Trails & Passes
Paths walked since before Rome fell, through some of Europe's wildest terrain
The Llogara Pass climbs to 1,027 meters above sea level, crossing the Ceraunian Mountains at the point where the Adriatic becomes the Ionian. On one side, the Albanian Riviera unfolds below in a sequence of white bays and turquoise water. On the other, the road drops through ancient pine forest — Bosnian pines twisted by centuries of wind into shapes that look like they belong in a medieval woodcut. Caesar marched his legions through this pass pursuing Pompey. Today, you can drive it in twenty minutes or hike it in a day.
But the Llogara is just the beginning. The mountains behind the Albanian coast harbour a network of trails that connect villages, cross passes, and traverse landscapes that have barely changed since the Ottoman era. The most significant of these is the Via Dinarica, a long-distance trail that runs the length of the Dinaric Alps from Slovenia to Albania — roughly 1,200 kilometres of mountain terrain through some of the least-visited corners of Europe.
The Peaks of the Balkans
The Peaks of the Balkans trail is a 192-kilometre loop through the Accursed Mountains, crossing between Albania, Montenegro, and Kosovo. The name — Bjeshkët e Nemuna in Albanian — was given by travellers who found the terrain so harsh and the mountains so steep that they declared them cursed. The trail typically takes ten to twelve days and passes through villages where guesthouses serve food grown in the gardens outside and the nearest road is a day's walk away.
The highest point on the trail is the Qafa e Pejës pass at 1,970 meters, where on clear days you can see three countries. The route is not technically difficult — there's no scrambling or rope work — but it's remote and demanding. Navigation can be challenging in cloud, and the trails are not always well-marked. A GPS device or detailed maps are essential, and most trekkers hire local guides for at least the Albanian sections.
Theth to Valbona
The single most popular trek in the Albanian Alps is the day hike from Theth to Valbona, or vice versa. The route crosses the Valbona Pass at approximately 1,800 meters, with views down into the glacial valley on either side. It takes six to eight hours depending on fitness and weather, and the trail is well-maintained by local communities who have recognized its value to the growing trekking tourism economy.
Theth itself is a village of stone towers and scattered farmsteads in a valley ringed by peaks. The Grunas Waterfall drops 30 meters into a natural pool. The Blue Eye of Theth — different from the one near Sarandë — is a spring-fed pool of startling clarity. The village has basic guesthouses that serve home-cooked meals, and the atmosphere at night, with no light pollution and no sounds beyond the river, is as close to silence as most people will ever experience.
Durmitor, Montenegro
Durmitor National Park contains 48 peaks above 2,000 meters, 18 glacial lakes, and the Tara River Canyon — the deepest in Europe at 1,300 meters. The trails here range from easy lakeside walks around Black Lake to demanding alpine routes along the ridgeline to Bobotov Kuk, the highest summit at 2,523 meters.
The Bobotov Kuk ascent is non-technical but exposed — a long day involving 1,400 meters of elevation gain, with the final approach along a narrow ridge with significant drop-offs on both sides. The reward is a 360-degree panorama that takes in most of northern Montenegro and reaches into Bosnia, Serbia, and Albania on clear days. Come in late June or early July, when the snow has mostly melted but the wildflowers are at their peak.