Hochwanner (Ammergau Alps)
Hochwanner | ||
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View from the Daniel-Upsspitze summit ridge in north direction; the Hochwanner is at the end of the snow-covered ridge in the foreground. |
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height | 2085 m above sea level A. | |
location | Tyrol | |
Mountains | Ammergau Alps | |
Dominance | 1 km → Daniel | |
Notch height | 102 m ↓ Meirtljoch | |
Coordinates | 47 ° 26 '36 " N , 10 ° 52' 54" E | |
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Hochwanner summit book |
The Hochwanner is a 2085 m above sea level. A. high mountain in the Ammergau Alps in the Austrian state of Tyrol . Within the Ammergau Alps, the Hochwanner belongs to the Danielkamm and is located in the N ridge of the Daniels .
Routes to the summit
The normal route to the Hochwanner leads from the Meirtl-Joch ( 1983 m above sea level ) over the south ridge (footprints, climbing points (I)). When approaching from the east (AV-Weg 692 from Ehrwald) you can also climb directly to the summit from the area between s Meirtl and Tormetzanger over a steep grass slope (pathless). A direct ascent is also possible from the Oberen Neuweid-Alm from the Hebertal (pathless, craggy , easy climbing (I)).
From the Hochwanner you have a comprehensive view of the Ammergau Alps from the Kramerspitz to the Säuling , of the Ester Mountains , the Soiernspitze , the Zugspitze and the Mieminger Mountains . The Hochwanner is very rarely climbed: the summit book (as of 2018) dates from 1985.
Literature and map
- Dieter Seibert: Alpine Club Guide Allgäu Alps and Ammergau Alps , Bergverlag Rother, Munich, 17th edition 2008, ISBN 978-3-7633-1126-2
- Alpine Club Card , 4/1 Wetterstein-Mieminger Mountains West (1: 25,000)
Individual evidence
- ^ Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying Austria: Austrian Map online (Austrian map 1: 50,000) . Retrieved October 26, 2012.
- ↑ Alois Igelspacher: From Ehrwald to the Hochwanner: Quiet Ammergau summit. Retrieved February 17, 2020 .