HikeMetrics
Global Hiking Index
HikeMetrics
Global Hiking Index
HikeMetrics // Comparison Engine
Route A

Amatola Hiking Trail

south-africa/Eastern Cape / Amathole Mountains
VS
Route B

Victoria Peak Trail

belize/Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary, Stann Creek District

Amatola Hiking Trail vs Victoria Peak Trail: Intensity Score Comparison

Both routes share a similar overall intensity (78 vs 82). Depending on personal strengths, the challenge relies more on Victoria Peak Trail's technicality versus the physical output of the other.

Model-based (not a field report) · Evaluates overall route demand, not danger.

Intensity Difference
+4 Victoria Peak Trail is harder
Higher Physical Load
Amatola Hiking Trail
Higher Technical Seriousness
Victoria Peak Trail
Greater Commitment
Victoria Peak Trail
Overall HikeMetrics Score
Amatola Hiking Trail wins 5 of 9 metrics
5
Route A
4
Route B
south-africa/Eastern Cape / Amathole Mountains

Amatola Hiking Trail

LOW // ACCESS
Full Route Report

Often regarded as one of South Africa’s toughest multi-day hikes, the Amatola Trail is a relentlessly demanding hut-to-hut journey through ancient Afromontane forest in the Eastern Cape. A hard six-day route with roughly 100 km of walking and about 4,900–5,000 m of climbing, it moves through dense yellowwood forest, deep valleys, open ridgelines, and numerous waterfalls and cascades. Trails are often wet and uneven, with roots, mud, and repeated steep descents slowing progress. What defines the Amatola is not technical climbing but cumulative punishment. Flat sections are brief, the hut system fixes your stages, and the trail steadily grinds people down through repeated ascent, descent, wet feet, and heavy-pack fatigue.

belize/Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary, Stann Creek District

Victoria Peak Trail

LETHAL // NO-MARGIN
Full Route Report

Belize's most demanding multi-day trek. Over three to four days you cover 27 km through dense tropical jungle, river crossings, and rugged granite ridgelines to reach Victoria Peak (1,120m) — the country's second-highest summit after Doyle's Delight (1,124m). The trail is only open in the dry season (February–May) and a certified guide from the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary is mandatory. The Maya Mountains are composed of ancient metamorphic and granitic rock — not alpine terrain, but remote tropical expedition terrain where heat, humidity, and isolation are the primary challenges.

Head-to-Head Metric Analysis

Intensity ScoreHigher Overall Demand
78
WINNER82
Physical LoadMore Physically Taxing
80 WINNER
51
Technical SeriousnessMore Technically Demanding
43
WINNER73
DistanceLonger route
101.8 km WINNER
27 km
Elevation GainMore vertical
5,000 m WINNER
950 m
Highest PointHigher summit
1,880 m WINNER
1,120 m
DurationShorter commitment
6 days
WINNER4 days
Hazard LevelMore accessible
Level 4.5 WINNER
LETHAL // NO-MARGIN
Crowd Level
2 / 5
2 / 5
RemotenessMore remote
3 / 5
WINNER5 / 5

HikeMetrics Hazard Scale — Explanation

1
LOW // ACCESS
2
STANDARD // TRAIL
3
MODERATE // CHALLENGING
4
SERIOUS // HIGH CONSEQUENCE
5
LETHAL // NO-MARGIN

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
Route A // Hazard Verdict
Amatola Hiking Trail
LOW // ACCESS
Weather is the defining risk factor: Dense mist can reduce visibility to near zero, especially on ridgelines. Heavy rainfall turns trails into mud channels, increases slip risk on roots and rock, and can effectively push the route a full difficulty tier higher than in dry weather.
Physical and Psychological Load: Relentless vertical repetition and long hours in monotone, dense forest can feel disorienting. Slower progress than expected is common, especially once cumulative fatigue sets in from day 3 onward.
Route B // Hazard Verdict
Victoria Peak Trail
LETHAL // NO-MARGIN
heat and humidity stress: Temperatures regularly exceed 30°C with humidity above 90% in the lowlands. Dehydration and heat exhaustion are the primary physical risks.
steep terrain on loose substrate: Long, sustained climbs on loose granitic and metamorphic soil — slippery when wet.

Required Gear Comparison

Amatola Hiking Trail
Footwear with maximum traction (wet forest grip)Heavy-duty gaiters for mud, wet grass, and thorny sectionsSignificant rain protection (gore-tex shell + gaiters)High-capacity hydration bag (streams are abundant but filtering is required)Reliable GPS and physical topographical maps
Victoria Peak Trail
High-traction hiking bootsLightweight rain jacketSun hat and sunscreen2-3 L of water per dayElectrolyte tabletsCertified guide (mandatory)First-aid kit (guide carries emergency equipment)Water purification tablets or portable filterInsect repellent (DEET-based)Gaiters

Compare with Other Routes

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LETHAL // NO-MARGIN
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LETHAL // NO-MARGIN
argentina
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LETHAL // NO-MARGIN
austria
Berliner Höhenweg — The Zillertal High-Route
LETHAL // NO-MARGIN
australia
Larapinta Trail
LETHAL // NO-MARGIN
bolivia
Cordillera Apolobamba Traverse
LETHAL // NO-MARGIN