Fritz Pflaum Hut

Fritz Pflaum Hut
Fritz Pflaum Hut
Coordinates 47°33′51″N 12°20′14″E / 47.56417°N 12.33722°E / 47.56417; 12.33722Coordinates: 47°33′51″N 12°20′14″E / 47.56417°N 12.33722°E / 47.56417; 12.33722
Country Austria
Administrative
district
Tirol
Mountain range Kaiser Mountains
Elevation 1,865 m (6,119 ft) AA
Construction
Built in 1912
Administration
Hut type DAV self-service hut Category I
Owner German Alpine Club (DAV) - Bayerland Section
Website www.fritzpflaumhuette.de
Facilities
Mattresses 23[1][2]
Footnotes
Hut reference OeAV DAV

The Fritz Pflaum Hut (German: Fritz-Pflaum-Hütte) is an Alpine club hut belonging to the Bayerland Section of the German Alpine Club,[3][1] located in the Kaisergebirge mountains in the Austrian federal state of Tyrol.[4]

Location

The Fritz Pflaum Hut is an unmanned climbers' hut high above the Kaiserbachtal that lies in the Griesner Cirque (Griesner Kar) at the foot of the Mitterkaiser.[1] It is located at a height of 1,865 metres (6,119 ft)[5][6] and is thus the highest hut in the Wilder Kaiser. It is accessible with an Alpine Club key (AV-Schlüssel), but a guardian is only present for group bookings.[3][1] The hut is a base for all summits around the Griesener Kar bowl as well as a starting point for the Kleinkaiser and Mitterkaiser peaks. It has 23 bedspaces.[2]

History

The hut was named after the Alpinist, Fritz Pflaum,[7] who was born in 1871. He was a keen nature lover and sportsman and loved the Wilder Kaiser. On 25 August 1908 he died during a difficult mountain tour on the Mönch.[8] Relatives, friends and acquaintances donated 8,000 marks for the construction of the Fritz Pflaum Hut, which was opened on 25 August 1912, exactly four years after his death.[9] Subsequent attempts to rename it the Griesnerkar Hut have not succeeded. An attempt to provide a basic managed service in the spring of 2007 failed because of a ban by the district commission.

Approaches

The normal approach to the hut is from the Griesner Alm in the Kaiserbach valley over a good path with numerous bends that takes 212 hours as a mountain hike[1] and 214 hours as a ski tour[10] (height difference: 870 metres (2,850 ft)).

The alternative is a rarely used climb from the Fischbachalm, also down in the Kaiserbach valley, via the pine oil distillery (Latschenölbrennerei) and the Kleiner Griesner Tor which takes 2 hours.[1] This route is rather more challenging and requires sure-footedness. Some sections are protected by cable.[1]

Crossings

  • Gaudeamus Hut (1,270 m (4,170 ft)), via the Kleines Törl, Gildensteig and Wildererkanzel, duration: 312 hours
  • Ackerl Hut (1,460 m (4,790 ft)), via the Kleines Törl, Gildensteig and Wilder Kaiser Path, duration: 3 hours
  • Ackerl Hut (1,460 m (4,790 ft)), via the Ackerlspitze and Maukspitze, challenging, duration: 5 hours
  • Grutten Hut (1,620 m (5,310 ft)), via the Kleines Törl, Gildensteig, Wilder Kaiser Path, Jubiläumssteig, duration: 4 hours
  • Stripsenjochhaus (1,577 m (5,174 ft)), via the Großes Griesner Tor, Hüttenweg, easy, duration: 212 hours

Ascents

The following ascents are listed by the DAV:[7]

  • Ackerlspitze (2,329 m (7,641 ft)), duration: 2 hours, medium difficulty
  • Lärcheck (2,124 m (6,969 ft)), duration: 2¼ hours, difficult
  • Mitterkaiser (2,007 m (6,585 ft)), duration: ½-1 hour, medium difficulty
  • Regalmspitze (2,249 m (7,379 ft)), duration: 2 hours, difficult
  • Maukspitze (2,231 m (7,320 ft)_, duration of crossing: 1 hour, difficult

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Höfler, Horst and Piepenstock Jan. Kaisergebirge. Munich: Rother, 12th edn., 2006, p. 42.
  2. 1 2 Schubert, Pit. Kaisergebirge - extrem. Munich: Rother (2000). p. 26. ISBN 3-7633-1272-2
  3. 1 2 Reynolds, Kev (2009). Walking in Austria, 1st ed., Cicerone, Milnthorpe, p. 265, ISBN 978-1-85284-538-4.
  4. Fritz-Pflaum-Hütte at www.alpenverein.at. Retrieved 5 Dec 2015.
  5. Fritz-Pflaum-Hütte, 1865 m at www.alpenverein.de. Retrieved 5 Dec 2015.
  6. Reynolds gives its height as 1868 m, the Alpine Club Guide as 1866 m.
  7. 1 2 Die Fritz-Pflaum-Hütte at www.alpenverein-bayerland.de. Retrieved 5 Dec 2015.
  8. Stephen, Sir Leslie; Freshfield, Douglas William; Conway, Sir William Martin; Butler, Arthur John and Yeld, George. The Alpine Journal, Vol. 24, London: The Alpine Club (1909), p. 350.
  9. Kühntopf, Michael. Juden, Juden, Juden. Germany: Books on Demand (2008), p. 79. ISBN 978-3-8334-8629-6.
  10. Brandl, Sepp. Berchtesgadener und Chiemgauer Alpen: mit Kaiser und Steinbergen. Munich: Rother, 2015. ISBN 978-3-7633-5906-6.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.