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What are some of the longest "single mountain" hikes in the world? That is, hikes which more or less go up one mountain. Specifically, let's say we're looking at the following criteria:

  1. One continuous climb with no long flat or downhill sections.
  2. On established trails (though they don't have to be official or maintained trails)
  3. Trailhead is near or easily accesible from a town/city.
  4. No technical climbing (at most some class 2 scrambling)
  5. Entirely on trails (as opposed to paved roads)

plus the following optional criteria:

  1. Can be hiked without a guide or expensive permits
  2. Is an "established" hike, i.e. route has a name and people regularly hike the whole length of it.
  3. Enjoyable: scenery, views from the summit, historical sites, wildlife, etc.

Two candidates I can think of are (1) Mt Fuji from the bottom ("1st station"), with ~3000m of elevation gain, and (2) the "Cactus to Clouds" hike in Palm Springs, CA, with 10400ft/3200m of elevation gain.

Similar to this question but this is about the longest hikes as opposed to the tallest mountains

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    What is your measure of length for "longest?" Is it only elevation gain?
    – user2169
    Dec 15, 2020 at 23:24

3 Answers 3

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Aconcagua, which apparently is non-technical if ascended from the Northern route and does not require axes or ropes. Aconcagua is 6,961 m high. The hike in starts from a village (Puente del Inca) at 2740 m, making the climb 4,221 m in altitude. It seems that it normally takes between 12 and 20 days to climb, mostly because of the need to acclimatize to the altitude, and the need to hike an extended route to approach the Northern side from Puente del Inca - this is probably fairly flat along a river valley, but will show some continuous climb because of this. Because of the altitude, you will need to have at least ascended some ~5,000 m mountains before attempting Aconcagua.

The climb proper starts at Plaza de Mulas (i.e. basecamp) at 4,370 m and there are 3-5 camps (i.e. nights) between there and the summit for ascent. I would assume that you could descend faster than ascend and probably make it back to Plaza de Mulas (feel free to chime in if you have been to Aconcagua) with maybe one night somewhere in between. It looks like, from wikivoyager that you need a permit to hike in the park, but do not need a guide. There are rangers who will assess your fitness at Plaza de Mulas before you ascend.

Another close contender Kilimanjaro - the highest free-standing mountain in the world. It is ~4,900 m above the plateau on which it stands, and takes about 3 days to hike to the peak, much of which is required for acclimatization to the altitude (thanks to @BenCrowall for pointing this out). People are required to have a guide and permit for the mountain, but it is fairly well established as a hike.

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    The elevation gain isn't quite that much from the trailheads. From the Marangu trailhead it's 4100 m. It takes several days mainly because of acclimatization. It doesn't really fit the OP's criterion #6, since it's not legal to do it without a guide, and you do need a fairly expensive permit.
    – user2169
    Dec 15, 2020 at 23:31
  • @BenCrowell - criteria 6-8 are optional in the question, and ~4100 m is still 1000 m above the ones listed by the OP - though I wasn't aware that the trailheads were so high.
    – bob1
    Dec 15, 2020 at 23:51
  • "does not require axes or ropes" Anyone climbing anything that tall is going to need to carry an ice ax and know how to use it.
    – user2169
    Dec 16, 2020 at 13:49
  • @BenCrowell - I agree, but if you have a look at the satellite photos of Aconcagua, you'll see that it is indeed a high altitude walk, with limited snow on the North-Western route, the steepest section being a gradient of about 2 in 5 (23 deg), near the summit.
    – bob1
    Dec 16, 2020 at 19:39
  • What counts as a long, flat section? I'm thinking of spending hours on the 3rd day of the Marangu route on a saddle that was flat to the best of our ability to tell. (This was long before GPS.) Dec 18, 2020 at 1:34
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bob1 gave an excellent answer for the case where we relax the criteria that the hike be accessible without a guide or expensive permit. If we keep that criteria, possibly the longest uphill hike in the world is Mt Fuji from near Fujinomiya city, via an extension to the standard Fujinomiya trail.

Here is the route, 20km long with nearly 3500m of elevation gain.

It is not an established hike as probably almost no one hikes this route, though it does follow most of the "Mt Fuji from the sea" route (which itself is longer, but involves a lot of walking along paved roads).

Mauna Kea in Hawaii is higher at 4200m, but there is no trail directly from the ocean to the summit (though in theory it seems possible to build such a trail). The hiking trail to the summit starts from the visitor center and has around 1500m of elevation gain; there's no way to extend it to the sea without a LOT of walking on roads.

Potentially even longer climbs might exist in the Andes (and which don't require expensive permits like Aconcagua). I don't think there are any other places in the world which may have candidates. Nearly all trails in the Himalayas/central Asian mountains start at a high elevation. New Guinea has mountains even higher than Hawaii, but most of them require technical mountaineering to climb (and all are quite remote).

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E3 is a long mountain "trail" spanning multiple mountains. It takes about an year for an experienced hiker to complete.

It does not adhere to point 1 in your question, so that`s probably a dealbraker, but it does adhere to all the later points.

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