Little violinist

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Little violinist
height 2816  m above sea level A.
location East Tyrol , Austria
Mountains Venediger group
Coordinates 47 ° 3 '55 "  N , 12 ° 18' 26"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 3 '55 "  N , 12 ° 18' 26"  E
Little violinist (Tyrol)
Little violinist
First ascent J. Dorn, Th. Husche (1913)
Normal way West rise from the Essen-Rostocker Hütte ( UIAA II )

The Kleine Geiger is a 2816  m above sea level. A. high mountain peaks of the Dorferkamm in the Venediger group in East Tyrol ( Austria ). The Kleine Geiger was first climbed on July 28, 1913 by J. Dorn and Th. Husche.

location

The Kleine Geiger is located in the north of the municipality of Prägraten am Großvenediger in the center of the Dorferkamm, which in turn is in the center of the Venediger group. The Dorferkamm, which branches off to the south in the area of ​​the Großer Geiger ( 3360  m above sea level ), first runs to the Großer Happ ( 3352  m above sea level ) and then to an unnamed high point ( 3129  m above sea level ) before south of this point there is a branch of the main ridge to the southwest to the Kleiner Geiger. To the east of the Kleiner Geiger on the main ridge is the Türmljoch ( 2772  m above sea level ) with the Türml ( 2844  m above sea level ), followed by the Niklaskogel ( 2791  m above sea level ). The summit, located on the edge of the core zone of the Hohe Tauern National Park , is insignificant in the alpine world and rises above the Maurerbach valley to the west . The Hinterbichler Dorfertal extends to the east . The closest refuges are the Essener-Rostocker Hütte in the southwest and the Johannishütte in the southeast.

Promotion opportunities

The ascent to the Kleiner Geiger is from the connecting path between the Essen-Rostocker Hütte and Johannishütte. Here you climb up from the Essener-Rostocker Hütte in the direction of the Türmljoch or from the Johannishütte over the Türmljoch until you come to a scree gully that runs down from the Kleiner Geiger. The ascent to the summit edge takes place through the scree gully, which is then reached on the right over rocks. The final ascent takes place on a ribbon and then through a chimney-like intersection to the summit ( UIAA II ).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying Austria: Austrian Map online (Austrian map 1: 50,000) ; According to the Tyrolean spatial information system (TIRIS) 2814 meters

literature