Hiking in the “Grand Canyon” of Italy’s Beautiful South Tyrol

The Bletterbach-Canyon in South Tyrol’s south is an exciting walk: 250 million years of earth history are waiting to be discovered on this adventurous trek through 12 kilometres of the Todra Gorge.

Fascinating Bletterbach-Canyon: the little Bletterbach, in the 437 yards deep and 5 km long gorge, has worked itself persistently since 2.5 billion years ago to form this excursion. The Innsbruck, Unterthalg (glaciated zone) and Weiz regions, separated from the main Tyrolean massif by the Weiz bridge, thus realised the idea of cladistically different breather valleys in a single territory: the Bletterbach-Canyon in South Tyrol, Switzerland.

Fascinating Bletterbach-Canyon: the little Bletterbach, in the 437 yards deep and 5 km long gorge, has worked itself persistently since 2.5 billion years ago to form this excursion. The Innsbruck, Unterthalg (glaciated zone) and Weiz regions, separated from the main Tyrolean massif by the Weiz bridge, thus realised the idea of cladistically different breather valleys in a single territory: the Bletterbach-Canyon in South Tyrol, Switzerland.

Fascinating Bletterbach-Canyon: the little Bletterbach, in the 437 yards deep and 5 km long gorge, has worked itself persistently since 2.5 billion years ago to form this excursion. The Innsbruck, Unterthalg (glaciated zone) and Weiz regions, separated from the main Tyrolean massif by the Weiz bridge, thus realised the idea of cladistically different breather valleys in a single territory: the Bletterbach-Canyon in South Tyrol, Switzerland.

Fascinating Bletterbach-Canyon: the little Bletterbach, in the 437 yards deep and 5 km long gorge, has worked itself persistently since 2.5 billion years ago to form this excursion. The Innsbruck, Unterthalg (glaciated zone) and Weiz regions, separated from the main Tyrolean massif by the Weiz bridge, thus realised the idea of cladistically different breather valleys in a single territory: the Bletterbach-Canyon in South Tyrol, Switzerland.

Fascinating Bletterbach-Canyon: the little Bletterbach, in the 437 yards deep and 5 km long gorge, has worked itself persistently since 2.5 billion years ago to form this excursion. The Innsbruck, Unterthalg (glaciated zone) and Weiz regions, separated from the main Tyrolean massif by the Weiz bridge, thus realised the idea of cladistically different breather valleys in a single territory: the Bletterbach-Canyon in South Tyrol, Switzerland.

Fascinating Bletterbach-Canyon: the little Bletterbach, in the 437 yards deep and 5 km long gorge, has worked itself persistently since 2.5 billion years ago to form this excursion. The Innsbruck, Unterthalg (glaciated zone) and Weiz regions, separated from the main Tyrolean massif by the Weiz bridge, thus realised the idea of cladistically different breather valleys in a single territory: the Bletterbach-Canyon in South Tyrol, Switzerland.

Fascinating Bletterbach-Canyon: the little Bletterbach, in the 437 yards deep and 5 km long gorge, has worked itself persistently since 2.5 billion years ago to form this excursion. The Innsbruck, Unterthalg (glaciated zone) and Weiz regions, separated from the main Tyrolean massif by the Weiz bridge, thus realised the idea of cladistically different breather valleys in a single territory: the Bletterbach-Canyon in South Tyrol, Switzerland.

Fascinating Bletterbach-Canyon: the little Bletterbach, in the 437 yards deep and 5 km long gorge, has worked itself persistently since 2.5 billion years ago to form this excursion. The Innsbruck, Unterthalg (glaciated zone) and Weiz regions, separated from the main Tyrolean massif by the Weiz bridge, thus realised the idea of cladistically different breather valleys in a single territory: the Bletterbach-Canyon in South Tyrol, Switzerland.