Traveloak

trav·el·oak - A narrated film, video (or blog!) about travel :-)

  • Stories
  • Guides
  • Music
  • Photos
  • Reviews
  • Status Updates

Hiking in the Hailforest

March 6, 2011 by Karsten Leave a Comment

Test Heading

This article will take approximately 4 minutes to read. Don't have the time right now? No worries. You can email the ad-free version of the article to yourself and read it later!

What I thought I had signed up for: A moderately demanding hike that would deliver some great views.

What I actually signed up for: Brutal hike up a 4137m Mountain (Mt. Muhavura) with a total altitude gain of 1700m (2600m from the location of my hostel) on a round trip distance of 16km in a single day. Needless to say, my legs are still hurting while I’m writing this. And course it was too clouded to see anything. But before getting to the hiking path, I first had to make my way there on the back of motorcycle in the dark and over a bumpy road. With ‘road’ being a euphemism for a random scattering of dirt, large stones and pot holes.

Mt Muhavura

The hike was supposed to cover several vegetation zones – from former farmland that slowly turned to forest again, to actual rain forest to sub alpine forest (and the one or two others inbetween and after). While rain wouldn’t really be that surprising in a rain forest, hail was something different. Yes, it actually hailed. I wasn’t completely taken by surprise though, since a day earlier I ran into some Swedes who mentioned one of their friends being hit by hail stones so big, that they were actually drawing blood on his arms. Always nice to put things into perspective. But that wasn’t the only difficulty I encountered.

Armed Ranger Guide

Altitude sickness, mud, shoes that were too thin and slippy as well as the aforementioned hail turned everything above 2500m into a tread of misery. Altitude sickness was interesting. It started with a slight headache, that got somewhat stronger, then I just felt tired, similar to the lethargy that comes with a proper cold. Add nauseousness to that and and you can imagine that halfway through, I was utterly convinced of on never setting another foot on a mountain. But as we got down again and the supply of oxygen improved, so did my outlook on my future hiking career.

After all, there were some good highlights: Seeing clouds race up from behind you and engulf the landscape around you in fog was pretty amazing. I also got a chuckle out of the reason provided for the accompanying guy with a Kalashnikov. The official explanation given was that ‘we might run into young, aggressive buffaloes’. Yeah, right. I decided that close proximity to DR Congo and a nearby national park that recently saw 8 rangers getting killed was the more likely cause.

Karsten Aichholz

Karsten is a 30-something tech entrepreneur turned writer who finds his travel destinations on CNN. As an active couchsurfer and host he loves to meet new people and find out what makes them tick. He can be bribed with iced coffee and beta accounts for mobile spreadsheet apps.

Filed Under: Stories, Trip Reports

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Comments

  • Sean Sellek on A One Week Itinerary for Ladakh
  • Karsten Aichholz on An In-Depth Travel Guide to Ladakh
  • Kit Johnson on From Armenia to Zimbabwe: A Guide to Creating Memorable Travel Experiences
  • Karsten Aichholz on The Street Ratchada
  • Sean Clarke on The Street Ratchada

Traveloak

  • About the Author
  • New Home Page Travel Oak
  • Private Policy

Status Updates

The Street Ratchada

June 21, 2016 By Karsten 2 Comments

I keep joking that I now live in 'The Street' - a recently built mall near the Thailand Cultural Center subway station in the Din Daeng district of Bangkok. While living might not be the right term, … [Read More...]

Copyright © 2025 — Traveloak • Log in