Austria: June 2022 |
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Finally off to Austria after a delay of 2-years! |
Back in
2019, before Covid-19, before the pandemic, Julie and I had decided to book a
walking holiday with the company Inntravel. The previus year, 2018, we had a
great holiday in Italy organised by Inntravel, and we decided to use them
again for 2020 – little did we know what was about to befall the planet! |
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After
13-hours of travel (a serious rail accident in Bavaria resulted in our having
to change route) we arrived late in Hotel Inntaler
Hof, Mosern. |
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Day-1: we did a walk from the hotel to explore the
hills around Mosern. |
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Day-2: With our luggage being transported ahead of
us, we walked from Mosern to Hotel Kristall, Oberweidach. |
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Hotel Kristall has an ‘infinity’ pool on its roof,
and at 32degC was just warm enough for me! |
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The following day,
three, was to be an exploration of the hills, but rain stopped play. The wet
did bring out giant snails: its shell was 50mm across! |
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Day-4: With our
luggage moved on to our next hotel, we walked between Oberweidach
and Hotel Hubertushof, Reindlau. |
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This was a day of
Alpine meadows. After the rain the day before, our walk was warm, sunny and
dry! |
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Day-5: More rain! However, as this is one of the
highlights of the holiday, rain or no rain we were going to explore the Leutaschklamm. A ‘klamm’ is a gorge, and in
the Alps gorges are often made accessible by some amazing engineering. Leutaschklamm is no exception, although rather later than
other klamms, it was only in 2006 when Leutaschklamm was finally open to the public. We used the free bus along the valley to save a
drenching. And by the time we reached the klamm the
rain had subsided. |
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Built for 1.4-million
euro, with support from the EU, the gorge is free to visit. It’s one of the
longest klamms in the Alps at just over 1-mile in
length. |
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As you descend the klamm, eventually, near the end of the gorge, you cross
into Germany. There is a charge of a few euros to walk the last 200m to
complete the traverse of the Leutaschklamm. |
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Day-6: we leave Reindlau and
head back to Hotel Inntaler Hof, where we started
the holiday. The weather had improved considerably over that of the previous
day, and the cloud was high enough to allow us to use a chairlift for the
first time on the holiday. |
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We spent two nights at
Hotel Inntaler Hof, and the day in-between we
climbed a popular hill with fabulous views! |
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Although a rather
demure hill, the summit has a 360-degree view of the Tyrol – and full
advantage of this has been taken! |
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Immediately adjacent to the hotel is an enormous bell –
The Peace Bell. At over 10-tonnes, it is the largest bell in the Tyrol. It
chimes at 5pm each evening, and can be heard across three national
boundaries. |
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For the second week of
our holiday we headed off to Pertisau, in the Leutasch Valley, where we spent 6-nights at Hotel Wiesenhof. |
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We used the train to get from Mosern,
Seefeld, to Pertisau, Jenbach. When we arrived at Jenbach we
were in good time to see the Jenbach/Pertisau tourist train. A steam-driven rack and pinion
locomotive: the world’s oldest! |
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The day of our travel
to Pertisau the weather was fabulous. The following
day, the rain returned. We took the ferry up the lake and walked back. The weather improved
within 30-minutes of us starting the walk. Just as well: the path is
‘interesting’ in places! |
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The route did have all
the conveniences: waterfall shelters and café. The following day the
weather forecast, and reality, was fabulous. We took the Rofanseilbahn
gondola and then climbed Rofanspitze. |
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From the top-station
of the gondola, left image, the footpath takes you through high meadows,
right image. |
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The high altitude meadows
are the preferred habitat for gentian – and they were in vast abundance! |
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It was a glorious day
– absolutely delightful walking and climbing! |
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Approaching the summit
of Rofanspitze. |
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The summit of Rofanspitze, and, inevitably, alpine cuff. A truly spectacular
location! The following day was
another great weather day. What else could we do – another summit, of course:
Barenkopf. |
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We started by taking
the cable car, conveniently located a couple of hundred metres from our
hotel, removing a lot of climbing for the day. |
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Unlike the previous
day, this summit needed use of hands. The right image is a lot steeper than
it appears in this picture – Julie wasn’t very happy! The view is worth all
the effort: looking down to Pertisau and lake Achensee. |
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The decent was full of
interest: tunnels and very friendly butterflies. The next day we
decided to take it easy: a nice 9-miles valley walk. Unfortunately the rain
returned. |
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It all started so
well: walking along the Falzthurnbach valley. It
then started to rain. The on-off rain did
provide some fabulous cloudscapes. The following day, the
last of our holiday, we climbed another summit. |
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It was a lovely day
and a splendid viewpoint: a nice walk for the end of the holiday. Cheers! |
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