Multi-day trip to the Julian Alps
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| makris3. 02. 2016 21:13:47 |
Primož's suggestion seems very appropriate to me, otherwise you can help yourself in planning with the page http://www.pespoti.si. When logged into the system you can among other things assemble a planned route by sections.
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| IgorZlodej3. 02. 2016 21:17:35 |
Unfortunately, just knowing peak names is not enough for planning or even leading a group on a multi-day mountain tour (trips happen elsewhere), so you also need route description, difficulty assessment of individual sections, length, timetable, required equipment, proximity of huts on those paths and possibility of overnight stays and food/drink supply on the tour. The internet can only help as a supplement to all the previous.
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| simon794. 02. 2016 09:09:19 |
For me, one very nice part of mountaineering is already just planning the tour, reviewing maps, descriptions in the guidebook and here on hribi, making the plan... Since I go to the mountains mostly in summer, I usually plan tours already in winter, in spring ideas mature and I can hardly wait for conditions to finally allow the start of the tour. smatjaz, could you please put Eastern Julian Alps in Dropbox if you have them available somewhere? The Western ones were great! Bravo!
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| simon794. 02. 2016 14:58:49 |
Thanks, I always like to look at similar slideshows, trip reports, blogs... Great, for all this of yours I'll take special time in the evening with a beer...
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| Amritaya4. 02. 2016 18:51:13 |
We'll do the tour in summer time... The team consists of 4 men and 1 woman, all athletes and fitness is not a problem, used to via ferratas and pegs, equipment is there, actually as smatjaz said, I couldn't imagine the routes or connect routes so that in several days we can do as many peaks as possible. Now I found a bunch of mountain maps and various books on nonot, so I'll help myself with the recommended sites as well as literature.
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| smatjaz4. 02. 2016 22:06:19 |
Yes, just compare with newer maps so that no path from a very old map has been abandoned and is no longer marked, so you don't end up on pathless terrain, otherwise these old maps are fantastic. For planning help, get Tinet Mihelič's mountaineering guide - Julian Alps (has descriptions of difficulty, starting points, walking times.....), current paths here: http://www.planinske-poti.si/
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