Thursday, February 10, 2011

Road to Death

Road to Death #2

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Crazy Routes in Andes, Albania & New Zealand

Necessity may dictate that you choose the "road less traveled", but for goodness sake, leave weaker-nerved passengers behind. They might experience life-changing (and underwear-changing) circumstances that they will never forget, or forgive.
 One of the Chinese military roads to "boost the morale of their troops" -



and here is how they navigate it:




Tirana to Elbasan Road in Albania
 This is a hairy route, very high, badly maintained with high volume of heavy truck traffic - count on these Albanian drivers to be dare-devils, too. Whatever pictures we could get, look pretty serious:
The cool thing about this road is that it leads to various interesting "rabbit trails" with ancient ruins at the end:




some of the bridges there look pretty ancient too, and require some extra faith that they'll hold:



 The Skippers Canyon Road near Queenstown:

Katie Laurence writes to us:
"This road is made from a very narrow cut in the middle of a sheer cliff face. The large tourist buses go along it, and it's so narrow that if two vehicles have to pass each other, one vehicle might have to reverse for anything up to 3 kilometres of winding narrow road to get to a place wide enough to pass. It is the SCARIEST road you could imagine..."

A few aerial shots first:



(image credit: David Wall Photography)

and this is how it looks close up, with sheer drops just outside the single lane (with almost not enough space for tires) -




(images credit: beez kneez)


 Some other bad road predicaments:

This road in Sahara is totally beset by drifting dunes: they change location and are hard to get rid of, considering the desert is all around it:



Potholes from hell:






(image credit: Roussos)

This is pretty extreme, I'd say:


Stelvio Pass Road - redefining switchbacks - A Scenic yet Dangerous Road!

Height - 2757 meters

Location - in the Italian Alps, near Bormio and Sulden, 75 km from Bolzano, close to Swiss border. (The road connects the Valtellina with the upper Adige valley and Merano)

Claim to fame - "the highest paved mountain pass in the Eastern Alps, and the second highest in the Alps, after the Col de l'Iseran (2770 m)"


The Pulpit Rock Hike - if you fall, it's 1000 meters down

This place is indeed so spectacular, that we are going to write a special post about it. For now, just to give you a taste of some scenery - a few shots of people definitely having fun (not forgetting thousand-meter drops at every turn)


(image credit: Globosapiens)


(image credit: Susi Varming)
We finish with a scenario which might not have a happy ending.


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