Among the mountains that I had chosen for my tour of the Alps, Monte Zermula was "the little one": in Italy, we say "la Cenerentola".
And, when I was at the Passo Cason di Lanza, I was even in doubt whether to climb it or to skip it.
Luckily, a clear dawn convinced me to go. The weather remained fine, which was absolutely not the case on the summits of the following three days: Terza Grande, Antelao and Tofana di Rozes.
So, the little one has become one of the best ones. These are also places where one does not find big crowds. The pass itself is very demanding: it has slopes comparable to those of the famous Zoncolan, although they are not as continuous as there. Car drivers assured that this pass is a challenge also for them; the very same was abundantly witnessed by the smell of the vehicles descending the steepest slopes.
A special thank goes to Ulrich Deuschle, who yesterday in the late evening sent me by hand (!!!) the mail containing the rendering that I used, as always, to fine-tune the orientation. He writes:
Seit einigen Wochen werden E-Mails, die udeuschle an GMail-Accounts sendet, abgewiesen. Ich habe noch keine Lösung gefunden. Bis dahin sende ich Ihnen die E-Mails von Hand weiter, leider mit einiger Verspätung.
Location: 46.561503 13.151576
Larger: https://bit.ly/3BlNpQI
Michael Bodenstedt, Alvise Bonaldo, Peter Brandt, Klaus Brückner, Hans-Jörg Bäuerle, Günter Diez, Jörg Engelhardt, Andre Frick, Johannes Ha, Franz Kerscher, Matthias Knapp, Martin Kraus, Dieter Leimkötter, Werner Maurer, Gianluca Moroni, Danko Rihter, Adri Schmidt, Christoph Seger, Andreas Starick, Michael Strasser, Jens Vischer, Benjamin Vogel
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Kommentare
LG Christoph
Bald sind zwei andere gekommen, und das war gut, weil sie aus dem Friuli waren, so haben sie mir viel gezeigt und erklärt.
LG Alberto
ciao, Alvise
Manchmal klicke ich auch... aber vergebens.
Jetzt habe ich auch die Koordinaten gegeben.
LG, Alberto.
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