Kahlersberg | |
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Highest point | |
Elevation | 2,350 m above sea level (NN) (7,710 ft) |
Coordinates | 47°31′53″N 13°01′56″E / 47.53139°N 13.03222°E |
Geography | |
Parent range | Berchtesgaden Alps |
Climbing | |
First ascent | in 1854 probably by F. v. Schilcher and G. Helblehen |
Easiest route | Klettersteig: Alpine Club Route 496 from the west |
The Kahlersberg is a 2,350-metre-high (7,710 ft) mountain in the Northern Limestone Alps (Hagen Mountains) in the Berchtesgaden Alps on the border between Germany (Bavaria) and Austria (Salzburg).
From the west a steep, marked climb (Route 496) runs through the so-called Mausloch ("Mousehole") to the summit. The summit can also be reached along the Eisenpfad ("Iron Path"), a path which approaches from the southwest, from the Landtal valley, is very steep in places and has old markings. A trackless descent variant runs from the Fensterl, a wind gap with a striking, small pit (in the right of the picture; the fourth wind gap left of the summit), northwards and down into the bowl between the Kahlersberg and the Hochseeleinkopf. This descent drops down mainly over steep scree.