47°22′N · 10°58′E

The river bends. So does time.

Elite alpine expeditions measured in altitude, not itinerary.

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The Routes

Five ranges.
One threshold.

Designed for those who measure elevation in hours, not metres. Five ranges, one threshold: the altitude where everything changes.

Mont Blanc massif aerial view with glaciated ridgeline and snowfield
4,808m · 12 days
Mont Blanc Circuit Chamonix, France
Jungfrau north face from Bernese Oberland with snow-dusted rock face
4,158m · 9 days
Jungfrau Express Bernese Oberland
Gran Paradiso peak with turquoise glacial lake in valley floor
4,061m · 7 days
Gran Paradiso North Aosta Valley
Dolomites spires in South Tyrol with ochre-rose rock faces and forest
3,343m · 8 days
Dolomites Traverse South Tyrol
High Tatras granite peaks with alpine lake in cirque and pine forest
2,655m · 6 days
High Tatras Passage Slovakia
2,400m Average trail altitude across all expeditions
8 days Average expedition length in the field
18 Countries where we currently operate
"We design expeditions the way rivers design valleys — not in straight lines, but along the path of least resistance and greatest wonder."

— Marco V., Head Expedition Designer

Two mountaineers crossing a wooden footbridge over a glacial turquoise river

From the Ridge

Stories from
above the treeline.

On the third day above Chamonix, the cloud layer settled below us. We spent four hours walking on top of the sky, watching thunderstorms move through the valley like slow ships.

The Dolomites route crosses fourteen ridgelines. Each one feels like a threshold. By the fourteenth, you understand why they call this a traverse and not a hike.