu region. Hard to get lost really, the only tricky bit was crossing the glacier to Gokyo - had one tricky section back then, will look different now. If you go in peak season there will be other hikers with guides to follow.
Nepal is remote if you want it to be, but can be easy mode as well.
>If you go in peak season there will be other hikers with guides to follow.
That's a good point.
I'll look into what kind of treks look doable.
Even in December a couple of us grouped together and figured it out. I took the lead - had enough quite a bit of experience with glaciers - and ended up in a legit sketchy spot but got out of it and made sure the others took a different route. Wasn't too bad.
I recall the first time I went camping and hiking in Sweden with a buddy I had been good friends with for about five years at that point.
First night after having enjoyed some sausage and beer we get inside the tent and it took him about five minutes before he touched my leg gently with his hand, looking me in the eye.
It was painfully awkward as I had no idea he was a fruit, and I left the tent without a word and slept on a slab of stone like some sort of human sacrifice and ended up being assaulted by mosquitos and three ticks burrowing into my taint and armpit.
The next morning he asked what's wrong and all I could say was I'm not enjoying any of this so we went back to the bus stop and when the bus was about to leave I quickly got off and left him on there by himself which was probably the gayest thing I could've done aside from actually agreeing to being railed by him. I tried calling the next day after feeling sorry but the asshole had blocked my number.
Thanks for reading my blog.
I'm in Belgrade right now and I went to the medieval torture museum they have the cure for all this degeneracy that's going on in the world from being progressive, a queer, cheating, a loose female, a bitchy female etc none of this cancer is new except our masters promoting it. The penalty for treason is quite unpleasant
lmao these are literally fake schizo inventions by protestants in the 1600s and even later, then 'backdated' to the middle ages by victorian weirdos
>torture museum
Literal tourist traps. Almost every European city has one. Most of these are not even old or real.
You are a retard this one is associated with the national military museum next door
Castration and penis removal was reserved for traitors, now our masters do it to innocent children
Are you guys butt buddies? Be careful about the monkey poxx.
Have you considered one of the long distance paths in Europe? There's plenty and you can learn the skills you'd need for a place with less safety nets like Nepal while also soaking up really beautiful scenery, doing sighsee stuff and also meeting all kinds of interesting people, especially people your age. Have you ever gone for a hiking trip? Walked for more than 10 days? If not, start somewhere in Europe.
>somewhere with wilderness
you guys aren't surviving one day in real wilderness.
Georgia has many locations for all sort of sighsee stuff. it's close to europe and is relatively safe
Nepal will be fine they have some good routes that are not too challenging