Stutz (municipality of Frastanz)

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Bazora and on the right the Stutzberg parcel, including Stutz. In the background the Samina valley and dominating behind it the Three Sisters . Photo taken in 1966, the area is even more wooded today.
The alluvial forest near Frastanz, the municipality of Frastanz and behind it Stutz, Stutzberg, Bazora and the Gurtisspitze . On the right the Samina valley and the three sisters. Photo taken around 1907

Stutz is a group and a parcel, which between Frastafeders and the parcel of Stutzberg / Bazora in the market town of Frastanz in Vorarlberg ( Austria ) at about 820  m above sea level. A. lies. The area from Stutz to Bazora is known for the wealth of species of animals and plants, especially fungi.

history

A document in the Frastanz municipal archive (1471) deals with a conflict between the so-called mountain and valley people of Frastanz. This document tells of four farms on Garfarberg that were inhabited by Hans Giger, the Stutzer, Peter Bertsch's heirs and Ytal Bertsch. It is not yet possible to determine with certainty whether these were the courtyards on the upper and lower stub or whether these courtyards were located somewhere else. There are several parcels of land in the vicinity of Stutz / Stutzberg / Bazora that have a similar name.

Surname

Stutz is a name that occurs often in Vorarlberg (e.g. in: Au , Bürs , Dalaas , Düns , Fontanella etc.), alone and in various combinations (e.g. Stutzalp, Stutzboda, Stutzbühl, Stutzhalde, Stutzwald etc.) .). Stutz is understood to mean something abbreviated (see for example: Stutzen (weapon) ). Stutz is therefore to be understood in the sense of "small".

protection

The flora at Stutz and on the Stutzberg was protected for the first time through the ordinance on the protection of wild plants in the area of ​​the Bazora. Today flora and fauna are protected by the Vorarlberg Nature Conservation Ordinance. In addition, the poor meadow landscape between Frastafeders (Frastanz) and Bazora, including Stutz and Stutzberg, has been included in the Vorarlberg biotope inventory. The Walgau biotope map shows that a unique mosaic of wet and dry meadows spreads out on the slopes above Frastanz and Nenzing.

topography

The subsoil between Bazora and Stutz consists of moraine material . The Stutz parcel is bounded on the eastern side by the Klöslefeldbach / Grappawald and on the western side by the Garsettabach (also: Valiserabach) / Garsettawald and the Saminatal or Samina . Amerlügen is about 900 meters as the crow flies northwest of Stutz. To the south is the Stutzberg 450 meters as the crow flies and the Rotte Bazora 900 meters. It is about 1500 meters to the north-eastern center of Frastanz.

There are several small iron springs here. The iron hydroxide appears as a colorful, shimmering film over standing water or is visible as "rust spots" ( yellowing ) on the ground. The iron content comes from the clayey and clayey moraine material from the Silvretta. An iron-containing sulfur source in or around Stutz is said to have been used in the 19th century . Above the Stutzberg there is a piece of land called: Sulfur water .

Flora and fauna

The Stutzberg, together with the Stutz and Bazora, formed a large, coherent, rough meadow landscape. Over the past 70 years, however, a large number of the meadows have disappeared and are now forested. Today there is a change between wooded meadows, reeds and forest stands.

For the animal and plant species occurring here, see: Flora and fauna on the Stutzberg .

Sports

Until recently, the Stutzweg was used by residents as a toboggan run in winter for decades. The natural ski run from Bazora to Frastafeders or Frastanz also leads past Stutz.

literature

Inatura (ed.): Nature in the shade. Stutz - Stutzberg - Bazora. Die Wunderwelt ob Frastanz , Dornbirn 2017, Bucher Verlag, ISBN 978-3-99018-408-0 .

Individual evidence

  1. Thomas Welte: Bazora im Wandel , in: Inatura (ed.): Nature in the shade. Stutz - Stutzberg - Bazora. Die Wunderwelt ob Frastanz , p. 37.
  2. Pierer's Universal Lexikon, 4th edition, 1857–1865, search term: Stutz , website: zeno.org.
  3. LGBl. No. 25/1962, expired in 1998 when the Vorarlberg Nature Conservation Ordinance came into force.
  4. LGBl. No. 8/1998.
  5. Günter Stadler: Nature in the shade - special features and biodiversity - in a nutshell , in: Inatura (ed.): Nature in the shade. Stutz - Stutzberg - Bazora. Die Wunderwelt ob Frastanz , p. 23.
  6. Gerhard Wanner: Stones tell. Geology between Gamp and Saminatal , in: Inatura (Hrsg.): Natur im Schatten. Stutz - Stutzberg - Bazora. Die Wunderwelt ob Frastanz , p. 99.
  7. Andreas Beiser: The natural space at a glance in Inatura (ed.): Nature in the shade. Stutz - Stutzberg - Bazora. Die Wunderwelt ob Frastanz , pp. 80 f., 82 ff.
  8. Andreas Beiser: The natural space at a glance in Inatura (ed.): Nature in the shade. Stutz - Stutzberg - Bazora. Die Wunderwelt ob Frastanz , p. 86.
  9. Henning Heilmann: Unique natural diversity on the Stutzberg , vol.at from June 26, 2017.

Coordinates: 47 ° 12 ′ 14.7 ″  N , 9 ° 37 ′ 19.2 ″  E