Lantau Trail


The Lantau Trail, opened on 4 December 1984, is a long-distance footpath on Lantau Island in the New Territories of Hong Kong. The trail is a loop starting and finishing in Mui Wo. The Lantau Trail has good visitor facilities along the way, and the route is well marked. There are information boards and maps at junctions between each stage. Distance posts around 500 metres apart help hikers know where they are. At each turning, route signs give instructions about directions, place names, and the distances and times for hiking between various locations.
station.

Stages

The Lantau Trail has 12 stages. There are distance posts, numbered 000 through 140, every 500m:
StageRouteLength Time DifficultyStarting PostEnding Post
1Mui Wo → Nam Shan2.50.75000005
2Nam Shan → Pak Kung Au6.52.75005018
3Pak Kung Au → Ngong Ping 3606.02.75018027
4Ngong Ping 360 → Sham Wat Road12.51.25027035
5Sham Wat Road → Man Cheung Po7.52.75035050
6Man Cheung Po → Tai O2.51.0050055
7Tai O → Kau Ling Chung210.53.0055076
8Kau Ling Chung → Shek Pik5.51.5076087
9Shek Pik → Shui Hau6.52.0087100
10Shui Hau → Tung Chung Road6.52.0100113
11Tung Chung Road → Pui O4.51.25113122
12Pui O → Mui Wo9.03.0122140

Easy Walk

Fairly Difficult

Very Difficult
1 Path is rerouted. The Section 3/4 changeover appears now to occur very close to the Ngong Ping 360 cable lift. Section 4 for the most part follows Ngong Ping Road from Ngong Ping 360 to the start of Section 5. As of April 2019, Google Maps has the correct route in its database.
2 Path is partially closed. An alternative route has been suggested.

Trail rerouting at Ngong Ping (Sections 4 and 5)

The current routing leaves it unclear if the Section 4/5 changeover is near distance post 027 or distance post 030. The previous changeover was at 027. For easiest access to/from Ngong Ping and Ngong Ping 360, follow the trail to distance post 030. Once at the cable car station, follow the pedestrian shopping mall in the direction of the Tian Tan Buddha for around 200m, watching on the right for a poorly displayed Lantau Trail sign pointing hikers downhill along Ngong Ping Road. Section 4 continues on the road all the way to Section 5.

Trail closing at Yi O (Section 7) and related controversy

The trail crosses private land at Yi O Village and access is officially closed.
Along the trail is posted the following message:
The closing applies approximately to the part of Section 7 between distance posts 062 and 065 only, but the alternate route skips a length of trail starting from around distance post 059 and ending around distance post 073. Portions of the alternate route are available on Google maps as of April 2019. The intermediate distance posts in the closed section appear to have been removed. There is currently no sign indicating when the original part of Section 7 will be restored.
One can find the approximate original route by turning left at the end of the paved path, following the trail/dirt road, and then staying to the left of the organic produce farm. However use of this route, as a separate sign indicates, will be considered trespassing—those who choose to find the original route should be mindful about causing disruptions. The suggested alternate route leaves the Lantau Trail right after distance post 059 and rejoins the trail near distance post 073. Substantial clearing work for an organic farm has occurred since 2010, so finding the trail may be difficult.,
The trail closing has, as of December 2013, generated considerable political controversy. The developer of the 9-hectare organic farm, Andrew Lam Siu-lo, is being investigated for having cleared ecologically sensitive land by burning and for having brought heavy construction machinery into a protected Hong Kong country park. The Yi O village area has protected wetland area and is one of the few habitats of Hong Kong's endemic and rare Romer's tree frog. Lam was a top advisor to Hong Kong Chief Executive CY Leung's 2012 campaign. Rerouting of the trail appears to have been unnecessary and one might reasonably point to Mr. Lam's motivation in attempting to keep the public away from Yi O. Other than some recent development, Yi O appears to be an all but abandoned village, having lost its population long ago, and therefore restrictions against "trespassing" on village property might only make sense in the context of Mr. Lam's development project.

Phoenix Walkathon

The Phoenix Walkathon was previously held by the along the 70-km Lantau Trail every year, although it was cancelled in the early 2000s.