Ski Touring recommended route

Liebenerspitze ever summit

Ski Touring · Gurgl
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  • Wenn dieser Hang im Aufstieg gehalten hat, dann sollte er dies grundsätzlich auch in der Abfahrt tun.
    Wenn dieser Hang im Aufstieg gehalten hat, dann sollte er dies grundsätzlich auch in der Abfahrt tun.
    Photo: Ötztal
The ski tour to the Liebenerspitze-Hauptpipfel 3400m is an absolute highlight in the surroundings of Obergurgl.
difficult
Distance 15.7 km
4:30 h
1,481 m
1,481 m
3,389 m
1,906 m
An absolute must for all ski touring lovers is the tour to the Liebenerspitze-Hauptpipfel. It is an absolute highlight in the surroundings of Obergurgl and offers everything a high alpine ski tour in the Ötztaler Alps can offer. The scenic scenery is as always overwhelming at the Ötztaler Hauptkamm, the descent belongs to the most beautiful what the tour region around Obergurgl has to offer.

Author’s recommendation

Die Liebenerspitze durch das Gaisbergtal bestiegen.
Profile picture of Roland Grüner
Author
Roland Grüner 
Update: February 03, 2024
Difficulty
difficult
Stamina
Experience
Landscape
Highest point
3,389 m
Lowest point
1,906 m
Best time of year
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec

Track types

Show elevation profile

Rest stops

Nederhütte

Safety information

Avalanche Hazard Scale

1 (LOW)

Triggering is generally possible but only from high additional load in isolated areas of extremely steep terrain. Only small-sized sluffs and natural avalanches are expected. Snow layers are generally stable.

2 (MODERATE)

Avalanches may be triggered in case of truly heavy loads, especially on a few explicitly indicated, steep slopes. Large spontaneous avalanches are not expected. In general, the snowpack is well bonded except on some very steep slopes. Choose your route carefully, avoid the indicated slopes and exposed sections.

3 (CONSIDERABLE)

Triggering is very probable even from low additional loads, particularly on the indicated steep slopes. On some steeper slopes, medium or even fairly large spontaneous avalanches may occur. On most steepslopes the snow layer is only moderately or weakly stable. Expertavalanche knowledge is required. You must avoid the indicated steepslopes and highly exposed sections.

4 (HIGH)

Avalanches are likely to be triggered on many of the indicated steepslopes even if only light loads are applied. In some places, numerous medium-sized and also large-sized natural avalanches are expected.The snowpack is poorly bonded on most steep slopes. Choose your route according to these criteria, select only moderately steep terrain by avoiding the avalanche runout zones. Very expert avalanche knowledge is required.

5 (EXTREMELY HIGH)

Numerous huge or very large-sized natural avalanches are expected also in moderately steep terrain. Safe skiing is not possible anymore, not even in the marked ski area. The snowpack is poorly bonded and largely unstable. Don‘t go ski mountaineering at all!

 

Also visit lawine.tirol.gv.at

Tips and suggestions

Ski Mountaineering Rules
  • If you enjoy activities amid nature always respect the local guidelines when you set out on a ski tour (for example: wildlife preserves, hunting enclosures, reforestation areas, information boards, etc.).
  • Don‘t enter protected wildlife zones or feeding areas amid naturelandscapes, and avoid noise.
  • Cross forest areas in winter only on sign posted trails or marked routes as wild animals can panic if they hear loud voices or noise.
  • Learn more about the habitat of wild animals in the mountains, avoid getting too close to them. Watch them only from a safe distance. Please put your dog on a lead, it is absolutely irresponsible to take dogs into the forest without leashing them because wild animals suffer from food deficiency and weakness in winter.
  • Excellent planning and time management: start your tour early enough and return before darkness. In spring you should be back on the hut or in the valley at 12 noon (avalanche hazard!) at the latest.
  • Never cross forestation zones and areas with young plants and trees.

 

Ötztal Tourismus doesn‘t take any responsibility for the suggested tours. It is strongly recommended to enlist a certified local mountainguide. Glacier crossings are allowed only in a group by using a rope.

Before you set out on a tour you should inform someone down in the valley about the tour‘s destination and when you plan to be back. Anavalanche transceiver is an absolute must for Alpine ski mountaineering tours.

 

More details about ski mountaineering tours in Ötztal: https://www.oetztal.com/skitouren

 

Start

Obergurgl
Coordinates:
DD
46.869330, 11.026490
DMS
46°52'09.6"N 11°01'35.4"E
UTM
32T 654438 5192637
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Destination

Obergurgl

Turn-by-turn directions

This has everything to offer in the ascent as well as in the descent, what a high alpine ski tour on the Ötztal main ridge has to offer. This includes a long ascent into a troy-like side valley the Gaiberg valley, with a glacier, which at its end is huge and in this case very clefty, the Gaisbergferner. In addition there is a huge and equally threatening ice break from the upper Gaisbergferner, which is an additional danger for the tour. This area is often marked by remnants of ice vigils and should therefore be bypassed in the ascent to the left, even if you are then in a clefty, more than 40 ° steep glacier zone. It is here just the lower evil to choose. In the descent, however, you can still be in the middle of the Gaisberg River, as soon as the threatened zone is quickly overcome. The most delicate ape awaits you at Pt. 3150m, where you have to change from the Gaisbergferner to the upper Gaisbergferner. The short, but more than 40 ° steep northern slope represents a last great danger moment. If one has overcome this, the 30 ° to 35 ° steep, but extensive summit slope should be hardly a problem. In addition, you can climb the summit up to the last few meters with skis. Rather an exception at the Ötztaler Hauptkamm. The last meters to the summit are then quite easy to cope with. The scenic scenery is as always overwhelming at the Ötztaler Hauptkamm, the descent belongs to the most beautiful what the tour region around Obergurgl has to offer. Starting in Obergurgl at the valley station of the Hohenmuhlbahn 1915m so to the summit to about 9.4 kilometers approximately 1500 height meters to be covered. If you use the Festkogelbahn as an ascent aid and drive to the valley entrance of the Gaisberg valley, the climb decreases to approx. 6.9 kilometers, or 1100 meters of altitude.

Public transport

Enjoy a both comfortable and relaxing train ride to the train station in Ötztal Bahnhof. You get off the train in ÖTZTAL Bahnhof where you change to a public bus or local taxi. The current bus schedule can be found at: http://fahrplan.vvt.at

 

Directions

Obergurgl-Hochgurgl is located in the western part of Austria in the state TYROL, in a southern side valley of the Inn valley - the ÖTZTAL. For your arrival by car, you can plan the best route from your home town with the route planner online at https://www.google.at/maps

 

Parking

In Obergurgl-Hochgurgl the following parking facilities are available:
  • Car park Village center Obergurgl (in front of the church on the right, behind the multi-purpose building where the information office is located)
  • Parking lot with coin entrance Parking Place entrance - valley station Festkoglbahn, free of charge
  • Parking Hochgurglbahn valley station, free of charge - no parking at night
  • Parking Top Mountain Crosspoint, free of charge
  • Parking Hochgurgl, free of charge (very small parking)

Coordinates

DD
46.869330, 11.026490
DMS
46°52'09.6"N 11°01'35.4"E
UTM
32T 654438 5192637
w3w 
///paved.eradicated.splays
Get there by train, car, bike, or on foot!

Equipment

Recommended Ski Mountaineering Equipment

The „standard ski mountaineering equipment“ is: touring skis with touring bindings, telescopic poles, climbing skins, ski crampons, digital avalanche transceiver, avalanche shovel, avalanche probe, firstaid kit and mobile phone. A „complete glacier equipment set“ contains: sit harness, two prusik loops of different lengths and ascenders, two HMS biners, icepick, climbing irons and rope. Pack your rucksack carefully and don‘t forget extra clothes for the descent, sun protection/cream, cold protection, enough food and drink. If you stay overnight at a mountain hut take toiletry articles and a hut sleeping bag with you!

 

LEVELS OF DIFFICULTY

  • Easy: Short or moderately long tours, always easy, with ascents not steeper than 25° or slightly steeper only on short sections.
  • Intermediate: Moderately long or long tours of intermediate difficulty with ascents up to 35° or slightly steeper only on short sections.
  • Difficult: Very challenging and long or very long tours with ascents that can exceed 40°, comprising also climbing sections up to difficulty grade II (UIAA).

Similar routes nearby

  • Hochfirst
  • Seewerspitze
  • Liebenerspitze West Summit
  • Hinterer Seelenkogel vom Rotmoostal aus
  • Langtalereckhütte
 These suggestions were generated by our system
Difficulty
difficult
Distance
15.7 km
Duration
4:30 h
Ascent
1,481 m
Descent
1,481 m
Highest point
3,389 m
Lowest point
1,906 m

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