Hiking the Slovenian Alps
Trip Data
- Photos: Photo Gallery
- Hikers: me, Brian, Mark
- Routes & GPX: See below, by day
- Location: Slovenia’s Julian Alps
- Mileage: 72 miles over 7 days
- Ascent: 19,000 feet over 7 days
- Elevation: 3000 - 6000ft, roughly
- Date: 11-17 Aug 2024
- Duration: 7 days
- Weather: 60s-90s (too hot)
- Conditions: Clear and sunny
Journal
“How about hiking in Slovenia?” asked Mark.
“Sure,” said Brian.
“Slovenia???” I thought.
“Sure,” I said.
So, with Mark, off we went. August. Julian Alps. Organized by an adventure hiking company. A week of day-hiking across the country, with nights spent in hotels, and bags ferried by pre-arranged taxi.
Definitely an exploration-kinda trip. See a new place. Discover what hiking in the Julian Alps was like. Learn a few basics about Slovenia… such as where it was.
The Trip
Slovenia is north of Italy, south of Austria, and feels a little like a Switzerland with fewer mountains, cows, and trains. Miro, our high-flavor taxi driver, would be really irritated if he read that; the Swiss are the worst. So legalistic, so organized, so expensive. Almost as bad as the Norwegians.
We few into Slovenia’s main and only city, Ljubljana, which is pronounced just like it’s spelled. We spent our week in the northwest quadrant of the country, where they keep most of their mountains.
It was August, and we’re melting the planet, so it was hot. The high-end-ish hotel in the tourist town of Bled had air conditioning. The others had windows. The hiking and sleeping parts of this trip would probably have been a lot more enjoyable in May or October.
According to Wikipedia, over half of the Slovenian population speaks English. However, in our experience, everyone does. (Except the airport shuttle guy, who still gave a pretty passable tour of Ljubljana.) It was really interesting to hear it used regularly as the common communication language between people from different areas of Europe.
The first town we stayed in, Jezersko, which is not pronounced like that, was a rural farming village masquerading as a tourist destination. We figured this out after eating in the only open restaurant in town for the 3rd night in a row, where they serve any kind of meat you like, as long as it’s from a pig or a trout. We arrived in Jezersko via a very smooth Mercedes, courtesy of Miro the pan-European taxi driver, an entertaining Serbian conspiracy theorist who learned his English from American movies. Oh, and maybe in school.
After 3 days of hiking there, the young ghost of Speed Racer ferried us to our 2nd hiking location near the Austrian border in a van that only needed two wheels on the corners. We survived.
The second town we stayed in, Begunje, also pronounced differently than that, is the home of a polka music palace, built and run by a platinum-album polka band native to Slovenia. They have a museum, host huge polka music events on the weekend, and run a small hotel that we stayed at, where they play their albums continuously for their guests. We survived.
The next night, we stayed at Lake Bled, pronounced in more or less the only way you could imagine. It’s the premier tourist zone in Slovenia, complete with castles, islands, and a casino. We found good food, good coffee, good ice cream, and clean, cool rooms.
The final two days of hiking took us into Triglav National Park, home to the highest peaks in Slovenia. The hiking and views were spectacular. We spent the first night at a biathlon camp deep in the forest, watching young kids being trained to punch at each other, shoot at stuff, and then skate away as fast as they could go.
We ended the hike at Lake Boheen, which is not spelled that way, but is probably your best attempt at it if you’re American. The gorgeous alpine lake was overloaded with sweltering campers and tourists. Brian and I took a boat across the lake then a cable car up into the cooler mountains for views of the Triglav peaks, while Mark watched youngsters play mini golf.
Three Losses
This trip was notable for losses.
One
When I checked out the hotel in Loobieyawna, I inadvertently left my Garmin watch and In Reach emergency radio in my room. Later that day, after getting dropped off in Yezersko by Miro, I figured this out. I called the hotel, and they confirmed they had discovered a watch and a walkie-talkie.
Fortunately, Mark had Miro’s number, so we called to see if he could help, and he was willing to go right back into the city to pick them up, then bring them back to us for the cost of another taxi ride. In the meantime, we went on our first hike, which turned out to be hotter, steeper, and slower than we had planned, so Mark, who had less jet lag and more energy than Brian or I, effectively sprinted back into town from the top of the hike, arriving just in time to meet Miro.
Two
Later that day, I kid you not, I reached for my wallet to pull out my ATM card and discovered my pocket was empty. Back in the hotel room, I went through everything and confirmed that a) my pocket had hole in it, b) the wallet was gone, c) I had managed to pull off two important loss events in one day, and d) I felt like a total idiot. The last time I’d see it was on the top of the mountain we’d just hiked, when I pulled it out to give Mark some euros to pay Miro. There was no way I was going back up that mountain for the wallet, especially since it could be anywhere on the trail. I started the process of canceling credit cards, etc.
Then two days later, Mark got a text from Alan, our innkeeper. My wallet had been found and returned to the tourist office, who then contacted him. Awesome! We got back into town, where Alan gave me back my wallet and the contact information for the Austrian fellow who had found it. I texted him to thank him, asking where he found it. Oddly, he mentioned a trail we had not been on. Amazing!
At dinner at the Pork-As-You-Like-It place, we were talking, and a friendly young couple from Britain stopped by our table. “Are you Remy?” “Um, yes?” “Did you get your wallet back?” “Ummm, yes???” “We found it up on Virnikov! So glad you got it back after we took it to the tourist office.” So, yeah, after further discussion we confirmed it was them, not this Austrian guy, who had found it. Maybe I was not the only person to lose a wallet in the region that day? No idea. In any case, I tracked down their server and paid for their dinner before we escaped the Hut-de-Hog.
Three
Technically not a loss; more of a theft.
After escaping the Polka Music Motherlode, we paused after summiting a tough climb on the trail, looking back into town. Mark said, “oh, hmmmm”, and pulled the huge metal hotel room key from the night before out his pocket. No way we were going back.
Later that day, he tried to talk our driver into dropping it by the hotel, cause no town in Slovenia is really that far out of anyone’s way…. But no, the driver was busy. As we checked in to our hotel in Lake Bled, though, the desk clerk there asked Mark for the key from the polka hotel back in Begunyuh. They had contacted the hike organizing group to see where we were going to be next and tracked us down. Key returned with basically no effort.
The Hikes
Around Jezersko:
- Day 1 - Virnikov Ascent (route) (6.5 miles, 2600 ft ascent). Mixed quality trails, steep and rooty in parts, pretty good view at the summit.
- Day 2 - Hike up to Ceska Kosa (route) (8.5 miles, 2500 ft ascent). A climb up to cool little mountain hut that serves meals and drinks. Mixed quality trails (particularly bad on our descent), pretty good views. Probably the best of these 3 hikes.
- Day 3 - Ascent of Goli Vrh (route) (10 miles, 3000 ft ascent). A tough haul up to a peak overlooking the Jezersko valley. Best views of the three at the end, trail quality mixed.
Around Begunje:
- Day 4 - Descent from Austrian border (route) (11 miles, 1900 ft ascent). Cool tunnel early in the hike and a nice gradual climb to another hut, but otherwise forgettable and too much time on forest roads, even counting the extra 2 hours we spent trying to follow a steep ghost trail over a wooded cliff.
- Day 5 - Up into the hills, then back down (route) (10.5 miles, 3200 ft ascent). More forest roads, no views. Skippable.
In Triglav National Park:
- Day 6 - Hike to Mt. Srenjslo with an extension to Brda (route) (12 miles, 3500 ft ascent). Best hike of the week. Great trails, glorious views. We added an extra loop to the north to hit a high point, which was well worth it.
- Day 7 - From Pokljuka, the biathlon center, down to Lake Bohinj (route) (8 miles, all downhill.) Mostly forest roads, some trails. Nice stroll out of the forest to finish off the week.
Broadly speaking, the hiking was mixed. Some trails were fantastic; some trails were chaotic scrambles straight up steep hills covered in roots. Some views were worth it, some views were non-existent. If we had done this trip just for the hiking and not the exploring, I’d be disappointed. As it is, it was good to get a feel for different parts of the country. If I were to hike more there, I’d focus on the Triglav National Park area, which looks difficult to explore much beyond what we did without shifting to mountain huts and multi-day hikes.
Looking Back
All-in-all, a fantastic exploratory trip with good friends. I didn’t have any major expectations coming into this trip, largely hoping to have some good hikes while restoring life balance. I came away, however, with an appreciation for the beauty, friendliness, and culture of a country outside my previous experience. I have a slightly greater awareness of just how much more there is to explore and understand in that corner of the world.