Saturday January 1, 2022 -- First Hike of the New Year!!!
In the low-lying regions of Switzerland there is currently no snow and the grass is still green, but for weeks there has been fog. Only above the fog (1000m or so) you might find sunshine, but there the trails are covered in mushy snow.
On this Saturday, the forecast was for fog to only 600m, so as long as we stayed slightly higher, we might get some good walking in. We chose a nearby "mountain" called Heitersberg, (where we had hiked once before but had to cut our hike short due to rain) because at 780m we should safely be above the fog, and it would be like climbing a mountain again! Our main reason for going there was to view a brand new look-out tower (built in 2021) at the South end of the mountain, and we knew we'd have a good view of the Alps.
We decided to start on the North side and end with a climb on the tower, planning to always have the mountains ahead of us. This was the wrong choice for two reasons: Most of the trail was through forested area (albeit mostly deciduous forest, which means we still had some amount of filtered sunlight) and therefore we had little view of the mountains except to the East; and secondly and totally unexpected were the hundreds of people we encountered at the tower! We should have guessed that on a balmy and sunny holiday afternoon, with loads of parking nearby and great visibility, that many many people were going to visit a brand new look-out tower after their family lunch on the first day of the new year!!!
We should have started at the tower... at 11 a.m, before everybody else's afternoon outing. But it was a beautiful tower, and the view was splendid. And we got there just before the shade reached the tower. And even though we had less sunshine on the trail than I had hoped, it was still a good 12-km walk for us.
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We got off the bus (from Baden) hier along the road, where the forest trail heads up to the Heitersberg range. The thick fog was "slightly" disappointing! But forecast was for fog to 600m, so there was still hope. Trail marker indicates 2 hrs.45 minutes to the lookout tower at Hasenberg, and from there it was another 20 minutes down to the next bus stop in Widen. So a total hike of over three hours. |
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I'm still not sure if the fog is going to lift! But it was kind of cool to walk through the forest like this. |
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When we emerged from the forest at 580m... sure enough, we were above the fog! This was the view to the West. We could have stayed here on the West side of the forested hill; we would have had more view and sunshine, but it was a wide flat road. We wanted more mountain trails, so we headed further up. |
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When we got to the ridge, we had a nice view of the mountains to the East, as well as part of the Jura Range to the North. And by fortuitous timing, we found a bench, in the sunshine, with the view, right at lunchtime!!! |
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From our picnic bench, a view of Mt. Säntis in the very east of Switzerland |
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We chose the eastern side of the forest because we knew there were small trails here as opposed to the wider forestry or paved roads on the West side. But this trail was pretty muddy!!! |
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Not a bad view, even with the fog! On the left is the Lägern Range, which we have walked about three times, and on the right is the Altberg, which also has a viewing tower (Steinacher Turm) which we visited in March of 2020 (those photos are HERE) |
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The damp forest smelled lovely! |
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Up ahead is a clearing where we finally had more sunshine and a view to the Bernese Alps |
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In this clearing we had a view of the Bernese Alps to the Southwest. From here we headed eastward again to climb the ridge trail to the summit of Mt. Heitersberg, where we were mostly in the forest again. |
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The highest point of this hike, on the summit of Mt. Heitersberg |
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In the second world war, there was a defense line right over this mountain. In the mountain are hidden seven military bunkers within a few hundred meters of each other. |
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Even though most of the hike was through the forest, because its a deciduous forest, we still had some rays of sunshine. On the left, the hillside drops steeply down to a lake called Egelsee (which we visited in Apri 2014. But you could just barely see it through the trees |
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Finally a clearing with a nice view over the city of Zurich |
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First glimpse of the Hasenberg tower as we got off the mountain. The noise of the hundreds of people here was a shock. The tower is 40m high. |
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A look up at the beautiful Hasenberg tower. The viewing platform is at 36 m, and there are 210 steps to cover to get there! |
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The view from up here is definitely spectacular. And the panorama photo placards are useful to help identify all the mountains we see! |
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The view to the Northeast from the viewing platform |
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View to the Southeast and the Glarnish Alps |
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A zoomed view of the beautiful Glarnish Alps. |
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And you even get a view to the Bernese Alps to the southwest! |
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As more and more people came up on the platform, we were starting to feel too crowded. So we didn't stay long. |
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Another view on the way down. Looks like there is still fog down along the Reuss River in what is called the Freiamt region of Canton Aargau. (We're heading that way once we get onto the train in Widen-Berikon) |
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Luckily the tower is so huge that it can accommodate a lot of people |
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A look back at the Hasenberg tower as we now make our way down the hill to Widen, which is the nearest bus stop. |
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As it's now almost 3 p.m. and the sun is already getting low in the West, the visibility to the East is even better. On the right is Mt. Säntis in the Alpstein Massif in the very eastern part of Switzerland, and the hill with the TV towers (also a look-out tower) is Mt.Uetliberg, which is Zurich's mountain (the city is on the other side). |
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As we head down the hill toward the town of Widen, there are more and more people coming up from the huge parking lot, more people who want to see the new tower!!! |
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A final photo with the pastoral lands of Canton Aargau below, behind that the Albis Range with the old Felsenegg Radio Tower visible to the left of my head, and dominant in the background are the Glarnisch Alps. |
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