Alpe Adria Trail
The East Coast Trail
Alpe Adria Trail vs The East Coast Trail: Intensity Score Comparison
Both routes share a similar overall intensity (66 vs 65). Depending on personal strengths, the challenge relies more on The East Coast Trail's technicality versus the physical output of the other.
Model-based (not a field report) · Evaluates overall route demand, not danger.
Alpe Adria Trail
The Alpe-Adria Trail is an epic long-distance hiking route connecting the foot of Austria's highest peak, the Grossglockner (3,798m), with the Adriatic port of Muggia in Italy. Spanning 43 stages, the trail traverses the Hohe Tauern National Park, the Nock Mountains, the Julian Alps, and the karst plateau of the Friuli-Venezia Giulia. It is designed as a 'discovery trail', prioritizing dramatic landscape transitions from the glaciated high Alps through the 'Emerald' Soča Valley to the Mediterranean coast. While it skirts technical climbing peaks, the total distance and cumulative elevation changes create a significant endurance demand.
Walking the edge of the continent. The East Coast Trail (ECT) is a network of 26 individual wilderness paths stretching 336km along the rugged eastern shore of Newfoundland's Avalon Peninsula. It links historic fishing villages with dramatic sea stacks, deep fjords, and ocean caves. Whether you're watching icebergs drift past in June or spotting whales from the cliffs in July, the trail offers a raw, maritime beauty that is distinctly Newfoundland. Most hikers explore the ECT as a series of day hikes from St. John's rather than attempting a continuous thru-hike.
Head-to-Head Metric Analysis
HikeMetrics Hazard Scale — Explanation
The HikeMetrics Hazard Scale is a proprietary 5-point classification system that evaluates hiking routes across five dimensions: physical demand, technical complexity, altitude exposure, weather risk, and rescue accessibility.
Unlike generic star ratings, the Hazard Scale is calibrated against altitude profiles, elevation gain per day, and logistical isolation factors — making it the most precise route classification system available.
Full Scale Documentation