Via Alpina Green Route vs. Haute Route?

Short summary – read this first

A couple is planning to hike the Via Alpina Green Route this summer and wants to know how it compares in difficulty and gear requirements to the Haute Route they completed a couple of years ago. They are also interested in discovering great side trips along the way.

Key takeaways:
  • If you successfully completed the Haute Route, you should manage the Via Alpina, but be mindful of weather and personal fitness.
  • The Via Alpina is of medium difficulty with some exposed sections; study comprehensive trail info online for details.
  • Consider side trips to the Montreux area or Lake Geneva, and other options from Kandersteg, Lauterbrunnen, and Engelberg.
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InfoAI-generated summary
  • Anonymous
    Inactive
    83503 posts
    10 March 2016 at 1:11:18 #808575

    Hello there,

    My partner and I hiked the Haute Route from Chamonix to Zermatt a couple years ago and our next project for this summer is the Via Alpina Green Route. We were wondering how the two compare in terms of difficulty, exposure and gear required. Also, if there are any great side trips we would love to know. Any advice would be much appreciated! Thanks!

  • Annika
    Moderator
    7328 posts
    Reply 1 of 1 • 12 March 2016 at 8:13:22 #849231

    Welcome djohns8, thanks for joining us!

    Unfortunately I haven’t done either of these routes,so it’s a bit hard to compare. The Haute Route is a quite challenging Alpine trail; if you managed to complete it succesfully, you should be fine with the Via Alpina too. But of course, this strongly depends on your experience and fitness, and (weather) circumstances during your tour shouldn’t be underestimated. Always take caution of general hiking rules and precautionary measures.

    Having said that, the Via Alpina is listed as a trail of medium difficulty, but with some exposed and difficult sections, the highest legs at about 2200 m. Length and difficulty differ per section. I’d advise to carefully study the very comprehensive information at http://www.wanderlandschweiz. ch/en. It lists descriptions of each leg, overnight options, height profiles, etcetera.

    You’ll be passing some of Switzerland’s prettiest regions during this tour, wit lots of options for side trips. For example, you could start or end with exploring the Montreux area/Lake Geneva. Also, consider side trips from e.g. Kandersteg and Lauterbrunnen/Grindelw ald. And you may like a day tour to the Lake Lucerne region from Engelberg or the Altdorf area.

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