Blüemlisalp

The Blüemlisalp is a massif of the Bernese Alps, in the territory of the municipalities of Kandersteg and Reichenbach im Kandertal.

Blüemlisalp
Blüemlisalphorn
Blüemlisalphorn from the west side
Highest point
Elevation3,661 m (12,011 ft)
Prominence874 m (2,867 ft)[1]
Parent peakFinsteraarhorn
Isolation7.0 km (4.3 mi)[2]
Coordinates46°29′19″N 7°46′18″E
Geography
Blüemlisalp
Location in Switzerland
LocationBerne, Switzerland
Parent rangeBernese Alps
Climbing
First ascent27 August 1860 by Leslie Stephen, Melchior Anderegg, R. Liveing, F. Ogi, P. Simond and J. K. Stone

Its main peaks are:

The entire massif is contained within the canton of Berne, as it lies north of the main crest and water divide of the Bernese Alps. To the west, it is connected with the Doldenhorn group via the Oeschinenhorn and Fründenhorn peaks; to the east, it is continued by the Gspaltenhorn. To the south, it is connected to the main crest by the Tschingel Pass.

Ascent is from the Blüemlisalphütte (2,840 m), over the glacier, past the Wildi Frau (3,260 m)

Geography

Blüemlisalp massif

The Blüemlisalp forms a ridge of great height, cut away in precipices on the southeast side, surmounted by four principal peaks, in the following order, reckoning from east to west: Morgenhorn (3,623 m), Wyssi Frau (3,648 m), the Blüemlisalphorn (3,661 m) and the Oeschinenhorn (3,486 m). To the southwest of the last peak, and between it and the Doldenhorn, is a minor summit — the Fründenhorn (3,369 m). In front of the main ridge, as seen from the northwest, e. g. from the Dündenhorn, are seen three minor peaks which project as steep islets of rock from the great glacier-fields that cover that side of the mountain. These are the Wildi Frau (3,260 m), the Ufem Stock (3,221 m), and the Blümlisalp Rothhorn (3,297 m).[3]

The two main feeders of the Blüemlisalp Glacier (German: Blüemlisalpgletscher) flow downwards through the openings between the three last-named summits, but a short branch from the ice-stream that descends between the Wildi Frau and the Ufem Stock turns to the north, and flows into the head of the Kiental.[4]

Blüemlisalp Glacier

First ascent

The Blüemlisalp (centre) and Lake Oeschinen

The highest peak was ascended in 1860 by Leslie Stephen, accompanied by R. Liveing and J.K. Stone, with Melchior Anderegg and Pierre Simond of Argentière as guides. Starting from the chalets of the Oeschinenalp at 2 a.m., they reached the ridge near the Dündengrat at 4.15. Then mounting over snowfields, and the glacier lying between the Wilde Frau and the Ufem Stock, they passed behind, or south, of the latter summit, and gained the depression between the Blüemlisalp Rothhorn and the highest peak at 6 a.m. They finally reached the top 2 hours laters, Stephen wrote:[4]

"We reached the top at 8 a.m., and had a grand view down the cliffs to the Tschingel Glacier, as well as a very fine view over the Swiss plains, and a general panorama resembling that from the Altels, returning easily to Kandersteg by 2 p.m."
gollark: Well, they seem to have tried to do that initially for a bit, then gave up (at least for my year), leaving us doing something like two lessons a week but being set a bunch of random papers to do (which I mostly ignored because they are extremely boring).
gollark: I'm glad school is over for me now and I can avoid worrying about them doing stupid things.
gollark: https://archlinuxarm.org/platforms/armv8/broadcom/raspberry-pi-3
gollark: There's an ArchLinuxARM thing.
gollark: Yep!

See also

References

  1. Retrieved from the Swisstopo topographic maps. The key col is the Tschingelpass (2,787 m).
  2. Retrieved from Google Earth. The nearest point of higher elevation is west of the Breithorn (Lauterbrunnen).
  3. Swisstopo map
  4. John Ball, The Alpine Guide, Central Alps, p. 43
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.