I was in the queue for the opening of the gondola lift at 9 am this morning, so by half past nine, there I was, back at the top by Kaiserberg again ready to resume the walk where I left off yesterday.

It was a stiff but short climb to ascend to the obvious peak nearby, Woellaner Nock, marked both with a big cross, and, as it turned out when I got there, lots of little stone cairns which people had assembled. Even though I’d been amongst the first dozen on the cable car, others had already made it there before me.

But once I started descending a little the other side aiming for the next, nearby peak, Vorderer Woellaner Nock, I was on my own. The landscape here was reminiscent of the Pennine Way, particularly the Cheviot Hills, which mark the border between Scotland and England, although obviously at a far higher elevation. The views were grand, and in every direction, with nothing higher to obscure or obstruct what you could see.

Not a landscape I guess many people, including myself, normally associate with the Alps, this was not the ruggedness or grandeur of Grossglockner, of Mont Blanc or the Matterhorn. It was a softer landscape, with more grass covered, rounded mountains, despite being 2000 metres above sea level, and still much higher than any UK mountain.

From this second little peak I veered off left and could see already to my right what the guidebook told me was my destination of today, the village of Arriach, still another 10km of walking away down to the valley. The path left was very steep, probably 1 in 4 or 5, but never felt unsafe, as there were plenty of solid rocks to place your feet on, dry grass and moss, and even posts from a barbed wire fence to hang onto. But it did make it slow progress for me, and it took me a good 45 minutes to an hour to descend what, when I looked back, seemed to be hardly any distance at all. By this time others were haring past me, and I just couldn’t understand how, especially without walking poles, they felt safe to do so.

I then joined a track which continued to descend, in a series of sweeping curves, and at a more measured gradient. At one point some bullocks blocked the path, and there was a bit of a stand off, with me, and two young men approaching the other way on the other side of the animals, waiting to pass, with no obvious way of our diverting around. After a few minutes, the two guys were braver than me and decided to just walk past, horn side of the animals, and it turned out the bullocks just ran off, so I was able to pass too.

Although it was quite a long descent, at over 1000 metres, it didn’t feel anything like as tiring as the walk down to Dobriach a few days earlier. Once again I had a fuller rucksack, as there was no luggage delivery to Arriach today, and while it was getting hotter it was only in the mid 20s at this point.

I passed a strange target shaped design indicating I was now at the central point of Carinthia, and it was not long after this I came out of the forest by some little farms. As last week, once I was down lower, it was much hotter, and with no shade either, any effort , especially little inclines, took it out of you. I passed through the little village of Laastadt, and then walked alongside a river, where I could see that mud and debris had accumulated here too, presumably after last week’s storm, with workmen trying to clear some of the damage caused.

After about five hours walking, and by now in blazing heat, I arrived at the hotel in Arriach. It was only 2:30 but the rising heat, and my fatigue had vindicated my decision to split stage 17 over two days, one mainly up, and the other mainly down. Had I not done that I would have begun the new week much more exhausted.


Tomorrow promises rain and thunder all day, right from early in the morning, so I am glad I am going up again, not down, if the forecast proves accurate. I only hope that, assuming we do get rain, it’s nothing like as ferocious as the storm here last week. It’s not as if you can’t expect a day of rain if you’re spending the amount of time I am here walking in the mountains, after all, and last weeks weather was pretty exceptional I think.
































































































