Going halt
Going halt | ||
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Rear (left) and Vordere Goinger Halt (right) from the west. The climb from the Ellmauer Tor to the Hintere Goinger Halt is clearly visible |
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height | 2242 m above sea level A. | |
location | Tyrol , Austria | |
Mountains | Kaiser Mountains | |
Dominance | 0.7 km → Karlspitzen | |
Notch height | 245 m ↓ Ellmauer Tor | |
Coordinates | 47 ° 33 '52 " N , 12 ° 19' 31" E | |
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rock | Wetterstein lime | |
Age of the rock | Ladinium - Lower Carnium | |
Vordere (left) and Hintere Goinger Halt (right) seen from the east from the Kleinkaiser |
The Goinger Halt is a mountain in the Kaiser Mountains in Tyrol . It has two peaks and consists of the northern Hinteren Goinger Halt ( 2192 m above sea level ) and the southern, higher Vorderen Goinger Halt ( 2242 m above sea level ). The name "Halt" means something like alpine pasture and thus describes the summit above the pasture areas that belong to the village of Going (cf. Ellmauer Halt ). However, both peaks now belong to the municipality of Kirchdorf in Tirol .
location
The Goinger Halts rise from the Steinerne Rinne immediately east of the Ellmauer Tor and are thus in the central part of the Kaiser Mountains. To the west opposite are the Karlspitzen and the meat bank . To the north is the sermon chair in front of the keep . To the south-east follows the main ridge with the Törlspitzen , which finally culminates in the Ackerlspitze in the Ostkaiser, and to the northeast, steep rockfalls fall into the Große Griesner Kar.
Routes
The Hintere Goinger Halt is one of the easiest and therefore most visited peaks of the Wilder Kaiser. Your summit cross can be reached in 40 minutes via an easy , marked path from Ellmauer Tor . Nevertheless, surefootedness is required here . On beautiful summer days, numerous visitors crowd to the very cramped summit.
The Vordere Goinger Halt is much more demanding and can also be reached from the Ellmauer Tor . First you follow the trail in the direction of Hintere Goinger Halt, but turn right at a notch ("Grassattel") and follow trail tracks that are only "marked" by Steinmandl . Subsequently, the route, which is consistently recognizable by cairns (some cairns do not show the easiest way), becomes rocky and exposed, it requires unsecured climbing in difficulty II according to the UIAA scale . A small ridge tower and a short rock wall must be climbed over (II). The difficult part is a cross-passage in the almost vertical rock, but which is well-graded (3 bolts, a tread bracket) with subsequent cross-member and descend through strewn with loose material grass Schrofen . This is followed by the ascent through a steep rock channel, where a clamping block has to be climbed over (step / grip poor, II +). On the summit structure itself, one point is defused by several iron clips. Often, however, walking terrain with exposed climbing tracks with rubble layers that lead through steep grass ridges. The summit with a book is reached from Ellmauer Tor after a good one and a half hours and offers not only a larger panorama, but also more tranquility than the Hintere Goinger Halt.
A popular climbing route in III. Grad leads from the Predigtstuhlscharte over the north ridge to the summit of the Hinteren Goinger Halt.
Literature and map
- Horst Höfler , Jan Piepenstock: Alpine Kaiser Mountains. Alpine Club Guide for hikers and mountaineers (= Alpine Club Guide ). 12th edition. Bergverlag Rother, Munich 2006, ISBN 3-7633-1257-9 .
- Pit Schubert : Extreme Kaiser Mountains. Alpine club guide for climbers (= Alpine club guide ). Bergverlag Rother, Munich 2000, ISBN 3-7633-1272-2
- Alpine Club Map 1: 25,000, Kaiser Mountains , sheet 8.