Weather report
Partly cloudy
-9° / -1° CAmount of snow
On the mountains:
82 cm
at 1,200 m:
27 cm
Mountain lift facilities
24 out of 28 in operation
Alpine ski slopes
26 out of 29 open
Winter Walk
Route: Seewaldalm car park - Albrecht-Dürer-Weg - Broch-Weg - Pirschsteig - Lottensee - Ropferstub'm.
Parking and public transport:
P1 "Seewaldalm"
The fastest public connection to the starting point can be found directly in our route planner.
Take the train to Seefeld train station and continue with the Regio-/Skibus to the stop "Mösern Lifte Seewaldalm".
You can find all connections in real time with the Mobility-App "wegfinder".
Directions:
The hiking route from Mösern to Buchen starts directly from the Seewaldalm car park on the Möserer Landesstrasse and rewards you along the way with impressive views of the Inn Valley, deep snow-covered forests, an aperiodic mountain lake and a delicious hut stop at the Ropferstub'm in Buchen.
From the starting point at the car park, you first take the Albrecht-Dürer-Weg through a short stretch of forest and follow it through the intersection with the Möserer Seestraße until you reach the Broch-Weg. The Broch trail then leads in a straight line across a small car park onto the Pirschsteig (trail no. 2) and through the snow-covered Mühlwald forest to the trail junction at Lottensee (an aperiodic lake what you can see during spring months). If you wish, you can turn right here, walk around and then reward yourself with a snack in the traditional Lottensee hut.
Otherwise (or afterwards), at the junction you now take hiking trail no. 27 for a short distance through sparse woodland. With a left turn, however, the hike then quickly introduces the last panoramic loop through the Ropferswald forest to Buchen and finally rewards you there with a delicious stop at the Ropferstub'm (1,200m). Here you can either end the impressive winter tour with the best view of the Hohe Munde on the sun terrace - or warm up in the cosy wooden parlour with homemade specialities and hearty conviviality.
Alpine emergency call:
Call: 140