Showing posts with label Hiking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hiking. Show all posts

2025-01-19

Wildspitz (1206m), Höhronen (1229m)

Zürich had been in a layer of clouds for a while. A classical weather inversion situation with dense low clouds turning everything gray while you get beautiful clear blue skies up in the mountains. So I decided to escape into the sun for a few hours. Between family commitments I didn't have enough time for a big outing - and the high mountains have too much snow for comfortable hiking anyways. So I aimed for a modest range barely half an hour's drive away from home. It turned out to be the perfect choice. High enough to get above the clouds, low enough to stay below more severe snow.

15km, +555m, 3:30h. Parked the car at Biberbrugg and did a roundtrip up over the ridge and back via the Biber creek.

Slippery trail.

2024-11-16

Brüschbüchel (1817m), Chruter (1881m)

Afroz suggested to go hiking on the weekend. He had a nice trail in Valais in mind. I was up for spending time outside, but the proposed route would imply a four hour one way car commute, tilting the balance of commute to hike entirely in the wrong direction in my opinion. So we spontaneously compromised on a trail near lake Klöntal. My idea was to link some smaller unremarkable mountains that I hadn't been to yet. The trick was chosing a Southerly aspect for the hike and not go too high - both to avoid getting into snow. It worked out beautifully! We enjoyed great November weather. In the sun high above the perpetually shaded Klöntal valley lying still in hoar frost. We ticked two of my three planned summits. The third looked a bit too intimidating after we had just scrambled over some karst landscape and steep slippery grass. It's most definitely doable, but at the same time easy to get stuck in these conditions when you never know whether you'll encounter a patch of snow or ice in the wrong spot. So we watched the local chamois population show off their skills in difficult terrain and enjoyed each others company and conversation on the way back to the car.

Smoke from a wood fire hangin low in the valley.
Sun!
Lake Klöntal with the mighty Glärnisch North face. That'd be a dream to climb... an intimidating prospect.
Frozen pond.
Afroz.
Sören.
Some balance required.
View towards the Wägitalersee.
Some scrambling required.
Steep slope cleared of trees. Maybe by an avalanche a long time ago?
Back into the frozen valley.

2024-09-07

Barglen (2669m) via "Jesi", 190m, 6a

Björn and I decided to explore a new (to us) climbing area up at Melchsee-Frutt. The approach is a bit longer than usual, so we took Björn & Sandra's "Büssli" (VW van) and mounted our bicycles on the backrack. I have been to Melchsee a bunch of times, but got there by either walking up or taking the cable car. This time we drove the winding mountain road. It requires good timing as it changes direction every hour, going uphill on even hours and downhill on odd ones. Even before we reached the small road we passed crowded parking lots and lots of tents. The Modular Music Festival in full swing - drugged or hung over people walking about even in the early morning when we arrived ;-)

In the gravel on the approach.
Björn's macro photography.
At the start of our climb.

We mounted our bikes at the Melchsee and proceeded to pedal up towards the Tannensee. A surprising number of people walked around there too. Drawn by the "Plauschfischen", a invitation by the local fishery club. We kept biking until the road turned to gravel and eventually became too steep and loose for my bike. At that point only a few hundred meters of road were left anyways, so we proceeded by foot in pathless terrain. A long traverse under the looming cliff of the Hohmad. We couldn't find an obvious approach to gain it, so at some point we just scrambled up the steep gravel. We chose a spot that made us head straight towards a climbing party already on the wall. On noticing us, one of the climbers shouted down to us from about two pitches up. He appeared to be the local expert and was keen to demonstrate it. After he learned what route we were aiming for he lectured us on how it wasn't the best choice for that grade and recommended a different one. Björn and I consulted for a bit but in the end decided to stick with our original plan. We still learned of www.barglen.ch from the encounter, a great resource on routes in the area. Thanks!

Warmup.
Björn.
Nice chimney.

By 11 o'clock we had finally reached the start of our route and started climbing. This went very smooth and we did enjoy the route. If the others are even better as the guy claimed, we should definitely return for more! Our rappel line crossed a few other, harder, routes and we eye balled them, trying to gauge whether they'd be within our abilities. "Dä Burner" (topo1, topo2) looked particularly nice.

This was one of the harder pitches. Even slightly overhanging in places.
Björn walking up the ramp. The only section with a bit questionable loose rock.
Björn on the sharp end.

We made it back down by 3 pm and this time decided to traverse directly at the base of the cliff. There are a bunch of caves cut into the rock and quite a few of them were busy with climbers preparing their bivouacs for the night. Nice spot! Sheltered from the elements with great mountain panorama to fall asleep to. Unfortunately the weather forecast for the next day predicted thunderstorms and lots of rain. Wishing people the best of luck we reached our bikes and sped down the mountain back to the Melchsee village. Unfortunately (fortunately?) our timing was almost maximally bad wrt the road opening times. So we bridged the better part of an hour by sitting in the sun and enjoying a beer on the terrace of a café ;-)

Family picture!
Coming back down.
Quite steep!

A clean on-sight for the both of us. On a great weather day. In great atmosphere and mood. What more could you wish for?

Flowery meadows in September.
Random munition lying around.
Some sections were a bit swampy. Bare minutes before we got back onto the gravel road and our bikes I made a single misstep onto grass that was less solid than it looked ;-/

2024-08-31

Läged Windgällen West (2'572m) via "Langi Zyt", 200m, 6a

Björn and I went up to the Läged Windgällen. I had been there just a few weeks prior with Arne. At the time we had to bail before we even started climbing - just when we had reached the base of the wall, a thunderstorm was rolling in and got everything thoroughly wet. This time the weather was great. In fact, up high was where it was bearable, the valleys were way too hot. The one successful climb I had already done on this mountain was the Zentralpfeiler. I remembered that as a pretty old school mountaineering route, requiring strong nerves on so-so rock and sparse protection. Luigi had recently returned with somebody else, climbing yet another route, and reported that it was "mental": sparsely protected and with a lot of exposure. So it was that Björn and I came prepared, bringing extra trad gear and expecting the worst.

It's a pretty wide wall with lots of (potential) routes. But apparently the rock quality isn't consistently great.
Björn.
Sören.

We would be surprised! It turned out to be a complete plaisir climb. The rock quality, while not bomber everywhere, was solid enough for an alpine climb. And the protection and diffiulty grade were well within our comfort zone so that we didn't place any additional gear. We made good time up and down and were surprised that the route book, although being shared between two routes, had only few entries dating all the way back to 2005. Great day out! Can I haz moar of these pleaz?

IIRC This might have been the crux pitch?
Super fun dihedral.
The second but last 5c pitch.
Quite overhanging for the grade, but on friendly jugs. Fun!
"Langi Zyt" and "Linke Südwand" share a route book and merge near the top.
Family photo.
Final pitch to the top. At this point three routes converge and we weren't 100% sure we climbed the right one. They are all similar in grade, so I guess it doesn't really matter.
Almost there!
Preparing to rappel.
Björn celebrating.
Lunch break on a nice ledge on the way down.
I eye-balled the other routes that we crossed during the rappel. They look eminently doable and worth returning for.
This guy (or his cousins) accompanied us for quite some time.
Mission accomplished.