Allchin09 wrote:Hallu wrote:Also, Australia is lucky to have properly built and maintained walking tracks. Even in mountainous Tasmania, it's pretty rare to have a narrow track where one wrong step = death, or you have ladders/ropes/chains. In the French Alps, it can be absolutely crazy (like this : http://www.tetras.org/Chartreuse/06_11_ ... e_Est.html or this : http://www.tetras.org/Chartreuse/07_07_Sangle_V.html ), and I think on 2/3 of the walks I do there is a short moment like that. And you won't find a single warning sign.
Plenty of spots like that over hear - you have to go find them though! http://fatcanyoners.org/2013/05/04/ledging-mt-banks/
Yeah that's scary indeed. But it's more of a secret route than an official walking track. While in the French Alps, especially in Chartreuse, it's like a "tradition". They call these very much official paths "sangle", like the strap of a backpack, when the track goes around a cliff or summit with a huge drop on the side. Plenty of people have died walking on them, but since you can't sue anyone for that, unlike in the US or Australia, they remain unfenced.