Thank you so much for sharing these adventures with us Cris, and I love your rating and thoughts too. I've dreamed of doing Italian Via Ferratas for a few years now and I feel like I could start planning a trip now having watched your videos.
Beautiful. I did those, too. They are a must do. For the thrill, you have to do Cesare Piazzetta, which I just did recently at age 62. My next targets are Punta Anna and Tomaselli. I'd recommend ferrata gloves and a resting sling with carabiner. Stay safe and all the best.
I couldn't agree more with your faves. Did Punta Anna 6 times, Gianni Aglio twice and Lipella three times. LOve them all. Next time try othe r faves of mine if you could: Tommaselli, Piazzetta, Eterna Cadore... but in all fairness all of these routes are so great, I love them all, that's why I come back year after year over here.
Once again, beautiful images, footage and insight into the Dolomites via ferrata legacy. Great to hear your opinions and recommendations. Fantastic achievement to have completed and reviewed the best of them.
Discovered your channel a few days ago and have been bingeing all the via ferrata videos! Did the Via des Evettes in Chamonix in the summer with my girlfriend (our first via ferrata) and we're planning to go to the Dolomites next year. Saw you did that one too, how would you say ferrata in the Dolomites compare to des Evettes? Excited for more videos (and to work my way through your other videos)!
Not to trample over the author's recommendation but you could start with Brigata Tridentina (Pisciadu); close to parking, fairly easy, refuge at the end; the downclimb is actually harder than the VF proper
Madalin,tThese two ferattas are not in the Dolomiti di Brenta. That mountain range is about three hours away to the west of the eastern Dolomites where these tow VFs are located. To be more precise they are in Catinaccio (Rosengarten in german). Dolomiti di Brenta is also quite different in how they look from eastern Dolomites. There is a prevalence of vertical walls interrupted by long ledges and their VFs have a lot of ladders due to this fact. Congrats on the production, it is quite beautiful.
It's hard to access and it is looooong... Not too many are trying it due to the requirement to be in top physical shape plus a whole day of good weather
Correction: This via Ferrata is NOT in the Brenta Dolomites.
Thanks everyone for letting me know!
Thank you so much for sharing these adventures with us Cris, and I love your rating and thoughts too. I've dreamed of doing Italian Via Ferratas for a few years now and I feel like I could start planning a trip now having watched your videos.
@@danielw4327 I'm glad they're helpful mate, enjoy your trip! 💪🏻
Another great video! Congratulations on completing the series 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
@@maritagardener6199 Thanks Marita!
Really enjoyed this series, absolutely awesome mate 👍 now can't wait for the next sea to summit to come out!
@@Phil-q8d Glad you enjoyed it!
Really enjoyed your Ferrata Series, Cris. Stunning scenery and amazing climbing.
@@RobRoy2012 Thank you 🙏🏻
Hi mate, great content, indeed! Btw you have a great taste od music, really good music selection in this part!🤠
@@flare31777 Thanks so much🙏🏻 It's one of the hardest things to get right so I really appreciate you saying that!
how on Earth is this channel (still) this underappreciated...amazing content
@@wolfvonderr4487 Comments like yours make it all worth it 😊
Epic! The scenery is stunning, enjoyed every moment! Cris, stay safe and say hi to Viv!
This suits my saturday mood very well 🙂. Thanks for uploading your adventures!
@@sali1608 Thank you for watching!
Beautiful. I did those, too. They are a must do. For the thrill, you have to do Cesare Piazzetta, which I just did recently at age 62. My next targets are Punta Anna and Tomaselli. I'd recommend ferrata gloves and a resting sling with carabiner. Stay safe and all the best.
You became a Via Ferrata Master my friend😄 Good stuff! Your subscribers are growing too💪🏼
I couldn't agree more with your faves. Did Punta Anna 6 times, Gianni Aglio twice and Lipella three times. LOve them all. Next time try othe r faves of mine if you could: Tommaselli, Piazzetta, Eterna Cadore... but in all fairness all of these routes are so great, I love them all, that's why I come back year after year over here.
Thank you for these! We will definitely check those out next year
@@eugenpaval Tommaselli was on my list for a long time, you'll probably see a video on it next year 😉
I rememebr Roda di Vael quite simple, while I completely agree with Di Bona as one of the best!
Once again, beautiful images, footage and insight into the Dolomites via ferrata legacy. Great to hear your opinions and recommendations. Fantastic achievement to have completed and reviewed the best of them.
@@johngardener4536 Thanks so much 🙏🏻
Glad you enjoyed the series!
@@johngardener4536 Thank you!
Super. Impresionant. ❤
@@cameliamariacristea4836 Mersi mama ❤️
Wow Amazing
This looks epic. We are going back
Discovered your channel a few days ago and have been bingeing all the via ferrata videos! Did the Via des Evettes in Chamonix in the summer with my girlfriend (our first via ferrata) and we're planning to go to the Dolomites next year. Saw you did that one too, how would you say ferrata in the Dolomites compare to des Evettes?
Excited for more videos (and to work my way through your other videos)!
I love the series. Makes me want to do it in 2025 😁
Which one would you suggest to start with for a noob like me
Not to trample over the author's recommendation but you could start with Brigata Tridentina (Pisciadu); close to parking, fairly easy, refuge at the end; the downclimb is actually harder than the VF proper
@@URBEATSs If you don't have any experience with it, I'd actually say Roda di Vael, first one in this video!
Madalin,tThese two ferattas are not in the Dolomiti di Brenta. That mountain range is about three hours away to the west of the eastern Dolomites where these tow VFs are located. To be more precise they are in Catinaccio (Rosengarten in german). Dolomiti di Brenta is also quite different in how they look from eastern Dolomites. There is a prevalence of vertical walls interrupted by long ledges and their VFs have a lot of ladders due to this fact. Congrats on the production, it is quite beautiful.
@@eugenpaval Thanks, I correct the mistake
Great series! although I am surprised that Gianni Costantini is not on the list. Did people not vote it?
It's hard to access and it is looooong... Not too many are trying it due to the requirement to be in top physical shape plus a whole day of good weather
@@giomovementacademy I don't think they did, but I'll add it for next year 😉
@@TraintoSummit awesome;would be curious to see what you think of it
@@eugenpaval hard to access? I recall me taking about 1hs to approach which is not bad actually
@@giomovementacademy you’re right. Should’ve said remote.
You are not in the Brenta Dolomites but near the Catinaccio group!!
@@veronesegiancarlo1968 Thanks for letting me know. I pinned a comment to this video correcting the mistake