The Cabane d'Orny, Wallis, Switzerland
Living the Hut Life
High alpine shelters are a lot more than refuges—they're destinations in their own right
I paid twenty-eight dollars for a plate of hash browns once. It was worth it. After five days of trekking across the original Haute Route and burning a couple thousand calories a day, we finally arrived at a hut in the early afternoon, before the kitchen had closed down to prepare for the evening dinner. I wanted rösti, the Swiss national comfort food gut-bomb, a pile of oil-cooked grated potatoes, cheese, and eggs, and every afternoon of our trip, we had arrived at a different hut just after the kitchen closed. So this time, I ordered it and gladly forked over the money, when in Rome or whatever.
And I sat at a table in the sun and ate the entire thing, enough for two people to split, and I watched avalanches rip down the thousand-meter-high north face of the Dent d’Hérens. I listened to them rumble down for a half-mile onto the glacier below, loud enough to drown out the giggles of the
1,400 words to go
You’re just getting to the good part.
This story — and 41 issues of them — opens with a subscription.
Either one picks up right where you left off.
Join 7,000+ readers · Independently owned · Since 2008
Already a subscriber? Sign in
Adventure Journal — Print Quarterly
Stories like this, in your hands four times a year.
41 issues. 10 years. Independently owned. Printed on 70lb uncoated paper with a soft-touch cover, solar-powered, and shipped in a brown paper envelope. Free domestic shipping.