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1) Huayna Picchu, Peru (1 of 14)
1) Huayna Picchu, Peru (1 of 14)
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It is said that the Inca Trail is a tricky trek that causes a few casualties every year. If you wander a little further, you will come across the Huayna Picchu, which is known as the “Hike of Death.” The place has an old Inca staircase made from granite and is at an elevated height of 1,000 feet within a mile. The terrain is also very tricky as it consists of jarred corners, slippery stones, and crumbling rocks. The weather adds to the difficulty of the hikers as it is usually cloudy, which blurs the vision.
New Hampshire’s Mt Washington may not look like a killer at less than 7000 feet but more than 150 hikers have died on the trail to it’s summit over the last 100 years. Mt. Washington happens to be at the confluence of several weather systems and has some of the most violent winds on the planet. For many years, from 1933 to sometime around 2000, it held the record for the worlds highest recorded wind speed: 233 MPH at the summit. What has killed so many hikers are not falls, instead, most have died from hypothermia. Weather there can change with stunning rapidness. Half way up the mountain, the temperature can drop 40 degrees, accompanied with sleet, snow and cold fog, reducing visibility to zero.
Lightly dressed hikers unprepared for such conditions can quickly loose conciseness and freeze to death.
It has happened way to often.