[Backposted to 31-August-2009]
Overlooking Zermatt is a 3415m mountain that is ice free and can be hiked without crampons, ice axes or any other technical fancy-schmancy equipment that makes you sound hard. It’s name is Oberrothorn and I just *HAD* to get to the top of it! If anyone knows of a higher place I can get to in the Alps, that is ice free, please let me know!
As I was scoping out the route up to Sunnegg (really, the starting point for the hike) I noticed this at the bottom of a steep looking trail:

THAT SOUNDS LIKE A CHALLENGE TO ME! If I could make it up to Sunnegg in that time it would take me about an hour, much less than the 2.5/3.0 hours to get there using the other two available routes. It was particuliarly appealing because if I did badly at it I wouldn’t have to tell anyone. So, as you can tell, I did well
And so it was that in the morning I set my stop watch and started hiking up this trail. Nothing technical, just steep, and I only did it at my regular walking pace. Compared with a lot of the mountain hiking I’ve done over the last few months this wasn’t taxing at all. In all, it took me 52 minutes to get to Sunnegg which means I am technically Matterhorn fit! I’m not getting any crazy ideas about summitting the Matterhorn though. I found this website showing the Cirque de la Solitude in Corsica which I did a few years ago and even though it was only a Grade 1/2 scramble it well and truly caused my turtles head to come out to play. No more of that for me, thanks!
If you’re in Zermatt and want a quick route up to Sunnegg, this route is steep but a fast and worthy alternative way up. From Sunnegg, apart from being a place where you can get Apfelstrudel, you get your first good view of the Matterhorn:

From Zermatt, via the steep route, to the top of the Oberrothorn took me a mere 3 hours 10 minutes to gain 1800 metres. I was on fire man! Although high, not a lot of distance was covered because it was relentlessly steep throughout. At the top it felt damned good to be fit enough to do this:

Over the edge is one almighty drop!
You also get an excellent view of the Matterhorn and its surrounding mountains and glaciers. From the top of the Matterhorn to the valley at the bottom is almost 3 kilometres of vertical ascent:

On the way up and down to Oberrothorn (you have to take the same route) you get a good view of the surrounding glaciers as well which you can’t see from the Zermatt side:

You can see people on the way up. When I passed them on the way down, not a single one was smiling. Funny that!
On the way down, for some Apfelstrudle, I paid a visit to the Rothorn Paradise which is the cable car station overlooking most of the ascent/descent. You can see the Rothorn Paradise, about 75 minutes walk away, from the top of Oberrothorn on the mountain below:

The descent really seemed to take forever, first down to Blauherd, then Sunnegg and then Zermatt via Winkelmatten (a suburb) where I had some more Apfelstrudel.










