Berliner Höhenweg — The Zillertal High-Route
Westray North Coast — Noup Head Loop
Berliner Höhenweg — The Zillertal High-Route vs Westray North Coast — Noup Head Loop: Intensity Score Comparison
Berliner Höhenweg — The Zillertal High-Route is unequivocally more demanding overall (+45 points). While Westray North Coast — Noup Head Loop is a serious endeavor, Berliner Höhenweg — The Zillertal High-Route pushes the limits further, particularly regarding sustained physical exertion.
Model-based (not a field report) · Evaluates overall route demand, not danger.
Berliner Höhenweg — The Zillertal High-Route
The Berliner Höhenweg (also known as the Zillertaler Runde) is one of the most prestigious high-altitude treks in the Alps. This 8-day circuit traverses the heart of the Zillertal Alps Nature Park, staying consistently between 2,000 and 3,000 meters. The route is characterized by steep granite passes, ancient glacial plateaus, and overnight stays in historic, palatial huts like the Berliner Hütte—a designated monument. It is a world of sharp ridges, emerald reservoirs, and the last remaining glaciers of the Zillertal range.
Westray North Coast — Noup Head Loop
Located on Westray, one of the northernmost Orkney Islands, this coastal circuit offers a wild, remote walk culminating at the spectacular Noup Head Lighthouse. The route takes you along towering 76-meter sea cliffs that plunge straight into the swirling Atlantic, offering views of geos (narrow rock inlets), natural arches, and dramatic sea stacks. It is most famous as an RSPB nature reserve: during the early summer, the cliffs are a chaotic, deafening 'seabird city' home to tens of thousands of guillemots, razorbills, kittiwakes, and puffins.
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