Kogelseespitze

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Kogelseespitze
Kogelseespitze southern flank from Gufelseejöchl

Kogelseespitze southern flank from Gufelseejöchl

height 2647  m above sea level NN
location Tyrol , Austria
Mountains Parzinn , Lechtal Alps
Dominance 2.7 km →  Dremelspitze
Notch height 272 m ↓  Gufelseejoch
Coordinates 47 ° 14 '53 "  N , 10 ° 33' 55"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 14 '53 "  N , 10 ° 33' 55"  E
Kogelseespitze (Tyrol)
Kogelseespitze

The Kogelseespitze is a 2647  m high mountain in the Lechtal Alps . The mighty mountain lies northwest of the Parzinnspitze and can be easily reached from the Hanauer Hütte (1922 m) over the southeast ridge. The Kogelseespitze was first climbed for tourism on September 10, 1881 by Anton Spiehler , the curate Maurer and the mountain guide Anton Wechner from Gramais .

Location and surroundings

The Kogelseespitze lies between the Oberinntal in the southeast and the Lech valley in the northwest. Neighboring mountains are in the north, separated by the Kogelseescharte (2497 m), the Bockkarspitzen (the highest 2602 m) and in the southeast, separated by the Gufelseejoch (2281 m), the Parzinnspitze with 2613 meters. To the north, the terrain slopes down to the Kogelsee (water level at 2171 m), to the west to the Otterbach , to the east to the Parzinnalpe and to the southwest to the Gufelsee and the Hinteren Gufelalpe . The closest settlement is Gramais in the Gramaiser Tal , which is about three and a half kilometers to the northwest as the crow flies .

Ascent

The Kogelseespitze is easy to climb from the Hanauer Hütte and Gramais . Both routes are also suitable as a ski tour.

Summit panorama

Panoramic view from the summit of the Kogelseespitze on October 24, 2004

Literature and map

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying Austria: Austrian Map online (Austrian map 1: 50,000) . Retrieved March 7, 2011.
  2. ^ Dieter Seibert: Alpine Club Guide alpine - Lechtal Alps . 2nd Edition. Bergverlag Rother, Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-7633-1268-9 (p. 192 f.,  Margin no. 699).
  3. ^ Journal of the German and Austrian Alpine Club , Volume XIX, Munich 1888 (p. 218 f).