by Hallu » Thu 24 Jul, 2014 1:14 am
America has a strong culture of road trips and car camping : in the 20s, Stephen Mather built a huge number of road in National Parks, which means you didn't have to walk miles to reach wilderness any more. You could enjoy a National Park solely by camping next to your car.
In Australia road trips and car camping are also strong, but but there was less investment in big scenic roads, so people tend to walk more (in my opinion). In Europe, whilst there are scenic roads, there is no "road trip" per se. Lookouts for cars are rarely shown on maps, and in Parks the roads lead to ski stations or farms, there is no dedicated scenic road inside a park. There are young people who perform road trips in Europe, but it's mostly with cities in mind, like Barcelona, Prague, Paris, Berlin, etc... Hence the other young people who go to parks bushwalk. But I agree with Wayno, in the Alps you see plenty of crazy youth, doing paragliding, extreme skiing, speed climbing and so on, and that may have replaced bushwalking in some young people's minds. The only Alpine country that suits car tourism is Switzerland. Plenty of lookouts and little trains, glacier viewpoints not far from the road etc... In the French Alps, there's Chamonix and that's it. For truely enjoying the rest, you need plenty of guidebooks and maps to tell you where to walk.