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

The Wave (Coyote Buttes North)

usa/Arizona / Utah
VS
Route B

Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk

australia/queensland-kgari

The Wave (Coyote Buttes North) vs Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk: Intensity Score Comparison

Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk is unequivocally more demanding overall (+18 points). While The Wave (Coyote Buttes North) is a serious endeavor, Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk pushes the limits further, particularly regarding sustained physical exertion.

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

Intensity Difference
+18 Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk is harder
Higher Physical Load
Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk
Higher Technical Seriousness
Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk
Greater Commitment
Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk
Overall HikeMetrics Score
Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walkwins 4 of 7 metrics
3
Route A
4
Route B
usa/Arizona / Utah

The Wave (Coyote Buttes North)

MODERATE // CHLG
Full Route Report

The Wave is perhaps the most heavily photographed and tightly regulated natural attraction in the American Southwest. Situated in the Coyote Buttes North Special Management Area of the Paria Canyon-Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness, it is a magnificent, surreal basin of swirling, intersecting U-shaped troughs of Navajo sandstone. The rock is fiercely striated with vivid red, orange, yellow, and white banding, formed by Jurassic-era sand dunes compacted over millions of years and then eroded by wind and water. Because the landscape is incredibly fragile, access is strictly limited by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to a tiny number of lucky lottery winners per day. There is no marked trail; hikers receive a pictorial map and GPS coordinates to cross wild, trackless slickrock and deep sand to locate the formation.

australia/queensland-kgari

Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk

MODERATE // CHLG
Full Route Report

The K'gari (Fraser Island) Great Walk is an 8-day through-hike covering approximately 90km point-to-point within the Great Sandy National Park, Queensland. The route traverses often described as one of the largest sand island, moving through diverse ecological zones including high rainforests established on deep-sand substrates, mangrove systems, and freshwater perched lakes. Surface conditions are consistently sand-based, transitioning between consolidated forest paths and uncompacted dune segments. The route provides a cross-section of the island's unique hydrology and mature Satinay (Syncarpia hillii) timber stands. Access is regulated by Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service (QPWS).

Head-to-Head Metric Analysis

Intensity ScoreHigher Overall Demand
45
WINNER63
Physical LoadMore Physically Taxing
26
WINNER70
Technical Seriousness
42
42
DistanceLonger route
10 km
WINNER90 km
Elevation GainMore vertical
200 m
WINNER1,400 m
Highest PointHigher summit
1,600 m WINNER
240 m
DurationShorter commitment
1 days WINNER
6 days
Hazard Level
MODERATE // CHLG
MODERATE // CHLG
Crowd LevelLess crowded
1 / 5 WINNER
2 / 5
Remoteness
4 / 5
4 / 5

HikeMetrics Hazard Scale — Explanation

1
LOW // ACCESS
2
STANDARD // RT
3
MODERATE // CHLG
4
EXPERT // HAZARD
5
EXTREME // LETHAL

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
The Wave (Coyote Buttes North)
MODERATE // CHLG
extreme heat and dehydration: The hike crosses completely exposed, baking slickrock. In summer, ground temperatures can exceed 120°F (50°C), reflecting heat back up at the hiker. seriousities from heat stroke occur.
getting lost: There is no trail, no cairns, and no signs. Everything looks exactly the same in the sprawling desert, especially on the return trip when the landmarks look different in reverse.
Route B // Hazard Verdict
Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk
MODERATE // CHLG
wildlife management (dingoes): K'gari is home to a genetically distinct population of wild dingoes. Habituation to human presence can lead to predatory or aggressive behaviors.
mechanical fatigue and thermal stress: Walking on sand increases muscular strain by 20-30% compared to hard surfaces. High humidity typical of coastal Queensland increases the risk of thermoregulatory failure.

Required Gear Comparison

The Wave (Coyote Buttes North)
A highly coveted permit (attached prominently to your backpack)GPS device/app with the route pre-downloaded offlineSun protection (wide-brim hat, long sleeves, relentless sunscreen)Gaiters (to keep the deep red sand out of your shoes)
Fraser Island (K'gari) Great Walk
Specialized sand-compatible footwear or lightweight bootsDry bags for dingo-proof locker storageTechnical sun protection (UPF 50+)Water filtration system (for rainwater tank processing)Insect protection for March fly and mosquito mitigationSand gaiters (required for footwear management)

Compare with Other Routes

argentina
Cerro Tronador (Refugio Otto Meiling)
MODERATE // CHLG
argentina
Laguna Torre (Cerro Torre)
MODERATE // CHLG
austria
Coburger Hütte — Seebensee & Drachensee
MODERATE // CHLG
austria
Kaisertal — The Stairway to Heaven
MODERATE // CHLG
austria
The High Descent — Kaiser-Franz-Josef-Höhe to Heiligenblut
MODERATE // CHLG
australia
Great Ocean Walk
MODERATE // CHLG