Frillensee (Inzell)

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Frillensee
Frillensee, Inzell.jpg
Geographical location Inzell , Traunstein District , Bavaria
Tributaries only short ones , for example from the Goldnen Brünndl
Drain FrillenseebachGroßwaldbachRote TraunTraunAlzInnDanube
Data
Coordinates 47 ° 45 '56 "  N , 12 ° 49' 2"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 45 '56 "  N , 12 ° 49' 2"  E
Frillensee (Inzell) (Bavaria)
Frillensee (Inzell)
Altitude above sea level 922  m above sea level NHN
surface 4.3 ha
length 340 m
width 130 m
volume 165,000 m³
scope 880 m
Maximum depth 7.5 m
Middle deep 3.8 m
Catchment area 2.5 km²
Template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE AREA Template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE LAKE WIDTH Template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE VOLUME Template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE SCOPE Template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE MAX - DEPTH template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE-MED-DEPTH Template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE-Catchment area

The Frillensee is a lake in the Chiemgau Alps in the municipality of Inzell in the Bavarian district of Traunstein .

description

The Frillensee is about 5 km east of the center of Inzell at the northern foot of the Zwiesel at 922  m above sea level. NHN in a valley basin under its dark wall. From southeast to northwest it is 340 m long, 130 m wide, has an area of ​​4.3  hectares and is up to 7.5 m deep.

It has at least two tributaries that are less than 300 meters long, including the outflow of the Goldnen Brünndl in the south-east, which rises at the tip of a Murzunge from the Zennokopf of the Zwiesels. The Frillenseebach flows out under a footbridge at the northwestern tip and drains into the Rote Traun via the Großwaldbach .

The Frillensee is considered the coldest lake in Central Europe and often has a stable ice cover as early as November. It does not freeze from the edge as usual, but from the middle.

On the shores of the lake there is predominantly forest, but in the northwest there is a raised bog with a diverse flora , which is why the lake and its surroundings are under landscape protection . In the clearing on the north-west bank the abandoned Gaßlalm stands on a silted-up part of the lake.

tourism

The lake, which is almost enclosed by a forest path, can be reached on foot or by bike. The next parking lot is about one and a half kilometers northwest of the lake at the Adlgass forester's house at about 800  m above sea level. NN , near the Einsiedl district of the Inzell municipality, from where the lake can be reached on foot in around 45 minutes. For families with children, the mountain forest adventure trail to the lake is particularly suitable, where nature can be explored in a playful way, e.g. B. by tree telephone, identifying trees, information boards about forestry, huts and more.

Emergence

The Frillensee is a glacial lake that was created by the melting of the glaciers since the last ice age. Originally the lake was about 800 m long. Today it is only 340 m long, but turns into moors and wet meadows on the bank.

In the 19th century the lake was known as the trout lake .

Use for ice sports

In the past, the lake has hosted sporting events such as speed skating and ice hockey . The local ice hockey club DEC Frillensee Inzell therefore bears the name of the lake. On 23/24 January 1960 the Bavarian and German championships in speed skating were held. German champions there were Josef Biebl and Günter Traub . Ice shooters also held competitions on the Frillensee.

There has been an artificial ice rink in Inzell since 1963, and the Frillensee is no longer used for competitions due to the harsh weather conditions.

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Bavaria 1: The coldest lake in Central Europe ( Memento from December 16, 2013 in the Internet Archive ), www.br.de
  2. Gassl-Alm . In: Agricultural and cultural heritage database . Society for Agricultural History
  3. Münchner Geographische Hefte , issues 9–15 ( Google Books , ZDB -ID 504435-2 )
  4. Map from the period between 1808 and 1864 ( Bavarian premiere in the BayernAtlas )

Web links

Commons : Frillensee  - Collection of images, videos and audio files