Dvorský les
Dvorský les | ||
---|---|---|
height | 1036 m | |
location | Czech Republic | |
Mountains | Rýchory | |
Coordinates | 50 ° 38 '56 " N , 15 ° 51' 49" E | |
|
The Dvorský les (German Höfelbusch , also Hoflbusch ) is the highest peak of the Rehorn Mountains ( Rýchory ). The mountain range is located about 3.5 km southwest of the town of Schatzlar ( Žacléř ), about 10 km north of Trutnov ( Trautenau ) and about 6 km east of Janske Lazne ( Johannisbad ).
The mountain is located on the southeastern edge of the Giant Mountains and therefore has steep slopes to the south. In the north-west a 1.5 km long ridge connects it with the Rehornbaude ( Rýchorska bouda ) and the Quetschenstein. The southern foothills of the Höfelbusch consists of Sklenářovický vrch, Seifenberg, Kesselberg, and Bartenbusch ( Bártův les ). To the east of the Hofbusch is the Steinhübel ( Kámen ) above Schatzlar.
The Höfelbusch is drained by brooks that either flow directly from the left into the Aupa ( Úpa ), or indirectly via the Weisseltbach ( Sněžný potok ) and the Litschebach ( Ličná ).
Ascent
From Schatzlar you can follow the yellow marking of the Weiseltbachtal, at the White Cross with green marking further over the Rehornkreuz to Rehornbaude and with red marking to the summit of the Höfelbusch. Alternatively, you can climb the Höfelbusch from Jungbuch ( Mladé Buky ) via the Glasendorfer Valley.
buildings
On the north-eastern slope are the Weissel houses ( Sněžné domky ), two mountain huts with a view of the Braunauer Bergland .
The lines of objects of the Czechoslovak Wall against Nazi Germany stretched over the heights of the Hofbusch . The line crosses the summit from southeast to northwest. A TS 82 bunker is located on the south-eastern slope at a height of approx. 800 meters, the westernmost completed object of heavy fortification.
On the southern slope of the Höflbusch, in the valley of the Glasendorfer Bach (also called Altwasser), there is the desert village of Glasendorf ( Sklenářovice ). The village was depopulated by the expulsion of its German-speaking inhabitants and fell into disrepair.
Individual evidence
- ^ Bernhard Pollmann: Riesengebirge: With Jizera Mountains. 50 tours. With GPS data . Bergverlag Rother GmbH, 2017 ( online ).
- ^ Josef Demuth: The political district of Trautenau: Judicial districts: Trautenau, Marschendorf, Schatzlar and Eipel . Publishing house of the Trautenauer Bezirkslehrer-Verein, 1901 ( online ).
- ^ Riesengebirgler - Heimatkreis - Trautenau ". Retrieved on August 1, 2019 .