Shelter 2 was a 2015 sequel to the 2013 game Shelter. It Featured Inna, the mother Lynx, and her nameable cubs. It uses the same engine as Shelter with some differences, be it minor or large. You will start out being chased by wolves and you will have to escape them. This is the games way of teaching you the running/jumping controls. Once you escape the wolves, you will approach an open field. The Shelter 2 Mountains Soundtrack is the soundtrack album for Shelter 2 Mountains and features 2 total tracks that spun over a runtime of approximately five minutes. As with all Shelter products, the music is composed by Retro Family and is available as a downloadable 'DLC' on Steam. Owning the soundtrack on Steam will also unlock a unique Lynx call for use in the MMO, Meadow.
A mountain hut is a building located high in the mountains, generally accessible only by foot, intended to provide food and shelter to mountaineers, climbers and hikers. Mountain huts are usually operated by an Alpine Club or some organization dedicated to hiking or mountain recreation. They are known by many names, including alpine hut, mountain shelter, mountain refuge, mountain lodge, and mountain hostel.
Mountain huts can provide a range of services, starting with shelter and simple sleeping berths. Some, particularly in remote areas, are not staffed, but others have staff which prepare meals and drinks and can provide other services, including providing lectures and selling clothing and small items. Mountain huts usually allow anybody to access their facilities, although some require reservations.
While shelters have long existed in mountains, modern hut systems date back a century and a half. The Swiss Alpine Club has built huts since 1863.[1] In the United States, the Appalachian Mountain Club built its first hut at Madison Spring in New Hampshire in 1889.[2]
Huts[edit]
The Alps[edit]
The construction of refuges and shelters in the Alps date back to ancient times, when Roman roads led across the mountain passes. In the High Middle Ages, hospitales were erected along the trade routes; cottages and sheds on the high mountain pastures served for Alpine transhumance. The long history of mountaineering from the 19th century onwards has led to a large number of Alpine club huts as well as private huts along the mountaineering paths. These huts are categorised according to their location and facilities. They may have beds or a mattress room (Matratzenlager) for overnight stays.
Just as the Margherita Hut in the Valais Alps is the highest alpine refuge at 4,554 m, the Rifugio Mario Premuda in Trieste owned by the Italian Alpine Association is the lowest refuge in the Alps at 82 m.
Britain[edit]
In the United Kingdom the tradition is of unwardened 'climbing huts' providing fairly rudimentary accommodation (but superior to that of a bothy) close to a climbing ground; the huts are usually conversions (e.g. of former quarrymen's cottages, or of disused mine buildings), and are not open to passers-by except in emergency. Many climbing clubs in the UK have such huts in Snowdonia or in the Lake District. A well-known example is the Charles Inglis Clark Memorial Hut (the 'CIC Hut') - a purpose-built hut below the northern crags of Ben Nevis in Scotland.[3]In the past, some shelters in Scotland were built in exposed locations at high elevation, often as part of military training exercises. However, and particularly following the 1971 Cairngorm Plateau Disaster, these were deliberately demolished because they were thought to pose dangers exceeding their benefits.[4]
Shelter 2 Wolves
Norway[edit]
The Norwegian Trekking Association operates about 460 cabins mostly in the mountains and in forested areas, of which about 400 have lodgings.[5] Many cabins are unstaffed and open all year, while the staffed cabins often are just open during summer.[6]
Poland[edit]
In Poland most mountain shelters and huts are run by the Polish Tourist and Sightseeing Society, with some being privately owned. In the Polish mountains, there are about 100 shelters. Most mountain shelters offer multi-person rooms and refreshments. Polish mountain huts are obliged by their own regulations to overnight each person who is not able to find any other place before sunset, though the conditions may be spartan (e.g. a mattress in a hall or warm basement).[7]
Slovakia[edit]
In Slovakia there is a dense network of mountain huts ('chata') in most mountain and forest regions, serving a culture of hiking. In the past they were managed by the official tourist union, but now are mostly in private hands. Official mountain huts are similar to guest houses and are run by full-time managers. In winter, some refuges are closed.
United States[edit]
There are many huts in the United States, for example in the Rocky Mountains,[8] the Appalachian Mountains and other ranges. The High Huts of the White Mountains[9] in New Hampshire are generally 'full service' (cooks serve food) through summer and early fall, while some are open the rest of the year as self-service huts, at which hikers bring and prepare their own food.
Canada[edit]
The Alpine Club of Canada operates what it calls the 'largest network of backcountry huts in North America.'[10]
New Zealand[edit]
The New Zealand Department of Conservation 'manages a network of over 950 huts of all shapes and sizes.'[11]
The Himalayas[edit]
Shelter 2 Mountains Game
The mountains of Asia do not have a well-developed system of public mountain huts, although hiking, trekking and mountain climbing are common. In 2015, a competition was launched to design huts that could be located along trekking trails of Nepal.[12]
South Africa[edit]
Many places in Africa have hiking huts but they are usually privately owned and require payment and reservations. At least one hut is open for public use on Table Mountain in South Africa, part of Table Mountain National Park.[13]
Gallery[edit]
Europe[edit]
Ciareido hut, near Lozzo di Cadore in the Dolomites in Belluno, Italy
Cabane du Trient, Switzerland
Triglav Lakes Lodge in Julian Alps, Slovenia
Téryho chata in the Tatra Mountains, Slovakia
Samotnia in the Karkonosze, Poland
Edelweißerhütte in the Tennen Mountains, Austria
The Margherita Hut, the highest refuge in the Alps
The Rifugio Mario Premuda in Trieste, the lowest refuge in the Alps
Latin America[edit]
A refugio atop Tronador, Argentina
Frey Hut in San Carlos de Bariloche, Argentina
Refugio Otto Meiling Stevage, Argentina
Refugio Perú in Ancash, Perú
Refugio Contrahierbas in Ancash, Perú
North America[edit]
Elizabeth Parker hut in the Canadian Rockies
Greenleaf Hut in the White Mountains of the U.S.
R.J. Ritchie Hut (Balfour Hut) in Banff National Park
Shasta Alpine Lodge at Horse Camp on Mount Shasta, California
Smithsonian Institution Shelter on the summit of Mount Whitney, California
Africa[edit]
Mountain cabin on Mount Cameroon.
Oceania, Australia, New Zealand[edit]
Wallace's Hut, Bogong High Plains
Federation Hut, Mount Feathertop
See also[edit]
- bivouac shelter - a tent, or a permanent structure (e.g, a bivacco in the Italian Alps).
- Log cabin - small house built from logs
- Vernacular architecture - traditional architecture in a particular area
- Wilderness hut - rent-free, open dwelling place for temporary accommodation
References[edit]
- ^The Huts of the Swiss Alpine Club'
- ^'Timeline of AMC Huts'. Retrieved 11 July 2014.
- ^'Scottish Mountaineering Club'. www.smc.org.uk. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
- ^Duff, John (2001). A Bobbie on Ben Macdhui: Life and Death on the Braes o' Mar. Huntly: Leopard Magazine Publishing. pp. 115–125. ISBN0953453413.
- ^[1] The Norwegian Trekking Association, retrieved 2 June 2013
- ^DNT cabins - general informationArchived 2015-05-29 at the Wayback Machine The Norwegian Trekking Association, retrieved 2 June 2013
- ^Regulamin schroniska PTTK [retrieved 2009-12-25]
- ^10th Mountain Division Hut Association
- ^AMC huts
- ^Alpine Club of Canada
- ^NZ Department of Conservation 'Huts by region'
- ^Himalayan Mountain Hunt Competition
- ^MCSA Capetown: Table Mountain Hut
External links[edit]
- Media related to Alpine huts at Wikimedia Commons
- Media related to Mountain huts at Wikimedia Commons
Appalachian Trail Thru-Hiker Backcountry PermitYou may obtain an AT thru hiker permit through this site. IMPORTANT! To qualify for an AT Thru-Hiker Permit, you must begin and end your hike at least 50 miles outside Great Smoky Mountains National Park and only travel on the AT in the park. Hikers not meeting this definition should apply for a General Backcountry Permit All users are strongly encouraged to read the basic permit information below before acquiring a permit. Permits obtained through this system are issued by email. If you do not have an email address, please contact the Backcountry Office at 865-436-1297. Basic Trip Planning Information
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