Activities Available at Simien Lodge
Sun bathing, but remember the sun cream. You can burn easily at this altitude.
Champagne Lunches out on the escarpment
Trekking
Mountain Bike Riding
Horse Trekking (see notes)
From Simien Lodge you can hire:
Tents (two person) Quetcha automatic type
(Winter) sleeping bags rated to -5deg
Mattresses plates, spoons, knives, forks and cups
(and the stove can be rented from the Cook or Debark Park Office)
Beware of hiring used equipment in from places which do not specialise. The equipment is often poor quality and you could end up either very wet or very cold.
Different types of trekking available around the Lodge are:
Half-Day Walks
It is possible to take either challenging or not too challenging routes from the lodge which last just half a day and either return to the lodge by foot or to walk further a field and get picked up by car in order to come back to the lodge for lunch (and if you are on a tight schedule to even return to Gonder that afternoon)
Day Walks
You can order a packed lunch from the kitchen and stock up on water and head out for the day. You can stay on the relatively flatter paths of go off the beaten track and try some of the more challenging hillier walks to nearby view points, waterfalls and villages and then walk back of get picked up by car.
If you want a challenge then you can walk down the sides of the escarpment to the plateau to visit the Adarmaz monastery. The walk involves some narrow paths and stell ladders down vertical rocks (although the quality of these may vary!)
Nature Walks
Every walk in the Simiens is a nature walk. But if you’re keen on photography, beautiful landscape and sceneries, flora and fauna or wild-animals, you don’t need to walk far from the lodge to be immersed in amazing examples of all of these. (In fact, you can sit on your sun-porch and watch it come to you.) But if you aren’t that patient then tailored walks can be done to encompass any of these aspects. You can find one of the nearby Gilada Packs and sit just metres away from these amazing animals or walk to spectacular viewpoints.
Extended treks
You can of course extend you trekking experience to camp out and walk deeper in to the park over a few days. Possible routes include:
3 days leisurely trekking from Buit Ras (Simien Lodge) to Sankaber (5 Hours), Sankaber to Gich (6 Hours) and Gich to
Chenek (7 hours) and get picked up by car.
This can be made into a shorter or longer trip, as you can get picked up at the end of any day or could walk yet further into the park or make it into a 6 day trek if you walk back as well!
Variations include staying at Gich Camp a few nights and doing some day walks around Gich escarpments to avoid having to increase in altitude any more.
2 Days more physical walking: from Buyat Ras to Gich (7 Hours) and Gich to Chenek (5 hours) and you can come back by car, or walk.
Ras Daschen
You also have the opportunity to climb the highest mountain in Ethiopia - Ras Dashen. Although this could be done in 6 days from the lodge, we would advise taking longer over it unless you are properly acclimatised to these altitudes. Alternatively you can travel by car to Chunnuk camp or Bwahit and start trekking from there.
From Bwahit it is a three day trek.
From Bwahit you descend to the Mesheba river which takes about 4 hours through the village of Chiroleba. After the river at 2700m you climb to the camp which takes about 2 hours. The trek to the summit normally starts about 4am on the next day since the summit is often shrouded in cloud which comes later in the day. There is a long traverse through giant lobelia woods. The final 100 meters to the summit requires some rock climbing skills. There are a couple of parts which are steep. The same morning, the return to the camp is quite simple but the total walking time on this day is about 10/11 hours. The return to Bwahit the next day is perhaps the most tiring part of the three days. There is no radio communication, no search and rescue, no medical facilities on the far side of Bwahit.
Everything taken care of:
As a result of the altitude, the more popular way of trekking requires you to hire a scout, guide, cook, mules and mulers. Extra horses are available to take if you would like a back up in case it is harder in places than you had imagined. This allows you to concentrate on the good views and the enjoyable trekking, with tents, food and navigation being taken care of.
Challenging trekking with your home on your back!
If you are feeling fit, it is also possible to only hire a scout (who will know the way of the more popular treks, but may struggle more off the beaten track!) If you have a large enough rucksack then you can carry everything with you, but this should include food, water etc.
To make this a viable option you will need to bring all of your trekking equipment with you from home as trekking equipment on hire here is not light-weight, it is brought with mules in mind!
(Limited) food can be brought from Debark, but is more reliably brought from Gonder or Axum. Camping gas cylinders are available in Addis, or you can bring a multi-fuel or petrol stove with you instead and it is best to buy fuel in Gonder, although limited supplies of fuel are available in Debarke.
Notes on Horse Trekking:
The Horses in Ethiopia are not the same size as horses in Europe and tend to come up a little smaller, so although they are good as a back up, they are generally unable to carry heavy loads up or down the steeper of the hills. The equipment used here is somewhat rudimentary and as such is not as kind to the horses. The horses are not treated to such a good standard as the horses in Europe.

Simien Lodge support international efforts regarding global warming and assisted with the planting of 7000 trees last rainy season.