Guided Mountain Trips Across the Globe
Discover the world from the mountains with an experienced mountain guide
For those who love the mountains, adventure knows no borders. Every continent offers unique challenges, cultures, and breathtaking landscapes waiting to be explored. Our guided mountain trips, ski touring expeditions and trekking toursworldwide combine physical activity, nature, and authentic experiences – led by a certified and experienced mountain guide.
From the Andes in South America to the Caucasus, the Himalayas, and the mountain ranges of Asia – every journey is carefully planned to provide unforgettable moments far away from everyday life. Past destinations include Iran, Argentina, Chile, Georgia, Turkey, Bolivia, Nepal, China, Australia, Kyrgystan, Norway and Thailand.
New trekking and adventure trips are organized regularly and can also be tailored individually for groups. Each expedition is professionally planned and safely guided – for a truly exceptional experience in the mountains of the world.
Mountain Travel Gallery
Ski touring trip Georgia
Ski tour Turkey
Aconcagua 6962m in South America
First Ascent in Bolivia, 6029m
Northwest of Lake Titicaca on the Bolivian side, there is a series of 6000m peaks along the Cordillera Real - one of them, Chearoko (6127m), is rarely climbed and has been ascended from the south. West of it, there is a series of peaks which, according to very poor maps, are all supposedly under 6000m and (at least officially) unclimbed. The expedition was initiated and financed by my friend Madis Mägi from Estonia, with whom I had previously climbed several peaks, from the Dolomites to Mont Blanc. His dream was to climb an unclimbed mountain. (His surname, Mägi, means “mountain.”) Accompanying us were Miguel - a guide from La Paz, the cook Benancio, and porter Pedro at the camps. We established our base camp after about a six-hour hike at the 2 km long mountain lake Jistana Quta (4600m). From there, we set up our high camp at 5030m, passing a nameless glacial lake and the lake Janku Quta. Our planned route along this glacier lake had to be changed due to rock and icefall. We were able to find a way to the glacier base at about 5300m via rock ledges and easy climbing sections in granite. On Tuesday, September 19, we were finally able to reach the planned summit, measured by GPS at 6029m, via a roughly 6000m high subpeak. According to the guide and the local Pedro, there had been no previous ascents of this peak, and we could not find any traces of earlier expeditions either on site, in books, or on the Internet. Whether or not it was truly a first ascent, it was definitely a great adventure in a remote natural landscape.






















































