Nearly a thousand guests at Elbrus opened the eco-trail season over the weekend.
The legendary resort in Kabardino-Balkaria hosted its first traditional "Trekking Weekend" event this year. Guests embarked on hikes, symbolically kicking off the trekking season on Elbrus' eco-trails. Over the two-day weekend, nearly five thousand tourists visited the resort, two-thirds of whom took advantage of the walking rates, while the rest enjoyed skiing and snowboarding.
Four eco-trails have already thawed out and are open to guests: Azau-Cheget, Cheget-Narzanov Glade, Narzanov Glade-Tegenekli, and Garabashi Gorge. A total of over 65 kilometers of trails will be available at the resort during the season.
Participants of the "Trekking Weekend," accompanied by professional guides and photographers, walked along designated trails to the Azau-Su Waterfall, the Garabashi Gorge, and from the Azau Glade to Cheget. Anyone can join free group hikes in the future; announcements are conveniently available on the official channels of the management company and the Elbrus resort.
"Trekking weekends are consistently popular at all Kavkaz.RF resorts, so we will continue to hold them regularly throughout the season, adding thawed trails at higher altitudes to the program. "To ensure guests get the most out of Mount Elbrus and the resort's eco-trails, we've developed multi-day hiking packages for two and three days and a detailed program to fill their time: walks through the most picturesque sites, a historical trek through the battlefields of the Battle of the Caucasus, an introduction to Elbrus as a volcano, and an immersion in the mountain's architectural and scientific heritage," said Rustam Tapayev, Deputy General Director of Kavkaz.RF.
In total, the Kavkaz.RF development institute, with the support of the Russian Ministry of Economic Development, has already laid out and developed more than 250 kilometers of hiking trails in the North Caucasus mountains. 112 kilometers of trails run through the Elbrus region in Kabardino-Balkaria, 110 kilometers connect Chechnya's main resorts of Veduchi and Kezenoy-Am, and 32.5 kilometers of scenic trails have been developed near the new Mamison resort in North Ossetia.