| A dream in white, coming true - The Three Towers Trip Report |
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| A dream in white, coming true - The Three Towers   | 
| Page Type: Trip Report Location: Vorarlberg, Austria/Switzerland, Europe Lat/Lon: 47.02000°N / 9.80000°E Date Climbed/Hiked: Mar 4, 2002 Activities: Skiing Season: Spring, Winter | Page By: herbie Created/Edited: Mar 2, 2006 / Mar 3, 2006 Object ID: 177743 Hits: 2998  Loading... Page Score: 87.51% - 21 Votes  Loading... Vote: Log in to vote |
Some thoughts
Some of you know already that I'm less a mountaineer than more a mountaineering skier.
That's not the complete story, actually I like skiing more
than anything else, and some call me an addict. :-)
Therefore my first trip report is about the best tour in my recent past,
though I ascended meanwhile a lot of mountains with skis, many of them being
much higher than the one described here, some of them having even better
snow than here, but ...
... you know - there are some days with this special touch, everything just
fits 100%: the people with you, the conditions, the landscape, the weather, you can't really tell
WHY this was a special day, you just know that it was.
The tripIn march 2002 we went for a week to Vorarlberg, to ascend some summits in Raetikon.
Weather was bad when we arrived at Lindauer hut, where we wanted to spend 3 days.
It snowed heavily in the evening, we knew that the austrian weather forecast for this special
area is just worthless and we had no access to the swiss forecast. So we didn't expect much
for the next day and went to bed after a long cardgame evening.
For some reason I woke up around 6h30 and looked out of the window: clear sky, with
a touch of first blue in the black resulting from early dawn!
Drumming on the room table and singing loudly "breakfast, breakfast ..."
brought my 3 mates very fast out of the bed.
An hour later we were on our way to Sporaalpe to ascend the highest of the Drei Türme (Three Towers,
2830 meters, 9285 feet).
 The Drei Türme |
 The Sporaalpe |
It was very cold, and the very light and fine fresh powder had a height of approximately 10 inches,
it was like raising dust with every step.
We knew we had to be cautious because of the avalanches, especially the south slopes would
be dangerous today, but ours is a northslope.
Here at the foto with the good view to Öfapaß we turned left and had the first
view into Gamstobel. View to Oefapass before turning left to Gemstobel |
 At the crest of the traverse to Sporatobel | But this was not our target today, so we soon turned left again at
a place below the rocky walls of Gamsfreiheit to traverse into the Sporatobel.
Soon thereafter we catched a first view of our target: The Sporatobel with the
Sporatower (8166 feet) on the upper left side, a spectacular look! |  The first look up to the Sporatower after the traverse |
We saw that a strong wind blew on the ridge, and already feared that we would not reach
the summit because of the avalanche situation, but we wanted to go as far as we thought to be safe. The ascent took some time, because we checked the snowconditions sometimes and we also
left a major gap between every person. The slope becomes steeper after Sporatower |
In the upper third of Sporatobel there was the steepest part, and to be on the safe side we only passed it
one by one, while the others waited at a good place behind a rocky wall.
The view from here to the smaller southern face of Sporatower and beyond it to the other
mountains of Vorarlberg cannot be described well with words, and also the
panoramafoto is only a poor copy of reality. Panoramic view to Sporatower south side and beyond |
| Now it was not so steep anymore until to the last slope up to the ridge.
100 meters (300 feet) below the ridge, at an elevation of approximately 2650 meters (8700 feet) we recognized some big areas of snowcoverage, which were blown in to the leeward
side of the ridge, and so we stopped here. We didn't want to challenge our luck, which was so
noble to us until now. |  We stopped in close view of the ridge |
We knew that a great downhill awaited us, we'll do the first fresh tracks in 1000 meters (approx.
3000 feet) height difference of untouched powdersnow!
We took some minutes to eat and drink, and prepared the equipment for the downhill.
Then - hmm, how to explain that ?
People as addicted as we are, know what I'm talking
about, and I believe it cannot be explained well to the others.
One by one we skied down like hovering over the surface or something, it was like heaven to
be able to move fast through this fantastic landscape in such a nonexhausting way, hidden until up to our hips behind a snowcloud.
We took special care at the one steeper slope and used only it's very left side, then
we proceeded down the whole Sporatobel, waiting for each other approximately all
500 meters and watching who was doing the most beautiful track. Downhill through a fascinating landscape |
We didn't talk much, everybody was just excited about the conditions, only while cruising you could possibly hear sometimes a calm rhythmic song from one or the other. A powderdream comes true ... |
 Looking back enjoying the mountain, the snow and the fresh tracks |
Being back at Sporaalpe we didn't want to ski back to the hut immediately, because
it was quite warm in the sun. We digged out a small dry place on the south side of
the Alm and rested in the sun for a while, letting him warm up our bodies after being
in the shadows for a long time.
After an hour or so we packed up slowly and returned to Lindauerhut, still dreaming of
a powderday, which was just the beginning of one of the best ski mountaineering weeks of my life.
PS: Two days later, before we left the hut to traverse across a pass to Switzerland, we heard that
3 people entered the slope, which we avoided, from the ridge, all three at the same time.
They initiated an avalanche, but were lucky: only one was completely buried, and was digged out
by the others in minutes. It was good to see that we made the right decision. However, am I cautious
enough ?
Apparently not: Only a few weeks later I was in an avalanche by myself, though I think I'm
a really cautious skier. But I'm also addicted, and the avalanche doesn't know you are an expert ... :-)
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