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northcave
Jan 26, 2010, 8:15 PM
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Can anyone recommend a website dedicated to Via Ferrata in Europe? Basically I am a climber and so is my brother and I have the honour of arranging his stag do. His friends are fit and healthy but non-climbers and I thought it would be nice for us to go out and find a great route that we can all take part in. Could anyone recommend such a route which you would regard as truly excellent in terms of excitement, length and scenery. We would land on Thursday and then have Friday and part of Saturday before flying back Saturday afternoon. Ideally we would do a trip that would enable us to camp out overnight on Friday and finish up the route Saturday morning. This would be a nice touch I feel. As for the type of route. Something varied would be great. Something with gorges and yet get some altitude also with exposed sections. Can anyone think of anything that would be ideal? Cheers Tim
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sbaclimber
Jan 26, 2010, 8:21 PM
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um.......Europe is a pretty big *country* (I feel dirty...), where exactly will you be "landing"??
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JAB
Jan 26, 2010, 8:25 PM
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northcave wrote: Can anyone recommend a website dedicated to Via Ferrata in Europe? Basically I am a climber and so is my brother and I have the honour of arranging his stag do. His friends are fit and healthy but non-climbers and I thought it would be nice for us to go out and find a great route that we can all take part in. Could anyone recommend such a route which you would regard as truly excellent in terms of excitement, length and scenery. We would land on Thursday and then have Friday and part of Saturday before flying back Saturday afternoon. Ideally we would do a trip that would enable us to camp out overnight on Friday and finish up the route Saturday morning. This would be a nice touch I feel. As for the type of route. Something varied would be great. Something with gorges and yet get some altitude also with exposed sections. Can anyone think of anything that would be ideal? Cheers Tim I am flying to America next week. Can you recommend some good crags? I am mainly interested in trad, but sport is also ok. Thanks!
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sbaclimber
Jan 26, 2010, 8:26 PM
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JAB wrote: northcave wrote: Can anyone recommend a website dedicated to Via Ferrata in Europe? Basically I am a climber and so is my brother and I have the honour of arranging his stag do. His friends are fit and healthy but non-climbers and I thought it would be nice for us to go out and find a great route that we can all take part in. Could anyone recommend such a route which you would regard as truly excellent in terms of excitement, length and scenery. We would land on Thursday and then have Friday and part of Saturday before flying back Saturday afternoon. Ideally we would do a trip that would enable us to camp out overnight on Friday and finish up the route Saturday morning. This would be a nice touch I feel. As for the type of route. Something varied would be great. Something with gorges and yet get some altitude also with exposed sections. Can anyone think of anything that would be ideal? Cheers Tim I am flying to America next week. Can you recommend some good crags? I am mainly interested in trad, but sport is also ok. Thanks! .. FTW!!!
(This post was edited by sbaclimber on Jan 26, 2010, 8:29 PM)
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johnwesely
Jan 26, 2010, 8:58 PM
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JAB wrote: northcave wrote: Can anyone recommend a website dedicated to Via Ferrata in Europe? Basically I am a climber and so is my brother and I have the honour of arranging his stag do. His friends are fit and healthy but non-climbers and I thought it would be nice for us to go out and find a great route that we can all take part in. Could anyone recommend such a route which you would regard as truly excellent in terms of excitement, length and scenery. We would land on Thursday and then have Friday and part of Saturday before flying back Saturday afternoon. Ideally we would do a trip that would enable us to camp out overnight on Friday and finish up the route Saturday morning. This would be a nice touch I feel. As for the type of route. Something varied would be great. Something with gorges and yet get some altitude also with exposed sections. Can anyone think of anything that would be ideal? Cheers Tim I am flying to America next week. Can you recommend some good crags? I am mainly interested in trad, but sport is also ok. Thanks! The plot thickens.
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evanwish
Jan 26, 2010, 9:01 PM
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oh thats beautiful. ha!
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northcave
Jan 27, 2010, 9:33 AM
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sbaclimber wrote: um.......Europe is a pretty big *country* (I feel dirty...), where exactly will you be "landing"?? The options are open... Literally anywhere. Havent booked the flights yet.
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northcave
Jan 27, 2010, 9:38 AM
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Wearing a tad thin that one cock monger
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sbaclimber
Jan 27, 2010, 9:57 AM
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northcave wrote: sbaclimber wrote: um.......Europe is a pretty big *country* (I feel dirty...), where exactly will you be "landing"?? The options are open... Literally anywhere. Havent booked the flights yet. Okay...another question.... what time of year are you looking at? A full Friday, and partial Saturday, is a very small window for what you want to do. Not to mention the very real possibility of bad weather.....
(This post was edited by sbaclimber on Jan 27, 2010, 10:00 AM)
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hansundfritz
Jan 27, 2010, 2:12 PM
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I've done a few in the Dolomites. Most of them involve a fairly long approach -- sometimes over snow and ice (it's the Alps after all). If you base yourself at Cortina and use the cable cars, there might be some reachable ones. Just have to make sure you know when the last car comes down the hill at the end of the day -- or else you're looking at a much more serious outing. Good luck.
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I_do
Jan 27, 2010, 3:04 PM
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hansundfritz wrote: I've done a few in the Dolomites. Most of them involve a fairly long approach -- sometimes over snow and ice (it's the Alps after all). If you base yourself at Cortina and use the cable cars, there might be some reachable ones. Just have to make sure you know when the last car comes down the hill at the end of the day -- or else you're looking at a much more serious outing. Good luck. There's also plenty of via ferrata that start right next to the parking place with the tourist info which lends the gear across the road. For instance in the Otztal in Austria. This dude really needs to be more sdpecific about the area, 'the alps' doesn't really help
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nattfodd
Jan 27, 2010, 4:08 PM
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Take a look at southern Germany, there's quite a few good via ferratas of varying difficulty, and access is very easy from Munich via train. Nearly all of these routes have cablecar access which cuts the approach entirely. Around Garmisch-Partenkirchen, you have Alpspitze ferrata (moderate, nice summit, super easy access), Mittenwald (also moderate, downhill, bit longer day out). A worthy alternative is the Höllenthal route up Zugspitze, the highest mountain of Germany. It's got a bit of everything, including a (very easy) glacier crossing and some moderate ferrata. For the truly hardcore, Jubiläumsgrat is an amazing but very serious route. Another possibility is to head to Oberstdorf and do the Hindelanger klettersteig. It's not excessively difficult but still a bit exposed and feels a bit more serious.
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hansundfritz
Feb 1, 2010, 1:40 PM
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Bumping this thread b/c I just got this in my e-mail from Amazon. My old guidebook from the 1980s covered the whole of the Dolomites in about 180 pages. Via Ferratas of the Italian Dolomites: Vol 1: North, Central and East (Cicerone Guide) John Smith List Price: $24.95 Price: $16.47 You Save: $8.48 (34%) Release Date: February 15, 2010 Product Description This completely updated Volume 1 of Via Ferratas of the Italian Dolomites covers the northern central and eastern Dolomites across an area stretching from Val di Fassa to Auronzo. Instead of grouping routes by mountain ranges, the book sets them out according to strategic valley bases, with some guidance on the best bases for attacking each of the routes. The authors, who have first-hand knowledge of guiding all the routes, have developed a completely new grading system, which strives to simplify an extremely subjective topic. Mountain ranges covered include Catinaccio, Marmolada, Sella, Puez Odle, Fanes, Tofane, Cristallo, Sesto, Sorapiss and Marmarole. Volume 2 covers the southern Dolomites, Brenta and Lake Garda.
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ToySldr
Sep 28, 2010, 10:22 AM
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A great website is www.alavigne.net Lots of Italian via ferrata's and some GPS tracks. Great pictures too.
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