Blindis

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Blindis
Blindis (left) and Stampfleskopf (right) seen from the northeast

Blindis (left) and Stampfleskopf (right) seen from the northeast

height 3020  m above sea level A.
location East Tyrol
Mountains Lasörling group , Venediger group
Coordinates 46 ° 58 '8 "  N , 12 ° 19' 51"  E Coordinates: 46 ° 58 '8 "  N , 12 ° 19' 51"  E
Blindis (Tyrol)
Blindis
First ascent J. Erlsbacher with V. Ladstädter and B. Troger (1894)
Normal way from the Durfeldalm over the northwest ridge

The Blindis , also called Blindisspitze , is 3000  m above sea level. A. high mountain peak in the Lasörling group ( Venediger group ) in the north-west of East Tyrol . The first ascent of Blindis was made on July 5, 1894 by J. Erlsbacher with V. Ladstädter and B. Troger.

location

The Blindis is located in the west of the Lasörling group on the municipality border between Prägraten am Großvenediger in the northeast and St. Jakob in Defereggen in the southwest. Located in the core zone of the Hohe Tauern National Park , the Blindis is located between the eastern summit of the Stampfleskopf ( 3068  m above sea level ) in the north-west and the Pitzleshorn ( 2942  m above sea level ) in the east. On the northwest ridge, the Blindisscharte ( 2950  m above sea level ) separates the Blindis from the Stampfleskopf, the transition on the southeast ridge to the Pitzleshorn is marked by the Pitzlesscharte ( 2860  m above sea level ). The elongated southwest ridge is also known as the disk plate ridge. The south-western slopes are known as Im Blindis and extend over the Durfeldalm down into the valley of the Trojeralmbach . To the southeast lies the Blindissee and former miners' pits, in the north the headwaters of the Lasnitzenbach . The closest refuge is the Lasörlinghütte in the southeast .

Promotion opportunities

The normal route on the Blindis starts from the valley of the Trojeralmbach to the Durfeldalm and then pathless to the northwest ridge and to the summit. Depending on the source, the level of difficulty is described as short and easy from the Blindisscharte or as a short climb ( I-II ). Alternative ascent routes exist via the southeast ridge from the Pitzlesscharte ( I ) or via the southwest climb / southwest ridge ( both III ).

Individual evidence

  1. AV Guide
  2. Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying Austria: Austrian Map online (Austrian map 1: 50,000)

literature