About Malesia e Madhe Sep 4, 2020 | Destinations, Malesi e MadheIn the early twentieth century Edith Durham, a young British explorer, was lured towards Malesia e Madhe, the land of the Great Mountains. Despite many difficulties, she was carried away by the charm of an ancient culture still alive: the land of the living past. To relive the same emotions of Durham, we invite travelers to the discovery of Kelmend, one of the most remote and isolated areas of Northern Albania. The adventure will expose them to unforgettable landscapes, uncontaminated nature, and the exploration of ancient traditions and customs. The unspoiled villages have many treasures to explore and culture to inspire and move. Peace and tranquility will be the outcome of exposure to family life. Family-run traditional guesthouses provide a warm welcome for guests with authentic cuisine for gourmets, uncontaminated nature for the naturalist, and mountains for the adventurous lovers of arduous climbing. Expert and capable guides will lead you through awe-inspiring terrain. All the above is embellished by the wit and hilarity of Kelmendas people making hospitality a sacred law, unchanged over the years, the same that at the beginning of last century led the young lade to fall in love with Northern Albania. Shkreli Natural Regional Park – The Entrance Gate to the Alps A region, part of Malesia e Madhe, located between Thethi National Park and Skadar Lake in Shkodra and Kelmend region in the northwest. It takes higher importance for the diversity of the territory, from the fields of sage and lavender close to Skadar Lake to the valleys of Boga and Razma for an alpine landscape. Another advantage is the near distance with Shkodra 20 km or Montenegro 25 km. The area of Shkreli is well known for the chestnut forest, which constitutes a protected heritage as a natural monument. A few agro-farms, restaurants, and guesthouses offer different exploring and entertainment activities for the visitors.
Thethi, eternal love of tourists and hikers Aug 29, 2020 | Blogs from Albanian AlpsThethi, eternal love of tourists and of hikers. Italian journalist and writer, Indro Mantovanelli in the book “Albania one and a thousand write, “O migrant who goes to FC, Do not stop there but continue on up and only then will you understand what Shkodra is”. It takes weeks to climb the most beautiful peaks of Theth, because they are so excellent and so many. The peaks of the mountains are always covered in snow and sunshine, which is always welcoming and decorates Theth’s stunning valley. It is one of the most favored areas by foreign tourists in Albania, but also by Albanians themselves. The Alps of Theth, Albania are increasingly visited by foreign tourists. In addition to our beautiful coastline, there are mountainous landscapes such as Thethi, Razma, Valbona, Rragami, Lura, etc., They always lure and attract more visitors from many different countries. Thus, Theth, with its stunning natural beauty and healthy climate and curative properties, is not only visited by local tourists, but also by many foreigners. Many of the latter in transit from Theth Rragam, Valbona, or come from Valbona and the other territories, but always spend time in Thethi. Thethi – Balkans Peace Park Project (BPPP) The BPPP aims to facilitate the creation of a trans-national, cross border park in the adjourning mountains of Kosova, Montenegro, and northern Albanian as a symbol of peace and cooperation. Its aims are to promote environmental conservation, stimulate local employment, and promote sustainable visitor activities in the region. Antonia Young, a British citizen and President of The BPPP and Walter Todd, an American citizen, are two people to thank for this project. These two foreign nationals have taken an interest in the nature and values of the village, the culture, and the cultural and architectural values of the houses in Theth more than any ministers of Culture and Tourism of Albania since 1990. They have arranged for the children of Theth to learn English through summer school that is organized every year in Theth. Through these projects, the residents are represented in domestic and global tourism. Antonia Young has visited Thethi, spending the whole of the month of July here in 2005. There she visited every family to explain the tourist opportunities to them. There are many organized tourist guides and university students studying nature. Todd has been to Theth as representative of the Peace Park Project. In the first year, Theth Summer School has run some significant projects. He has led and invested in, with the support of foreign donors, the construction of the bridge over the Grunasit canyon, and the wooden roof of Kolajve mill. Todd has led the project during the year in Theth and has visited all the families of the village. A big help has been given to the workers and residents of Theti. Residents have done their utmost to keep to the conditions that have been. Edith Durham, said: Life in Theth was beautiful. I forgot everything for the rest of the world *. German technical assistance program (GTZ) in Theth. Since 1988 there has been development cooperation between Germany and Albania moving toward EU integration. The focus of the work is on sustainable economic development and water supply. The GTZ water project advises on improving conditions for a safe drinking water supply and sustainable wastewater disposal. In Theth the GTZ has provided funds for the first homes to be capable of receiving family tourists. Nature and water in that area are well known for their curative properties with regards to health since 1915 with analysis performed by the Austrians. GTZ has supported tourism giving some families a lot of money since 2000. This, in turn, has created the opportunity for families to have better facilities to host foreigners in their homes. GTZ’s support is made in light of its projects to strengthen the private sector in Albania. GTZ has been supporting private sector tourism throughout Albania to organize a national association. The Albanian Association of Tourism has been operating since 2008, in Albania and includes three main sectors, hotels, travel agencies, and restaurants, which are the basis of the tourism business. Albanian Alps that captivate the foreigners. High mountains surround Theth and rugged alps, sheep paths, the tip of Radohimës, Sheniku, Papluku, Maya and Alice, the peaks of Jezercës, the tip of Arapi, Maja Black, Maja Zorgjit, hidden in their interior numerous dealings with climbers, botanists, geologist and those more sympathetic to the Alps, on these this area leaves an indelible impression. All these are described for years by the top Albanians and foreign climbers. Lots of things have been written about Thethi, Georg Heinshemer, a great alpinist wrote, comparing with it with the Tyrol. “If you go to Thethi you could write a book about its beauty. The water, air and nature these are the stories”. Famous caves and beautiful waterfalls. There is a miracle that is called the Grunas waterfalls of which are about 25-30 meters high. They are so beautiful, the mouth of the canyon of Grunas is about 2 km long and 60 meters deep and 4 meters wide. There are many famous caves like the “Bira e rrathve” (round holes) and the “Arapi” with lakes and an underground gallery of giant stone. Thethi has 12 small mills and a plant which furnishes Theth with electricity. In Theth there are about 80 permanent water sources. In August Theth was visited by more than 8,000 foreign tourists, and they all visited the canyons, waterfalls, museums, and caves that Theth has. There are over 130 species of medicinal plants and about 50 plants that can be used for food coloring. The most common tree in the area is the beech, which covers almost 90% of the surface of the park. Theth has problems and requirements. There is some evidence of essential problems that hamper the development of tourism and family hotel in Theth. Investment in the infrastructure is needed in particular the following areas; The Roads A remote road services Theth since 1936. The street was designed by Ing. Spiro Koleka and is supported by the government and the citizens of Shkodra from time to time. Since that year this remote area had kept the same track and without any intervention to improve it. It has taken several years for the road to be paved with asphalt in the village Dedaj. It has taken five years for it in the town of Boge. It is unknown how many years it will take in Theth. Every year residents of the area and tourists who want to visit Theth expect the road to be paved with asphalt. Energy/Electricity. Thethi has had electricity since 1966, through the plant that is supplied by the river that crosses the central village. Since 1990 Albania has had worsening problems with electricity supplies. One of the obstacles and major problems with electricity in Theth is the national energy system. In Theth there has not been any investment in the power grid. It is not equipped with meters like any other country in Albania. The energy in Theth does not exceed 150 KW, the fact that hampers investment in the tourist area that is so necessary for the families. Contacts with leaders of KESH have made it clear that this power plant is privatized and we can not make any investment. ______________________________ * Concern Balkans. Edith Durham. Wednesday date 10 February 2010
Rivers that rise from the Albanian Alps Jul 25, 2020 | Albanian Alps, Blogs from Albanian AlpsValbona River The river of Valbona, which rises into Rrogami, is one of the most beautiful rivers of Albania characterized by a unique beauty. The Valbona River is one of the rivers of the Albanian Alps, with cold and crystalline water, picturesque waterfalls and canyons that attract tens of thousands of foreign and domestic tourists every year. However, all this tourism industry built on the tradition of hospitality and the beauties of nature in the heart of the Albanian Alps risks to disappear and not only but the income by which the inhabitants of these areas make a living may disappear as well. Gashi River The Valbona River joins the Gashi River, which is a UNESCO-protected property along with the beech forest on both sides. In this river, small groups and adventurers, especially those who love adventure, can go fishing and canoeing. All ancient beech forest natural reserves are fiercely protected in a total of 12 European countries, Albania being among them. UNESCO has included two Albanian natural reserves in its World Heritage List precisely because of the stunning beech forests found within them. These areas are Gashi River, located in the basin of Valbona National Park, and Rrajca. Albania proclaimed the Gashi River a natural reserve back in 1996. The 3000-hectare-reserve is located northeast of the Albanian Alps, in Tropoja, Kukës county, entirely removed from any inhabited areas. Virgin beech forests cover a large part of the city. The geological basin is crossed by the river and is surrounded by swamps and canals, which, for decades, have kept the rich flora and fauna alive and helped it flourish, undisturbed by the human hand. The geology and hydro-geology of the area In the basin of the Gashi River, the rocks of the oldest geological age in Albania can be found. They are represented by igneous, volcano-sedimentary, and slightly metamorphic limestones. The Torkuz granodiorite massif separates the terrigenous and volcanic rocks. Younger deposits are depositions on old river terraces. The river of Cem, along with its canyon, its rare fantastic beauty, and clean water belongs to the group of very attractive and beautiful rivers of Europe, which is visited by lovers all year long and especially during summer. Cem originates in Kelmend, Malësi e Madhe, Albania, and flows through the region of Malësia. The river has two tributaries: Cem of Vukël and Cem of Selcë, which join at the confluence of Tamarë. Cem of Vukël – the more important of the two in terms of water volume – rises at 900 m and flows for 17.9 km. It passes through a narrow canyon, a terrain which widens only near Kozhnja, where deposition has formed a small limestone valley. A creek called Cem of Nikç also contributes to its flow volume except for the summer period when it runs dry. The stream flows into the Moraca River, which together supplies Shkodra Lake with water. During summer, Cemi transforms into an attractive environment for different vacationers who prefer the wonders of this river, where one should point out Tergaj, which has become a place for bathing and resting for the Highlanders. The Kiri valley in Shkodra is one of the most beautiful areas in the north of the country, is only a few kilometers away from the center of Shkodra. This area has been “discovered” for four years by the people of Shkodra who tremendously visit it during the weekend. The crystalline water of the Kiri is named after the village of Kire of Dukagjini. The valley through which it passes is a breathtaking and navigable canyon for adventurers who want to swim in the canyon. This river, during its lineage into the truck, creates exceptional pools on the stones of this river. There is a canyon in the river Kiri, one of the most beautiful in Albania, and the cleanliness, calm and fresh air of the surrounding mountains is what the valley of Kiri has to offer from where it flows. Every weekend when the weather is warm, the citizens of Shkodra, foreign tourists, and village dwellers frequent these beaches for sunbathing in freshwater, as well as for water sports. Kiri is a village in the Administrative Unit of Shkodra Municipality were in ancient times, there was a castle that today has only a few ruins and nothing more, but even today this place is called the “Town of Kir” or “Castle of Kaur.” The name of this village is also named after the river, which originates from the slopes of Biga, Intercontinental, and Neck of Bkkas and flows into the Drin near Shkodra Fortress. The river got its name from the village and not vice versa the river name, because in earlier times this river was named Clusala. Above this stands the Middle Bridge built during the Ottoman rule. Today, the canyons of this river in its rocky flow have become an attraction for nature tourists, river beaches, water sports, etc. that continue even in these warm September days. Life happens on the banks of Shala Shala River is a miracle that can be enjoyed in the beauties of where it was born in Theth until it flows into Koman Lake. Looking at this oasis, where Shala embraces Drini, now Koman Lake is a real wonder. Recently, this river has become the most frequented place in northern Albania. The site where it has today received an extraordinary name is also called, because the headman of Dukagjin, Leka, passed his last years here. The Shala Valley is a virgin river in area that has only recently been incorporated into tourist agency guides, attracting particular attention due to its untouched nature and numerous opportunities that offer.
Bujtina Peraj Vermosh May 15, 2020 | Accommodation in Kelmend, Thethi-Hotels Vermosh Albania Bujtina Peraj Vermosh Guesthouse Peraj is set in Vermosh. Among the various facilities of this property are barbecue, garden, and the mountains. Booking & Contact Phone: +355676669022 Email: GuestHouseperaj@yahoo.com Room rates starting from 25€ / person bed and breakfast Featuring free WiFi and a barbecue, Peraj Guesthouse offers accommodation in Vermosh, 15 km from Gusinje. The bed and breakfast have a children’s playground and views of the mountain, and guests can enjoy all the products of Vermosh , everything that we serve is homemade. The guesthouse offers a continental or vegetarian breakfast… A variety of popular activities are available in the area around the property, including skiing and hiking… Free private parking is available on site. There is a shared lounge at the property. You can engage in various activities, such as skiing and horse riding. Podgorica is 89 km from Peraj Guesthouse, while Kolašin is 91 km from the property. Tirana can be reached in 200 km, while Shkodra is 98 km away. Shower Room Facilities Balcony Room Facilities Desk Room Facilities Bathroom Room Facilities Standart rates in the Alps Average 25 – 35 € night No matter if you want to visit and stay in Vermosh, Lepushe Theth, Valbone, Komani Lake, Shala River, we can find accommodation for you. Call now for the best offer English Speaking Phone 00355 69 60 15 771 Send us an email with your details Reserverations email info@thethi-guide.com FollowFollowFollowFollowFollow Guesthouse Peraj Vermosh Location
Hiking Beyond Borders in the Balkans – The New York Times Mar 7, 2019 | Blogs from Albanian Alps The seasons were changing fast, and the warmth I’d taken for granted had vanished as night mustered in the hills. I gathered the blanket around my neck and listened to the dogs barking below. It was now long past midnight, with only a few hours until the morning call to prayer. Multimedia Peter Grubb, the owner of an Idaho-based outfitter called ROW Adventures, sat in the corner flipping through maps under the lone working light bulb. We were in Room 305 of Hotel Rosi, a bright yellow block of a building in Gusinje, a predominately Muslim community in the former Yugoslav republic of Montenegro. South of here, a rocky trail climbed steadily into a vampiric maw of limestone peaks. Tomorrow we would follow that trail and slip virtually unnoticed into Albania. That would have been among the stupidest things you could do had it been the 1980s, when Albania was the North Korea of Europe. From World War II until his death in 1985, the Communist leader Enver Hoxha hammered Albania into an oppressive hermit state. He extirpated dissent, outlawed religion and lowered the age for executions to 11. The “Great Teacher” hermetically sealed the borders and distanced himself from other Communists. “We have fought empty-bellied and barefooted but have never kowtowed to anybody!” he once howled at Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet leader. Hoxha’s final heart attack and the eventual collapse of Communism hailed the beginning of the end of Albania’s isolation, and in recent years the once-tense border region separating Albania, Montenegro and Kosovo has become the kind of place you’d want to visit. Aid money, remittances and relative stability have helped create a middle class, and tourism in the region is beginning to boom. Guides take groups kayaking under stone bridges in Montenegro, hiking around Albanian archaeological sites and even skiing in Kosovo. New hotels are pumping fresh life into stale Communist hangouts, even if the water isn’t always hot. “If you want luxury, sorry, go to Paris or New York,” Kela Qendro, a 33-year-old Albanian working for a small tourism company, told me later. “You come here to see the real stuff. The shepherd. The old woman picking pomegranates. You go up to villagers and they will invite you inside their home for the joy of meeting you.” Mr. Grubb, who runs about seven trips a year to Croatia, had long been fascinated with this less-developed region of the Balkans. About a year ago he learned of an intriguing new way to explore it — on foot. The Peaks of the Balkans Trail, a project coordinated by the German Agency for International Cooperation and involving dozens of other groups (including women’s associations, tourism offices and environmental nongovernmental organizations), formally opened last year as a 120-mile trek designed to foster tourism and teamwork among historically quarrelsome neighbors. The path literally links Muslim, Catholic and Orthodox enclaves, as well as Slavs and numerous Albanian tribes in three adjoining national parks, each showcasing the border region’s inestimable beauty. Towering rock walls scream for thousands of feet into an unimpeachable sky. Farmhouses gather like asters in valleys. Wolves and lynxes pad through landscapes soaked in green. There would be no real roughing it, since locals have turned ancestral homes into rustic inns offering beds, homemade cheeses, meats and brandy. Even wandering across remote, unmanned borders is now legal, thanks to a new permit system introduced last summer. Mr. Grubb needed only some roll-with-it travelers willing to be his guinea pigs before offering the trip for real. Seven gregarious Texans and I signed up. Now, sitting in the hotel room, Mr. Grubb put down the map and sighed. He seemed restless. We were about to head deep into the Albanian Alps, better known as the cursed mountains, some of Europe’s most glaciated peaks after the Swiss Alps and the highest summits of the Dinaric Alps. The whole trail could be hiked in about 10 days, but we had just 5 to do parts of it. Even so, there were big days and taxing climbs ahead. We would be among the first American-outfitted groups to wander into the maw, and in these parts, the order of things is more mystery than fact. “This could be more cutting-edge than I thought,” Mr. Grubb said, and he switched off the light. EARLIER THAT DAY I had met the Texans at the airport in Podgorica, Montenegro’s pint-size capital. Rainey Rogers, a former amateur boxing champion, was the youngest in the group at 49. Richard Dill, a retired pharmacy franchise mogul whom everyone called Dick, was the oldest at 73. Mark David, a real estate investor, had rallied the guys around the hike. It was dark when we arrived in Gusinje, but the morning dawned bright and warm. Mount Rosi, the hotel’s 8,274-foot-high namesake, rose to the southeast, while the 8,838-foot-high pyramid of Mount Jezerca lorded over the south. Around 9 a.m. Enes Dreskovic, the newly minted director of the Prokletije National Park, one of the three border parks, roared up in a hunter-orange Pinzgauer, a military transport vehicle, to take us to the trail head. The bench seats in the back were too small for all of us, so I stood on the rear bumper and clung to the roll bars as we bounced down country lanes. Women in head scarves snapped upright from their fields to watch us, while Rainey hurled Blow Pops to children who stared from the side of the road. A gentleman in a pinstripe vest steered a horse cart groaning with firewood. We were alone when we ground to a halt in the Ropojana Valley, a fairy-tale scoop of swaying pines and scalloped ridges that even the Pinzgauer could not penetrate. The trail began in earnest here. An Albanian from Theth, our goal 12 miles away, had supposedly left the village at 3 a.m. with horses to carry our luggage, but there was no sign of him. “Well, welcome to the ‘A’ in adventure travel,” Mr. Grubb said, scratching his red beard. He proposed the only logical Plan B: to stuff what we needed into our daypacks and rendezvous with our bags two days later. The Texans seemed less annoyed than antsy to get romping through the magnificent landscape. “Let’s repack and get after it,” boomed Paul Pogue, a pilot. Rocks as white as marble complained under our boots as we marched toward a broad meadow in the midst of a beech forest. A griffon vulture performed lazy 8’s overhead. Shards of silvery-gray limestone shot into the sky like missiles. Of all the images I’d had of the region, none were as beautiful as this. “Amazing, isn’t it?” Mark marveled. By early afternoon we had crested the Peja Pass, a treeless scab of rock and wind with an elevation of about 5,000 feet. Ghostly stone barracks stood guard with tattered burlap billowing in the window frames. Inside I found a pair of size 9 dress shoes and rooms reeking of ungulates. Dome-shape bunkers with machine gun slits and roofs splintered like blooming onions fortified the high points. Fearing an invasion from all directions, Hoxha had built an estimated 700,000 of these death pods around a country smaller than Maryland. “Welcome to Albania,” bellowed our 28-year-old Montenegrin guide, Semir Kardovic, mimicking gunfire. The 2,600-vertical-foot climb to the pass had been difficult but the 4,000-vertical-foot descent into Theth was brutal. Down and down we plummeted along a series of knee-smashing switchbacks into an enormous glacial valley. By dusk, pointy houses with orange light seeping from the doorways winked through the forest. We made our way toward one, a medieval-looking guesthouse with squat windows and stone walls. “Good evening,” said the keeper, Pavlin Polia, greeting us. He was in his early 30s, tall with midnight hair and a Roman nose. His Kosovan wife, Vlora, fetched some glasses while his brother, Nardi, shook our hands. We did our best to ignore his black eye. “Fight,” Nardi shamefully explained. Inside the main room a slender stringed instrument called a cifteli hung on the wall above a barrel filled with bowling balls of cheese. Rainey limped in and lay his head down on a long wooden table while Dick collapsed onto one of the 15 beds upstairs. I slugged two shots of plum brandy, convinced we had wandered back in time. Like many Albanians, Mr. Polia had fled the country as soon as he could. He worked in construction in Italy and still remembers his first Pepsi. He returned to his family home in Theth a decade later and converted it into a guesthouse that opened in 2009. Now 300 people a year stay with him, the equivalent of half the village, each paying about 25 euros, or about $31 at $1.25 to the euro, for a bed and meals. “In Italy I had lots of opportunity to make money, but that was not my passion,” he told me over wild marjoram tea. I headed upstairs to wash but Mr. Polia stopped me. “Don’t forget your luggage,” he said. “You have my bag?” I asked, incredulously. “Of course,” he said. “I brought it with the horses.” THAT NIGHT FATIGUE sloughed off my body into a pile of warm blankets and I awoke to the prickly scent of roasting peppers. After a breakfast of eggs, curds and jam, Mr. Polia bade farewell as we shouldered our packs and stomped off toward the village of Valbona, about eight and a half miles east. We passed a stone chapel set in a pasture. The area is so rugged that the Ottoman Turks, who were Muslims, were unable to control the region as they did most of the Balkans for 500 years. As a result, both Theth and Valbona are still Catholic. Mount Arapit, a 7,274-foot peak with a southern face as sheer as Half Dome at Yosemite, seemed to size me up as I crossed a wooden bridge and began to climb through maple, ash and hornbeams. It was not yet 10 a.m. but already muggy. Less than two miles in I collapsed. We had gained 800 vertical feet. Only 3,000 more to go. There had been debate the night before about how many horses to bring in case someone needed a ride. The men seemed too tough to admit to wanting any, but the Day 1 damage was clear. Rainey had pulled a hamstring. Dick had taken a tumble. In the end, Mr. Grubb hired one extra horse, which was fortunate when Richard Abernathy, a 60-year-old lawyer, began to hint that his heart was acting funny. “I’m fine,” he countered. “Richard, get on the horse!” Paul barked, and Richard reluctantly climbed into the saddle atop a small, flea-bitten gray. He wasn’t riding for long, though. Soon the trail fell some 2,500 feet into a broad alluvial basin. A van waited for us at the start of a rocky road that joined an asphalt street poured only a few weeks earlier. The effect was rattling. New Colorado-style lodges with exposed timber beams seemed to be going up everywhere. “A lot of locals are moving back to the area, which is very encouraging,” Antonia Young, a British research fellow who has worked for more than a decade to create an international peace park in the region, told me later. “The danger now is that tourism gets too big before they can cope with it.” Kol Gjoni Jubani had seen it all change so fast. He met us in the courtyard of his guesthouse, a concrete chalet built in 2005 next to a destroyed stone hut in which he had been born more than 50 years ago. Mr. Jubani looked like a Balkan cowboy with jeans and a glorious Sam Elliott mustache. His son, Ardit, 19, showed me upstairs to a room with five beds; I claimed the one with a Disney blanket in the corner. “What do you think of Albania?” Ardit asked me after a dinner of chicken, lamb and spicy peppers. “For such an old place, something about it feels refreshingly new,” I replied. “Maybe that’s because it is new,” Ardit laughed. “We are still growing up.” TO BE SURE, Albania has had some wobbly moments on its new capitalist legs. In 1997 Albanians lost $1.2 billion of their life savings in pyramid schemes that sparked a rebellion against the government and resulted in about 2,000 deaths. A 2012 report by Transparency International ranked corruption there on par with Niger, where soldiers in 2011 were arrested for plotting to murder the president, who had recently begun investigations into corruption. Even tourism, which has nearly tripled in six years from about 1 million foreign tourists to 2.7 million in 2012, according to Albanian figures, has been unable to escape certain prejudices. “Albania is a great place to score plenty of illegal narcotics — a ‘must have’ for any Albanian holiday!” commented an anonymous reader of a June 11, 2012, Southeast European Times article about the country’s booming tourism trade. Another commented that Albanians themselves would rather flee to Greece or Italy than stick around. “You cannot have an image problem if that problem is real,” said Ilir Mati, who in 1992 sold his Fiat, one of the first private cars allowed in the country, to buy a fax machine and start an adventure tourism company called Outdoor Albania. Mr. Mati was at the guesthouse with clients, and I sat up late chatting with him in French. “You know, you were once my enemy,” he said, tugging on a cigarette. “My friends thought I was crazy to leave the military and go into tourism. But I had a dream that one day I would be sitting around a table like this talking to people like you.” The discussion continued the next morning when our plan to hike from Valbona back into Montenegro was altered. After two days the trek was too much for our group — 16 hours at least — and the trail had been washed out. So instead we drove to a spot just above the village of Cerem, where we loaded our luggage onto fresh horses and headed out for an easy two-mile stroll. Along the way we passed the remains of an Opel Frontera that only a few months ago had struck a land mine. “Don’t worry,” Semir said, demonstrating a wry sense of humor. “It was an anti-tank mine, so you have to be really heavy to trigger it.” We leapt over a ditch and landed in Montenegro, and soon the Pinzgauer arrived. A white Land Rover with “Policija” emblazoned on the side accompanied it. I quietly panicked, hoping the new permit system was truly in place. The officer showed zero interest in our paperwork. Instead, Inspector Gutic had come to offer us a more comfortable ride into the town of Plav, the largest town in a district of about 13,100 people, which felt like a thrumming metropolis after Albania. We sat in a cafe with Wi-Fi, bought chips and chocolate and explored an old stone tower where families once targeted in ancient blood feuds could better defend themselves at night. We still had two days on the trail, and both of them blew by. On Day 4 we hiked six miles from huts outside Plav to a road that led to a one-lift ski area called Boga, an Albanian area in Kosovo that had been leveled in the 1999 war with Serbia and then rapidly rebuilt. We spent the night in new A-frame cabins at the base, and I discovered that in winter it cost just 1 euro to ride the lift. On the last day we climbed 7,880-foot Hajla peak and wandered along its long, narrow summit ridge, where I put one foot in Kosovo and the other in Montenegro. I could see the plains of Serbia far to the east and the Sharr Mountains framing Macedonia to the south. The cursed range rose to the west, looking no less formidable than it had from Gusinje. We spent our last night as a group in Dubrovnik, Croatia, which we reached after a long bus ride from Rozaje, Montenegro. The old city was gorgeous — shiny ramparts against a shimmering sea — but there was nothing to discover. The streets were too polished, the menus too refined. I turned on the faucet in my hotel room and flinched when the water came out hot. All told we hadn’t hiked more than 35 miles, but the Peaks of the Balkans Trail isn’t about distance so much as interaction, and with that one bus ride I’d crossed the most obvious border of the trip, the one between traveler and tourist. Despite wandering through a place of such hardship, the trail had introduced me to a rare part of Europe where the very idea of walking freely between worlds is still a gift as sweet and momentous as your first soft drink. A whole new Europe, a gracious and wild one, had presented itself, and to experience it I just needed to lace up my boots. That all may one day disappear, too. And so the next morning after everyone left for Texas, I jumped in a taxi and drove south until we could drive no more. Then I hoisted my pack and walked back into Albania. IF YOU GO Getting There The Peaks of the Balkans Trail has trail heads in Montenegro, Albania and Kosovo. Flying into the Montenegrin capital, Podgorica, allows you to rest pre- and post-trip along Lake Skadar, about a half-hour out of the city. Expect at least a two-hour drive to a trail head near Gusinje. Pristina, Kosovo, is the closest city to a trail head west of Peja — about 66 miles — but the smog makes it a less pleasing place to get your bearings. Getting to trail heads in Albania (Theth or Valbona) from Tirana, the capital, can be long and complicated, and you’ll miss some of the most spectacular hiking into those villages. Connecting flights land in Podgorica (airport code TGD) from Paris, Zurich, Frankfurt, London and Rome, among other European cities. Getting Around Hiring a guide is not obligatory but highly recommended, as trails, though mostly marked, can still confuse, and many locals speak minimal English. Guides can also arrange pack horses, accommodations and airport transfers, and assist with permit applications, which need to be submitted at least 15 days before the hike begins. The Peaks of the Balkans Web site (peaksofthebalkans.com) lists guides who have been trained by the German Alpine Club and provides information on where to find maps, how to contact guesthouses and apply for permits, and what to expect on the trail each day. Outfitter ROW Adventures of Idaho is offering two departures, in June and September, for eight-day trips into Montenegro and Albania that combine kayaking on Lake Skadar, riding a scenic train and hiking portions of the trail around Theth and Valbona, two of the more spectacular areas in the Albanian Alps. ($2,090; rowadventures.com; 800-451-6034) http://travel.nytimes.com/2013/03/31/travel/balkan-promises-hiking-the-albanian-alps.html?pagewanted=1&_r=0&smid=go-share