Walking in the Leutasch Valley

This independent walking walk is based in the tiny hamlet of Kirchplaztl, in the heart of the Leutasch Valley, tucked away next to the onion-domed village church is our hotel, owned by the Ennemoser Family, the oldest inn in the valley, it has been sensitively modernised to incorporate all the luxuries you would expect of a **** establishment.

Itinerary

The huge bedrooms are more like apartments, with your own lounge area and tea/coffeemaking facilities, and the bathrooms have both a bath and a shower. There is a heated indoor swimming pool, two saunas, steam bath, whirlpool bath and solarium (pay locally), fitness studio, boot room, and if you want to spoil yourself, beauty treatments and massages at extra cost. For children, there's an indoor play area and games room, with table tennis, pool, table football, darts and pinball.

Breakfast is an enormous hot and cold buffet and picnic lunches are provided for all walking days. Evening meals are served in the hotel's elegant dining room - gorgeous mountain views. Hubert Kobinger has been the hotel's chef for the last 31 years and his menu is an interesting blend of Tyrolean specialities and international dishes.

  • Day 1: Arrive in Innsbruck

    We pick you up at Innsbruck station for the 40-minute drive to the hotel in time for dinner.

  • Day 2: Hochmoos Orientation Walk 14 km / 9 mi / 5 hr

    This circular route from the hotel starts gently past the Weidachsee (trout hatchery and fl y fi shing) to the Kreith chairlift, which whisks you up to the sunny terrace at the Katzenkopf restaurant (1363m). A shady forest path winds up to 1540m and a succession of dramatic viewpoints in a wonderful geography lesson: the bare-topped Zugspitze, sweeping Leutasch valley and neighbouring Seefeld, backed by the jagged Karwendel mountains. A taxi (included) takes you to Leutaschklamm Gorge, on the outskirts of Mittenwald, which you can explore along a board walk, above the ice-blue waters, to a thundering 23m waterfall. A short climb returns you to the Leutasch Valley from where you follow the steep Frenchmans' Climb. This is the route Napoleon took to invade Tyrol in 1805. You walk through cool forest along a broad ridge with wonderful views to the north. After perhaps a leisurely lunch at a mountain restaurant you descend back into Bavaria to catch the train home from Mittenwald. Back at the hotel enjoy a swim in the pool and the afternoon sun on the terrace.

  • Day 3: Gaistal Balcony Walk 17 km / 11 mi / 5.5 hr

    This dead-end valley, closed to vehicles, is a Tyrolean idyll of lush Alpine meadows, pretty wooden chalets and burbling brooks, topped by jagged grey mountain peaks. Starting from the hotel, there's a steep climb then a marvellous treat of constant views from benches along an easy balcony walk: not only the Leutasch valley and familiar mountains, but over to the spiky snowbound line of the Stubai Alps beyond Innsbruck.

  • Day 5: Rest Day

    Why not spend the day in Innsbruck, just 40 minutes away? The romantic mediaeval Altstadt is the best starting point, but the whole city centre, small enough to explore on foot, is a jumble of Gothic,  Renaissance and Baroque buildings. There's excellent shopping too. Alternatively you could book a day trip to the top of the Zugspitze (2962m) by cable car.

  • Day 6: Walk on the Wild Side 11 km / 7 mi / 3 hr OR 13 km / 8 mi / 4 hr

    You take the bus and train to Scharnitz to begin today's walk which follows part of the E4 Gibraltar-Crete long distance footpath. It feels like a really wild walk although you are still close to civilisation. The climb through the mixed woodland - we saw roe deer and a lone chamois grazing in the lunar landscape of the Kastental cliffs - takes you to the grassy High Saddle (1495m). From this wonderful picnic spot you descend by a choice of routes direct back to the hotel for a relaxing sauna and swim.

  • Day 7: Seefeld High Mountain Walk 12 km / 8 mi / 3.5 hr

    Today you get a taste of "high mountain" walking, along straightforward paths and using mountain lifts to cut out the hard work. From the top of the Seefelder Joch (2074m) you have a magnifi cent 360° panorama, and you can see the routes of all your walks. The Gaistal, dominated by the Zugspitze, looks magnifi cent! After dinner at the hotel, perhaps celebrate your last night with a fun Tyrolean music evening in a local bar.

  • Day 8:  Return home

* All prices shown are for low season, per person, twin share. Click here to see full Terms & Conditions.

Pricing

8 Days/7 Nights From $1,910*

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Includes: Meals: Buffet breakfast, 5 picnic lunches and all evening meals.

Departs: Saturdays from 22 May to 18 September 2010.

NB: No minimum group size, however transfers are subject to at least 2 people (in total) booked on each departure.

NB: Tickets for local buses/trains and ski lifts for the walks are not included. Before June, teh Kreith lift (day 2) and some mountain restaurants are open at weekends only.

Single centre independent walking.

Highlights

  • Hochmoos Orientation Walk
  • Gaistal Balcony Walk
  • Seefeld High Mountain Walk