Hiking and walking are two of my favorite activities when I’m traveling. It’s a way to get intimate with the landscape. And though I have a particular fondness for trails that snake through densely forested landscapes, I’ve also found more than a handful of trails that either snake through unusual lands (such as Turkey’s Cappadocia region that’s dotted with monoliths that are so curious they resemble images from a Salvator Dali painting) or they don’t represent what one typically thinks of as a gravel, dirt or sandy hiking path. (Croatia’s Plitvce Lakes National Park with its myriad boardwalks that wander through a land dripping with waterfalls comes to mind here.)

try to walk or hike at least one path in almost every country I visit. Recently, I wrote a feature round-up article for the travel network Boots n’All where I’ve picked out some of my favorite and unusual trails in the world. They range from the black lava-lined vineyards on Pico Island in the Azores to the serpentine Great Wall of China. Some of the trails I chose, such as the one that runs atop the battlement walls in Dubrovnik, are easy to negotiate on your own. Others, such as along the dry stream beds (or wadis) in the Negev Desert in Israel, are best tackled with a guide because it’s easy to lose your way. I’ve picked out tour companies and guide services that will enhance your journey by pointing out historically interesting and botanically relevant features.









