Drusenfluh
Drusenfluh | |
---|---|
Elevation | 2,830 m (9,285 ft) |
Prominence | 628 m (2,060 ft)[1] |
Parent peak | Piz Kesch |
Location | |
Drusenfluh | |
Location | Switzerland / Austria |
Range | Rätikon |
Coordinates | AT_ 47°1′44.3″N 9°48′5.5″E / 47.028972°N 9.801528°ECoordinates: AT_ 47°1′44.3″N 9°48′5.5″E / 47.028972°N 9.801528°E |
Climbing | |
First ascent | Christian Zudrell 14th of August 1870 |
The Drusenfluh is a mountain in the Rätikon mountain range (Alps), located on the border between Austria and Switzerland. According to the Swisstopo map, the mountain both includes the 2827 m Drusenfluh on the border and the three peaks named the de:Drei Türme or Dri Türm ("Three Towers"), the highest of which (2830 m) is north of the main ridge on the Austrian site. The Drusenfluh and Drei Türme are separated by the 2628 m Eisjöchle.
After Christian Zudrell's first ascent, it took 18 years before a second ascent was successful. This second tour ended all doubts about the first ascent as the two mounaineers, Karl Blodig und Eugen Sohm, encountered a rock on the peak of the mountain, that had the signs "C Z 70" engraved, the "visiting card" that Zudrell had left on the peak. This piece of rock was brought to the Lindauer Hütte in 1995 to protect it, as weather and lightnings had destroyed it more and more.
There is several routes for climbers mainly in the sheer drops of the southern face (which is the Graubünden side on Swiss territory. From the Austrian site, one of the Drei Türme can be reached via a mountain path from the Lindauer Hut (Swiss grade T4, signposted white and blue).[2]
The multiday hike "Prättigauer Höhenweg" passes south of the mountain. [3]
References
- ↑ Swisstopo maps. The key col is Schlappinger Joch (2,202 m)
- ↑ Hiking in Switzerland, degree of difficulty
- ↑ Hiking Switzerland past Drusenfluh, Graubünden
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Drusenfluh. |