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August 31, 2009

Zermatt / Oberrothorn

Filed under: Hiking — Tags: , — @ 8:00 pm

[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.

August 30, 2009

Bye, Bye, St Moritz

Filed under: Hiking — Tags: , — @ 9:21 pm

I am now in a place that in English we would call “The Carpet”.

But in German, they call it Zer Mat. ZER-MATT! ZERMATT! Geddit?!

*OUTSTANDING* humour, I know!

I was wandering around St Moritz the other day when I saw a train trip advertised that I’d never heard of before called The Glacier Express. It went straight through from St Moritz to Zermatt in 7.5 hours, a place I was going to visit again anyhow. After checking the weather and confirming it was going to be a stunning day today, I signed up: I paid the (ridiculous) 204 Swiss Francs [130 pounds] for the Second Class Ticket + Meal and the deal was done.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank one Mr Gordon Brown, our unelected Prime Minister who heads our democracy, for his policies which, over the last twelve years, have caused a devaluation of Sterling by 30% against the Swiss Franc in recent years. I really enjoy paying one third more for everything here than I have done in the past. It inspires feelings in me that I rarely experience towards another individual.

The trip was scenic, as promised, the weather was stunning, the food was good, and it delivered. It was expensive but it was a one off and probably the most scenic ride I’ve ever done. For more information on the trip (infact, for more information on planning any train trips, anywhere!) check out Seat 61. I’ve used that site for planning trips around Europe, Corsica and for “my big one” from Hong Kong to England a few years ago via Beijing, Moscow and Berlin. It has to be said that that site has remained true to its roots: it’s simple, it’s not cluttered with adverts, and it gets to the point. I like it.

And today I bought my first souvenir. WOOOO! I wanted a mascot to stick on the front of Naomi when I’m cycling across Australia and I figured this was ideal!


Moooooo

It’s worth pointing out that it’s a cow GIRL not a cow BOY. I don’t even want to think of the relentless – and I mean, RELENTLESS – Brokeback Mountain references that would have come my way if I’d bought a cow boy. I’ve decided to call her Moooooo. Not Moo. Not Moooo. But Moooooo with six o’s. Please: respect! Moooooo it is!

Anyway, after seeing The Glacier Express advertised, it got me thinking that despite hiking for nearly 10 weeks I hadn’t really seen any glaciers close up. So that was my mission!

The first hike was up over Fuorcla Surlej, about 1100m above St Moritz. By going over this pass you get into the valley that runs parallel to St Moritz. You can not really see much over the top of the pass until you are standing on it… and when you do, it’s full-on, in-your-face glacial city:


OOOOH!

From Fuorcla Surlej, it’s a two hour hike around to the Coaz Mountain Hut that sits perched on a rocky outcrop. If I didn’t mind the cold, and I didn’t mind the ice, and I didn’t mind the mountain huts, and I didn’t mind paying 7 Pounds for a sandwich, this would be a great place to spend the night. From here, you can undertake any number of glacier crossings or summit attemps on the surrounding icy peaks (suitably equipped and experienced, of course). The setting is stunning:


Left: hut approach. Right: hut view.

Looking back up at the hut on the descent shows how awesome the hut location is. Can you spot it?

After that, I had heard of a place called Diavolezza Hut which is about 45 minutes by train away from St Moritz. It’s a 1000m hike up from the train station to the hut from where you once again have a good view of the rapidly retreating glaciers. On the way into the train station at St Moritz from the Lake, they have an exhibition of photographs of this place from decades ago in black and white. Small, lone figures walking across huge, vast glaciers. People hiking up sheer ice faces with pick axes and basic ropes for security (none of this fancy ice-axe stuff!). It’s mesmerizing. I had to go there!

To get to Diovolezza, I was planning to hike up to Munt Pers (3300m) that is next to it and then descend to the hut. Unfortunately, I completely lost my way. The “panorama map” (a high level, low-detailed map of the area showing the hiking trails that the Tourist Information office gives out for free) neglected to mention that the ascent was, infact, an Alpine ascent where the way markings turn from “red/white” to “blue/white”. Or had I got the wrong trail? The problem is, I’m never quite sure what Alpine means: scrambling? Climbing? Technical equipment required? Glacial crossings? Snowfields? It’s probably written down somewhere. Anyway, given I was hiking on my own, I didn’t want to chance it so I descended 300 glorious metres and then reascended in the other direction to get to the hut.

It was a good day though and higher up it was once again Alpine desert. The last hour in particular reminded me of the Schiltorn ascent (also in Switzerland) including a few easy snowfield crossings but which I still *HATE*. However, it is fair to say that my Lowa Tibet GTX Pro Mountain Boots made kicking into this snow much, much easier than my Raichl GTX’s:

The glacier views from the hut were outstanding but unfortunately my pictures are not. This is embarassingly bad:

Anyone who has gone skiing will have seen far better. But I hate the cold and can’t imagine anything worse than paying good money to put oneself in a freezing environment. Middle Eastern mythology has it wrong. My idea of Hell is cold, not warm!

Now that I’m in Zermatt, I’ll spend four days here in a cheap Hotel with a “complimentary buffet breakfast” as they call it. I beg to differ! It’s not complimentary. It’s in the PRICE. And I intend to get my moneys worth!

August 25, 2009

St Moritz

Filed under: Hiking — Tags: , — @ 7:14 pm

I’ve been hiking around St Moritz for a few days now. No more lugging hefty backpacks. Light weight day-hiking from now on!

The first hike was up the side to Corvatsch Cable Car station (1000m ascent) which gave a cool view down the valley which I couldn’t even take a decent picture of. So here’s two:

What I like about Switzerland is that a lot of the mountains have restaurants on top so you feel like you’ve earned your meal when you get to the top. For the elderly, infirm, or simply fat, there’s usually cable cars up to said restaurants too. Piz Nair is just one of many. It was a pleasant hike up to the top and reasonably easy even though it was 1300m:


Looking down on the restaurant from the summit. And looking down on the 1300m ascent.

The one thing I’ve noticed about Switzerland is that they do not even number their trails. The signposting is so outstanding they don’t need it:

The descent down behind the mountain was stunning: lots of Alpine Desert. Given my luck thus far, I was expecting a storm to kick off when on such exposed terrain. It didn’t!

There’s trails leading off all over the place up here… I’ll be back! This place was great:


Various views on the descent

I think I’m suffering from the “Lienz-affect” again. The campsite here has outside power where I can plug in my laptop, it has WiFi and it has beer. The surroundings are great. The weather isn’t too bad. I might be here some time!

August 22, 2009

The End!

Filed under: Hiking — Tags: — @ 2:29 pm

After hiking into Switzerland a few days ago I felt satisfied: like a burden had been lifted. I woke up yesterday morning, donned the backpack to continue hiking to Lauterbrunnen… and instead got some transport to St. Mortiz. I had been giving a lot of thought about what to do when I got to Switzerland. I needed an endpoint and because Lauterbrunnen is where I’m meeting a friend in mid-September, that seemed like a sensible place to end the trek. But now that I’m here in Switzerland, and I’ve spent ten weeks walking every f…g inch from Trieste with 20 kilos on my back, I feel satisfied enough to call it a day. I always felt like I needed to make it to Switzerland for it all to have been worthwhile. Now that I have: I’m done!

I have never done anything this difficult and strenuous for this length of time and I’ve learnt a lot by doing it. This is a great foundation on which to plan longer trips in future (which I’m doing: this is addictive!). Physically, it wasn’t really a problem providing I got enough food and rested 2 days a week. Terrain wise, it was tough but nowhere near as hard as the GR20 which was just bloody cruel throughout. The backpack weight was difficult to carry at first, but what happens is that one day you get up, put on the backpack and it just “fits”. It still slows you down but it stops being a problem. The weather was the bane of my life throughout and definitely affected my mood. I got caught in a lot of storms up high early on in the trip and that made me paranoid for the remaining time.

So with that in mind, my next treks will be somewhere hot with guaranteed clear blue skies: Two months trekking around Lake Turkana in North Kenya is really my Next Big Idea and is something I would like to do within the next three years or so. I spent three weeks trekking there last November, it was as hard as hell, biblically hot but it was exactly the kind of thing I like doing. That was a perfect trip.

Before all that though, I have the small matter of cycling from Perth to Sydney to contend with! That will start towards the end of October. Cycle Touring is a new thing for me so a three month trip across Australia is a great way to find out how I cope with the whole thing.

For now, I’ve about two months in Europe to travel around and do whatever I like. Probably hiking, but with only a daypack.

Tchau!

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