Thirteen days crossing the full breadth of Eastern Georgia’s high mountains — from the glaciers of Kazbegi to the fortress villages of Khevsureti, over the Atsunta Pass into Tusheti, and down to the ancient vineyards of Kakheti. The most complete Georgian mountain expedition you can do.

Three mountain regions. Four crossings of the main Caucasus ridge. Eight days of trekking through landscapes that haven’t changed in centuries. This is the Grand Trek in Eastern Caucasus — two of our most celebrated trekking routes combined into a single, continuous expedition that takes you deeper into Georgia’s mountains than almost any other journey on offer.

You begin in Kazbegi, beneath the great peak of Mount Kazbek, and cross the Chaukhi Pass to reach the glacial Abudelauri lakes — one of the Caucasus’s most extraordinary alpine landscapes. From there, a jeep transfer carries you west through the Datvijvari Pass into Khevsureti, where the warrior traditions of medieval Georgia survived intact well into the 20th century. The second half of the trek follows the Khonischala gorge up to the Atsunta Pass (3,431m) and descends through Tusheti’s tower-guarded valleys into one of Europe’s most genuinely remote inhabited regions. The mountains end, as mountains always should, with wine: two days exploring Kakheti, Georgia’s ancient vineyard heartland.

This is not a comfortable tour. The terrain is demanding, the camping is basic, and there are stretches where turning back simply isn’t practical. But for experienced hikers who want to understand Georgia at its most elemental — its geology, its history, its extraordinary mountain cultures — there is nothing else quite like it.

Trek at a Glance

Duration: 13 days, 12 nights | Trekking Days: 8 | Total Trekking: ~90 km | Total Driving: ~600 km

Max Elevation: 3,431m (Atsunta Pass) | Difficulty: Challenging | Fitness Required: Excellent | Group Size: 4–12 persons

Accommodation: 3 nights camping + 9 nights guesthouses/hotel | Regions: Kazbegi → Khevsureti → Tusheti → Kakheti

Jeep Transfer: Roshka to Shatili (~50 km, between the two trekking sections) | Horse support: Days 6–8

Trek Highlights

  • Gergeti Trinity Church: The most iconic image in Georgia — a medieval church perched on a 2,170-meter ridge with the snow cone of Mount Kazbek rising directly behind it. Earned its postcard status.
  • Cross Chaukhi Pass (3,338m): The first major crossing, connecting the Juta valley to Roshka through a high-alpine landscape of jagged dolomite towers and glacial cirques that feel like another planet.
  • Abudelauri Glacier Lakes: Three glacial lakes in a single valley, each a different color — the White, Blue, and Green lakes — formed by different mineral compositions. Few places in the Caucasus are more surreal.
  • Shatili Fortress Village: Dozens of interconnected stone towers merged into a single defensive complex overlooking the Argun gorge — the most dramatic fortress settlement in Georgia.
  • Anatori Ossuary: A cluster of stone burial towers near the Chechen border where an entire community entombed itself during a medieval plague rather than flee and spread the disease. A place of haunting weight.
  • Mutso Cliff Fortress: The abandoned citadel perched on a vertical rock above the Argun gorge — harder to reach than Shatili and far fewer visitors, which makes the silence there something to reckon with.
  • Cross Atsunta Pass (3,431m): The highest crossing of the trek and one of the highest trekking passes in Georgia. On clear days the panorama stretches across the full depth of the Greater Caucasus.
  • Pirikiti Valley Tower Villages: Girevi, Parsma, Chesho, Kvavlo, Dartlo — Tusheti’s most remote cluster of medieval tower settlements, reached only on foot from the Atsunta side.
  • Dartlo: The living museum of Tusheti. Stone towers above clusters of timber-balconied houses, summer pastures all around, and a quiet that most of Europe gave up centuries ago.
  • Omalo and Keselo Castle: Tusheti’s main settlement and its iconic fortress towers — the images you’ve seen on postcards of the region. Worth the 13-day journey to stand there and understand the context.
  • Abano Pass (2,926m): The most dramatic mountain road in the Caucasus — 72 kilometers of unpaved switchbacks dropping from Tusheti to the Kakheti lowlands. Spectacular and nerve-wracking in equal measure.
  • Kakheti Wine Country: Two days of recovery in Georgia’s vineyard heartland — ancient monasteries, the hilltop town of Signagi, and wines made in buried clay qvevri using a method 8,000 years old.
  • Four Crossings of the Main Caucasus Ridge: The geological boundary between Asia and Europe, crossed twice on foot and twice by road — a fact that only becomes fully meaningful when you’ve stood on the passes themselves.
  • Horse Support on the High Section: Pack horses carry tents and heavy gear from Ardoti over the Atsunta Pass. You trek with a daypack. The horsemen know these routes across generations.

Who This Trek Is For

This trek suits: Experienced mountain hikers in excellent physical condition with prior multi-day trekking experience — ideally including high-altitude camping. People who can manage consecutive demanding days, comfortable with elevation gains of over 1,000 meters in a single push, 18km marathon days on rough terrain, and nights at altitude above 3,000 meters. Those seeking not just scenery but cultural depth — this route passes through three distinct highland peoples, each with traditions that evolved in near-total isolation from each other. Anyone who has done the Atsunta trek or the Chaukhi traverse separately and wants to experience both in a single continuous journey.

This trek doesn’t suit: Beginners or occasional day hikers — prior multi-day mountain experience is not optional, it’s a prerequisite. Those who need reliable mobile coverage, comfortable accommodation, or reliable access to medical facilities. Anyone with health conditions affected by altitude, or who cannot commit to 8 days of consecutive hiking with limited exit options in the middle section. If you’re uncertain about your fitness level, we would rather you ask us directly than find out on a mountainside.

Detailed Day-by-Day Itinerary

Day 1: Arrival in Tbilisi

Driving: Airport transfer | Walking: Optional Old Town stroll | Meals: Dinner | Overnight: Hotel in Tbilisi

Airport transfer and hotel check-in. For those arriving with energy to spare, the walk through Tbilisi’s Old Town — past the sulfur bath district, the Narikala fortress walls, and the tangle of carved wooden balconies above — is an excellent way to start calibrating yourself to Georgia. Tonight is for rest, a good dinner, and checking your pack.

This is also the moment to raise any last questions with your guide about gear, fitness, and what lies ahead. The mountains begin tomorrow.

Day 2: Tbilisi — Ananuri — Kazbegi — Gergeti — Juta

Driving: ~3.5 hours | Walking: ~3 km (Gergeti hike) | Max Elevation: 2,170m (Gergeti Church) | Meals: Lunch, Dinner | Overnight: Camp in Juta (~2,200m)

The Georgian Military Highway north from Tbilisi is one of the great mountain drives — the Aragvi valley narrows, the walls close in, and the altitude climbs steadily toward Russia. We stop first at the Zhinvali Reservoir viewpoint, then at Ananuri Castle, a 17th-century fortress complex that sits directly above the reservoir with a church, two towers, and views that stop most people mid-sentence.

Above Gudauri, the road crosses the Cross Pass at 2,379 meters — the point where the Caucasus ridge becomes something you can feel rather than just see. The descent into Stepantsminda (Kazbegi) brings Georgia’s most famous landmark into view: Gergeti Trinity Church, a 14th-century Georgian Orthodox church perched on its improbable ridge with Mount Kazbek — 5,047 meters, permanently snow-capped — filling the sky behind it.

We hike up to Gergeti, spend time at the church, then continue to the Gveleti waterfall gorge before driving the final mountain track to Juta. At 2,200 meters, in the shadow of the Chaukhi massif — a cluster of dolomite spires that looks like the Dolomites after a serious argument — this is your first night under canvas. Dinner is camp-cooked with the peaks visible from the tent.

Day 3: Chaukhi Pass Crossing — Juta to Roshka via Abudelauri Lakes

Hiking: ~18 km | Duration: ~8 hours | Elevation: 2,200m → 3,338m → 2,100m | Meals: Full board | Overnight: Guesthouse in Roshka

The first big day. From the Juta camp, the trail climbs steadily toward the Chaukhi Pass at 3,338 meters — gaining over 1,100 meters through alpine meadows that thin out into rocky scree and, depending on the season, patches of snow. The Chaukhi towers, those extraordinary dolomite spires, loom above you for most of the ascent.

The reward at the top is a view that stretches back into the Kazbegi district and forward into the Roshka valley — two completely different geological worlds separated by a single ridge. The descent follows a long, sweeping valley down toward the Abudelauri glacier lakes, which are unlike anything else in the Caucasus. Three lakes in a single glacial basin, each a different color: the White Lake, the Blue Lake, and the Green Lake, their hues determined by the varying mineral compositions of the glacial meltwater feeding them. The effect is disorienting in the best possible way.

From the lakes, the trail continues down to the village of Roshka, where a guesthouse, a warm meal, and a proper roof over your head mark the end of the first real mountain day. Appreciate the bed — it will be a while before the next one.

Day 4: Roshka — Datvijvari Pass — Shatili

Hiking: ~7 km (descent to road) | Driving: ~50 km by jeep | Max Pass Elevation: 2,676m (Datvijvari) | Meals: Full board | Overnight: Guesthouse in Shatili

A transitional day between the two trekking sections — and a welcome one after yesterday. From Roshka, a gentle 7-kilometer descent through the valley brings you to the main road and the waiting jeeps, which carry the group and all baggage the 50 kilometers west to Shatili via the Datvijvari Pass.

The road itself is worth attention. It crosses into Khevsureti through the 2,676-meter Datvijvari Pass, with views across some of Georgia’s most remote highland terrain — ridges and valleys stretching to the horizon with no town visible in any direction. En route, the ruins of Kistani village and the defensive tower of Lebaiskari give a first glimpse of the fortress architecture that defines this region.

Shatili itself is one of the most remarkable human constructions in the Caucasus — not a village with towers, but a fortress that is also a village, its dozens of interconnected stone towers grown directly from the ridge above the Argun gorge. Explore on foot in the evening. Sleep in a guesthouse among the towers.

Day 5: Shatili — Anatori — Mutso — Ardoti

Hiking: ~20 km | Duration: 7–8 hours | Elevation: 1,400m → 1,600m (via Mutso) → 1,500m (Ardoti) | Meals: Full board | Overnight: Camp near Ardoti

The second full trekking day begins the Khevsureti section in earnest. The trail descends the Argun gorge — the river rushing below, stone towers appearing on every ridge — to the confluence with the Andaki River at a place called Anatori. A cluster of stone burial towers stands here, set slightly apart from the path, in a location that carries a particular weight when you understand their history. During a plague epidemic — the date debated, the story consistent — the people of Anatori walled themselves inside these towers to prevent the disease from spreading to neighboring communities. The towers became their tombs. It is one of those places that requires silence.

Continuing upstream from Anatori, the trail passes the ruined settlement of Mutso — a fortress perched on an almost vertical cliff above the gorge, its towers half-collapsed but still recognizable as what they once were. The detour up to Mutso adds time and elevation but is worth every step for the views and the eerie stillness of an abandoned community hanging above an empty gorge.

From Mutso, the trail follows the valley to the ruins of Ardoti, where the camp is set for the second night under canvas. From here, the horses take over the heavy work.

Day 6: Ardoti — Khonischala Gorge — Atsunta Base Camp

Hiking: ~12 km | Duration: ~7 hours | Elevation: 1,500m → ~2,000m (+500m) | Meals: Full board | Overnight: Camp below Atsunta (~2,000m)
Horse support begins: Pack horses carry tents, food, and heavy gear from Ardoti onward

From Ardoti, the Khonischala gorge opens ahead — a long, progressively narrowing valley that carries you steadily upward toward the base of the Atsunta Pass. This is where the horse handlers and pack animals take over the luggage; from this point until Tusheti, you carry only a daypack. It makes a considerable difference.

The terrain shifts as you climb: first deciduous forest, then alpine meadow, then the raw rocky ground of the upper gorge where the treeline gives out and the mountains become something more serious. The gorge is wild and sees very few people — no road reaches it, and the trail exists primarily because local horsemen and the occasional expedition party have been using it for generations.

Camp tonight is set at around 2,000 meters — higher than yesterday, cold enough in the evening to make the sleeping bag feel earned. The pass is visible above. Tomorrow is the big day.

Day 7: Atsunta Pass Crossing (3,431m) — The Spine of the Caucasus

Hiking: ~10 km | Duration: ~8 hours | Elevation: 2,000m → 3,431m → ~2,800m (+1,431m / -631m) | Meals: Full board | Overnight: High camp, Tusheti side (~2,800m)

The centerpiece of the trek and its hardest day. An early start is not optional — the summit push gains over 1,400 meters from camp through steep, rocky terrain where snow can be present even in August. The final approach to the pass is the kind of climbing that narrows your focus to the next step and the next breath and nothing else.

At 3,431 meters, Atsunta is one of the highest trekking passes in Georgia. From the top, if the weather holds, the view opens across the full depth of the Greater Caucasus in both directions — range after range of peaks diminishing into haze, the valleys of Khevsureti behind you and the valleys of Tusheti below. You are standing on the spine of the mountains that separate, in a geological and historical sense, two different worlds. The community that once crossed this pass regularly — carrying goods, livestock, children — understood it as a threshold. Standing there, you will too.

The descent into Tusheti is careful and steep. Camp is pitched on the eastern side of the pass at around 2,800 meters, still high, still cold, but with the hardest work behind you. Tomorrow is all downhill.

Day 8: Descent to Dartlo via the Pirikiti Valley

Hiking: ~12 km | Duration: Full day | Elevation: 2,800m → 1,800m (−1,000m) | Meals: Full board | Overnight: Guesthouse in Dartlo

The long descent from the pass into Tusheti’s inhabited valleys passes through the Pirikiti Valley’s remotest settlements — Girevi, Parsma, Chesho — stone tower villages that sit above the trail on slopes of alpine pasture, inhabited only seasonally and seeing a fraction of the visitors that reach Omalo or Dartlo by road. Walking through them feels like a discovery, even if it’s a discovery that others have made before you. The towers are classic Tushetian: tall, narrow, built for defence rather than comfort, and still standing after centuries of abandonment by anyone except the occasional summer shepherd.

At the end of the valley, Dartlo awaits — the village most often described as the finest in Tusheti, with its stone towers above a cluster of timber-balconied houses, its summer families, and its sense of having reached somewhere genuinely far from the ordinary world. A guesthouse, a hot meal, and three nights of camping behind you. Sleep well.

Day 9: Dartlo — Omalo

Hiking: ~10 km | Duration: ~5 hours | Elevation: 1,800m → 1,900m (gentle) | Meals: Full board | Overnight: Guesthouse in Upper Omalo

The last trekking day, and by the standards of what came before, a relatively gentle one. The trail from Dartlo to Omalo follows the Pirikiti Alazani river valley through pine forests and summer meadows thick with wild berries — cloudberries, blueberries, raspberries depending on the season. After days of rocky alpine terrain, the change of vegetation feels like a different country entirely.

Omalo is the administrative and practical hub of Tusheti — which is a relative term in a region where the entire population of thousands of square kilometers numbers in the hundreds in summer and near zero in winter. Upper Omalo, perched above the lower village, gives views across the valley and up toward the Keselo Castle towers that define the skyline here. Tonight, a real guesthouse in a remarkable setting. The trek is complete.

Day 10: Omalo — Keselo Castle — Abano Pass — Telavi

Driving: ~6–7 hours total | Walking: ~1 km (Keselo) | Max Elevation: 2,926m (Abano Pass) | Meals: Breakfast, Dinner | Overnight: Hotel in Telavi

Morning visit to Keselo Castle — the fortress tower complex perched above Upper Omalo whose silhouette has appeared on every Tusheti photograph you’ve ever seen. The short walk up earns views across the entire valley, and the towers themselves, several of which have been partially restored, give context to the defensive logic of this entire highland world.

Then begins the Abano Pass descent: 72 kilometers of unpaved mountain road dropping from Tusheti’s plateau at 2,926 meters to the foothills of Kakheti. It is one of the most dramatic drives in the Caucasus — switchbacks above cliff edges, views that keep recomposing as the altitude drops, and a transition from alpine terrain to fertile, vineyard-covered slopes that happens almost visibly over the course of a few hours.

By evening you are in Telavi, Kakheti’s historic capital, where a proper hotel room, a hot shower, and a dinner that didn’t come from a camp stove await. The mountains are behind you. The wine country is ahead.

Day 11: Kakheti — Wineries, Signagi, Monasteries

Driving: ~3 hours total | Walking: light | Meals: Breakfast, Wine tasting | Overnight: Hotel in Telavi or Signagi

A day of deliberate deceleration. Kakheti is Georgia’s wine country — the Alazani valley spreading south from Telavi into a broad, sun-soaked plain of vineyards, orchards, and ancient monasteries where the pace of life seems calibrated to centuries rather than schedules.

The program for the day includes a wine tasting at a local producer, with wines made in the traditional qvevri method — clay amphoras buried in the earth that have been used for fermentation here for 8,000 years, producing wines with a depth of tannin and texture that European winemaking simply does not replicate. We also visit Signagi, the small hilltop town above the Alazani valley whose medieval walls and terracotta rooflines make it one of the most photographed towns in Georgia, and the Bodbe Monastery nearby, built over the grave of St. Nino, who brought Christianity to Georgia in the 4th century.

This is also a day for legs that have earned rest, for writing in notebooks, and for eating well.

Day 12: Kakheti — Alaverdi Monastery — Telavi — Tbilisi

Driving: ~3 hours to Tbilisi | Walking: light | Meals: Breakfast

A morning stop at Alaverdi Cathedral — the great 11th-century church rising from the vineyard plain north of Telavi, one of the tallest medieval structures in Georgia and still an active monastery surrounded by working vineyards — before the drive back to Tbilisi along the Kakheti highway. The tour officially ends on arrival in the capital.

Those flying onward the same day or the next morning will find this schedule workable. Those with time remaining in Tbilisi will find the city feels different after two weeks in the mountains.

Day 13: Departure

Transfer: Airport | Meals: Breakfast

Breakfast and airport transfer. The tour ends here. The mountains will stay with you considerably longer.

Price Information

Group Size Price per Person
4 persons $INSERT_PRICE
6 persons $INSERT_PRICE
8 persons $INSERT_PRICE
10–12 persons $INSERT_PRICE

What’s Included

  • All transportation (4×4 vehicles for mountain roads throughout)
  • Professional English-speaking guide and local support team
  • Horse support for luggage (Days 6–8, Ardoti to Tusheti)
  • All camping equipment (tents, sleeping mats)
  • 12 nights accommodation (3 camping, 9 guesthouses/hotel)
  • All meals as indicated in the itinerary
  • Entrance fees where applicable
  • Wine tasting in Kakheti
  • First aid kit and satellite communication device
  • Vegetarian meal options available on request

Not Included

  • International flights
  • Travel insurance (required — must cover high-altitude trekking and helicopter evacuation)
  • Sleeping bag (rated to -10°C recommended; available for rent)
  • Personal trekking gear and clothing
  • Alcoholic beverages beyond the included wine tasting
  • Tips for guides, horsemen, and guesthouse hosts
  • Optional Kutaisi airport extension (add 2 days)

Trek Route Map

Tbilisi
Start & End point
Ananuri Castle
Day 2 — Medieval fortress on the Military Highway
Kazbegi / Stepantsminda
Day 2 — Gateway to the high mountains
Gergeti Trinity Church
Day 2 — Iconic church at 2,170m
Juta Camp
Night 2 — First camp (2,200m)
Chaukhi Pass
Day 3 — First major crossing (3,338m)
Abudelauri Lakes
Day 3 — Three glacial lakes, three colors
Roshka
Night 3 — Guesthouse (2,100m)
Datvijvari Pass
Day 4 — Jeep transfer via 2,676m pass
Shatili
Night 4 — Legendary fortress village
Anatori
Day 5 — Plague ossuary towers
Mutso
Day 5 — Cliff fortress above the Argun gorge
Ardoti Camp
Night 5 — Camp (1,500m), horse support begins
Atsunta Base Camp
Night 6 — High camp (2,000m)
Atsunta Pass
Day 7 — Summit (3,431m)
High Camp Tusheti Side
Night 7 — Camp on descent (2,800m)
Dartlo
Night 8 — The finest village in Tusheti
Omalo
Night 9 — Tushetian capital, Keselo Castle
Abano Pass
Day 10 — Dramatic descent (2,926m)
Telavi
Nights 10–11 — Kakheti wine capital
Signagi
Day 11 — Hilltop town above the Alazani valley

Practical Information

Fitness Requirements

This is an expedition-grade trek requiring excellent physical fitness and prior mountain hiking experience. Eight consecutive hiking days include two marathon days of ~18–20 km, multiple days with 1,000m+ of elevation gain, three nights camping above 2,000 meters, and a summit day pushing to 3,431m. You should be comfortable with 7–8 hour hiking days, steep and rocky terrain, and the physical and psychological demands of consecutive challenging days with no easy exit option mid-route. If you’re unsure about your fitness level, contact us directly for an honest conversation — we would rather have that discussion before the trek than on a mountainside.

Best Time to Trek

July to early October. Snow can linger on both passes into July in heavy snow years. September offers cooler temperatures and more stable weather, though nights will be cold at high camp. August is peak season for conditions and wildflower meadows. October is possible but requires flexibility around early snowfall.

What to Bring

Essential: Sturdy broken-in mountain boots, layered clothing system (base, mid, insulating, waterproof shell), warm hat and gloves (critical for the pass and high camps), sun protection, headlamp, personal medications, minimum 2L water capacity, small daypack for trekking days.

Sleeping: We provide tents and sleeping mats. Bring your own sleeping bag rated to -10°C, or rent one from us — request at booking.

Recommended: Trekking poles, gaiters, camp sandals for evenings, quick-dry towel, camera with spare batteries, power bank.

Camping and Accommodation

Night 1: Hotel in Tbilisi | Night 2: Camp in Juta (2,200m) | Night 3: Guesthouse in Roshka | Night 4: Guesthouse in Shatili | Night 5: Camp near Ardoti (1,500m) | Night 6: Camp below Atsunta (2,000m) | Night 7: High camp, Tusheti side (2,800m) | Night 8: Guesthouse in Dartlo | Night 9: Guesthouse in Upper Omalo | Nights 10–11: Hotel in Telavi | Night 12: Hotel in Tbilisi

Horse Support

Pack horses carry tents, food, and heavy gear from Ardoti through the Atsunta Pass and into Tusheti. You trek with only a daypack through the most demanding section of the route. The horsemen accompanying us have used these trails across generations.

Vegetarian Options

Dietary requirements are discussed before the tour. Vegetarian meals are fully accommodated throughout. Please inform us when booking.

Cultural Note: Tusheti

An ancient tradition — predating Christianity and observed without exception — prohibits pork products throughout Tusheti. This is not a guideline; it is a strict rule taken very seriously by local people. No pork may enter the region. Please ensure nothing in your food supplies contains pork before crossing the Atsunta Pass.

Kutaisi Airport Option

The tour can be modified for groups arriving or departing via Kutaisi International Airport. This adds approximately two days to the itinerary, beginning in western Georgia before joining the route at Tbilisi. Contact us to arrange a customized start.

Frequently Asked Questions

This tour combines both routes into a single continuous expedition. You cross the Chaukhi Pass on Day 3, then the Atsunta Pass on Day 7, crossing the main Caucasus ridge a total of four times. It adds the Kazbegi region and the Abudelauri lakes to the Khevsureti-Tusheti journey, and provides the full arc of Georgia’s eastern mountain cultures in a single trip. If you’ve already done one of the routes, this is how you do the other — and experience the connection between them.
Day 7 — the Atsunta Pass crossing — involves the most elevation gain in a single day (over 1,400m from camp to summit) and is the most technically demanding. Day 3 (Chaukhi Pass, 18km) and Day 5 (Shatili to Ardoti, 20km) are the longest in terms of distance. All three require you to be in good condition going in.
No. This route is designed for experienced mountain hikers with prior multi-day trekking background. If you’re new to long-distance mountain hiking, our Tusheti jeep tour or standalone 4-day Tusheti hiking tour would be a more suitable introduction to the region.
Yes. We discuss dietary requirements before the tour and accommodate vegetarian meals throughout. Let us know when booking and we’ll plan accordingly.
After completing the Chaukhi Pass on Day 3 and arriving in Roshka, there is a jeep transfer of approximately 50 kilometers to Shatili via the Datvijvari Pass on Day 4. This is a practical break between the two mountain sections — the drive itself crosses into Khevsureti through a 2,676-meter pass and includes stops at significant historical sites along the way.
Very limited. You can expect some signal in Stepantsminda, Shatili, and Omalo/Dartlo on the Magti network. Expect no coverage during the trekking sections, the camping nights, and the pass crossings. Inform family and contacts that you will be out of reach for extended periods.
Yes. We provide tents and sleeping mats, but sleeping bags are not included. We recommend a bag rated to -10°C for the high camp nights. Sleeping bags can be rented — please request this when booking.
Mountain weather is unpredictable and the route cannot be modified on the fly once you’re in the high sections. Your guide will make all safety decisions, including whether to delay a pass crossing or adjust the day’s route. In extreme cases, the itinerary may be altered. Safety is always the priority, and the guides carry satellite communication for emergencies.
This is a pre-Christian tradition maintained without exception by Tushetian communities. Pigs are considered ritually unclean in this tradition, and the prohibition on pork — and any food containing pork — is absolute throughout the region. This is not negotiable for visitors. Please check all food items before entering Tusheti on Day 8.
All guides carry satellite communication devices and full first aid kits. Helicopter evacuation is available but takes time to organize from remote areas — which is precisely why adequate travel insurance covering high-altitude trekking and emergency evacuation is mandatory for this tour. Do not book without it.

The Complete Georgian Mountain Expedition

There are shorter treks, easier treks, and more comfortable ways to see Georgia’s mountains. The Grand Trek in Eastern Caucasus is none of those things. It is thirteen days of moving continuously through terrain that shaped three of the most distinct mountain cultures in the Caucasus — Khevsurs, Tushetians, Kakhetians — each with histories, traditions, and landscapes that require time and physical effort to understand properly.

The Chaukhi Pass shows you the Kazbegi world from the back side. The Atsunta crossing earns you entry into Tusheti in the only way the region has ever been entered from Khevsureti — on foot, over 3,400 meters of mountain. The Kakheti days give your legs and your mind time to process what you’ve seen. And throughout, the guides, horsemen, and guesthouse families you meet are part of what makes this a journey rather than just a route.

This is the trek we recommend to experienced hikers who want to see Georgia whole. Contact us to check availability, discuss your experience level, and start planning.

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