Schrandele

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Schrandele
Schrandele from the south, in the foreground the Schwarzenbergferner

Schrandele from the south, in the foreground the Schwarzenbergferner

height 3392  m above sea level A.
location Tyrol , Austria
Mountains Stubai Alps
Dominance 1.4 km →  cupboardogel
Notch height 167 m ↓  notch to the cupboard
Coordinates 47 ° 3 '18 "  N , 11 ° 6' 38"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 3 '18 "  N , 11 ° 6' 38"  E
Schrandele (Tyrol)
Schrandele
First ascent around 1870 allegedly by Alois Tanzer, touristic on August 24, 1886 by Ludwig Purtscheller and J. Reichl
Normal way over the Schwarzenbergferner as an alpine tour and the south ridge
Schrandele from the northwest

Schrandele from the northwest

Template: Infobox Berg / Maintenance / BILD1

The Schrandele is a 3392  m above sea level. A. high mountain in the Alpeiner Mountains , a subgroup of the Stubai Alps in the Austrian state of Tyrol . The mountain has the shape of a steep pyramid that clearly protrudes from the surroundings. The Schrandele sends out ridges at right angles in all four directions, which form a cross shape from a bird's eye view . Since the mountain makes high demands on the ascent, it is one of the less visited peaks, in contrast to the more easily accessible, but higher cabinet gel with 3496 meters height. The question of the first ascent of the Schrandele has not been clearly clarified. Allegedly, according to literature, Alois Tanzer was already on the summit at the end of the 1860s as part of the national survey, but the first tourist ascent on August 24, 1886 by Ludwig Purtscheller and Josef Reichl from Steyr is certain .

Location and surroundings

The Schrandele is a good seven kilometers as the crow flies east-southeast of Gries in the upper Sulztal . The mountain is surrounded by four glaciers that fill the space between the four ridges up to a height of about 3280 meters. In the north-west is the small, crevice-rich and up to 50 ° inclined southern cabinet arferner , in the north-east the Verborgen-Berg-Ferner , in the south-east the Wildgratferner (western part of the extensive Alpeiner Ferner ) and in the south-west is the Schwarzenbergferner . Neighboring mountains are in the course of the north ridge (deepest notch point 3192 meters), the Hintere Wilde Turm with 3294 meters height, in the course of the south ridge , separated by the Wildgratscharte (3262 m), the 3320 meter high northern Wildgratspitze and as an extension of the west ridge (deepest Point 3225 m), the cabinetarkogel with a height of 3332 meters, in the extension to the south-southwest finally the cabinetogel with 3497 meters height the second highest peak in the Stubai Alps.

Bases and routes

Ludwig Purtscheller's way in 1886 ran from Fulpmes up to the Alpeiner Ferner and over a steep rubble channel extending to the east onto the north ridge. After 10½ hours you reached the summit in a difficult climb.

Today's normal route , the easiest ascent on the Schrandele, leads from the south over the Schwarzenbergferner as an ice tour that should only be done with appropriate equipment and experience. The Amberger Hütte at 2135 meters in the rear Sulztal serves as a base for this route . From the hut, the route first runs south along the stream ( In der Sulza ) south around the Knieperogel on the crevice-rich glacier at around 3000 meters above sea level to its northeast corner. Then it goes on over the Wildgratscharte and the Südgrat in moderately difficult climbing in, according to literature, UIAA difficulty level II over crags and brittle rock to the summit in a walking time of 4½ hours. The difficult route of the first ascent is seldom taken today. It leads over the Verborgen-Berg-Ferner to the Schrandele-Südgrat in difficult climbing (UIAA level of difficulty III). The walking time from the Franz-Senn-Hütte (2147 m) in the Oberbergtal is about 5 hours. Another rarely used route leads over the brittle east ridge .

Literature and map

Web links

Commons : Schrandele  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Ludwig Purtscheller in Eduard Richter : The development of the Eastern Alps , Volume II, Berlin 1894, p. 435
  2. Communications of the German and Austrian Alpine Club , born in 1887, Munich 1887, p. 114 f.
  3. ^ Walter Klier: Alpenvereinsführer Stubai Alps , Munich 2006, p. 268 ff.