
Dear Readers, regulars will know that one of my favourite places in the whole world is the Rotmoos Valley here in Obergurgl – indeed, this time I was suggesting to my poor long-suffering husband that he could scatter some of my ashes here (not that I’m planning on being cremated any time soon, but it’s good to plan). Alas, to get here involves a pretty steep climb, although the Schonweisse Hut (the little brown building on the left of the photo above) does a pretty good Apfelstrudel.
This year the whole village has been a bit of a building site, as they are building a new reservoir, which looks to be about three times the size of the one in the photo above. This is partly because conditions are getting drier, but also to provide water for the snow-blowing machines in winter, now that, even here, the snow is not reliable.

Building site for the new reservoir
It’s illegal for a lift to operate over a building site, for obvious reasons, so instead the first stage lift (which we usually take to avoid several hundred metres of rather boring uphill) has been replaced by an electric shuttle bus. Babies, toddlers, parents, grandparents and us all pile in at the bottom of the hill, in the village, and then go up the precipitous road to the second stage lift, dodging earth movers and all manner of trucks in the process. The bus was crammed to busting both ways today, and goodness only knows how they’ll cope in high season. But it was kind of fun, in a masochistic way, and then we were off, and all you could hear was the sound of huffing and puffing. My ankle was well bandaged, and behaved impeccably. And in less time than I thought, we were here.

I just love it in this valley, in all its moods. We’ve been pelted with snow here, soaked, sunburned and everything in between. Today, it was surprisingly quiet, with just the sound of the Northern Wheatears, who have a couple of fledglings…

We could hear marmots whistling, but didn’t see any this time – everywhere seems extremely green, and so most animals are making the most of this sudden largesse after yesterday’s rain. Even the Hangerer (the highest peak around here) is greening up.

The bowl carved by the original Rotmoos glacier is really apparent in this shot, but the glacier itself has retreated further and further, even in the twenty years that we’ve been visiting. People used to be able to walk down from the Hohe Mut (on the left) and cross the glacier. Now it’s practically disappeared.

But somethings are the same, like these gentians for example, with what I think is Alpine Milk Vetch in the background. The lichen is pretty cool too.

And here are the little ‘hairdos’ of the Mountain Avens (Geum montanum)

And the Haflinger horses are here – I don’t know what happened to the ones that were hanging out in the centre of the village a few days ago, but these horses were having a wonderful time…


And then, fortified with strudel and Almdudler, it was time to head back down to catch the scary electric bus. The weather has certainly brightened up, and there’s time for one last look down the valley before we leave.

On the other side of the river, there’s the Seene Platte – we managed to get up there about twenty years ago, and have never managed it since, what with one thing and another. Maybe next year….

So, one more day to go before we head back to London, and the heat, and the crowds. I love it, but this fortnight always feels like a real chance to re-group and re-fortify, even if I do seem to insist on falling over. Maybe it’s nature’s way of telling me to slow down, and it’s certainly worked.




























































































