
This is the more interesting of the two proposals to reach the bivouac, perhaps a bit more tiring than the other in some stretches, but offers, compared to the previous one, the undeniable advantage of an uninterrupted and complete view of the whole Sappada valley, the mountains surrounding it to the north, those of Comelico and beyond. The route first climbs the lower part of Cadin di Fuori, then crosses diagonally through dwarf pines and low vegetation the northern flank of Col Lanar, the wooded elevation not very prominent that separates Cadin di Fuori from Cadin di Dentro. The wide panoramas, the variety of spaces crossed, make it one of the most popular hikes. Caution is recommended in the last rather exposed meters of the long gully.
Author: © Giovanni Borella
C.A.I. Sappada/Plodn
Interreg V Italy-Austria - CLLD Dolomiti Live. Project “Safe mountain – mountain adventure” ITAT 4019 CUP B43J16000270004
Derived from the technical difficulty and the stamina requirements.
Difficulty: E
Hours from Palù village: ascent 3:00-3:30 descent 2:15-2:30 total 5:15-6:00
TRAIL MARKS: 317, 322
DIFFICULTY SCALE
The technical sheet of each route includes the commonly used abbreviations in mountain guides (T- E - EE- EEA - A). Some routes may have a double abbreviation (e.g., T/E or E/EE) because they have characteristics of both categories
T (touristic) indicates routes almost always short and easy, running along forest tracks and/or well-marked or otherwise obvious paths that do not require special training
E (hiking) indicates routes, sometimes quite long, that run along mule tracks and/or paths often above 2000 meters, clear but not always marked. They do not have significant difficulties, but may sometimes include some exposed or tricky segments. Appropriate equipment, some experience, and training are required
EE (for experienced hikers) indicates routes generally above 2000 meters, which can run on treacherous terrain and/or in challenging zones, often characterized by exposed and/or equipped passages, sometimes on rock faces with difficulties of grade 1. Experience, sure-footedness, orientation skills, good equipment, and physical-psychological preparation are required.
EEA (for experienced hikers with equipment) indicates routes equipped with metal cables, handles, ladders. Exposure is almost always constant. Experience, training and proper equipment including helmet and via ferrata set are mandatory. Gloves are useful.
A (for alpinists) indicates rock routes leading to peaks with low alpine difficulty (grade 1/2). Technical skills, good experience, physical preparation, suitable equipment (helmet, some slings, always useful a 20-30 meter rope segment) are required
WARNINGS
© Extracted from the Guide "Sappada, dai sentieri alle vette" by Giovanni Borella, published by CO.EL.
Giovanni Borella Born in Belluno, where he lived until adolescence. Later he moved to Padua, where he still lives, attending the local University and graduating in Ancient Literature which led him to teaching for a few decades. Hiker first, mountaineer later, he made numerous ascents both in the most famous Dolomite groups and in particular on the Sappada mountains, which he has frequented for many years in summer and winter and where he has also opened new routes and repeated others solo. He has published three guides: "On the sunny trails" ed. Mediterranee 1995 as co-author, "Sappada, dai sentieri alle vette" Co.El. 2002, "Dolomiti del Comelico" Linteditoriale 2010.
Localization
Derived from the technical difficulty and the stamina requirements.