I had just gotten back from three weeks in Canada and was still trying to find my hiking legs, so we picked a trail with lots of downhill, high up in the mountains near the glaciers... and boy was there a lot of downhill! A total of almost 1500m in fact! But I can't even begin to describe how beautiful the landscape was.
We started with a bus ride to the Susten Pass.. (side note, we almost missed our connection because of traffic congestion heading South for the long weekend). The sky was cloudy, and it was COLD at the pass (2224m or 7300ft) at 10:00 a.m. so we ate French Fries at the restaurant at the pass, while waiting for the sun. It warmed up quite quickly after that.
The first descent was to the Steinsee Lake, fed by the Stein Glacier which we'll get closer to another time (we did see several people on "guided tours" across the glacier). From there we did a round trip into the Seeboden Natural Reserve, an upper moorland of national significance, a 2-hour round tour which can be done as a separate hike of its own. On this upper level, unseen from the road, are a myriad of small pools like little gems in an undulating brush-and-boulder landscape, entirely surrounded by the most magnificent glaciers and peaks, it leaves you speechless. I could have stayed up here all day.
After a steep descent out of the upper moorland, we continued down the Haslital Valley another 7 km to the village of Gadmen, fairly parallel to the pass road but in a smaller side valley, so we rarely heard the road. First we bought some Alp Cheese from the local dairy shop, then continued on a wonderful trail which passed through a second moor landscape ("In Miseren") and along and across and past so many streams and waterfalls and down canyons.... every turn in the trail was a new adventure.
In total we did 14 km and it took us 5 hours and 45 minutes, and I couldn't have taken one more step, but every step was worth it.
We came by bus from the East through the Meien Valley. This is looking back the way we came. |
Heading up by bus to the Susten Pass from the East |
At the pass it was very cold, so we warmed up in the restaurant with French Fries until the clouds cleared a bit. |
Lots of ponds filled with or surrounded by cotton grass |
So cold! I'm looking forward to a brisk walk all the way down that valley |
First stop is the Stein Lake below, then a climb onto the upper moor behind it. |
After a tour of the Seeboden Reserve, we headed down the valley to Gadmen |
The hike was exhilirating. I love glaciers, glacier moraines, glacier lakes, and mountains in general. |
Time for a picnic at the lake below the glacier. |
Just beyond the lake we headed up to the right to the upper moor: Seeboden Reserve |
This upper moorland is a reserve of national importance. |
There are lots of ponds and little lakes, some full of cotton grass |
Seebodensee Lake |
At the back on the other side of the Haslital Valley is the road to the Susten Pass from the West |
The Swiss are good at making holes in everything. |
The Steingletscher Glacier. This is the view as we headed back down off the high moor. |
Zoomed photo of the glacier and a group of people getting ready to walk along that crevasse |
Before continuing down the valley, we bought some Alp Cheese. |
Alp dairy / cheese shop near the Susten Pass. |
Filling up the water bottles |
Walking through the "In Miseren" Nature Reserve (here it was strictly forbidden to leave the trail) |
Heading down the steep trail in the Haslital Valley |
For a fantastic couple of kilometers the trail was paved like this with flat rocks. |
The end is near! We plan to catch the bus in the village of Gadmen below. |
Crossing the river at the bottom of the valley |
This is a young bull (steer?) |
Final leg into the village of Gadmen to catch the bus, with just one minute to spare. |
On the way out of the valley by bus toward Innertkirchen and Meiringen. |
14 km in 5-6 hours including a detour to the Seeboden Nature Reserve |
Hikes we have done in this area to date (each colour is a different year) |
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