OE/VB-494 (Hochälpele) – 1464 M / 4803 ft

After yesterdays activation of the ‘Galinakopf’ (OE/VB-287) under perfect conditions, I selected a less challenging summit for this Sunday. The dart I threw at the map landed closest to ‘Hochälpele’ or OE/VB-494 – a summit close to the previously activated ‘Geißkopf’. The ‘Hochälpele ’ is also part of the ‘Bödele‘, the landmark mountain of Dornbirn, the largest city in the state of Vorarlberg (Austria). The weather forecast was promising and called for a sunny day.

Trailhead: 3800 ft / 1158m
Summit:   4803 ft / 1464 m
Elev. gain: 1010 ft / 308 m
Roundtrip: 3.0 mi / 4.8 km

Compare this summit with my other activated summits

How to get there:
Take the ‘Bödele-Strasse’ (or L48 ) from Dornbirn or take the Bus line 38 (Dornbirn -Bödele – Schwarzenberg – Bezau) which leaves every 30 minutes, starting at the Dornbirn Railway Station. Park or get out of the Bus at the ‘Bödele Passhöhe‘. The trail starts about 100 yards (100 m) south of the parking lot.

Parking/Trailhead

Red Tape:
This area is a very popular local recreation area and finding a parking spot might be difficult, specially on week-ends and/or during sunny weather. Since it was a Sunday and a sunny day after several days of the rain and fog that is typical for the region at that time of the year… you can imagine the number of cars and people. It was a real zoo up there. The parking fee depends on how long you are staying at the lot, if I remember correctly it is about 1 Euro per hour. The parking lot has exactly one machine where you can pay your parking-fee… I waited approx. 20 minutes in single file to get to the machine when I came back from the summit. The good news… it accepts bills as well as coins.

The Ascent:
The ascent has no challenges. Just follow all the other people… no, seriously, the trail is hard to miss and is mostly moderate in steepness. The only challenge was the fact that it was incredibly muddy due to the heavy rain-falls we experienced over the last week. The first part leads through a few vacation homes (beautiful old Chalets), then by a Restaurant (in case you need some fuel before attempting the ascent). From there the trail is over grassy (muddy) terrain along a small ski-lift all the way to a ridge. At this point I made most of the elevation gain for this trip and I followed the south-easterly ridge all the way to the summit. The only challenge was to avoid the deep mud-puddles, which was sometimes difficult with all the foot-traffic.

The Summit:

View from the summit


At the summit – you guessed it – is another restaurant and a ‘Gipfelkreuz‘, a wooden cross. To find a good spot for setting up an antenna is not so easy. For one, there were a lot of people up there and the other ‘problem’ is that the summit is an elongated ridge which drops off steeply in both directions. So in order to get good propagation in all direction, I was looking for a spot very close to the top of the ridge which also coincides with the trail. I tuned the antenna for 10m, hoping for similar results than on the days before. But it was wishful thinking … my CQ calls did not get out well. I was wearing headphones to cancel out some of the noise on the summit (and from the nearby restaurant when I suddenly heard Alpenhorn sounds through my headphones. “I am having a sunstroke” I thought but the sun was not shining that hard and I was wearing a hat… I took the headphones off and turned my head, that’s when I realized that somebody set up their Alpenhorn about 6 feet (~1.8m) behind me… and he was puffing his lungs out. I am as fond of Alpenhorn sounds as the next guy but this was a bit much… as polite as possible I asked him whether it would be possible to move his instrument to another, more distant location. I tried to explain to him what I was doing… maybe he had not realized in light of my ~20 mast/antenna with all the guy-lines and counterpoise? I could not even finish my sentence when he got red all over the face and started lecturing me that this was a free country and that I cannot force him to move – yikes. It was pretty obvious that there was no way that sane arguments could convince this guy to stop or move. His wife/partner/companion tried to mediate the situation and coax him into moving, being obviously careful not to further upset him. In the end, I  turned back to my radio and head-phones, ignoring his further rants.

What seems funny to me is, that no matter the country and culture, people always try to justify their unconsidered and/or rude actions with the argument that we are in a free country – go figure.

The first contact with FR/DJ7RJ (Willie) was certainly the highlight. A DX contact of more than 5500 mi (~9000 km) on 5 W. Apart from that, band seemed to favor east-Europe and I made most of my very few contacts with Russia. After my fifth contact I packed up, feeling a little disappointed about this mountain.

The Descent:
I went down the same slippery/muddy route to the parking-lot… waiting patiently in-line to pay the fees and get ‘my’ car.

Some video impressions (no Alpenhorn sounds though):
Since the trip felt more like traveling on an interstate, I have only very limited footage.
httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kvEYUOcWy3g

If you would like to leave questions or comments, please do so through Youtube.


ATTENTION !! WARNING !! There are old mountaineers, and bold mountaineers... there are no old-bold mountaineers. Hiking and mountain climbing are potentially hazardous activities particularly in Colorado with its extreme elevations. I am not accepting responsibility for any death or injury resulting from activations based on my trip reports. Proper training, experience, and personal capability assessment is required - enjoy!


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