Wilde Leck

The Wilde Leck is a mountain, 3,361 m (AA), in the Stubai Alps in the Austrian state of Tyrol. It rises immediately west of the Sulztalferner glacier and towers above the Ötztal valley, 5.5 km northwest of Sölden. It has a rocky summit made of solid granite and prominent arêtes. In the Stubai Alps the Wilde Leck is one of the most difficult summits to climb, because its easiest route runs initially over glaciers and then up a rock face that is assessed as climbing grade III (UIAA).

Wilde Leck
The Wilde Leck from the northeast. Front right: the Zahme Leck.
Highest point
Elevation3,359 m (AA) (11,020 ft)
Prominence317 m Fernaujoch[1]
Isolation5.2 km Schrankogel
ListingAlpine mountains above 3000 m
Coordinates47°00′13″N 11°03′49″E
Geography
Wilde Leck
Parent rangeStubai Alps
Geology
Mountain typeG
Type of rockGranite
Climbing
First ascentZachäus Grüner from Sölden around 1865. For leisure, F. Drasch, Ludwig Purtscheller and Q. Gritsch on 1 September 1877
Normal routesouth face (grade III in one place)

Just north of the Wilde Leck ("Wild Leck") is the Zahme Leck ("Tame Leck", 3,226 m above sea level (AA)).

Ascents

  • South Face (grade II - III)
  • East Arête III - in one place IV

Literature

  • Heinrich and Walter Klier, Alpine Club Guide Stubaier Alpen, Bergverlag Rudolf Rother, Munich, 1988. ISBN 3-7633-1252-8

Sources

References

  1. "Wilde Leck - Peakvisor". peakvisor.com. Retrieved 24 May 2020.


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