Bavarian Prealps
The Bavarian Prealps are a mountain range within the Northern Limestone Alps along the Austria–Germany border. They include the Bavarian Prealp region between the river Loisach to the west and the river Inn to the east; the range is about long and wide. The term is not defined politically, but alpine-geographically because, although the range is mostly located in Bavaria, southeast Germany, small areas of the Bavarian Prealps lie in the state of Tyrol, Austria.
The term is not to be confused with the Bavarian Alps or the Bavarian Alpine Foreland. These terms include the whole of the alpine region and the whole Alpine Foreland on Bavarian state territory.
Except in the Ester Mountains in the extreme west, the summits of the Bavarian Prealps are all below 2000 metres in height and only a few have prominent limestone cliffs.
Extent
According to the 1984 classification of the Eastern Alps by the German Alpine Club the Bavarian Prealps are delineated as follows: Prealp region from Murnau via Kochel am See, Bad Tölz to Rosenheim – Inn to Kiefersfelden – Kieferbach – Glemmbach – Ellbach – Kaiserhaus – Brandenberger Ache – Erzherzog-Johann-Klause – Sattelbach – Ampelsbach – Achenbach – Walchen – Isar to Krün – Kranzbach – Kankerbach – Garmisch-Partenkirchen – Loisach to Murnau.Subdivision
The westernmost part of the Bavarian Prealps is formed by the Ester Mountains and its highest peak, the Krottenkopf, which is also the highest summit in the Prealps. To the northeast the range is enclosed by the Herzogstand and Heimgarten and the long ridge of the Benediktenwand.The eastern part of the Prealps between the rivers Isar and Inn is known as the Mangfall Mountains, because its streams – the Rottach, Weißach, Schlierach and Leitzach – all flow into the Mangfall river, which drains the whole area and forming an important groundwater store for the city of Munich. The highest peak in the eastern part of the Bavarian Prealps – located on Austrian state territory in spite of the name – is the Hinteres Sonnwendjoch at above sea level.
Neighbouring mountain ranges
The Bavarian Prealps border the following mountain ranges in the Alps:To the north the Bavarian Prealps border on the Alpine Foreland.
Notable peaks
- Benediktenwand
- Bischof
- Heimgarten
- Herzogstand
- Hinteres Sonnwendjoch
- Hirschberg
- Karwendel
- Krottenkopf
- Neureuth
- Plankenstein
- Rechelkopf
- Risserkogel
- Roßstein and Buchstein
- Rotwand
- Schliersberg
- Seekarkreuz
Tourism
Mountain climbing
Many peaks in the Bavarian Prealps are part of Munich's Hausbergen and may be climbed all year round on foot, by ski mountaineers or with snowshoes. There are good and simple, even family-friendly, routes to most of the summits. Several also offer scenic, generally well-protected climbing routes across a wide range of climbing grades : the Roßstein and Buchstein, Plankenstein, Ruchenköpfe. A ski touring classic is the Rotwand-Reib'n, which runs up to the Rotwand.Long-distance hiking trails
The Via Alpina, a cross-border long-distance trail with five route sections, runs over the entire Alps, including the Bavarian Prealps.The Violette Way of the Via Alpina runs in 9 stages through the Bavarian Prealps as follows:
- Stage A51 runs from Oberaudorf to the Brünnsteinhaus
- Stage A52 runs from the Brünnsteinhaus to the Rotwandhaus via the Ursprungtal
- Stage A53 runs from the Rotwandhaus to Sutten via the Spitzingsee
- Stage A54 runs from Sutten to Kreuth via the Risserkogel
- Stage A55 runs from Kreuth to Lenggries via the Hirschberghütte and the Lenggrieser Hütte
- Stage A56 runs from Lenggries to the Tutzinger Hütte via the Brauneck
- Stage A57 runs from der Tutzinger Hütte to the Herzogstand via the Kesselberghöhe
- Stage A58 runs from the Herzogstand to the Weilheimer Hütte via Eschenlohe
- Stage A59 runs from der Weilheimer Hütte to Garmisch-Partenkirchen via the Wank
In addition there is the Via Bavarica Tyrolensis, a cycle path from Munich to the Tyrol.