
Well Readers, after ten days of beautiful weather we had to have a less settled day at some point, and today was the day. Fortunately we’d decided to have a quiet day to give my poor ankle a bit more time to heal, and so we caught the bus up to the Timmelsjoch pass. This pass, at 2474 metres, marks the divide between Austria and the Italian South Tyrol, and in the Middle Ages ‘basket carriers’ would transport up to 100 kgs of wine, pork, flax, lard and vinegar from one side of the mountains to another. These days you can hop on a bus and be at the top in about 30 minutes.

In a normal year we would walk back down to the Sahnestuberl, but a descent of some 1000 metres didn’t feel sensible on a damaged leg. The path runs from behind the Rasthaus (above), and starts very narrow and rocky, followed by a bit of more gentle descent, and culminating in a very scary scramble down through the woods at a ligament-busting angle. I was very frustrated not to be walking down but sometimes one has to be sensible. Harrumph. Still, we stopped at the rustic restaurant at the top for a cuppa and some berry cake, which we ate so fast I didn’t stop to take a photo. Sorry, cake fans! And then I checked the bus timetable for the return journey, and just as well I did, because there was either a bus at 11.10, or one at 13.40, and that’s quite a long time to hang around, even with cake.
And by now it had started to rain, so that made for an entertaining ride back down to Obergurgl…


Cows with little road sense….

Various mountain sheep..

The Smuggler’s memorial…

Three fine Haflinger horses, and one small pony with a very fetching hair-do.

The Haflingers are all wearing some kind of fly protection – the flies down here can be infernal. Not sure why the little pony doesn’t get some headgear as well. Haflingers are a true Tyrolean breed, and are hardy, versatile and long-lived. The Haflingers in Obergurgl breed every year, and you can often find them on the mountain pastures, living semi-wild during the summer.



And then it’s back to the Hotel Olympia for a sandwich and a nap. What a life! Some of the meadows are still uncut, and the mix of flowers changes every day. There’s a lot of Tufted Vetch about at the moment, making puddles of lilac-blue amongst the yellow of the Hawkweeds and Trefoils, and the white of the Ox Eye Daisies…



































































































