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Starting from the parking lot in Unterjoch, one walks past the church and goes east to Zehrerhöfe on a road, where the paving abruptly stops. A dirt path at a right angle leads to the main path to the peak. From there, the main path leads up the slope. It becomes much steeper, and some places are secured by steel wire.
In the summer season it is possible to walk a 'panorama way' between the summits. The Weiherkopf is an intermediate objective on this route. The main path is called the Allgäu Hörner Tour (Allgäuer Hörnertour), which is also negotiable in winter, but is not then waymarked.
The Allgäu Alps and the Allgäu region are not identical. The Allgäu is a landscape that, according to present-day understanding, is (almost entirely, but see Tannheimer Tal) on German soil. By contrast, the Allgäu Alps are a mountain range of the Alps whose definition falls out of the Alpine Club classification of the Eastern Alps. Parts of ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Main_Chain_of_the_Allgäu_Alps&oldid=651395015"
The Rottachberg is a 1115 m high mountain in the Allgäu Alps near Rettenberg. Its summit is known as Falkenstein. ... The walk from Rettenberg to Falkenstein and ...
The Schartschrofen is a rocky summit, 1,968 m high, in the Tannheim Mountains, a sub-group of the Allgäu Alps. It lies northwest of the Rote Flüh and south of the col of Füssener Jöchl. Ascent
The Krottenspitze, Öfnerspitze and Großer Krottenkopf in the Allgäu Alps. This list of mountains of the Allgäu Alps tabulates those peaks and summits with names and spot heights that lie within the Allgäu Alps and that have a prominence of over 30 metres (98 ft). [1] [a] and an isolation of 100 m (330 ft) or more (rounded).
Riffenkopf is a 1,748 m high mountain in the Allgäu Alps in Bavaria, Germany. The peak is located on the ridge that extends from Höfats mountain to the west-north-west and is sometimes referred to as a foothill of Höfats. It is the first distinct summit on the ridge separating the Oy and Dietersbach valleys.