Hinterreintalschrofen Explained

Hinterreintalschrofen
Elevation: (2669disp=output onlyNaNdisp=output only)
Isolation:1.5 km → Hochwanner
Prominence:110 m
Range:Wetterstein Mountains
Location:Tyrolean / Bavarian border
(Austria/Germany)
Map:Austria
Coordinates:47.3961°N 11.0758°W
First Ascent:1 September 1871 by Freiherr Hermann von Barth or 1897 by A. Heinrich and F. Henning

The Hinterreintalschrofen is a 2,669 m high peak on the main, east–west oriented crest (the Teufelsgrat or "Devil's Ridge") of the Wetterstein Mountains in the Eastern Alps. It is a massive and dominant mountain with a high rock face that plunges into the Reintal valley to the north and stamps the appearance of the Wetterstein when seen from the north. In spite of that, the mountain is rarely climbed. Its neighbouring peaks are the Hochwanner (2,746 m) to the west and the Hundstallköpfe (2,533 m) to the east. The Teufelsgrat runs along the national border between the Austrian state of Tyrol, (Gaistal) in the south and the German state of Bavaria, (Reintal) in the north.

First ascent

The mountain was first climbed either on 1 September 1871 by Freiherr Hermann von Barth[1] or, according to Stefan Beulke,[2] not until 1897 by A. Heinrich and F. Henning.

Bases in the Gaistal valley

Easiest ascent

From the Rotmoosalm the normal route takes from 2 to 3 hours and runs up the southern flank of the Hinterreintalschrofen through rock gullies and scree slopes with rock outcrops to a crossing on the narrow western arête (Westgrat), which runs, exposed in places, to the very exposed summit. This route requires an ability to cope with grade I (UIAA) climbs.

References

  1. http://www.erstersteiger.de/ergebnis.php?typ=person&per=396 www.erstersteiger.de
  2. Alpenvereinsführer Wetterstein

Sources