Big begging throw

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Big begging throw
The small and large begging throw from the Mandlspitze

The small and large begging throw from the Mandlspitze

height 2726  m above sea level A.
location Tyrol , Austria
Mountains Gleirsch-Halltal chain , Karwendel
Dominance 8.4 km →  Kaltwasserkarspitze
Notch height 814 m ↓  supersonic yoke
Coordinates 47 ° 20 '39 "  N , 11 ° 31' 11"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 20 '39 "  N , 11 ° 31' 11"  E
Big begging throw (Tyrol)
Big begging throw
rock Wetterstein lime
Age of the rock Upper Upper Anisium - Lower Carnium
First ascent around 1855 Ludwig Barth zu Barthenau (tourist)
Normal way Eisengattergrat / southern flank ( I )
Small and large begging throw from the southwest (Thaur)

Small and large begging throw from the southwest ( Thaur )

Template: Infobox Berg / Maintenance / BILD1

The Great Begging Throw is at 2726  m above sea level. A. the highest peak of the Gleirsch-Halltal chain in the Karwendel in Tyrol and the fifth highest peak of the Karwendel. The neighboring Kleine Bettelwurf reaches a height of 2650  m above sea level. A.

The Großer Bettelwurf towers over the Inn valley by 2000  m and falls to the north with a huge 1200  m high wall into the Vomper Loch . This makes it a first-class panoramic mountain.

The summit can be reached on an easy via ferrata via the Bettelwurfhütte ( 2077  m above sea level ) from Halltal in Absam near Hall in Tirol . A medium-difficult via ferrata leads to the Kleiner Bettelwurf and from there the transition to the Großer Bettelwurf is possible on an equally difficult via ferrata.

geology

The begging litter consists of well-banked Wetterstein limestone from the Middle Triassic . The color of the rock varies between gray-white and light gray.

Tourist development

Compared to other Karwendel peaks, the peaks of the Halltal were visited relatively early by urban tourists due to their proximity to the Inn Valley. The first tourist known by name on the Großer Bettelwurf was Ludwig Barth zu Barthenau , who was led to the summit by a hunter around 1855 as a high school student. In September 1867 Julius Pock and Carl Wechner reached the summit on the second attempt. On June 18, 1878 , Carl Gsaller climbed the much more challenging summit of the Kleiner Bettelwurf over the south ridge and then successfully completed the ridge transition to the Großer Bettelwurf. On the south side of the Großer Bettelwurf is the Bettelwurfhütte , an Alpine Club hut belonging to the Austrian Alpine Club.

Web links

Commons : Beggar Throw  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Geological Survey : Geofast card 1: 50,000, sheet 118 Innsbruck, Publication 2013/02
  2. ^ Hermann von Barth : From the Northern Limestone Alps. Eduard Amthor, Gera 1874, p. 320
  3. ^ Heinrich Schwaiger in Eduard Richter (editor): The development of the Eastern Alps , Volume I, Berlin 1894, p. 217 ff.