2009-05-21 47 11

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Revision as of 22:43, 22 May 2009 by imported>Dawidi (photos, video, tracklog, and half of the writeup)
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Thu 21 May 2009 in Innsbruck, Austria:
47.4042194, 11.6254432
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At around 1270m above sea level, in the mouth of a ravine in an alpine valley near Pertisau, southwest of the Achensee in Tyrol. Reached at around 14:00 by dawidi from 49 12.

Planning phase

The coordinates for Geohashing Day were pretty crappy at first glance - in 49 12 and all nearby graticules, the coordinates were far away from me, and in fields or other boring locations. And the only interesting one in 47 11 seemed inaccessible at first glance: high in the alps, on a desolate, rocky slope in a rather remote valley. But it was intriguing... and then, panning around the satellite imagery a bit, I saw colorful, open sunshades at a rather large building not far from the hash - and a long row of parked cars, even large buses... maybe not such a remote place after all? What about train connections?

Further investigation showed that the building was the Gramai-Alm, a full-fledged restaurant/hotel at 1267m up in the valley. The nearest train station was Jenbach, reachable from Regensburg with a reasonable connection via Munich and Rosenheim. However, the last connection that would get me home the same day was very bad, and would require the whole expedition to take just under 4 hours. No way.

In the evening, I tried some other possibilities, and came up with a couple of good connections from Tegernsee, which would allow me to take 10 hours for the expedition, but also required me to cycle an extra 40-50km and cross the Achenpass (elevation 941m). That seemed feasible, although the first climb on the elevation profile seemed scary - from 550m at Jenbach to 950m next to the lake - and I wasn't sure how much of the overpass would have a separate cycle lane. Randomly surfing a couple of tourism websites for the area, I found solutions for both: between Jenbach and the lake, there's a freaking steam rack train line, and all the way to Tegernsee, a new signposted cycle route had been opened in 2004.

Expedition

I got up at 4:00, left home at 6:15, and arrived at the central station in time for the 6:43 train to Munich. On the train, I chatted with another cyclist and casually explained geohashing to him, as it turned out he had tried geocaching a while ago. In Munich, I went to the ticket office to get tickets for the Austrian part of the ride. The ticket for myself was easy, but the teller had no experience with international bicycle tickets, and suggested that I buy one from the train conductor before the train crossed the border. However, that part of the ride was a "self-service line", so I neither had someone to buy the ticket from, nor anyone to ask me for it, so my bike had to dodge its fare. Meh.

Arriving at Jenbach, I followed a rather large group of international, mostly elderly, tourists to the steam rack train station, and they allowed me on, even though their website explicitly said they'd take bicycles only after registration by phone. The friendly fireman suggested I could stay outside with my bike, at the end of the waggon directly facing the small steam engine that would push the waggons uphill, but warned me it might be a bit hot and loud there. Who could decline a seat (well, a place to stand) with such a good view of the locomotive? I took a lot of photos and video during the ride, and only when I got off the train next to the lake, I realized that my hearing was somewhat funny because of the long exposure to the extremely loud beating sound (which was probably partly from the engine, but mostly the rack rail / cogwheel interface). As I'm writing this, more than 36 hours later, I'm still hearing a high-pitched noise...

Anyway... after all the other tourists had moved onto the ship waiting to take them on a zig-zag course along the lake, I started the individual part of my expedition.

(about which I'll write tomorrow...)



  • An 8-minute video of my uphill ride on the steam rack train is available on YouTube. I also noticed some interesting factoids on the back of the ticket: the locomotives in use here were built in 1889, so they are 120 years old now; and the train consumes 350kg of coal for each ride (amounting to about 4kg for me and my bike... ouch), as well as 3 cubic meters of water, and the fireman needs to drink 3 liters (of lemonade in this case) due to the heat.
This panorama didn't work out too well.
Snowman2.png
dawidi earned the Snowman Geohash Achievement
by building a snowman at the (47, 11) geohash on 2009-05-21.
2009-05-21 47 11 snowman.jpg
Border.PNG
dawidi earned the Border geohash achievement
by crossing the Germany-Austria border on 2009-05-21 to reach the (47, 11) geohash.
2009-05-21 47 11 border crossing.jpg