Hochstaufen
The Hochstaufen is the easternmost mountain of the Chiemgau Alps, Germany. It is located in the north of Bad Reichenhall. The mountain belongs to the Staufen massif and is a popular destination for mountaineering.
In the 17th century there were some mines at the Hochstaufen, the best known gallery was the Doktor-Oswald-Gallery, located only 60 m underneath the summit.
At an altitude of 1,750 m is the Reichenhaller Haus, an alpine hut of the Deutscher Alpenverein.
Routes
- Bad Reichenhall – Barthlmahd – Reichenhaller Haus – Hochstaufen
- Bad Reichenhall – Buchmahd – "Steinerne Jaeger" – Reichenhaller Haus – Hochstaufen
- Piding – Mairalm – "Steinerne Jaeger" – Reichenhaller Haus – Hochstaufen
- Piding – Mairalm – Pidinger Klettersteig – Hochstaufen
- Piding or Aufham-Anger – Steiner Alm – Hochstaufen
- Passage from Zwiesel – Zennokopf – Mittelstaufen – Reichenhaller Haus – Hochstaufen
- Passage from Zwieselalm – Barthlmahd – Reichenhaller Haus – Hochstaufen
- Passage from Fuderheuberg – "Steinerne Jaeger" – Reichenhaller Haus – Hochstaufen
Miscellaneous
Near the summit of Hochstaufen, next to the Reichenhaller Haus, stands the Staufenkapelle, a small mountain chapel built in 1928–29. Each year, a traditional open-air mass called the Staufenmesse is held there after the summer solstice, drawing many visitors. On the evening before, the ridge and path are lit by fires placed by volunteers.After heavy rainfalls earthquakes occur at the Hochstaufen, so there are several seismometers of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich around the mountain.
In September 1993 the innkeeper couple of the Reichenhaller Haus was murdered in a brutal robbery.