Like many crossings in Nepal, the hanging bridge of Ghasa is used by both humans and animals alike. The bridge has been used for decades, despite its questionability under rainy and windy conditions.
On a daily basis, donkeys and cattle travel across the bridge hanging very high about the river valley. The river, fortunately, has high side rails which protect those who are brave enough to travel across.
Mystery Bridge, Indonesia
We are not sure why anybody is even crossing this bridge at all. Can it even still be called a bridge it’s hanging on its side and barely in one piece anymore.
This bridge can be compared to an ‘Indo Board’ which is a device used by surfers and skateboarders in order to develop balance. they balance a wheelless board on a foam cylinder without touching the floor. in comparison, a professional ‘indo-boarder’ wouldn’t get very far on this bridge in Indonesia. These school children surely don’t seem to be bothered by it.
Trift Bridge, Switzerland
This Bridge’s beauty is apparent to all; those afraid of heights and not. It suspends 558 feet over the glaciers of Switzerland and 328 feet above sea level. It is located near the town of Gadmen in the Swiss Alps.
The bridge was built in 2004 but had a problem upholding very windy conditions. Fortunately, they decided to add stabilizing cables in 2009 to ensure safer conditions for those daring enough to cross the bridge on foot.
U Bein Bridge, Burma
Stretching over the Taungthaman Lake, the U Bein Bridge was built in 1850. It is made from a tropical hardwood called teak and is believed to be the oldest bridge made out of that wood. The bridge is very dangerous as there are no side rails and nothing to hold on to as you walk (or crawl from fear) across its 1.2 km.
Not only do you have to worry about falling, but the bridge has also become a crime hotspot in recent years due to its tourist appeal. There are now policemen guarding the bridge as protection for tourists and passersby.
Root Bridges, India
The world can learn a thing or two about these bridges which aren’t built, yet grown from materials found in nature for their construction. The bridges used the tangled roots of the Ficus elastica tree, a rubber tree that is found in the southern Khasi and Jaintia hills and produces secondary roots from higher up its trunk.
Two closely related tribes, the War-Khasis and the War-Jaintias learned how to make the trees grow their roots in the right direction so that they could use them to create these spectacular bridges and pathways over rivers and through the forest.