Dolomiti di Brenta Via Ferrata Traverse
~30 km · +3,500 m · 5 days · Via Ferrata · Challenging
Best: Late June – mid September
Five days traversing the Brenta Dolomites, crossing the Via delle Bocchette — the most famous via ferrata route in the Alps, and the place where the iron way was born. The traverse starts and finishes in Madonna di Campiglio, taking the Grostè cable car to reach the north end of the Brenta ridge at 2,435 metres. From there, a chain of protected climbing routes — cables, ladders, exposed ledges, and narrow rock bands carved into vertical limestone — links the refuges that dot the range from north to south. The Sentiero Benini opens the traverse with a panoramic ledge climb to 2,900 metres. The Bocchette Alte cross beneath Cima Brenta, the highest peak of the group, through terrain of extraordinary verticality. The Bocchette Centrali — the most spectacular section — thread through towers and walls of dolomite with drops that make you aware of every footstep. Nights in the Rifugio Tuckett and Rifugio Alimonta sit at the heart of the route, with communal dinners and views that justify every second of the day. Via ferrata gear is required — harness, helmet, lanyards — and can be rented in Madonna di Campiglio. This is not hiking with cables for comfort. This is vertical mountain travel where the iron way is the only way through.



