Zwölferhorn, AT: 02/09/19

jamesdeluxe

Administrator
After five nights headquartered in the region of Steiermark 90 minutes southwest of Salzburg and Day 6 at Hochkönig, I relocated for my two last nights to a hotel in the middle of Salzburg that's only five minutes from the airport. Somewhat unique (and convenient) that a mid-sized airport is so physically close to a city.

For Day 7, the last of this trip, I went back to Alpinforum for inspiration. My legs were pretty tired after seven straight days of turns; still, I wanted to do something on skis that was fun but not too demanding. I remembered a TR from Zwölferhorn in the lake district of Salzkammergut 45 minutes from Salzburg. It's right alongside picturesque Lake Wolfgang in the village of St. Gilgen, which is well visited by Europeans and UKers, as well as busloads of Asian tourists, absolutely none of whom ski. My pix below aren't much different from the TR linked above; his are much better quality and it was a clearer day.
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For lift freaks, Zwölferhorn is a real throwback with only one mode of uphill transport, a 1957 gondola, which is an attraction in and of itself. Instead of scrapping it and installing a brand new tram, the entire lift was out of commission for a year for a complete renovation, and they kept the original 38 red and yellow cars. While I've ridden several gondolas of this vintage in Switzerland, it''s a real rarity in Austria. This being a German-speaking country, they don't mess around with stats. Here's all the necessary info:
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Waiting my turn for these oldtimers:
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They secure your skis to the back of the car with ropes:
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Capacity is four passengers and it's a very snug fit, even for slim people. It takes about 16 minutes to cover the 3,000 vertical feet and the ride is so smooth and steady, it feels like you're floating. Had a great chat with these locals; they were shocked to be with someone from NY/NJ who could speak their language.
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They were curious about skiing in the northeast U.S. so I put in a plug for the Catskills, ADKs, Greens, and Quebec. I underscored that our mountains were far older than the Alps, low elevation (with the associated effect on conditions), and underwent a lot of glaciation so they're not topographically dramatic, but offered fun skiing if you hit 'em at the right time, blah blah blah.
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It was still pretty overcast by the time we reached the top:
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Chinese visitors: reminded me of a similar situation three years ago in the lake district of Switzerland at Rigi. Not sure I would make the effort to go to the top of these mountains if I couldn't ski them.
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Even though they could certainly make this more of a typical ski area with extensive marked trails, snowmaking, etc., they've left it mostly "undeveloped" and on 100% natural snow, which is impressive for the very low elevation between 560 and 1,522 meters. The headwall down the gut of the mountain is ungroomed for the first 1,300 verts and a nice single-black pitch.
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Further down, you ski right under the gondola:
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The lower 1,500 verts are through a dense forest.
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At this fork, going left takes you to a very short t-bar at the bottom for beginners, going right takes you back to the gondola:
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Hardwoods like the northeastern U.S.:
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There were far more people skinning up than taking the gondola, easily a couple hundred:
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Back at lake level, you take off your skis and walk five minutes through the village main street back to the gondola.
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Here's the view from the gondola about a third of the way back up:
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For the second run, the sky was clearing up and conditions were transitioning to spring-like sugar:
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A nice view from a mid-mountain clearing
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I should've taken more pix but by this time in the trip, I was OD'ing on being a shutterbug. I only did three T2B runs and that was just right. I had lunch in the village then headed back to Salzburg.

At the airport the next morning was an advert for an international prep school in St. Gilgen targeted at the 1%. The pix say it all: a European version of Andover Academy in the U.S. Something tells me that it ain't cheap.
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And with that, this road trip to off-the-beaten path/low-elevation Austria was in the can. A fun visit, the only thing missing was a powder day. I realise that very few people are interested in these kind of places and prefer reading about the more high-profile circuits, but here are links to the others reports if interested:

Day 1: Werfenweng
Day 2: Tauplitz
Day 3: Wurzeralm and Hinterstoder
Day 4: Planneralm
Day 5: Riesneralm
Day 6: Hochkönig
 
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jamesdeluxe":1k1th6ug said:
It's right alongside picturesque Lake Wolfgang in the village of St. Gilpin
I usually look these places up on a map and the town is St. Gilgen.
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The ski area is low, but direct north facing, so I'm sure in good shape when James was there. Those days are over now. Per Fraser it's been warm and sunny in the Alps now for over two weeks, so upcoming visitors need to seek high altitudes for decent surface conditions even though the snowpack is robust from the big January dumps.

The Salzkammergut is touted by Rick Steves as a scenic local region for summer tourism, so we spent 2 days there in summer 1999. It rained most of that time, so instead of hanging out at the glacial lakes we visited the Dachstein ice cave and the Hallstadt salt mine. But you get a good view of Lake Wolfgang in James' pics, so you can see why these lakes are popular summer tourist spots.

Hallstadt is the most noted lake, SE from Lake Wolfgang. The Gasthaus there gave away our reservation before we arrived ~9PM so we ended up staying in Altmunster on the Traubsee.
 
I stand corrected. No idea how I misspelled it twice in the report even after posting the International School photo with the village's name.

I also kept misspelling the name of my Day 1 ski area as Werfenwang instead of the correct Werfenweng; however, I caught that one or edited it soon after posting.
 
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