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Turracher See

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Lake Turrach ( German : Turracher See ) is an Alpine lake at Turracher Höhe Pass , on the state border of Carinthia and Styria in Austria .

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26-462: The lake is located within the Gurktal Alps ( Nock Mountains ) at a height of 1,763 m (5,784 ft) above sea-level . Due to the altitude, it frequently freezes over in winter. In summer, the water temperature can reach a maximum of 18 °C (64 °F); the waters therefore are hardly used for bathing, except for a hotel beach on the southern shore equipped with thermal pumps. Lake Turrach

52-493: A little later in eastern Switzerland, cattle production became the primary agricultural activity. A number of specialized cattle markets grew up in Arona , Bellinzona , Como and Varese in the south and Villeneuve in the west. In these communities on the edge of the Alps, transhumance included both the vertical movement of cattle to the alpine pastures as well as horizontal movement to

78-579: A long-simmering feud between Schwyz and Einsiedeln Abbey . In 2011, the UNESCO declared Alpine transhumance in the Bregenz Forest as intangible cultural heritage. In the valleys along the edge of the Alps, cattle production with associated transhumance was generally the rule. However, in the inner alpine valleys the climate was drier which allowed farming even at higher elevations. These areas tended to be mixed between farming and animal husbandry, with

104-901: Is Eisenhut at 2,441 m (8,009 ft) . The range is located between the Mur Valley to the north (which separates it from the Niedere Tauern range) and the River Drava to the south, where it borders the Gailtal Alps and Karavanke ranges of the Southern Limestone Alps . In the west, the Gurktal Alps reach up to the Katschberg Pass and the Ankogel Group of the Hohe Tauern range. To

130-623: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Gurktal Alps The Gurktal Alps ( German : Gurktaler Alpen , Slovene : Krške Alpe ) is a mountain range in the Central Eastern Alps in Austria which is named after the valley of the Gurk river. The range stretches west to Lake Millstatt and east to Neumarkter Sattel (north-northwest of Neumarkt in Steiermark). The highest peak

156-648: Is fed by a mountain stream and several marshy meadows, the water drains northwards into the Styrian Mur valley at Predlitz . It was the first Carinthian lake to be protected from the discharge of wastewater by a sewage system. Today, several species of fish occur, among them brown trout and arctic char . Since 2012 the Carinthian part of the lake belongs to the UNESCO Salzburg Lungau and Nock Mountains biosphere reserve . This Carinthia location article

182-602: Is not geologically justified. The highest peaks are located within the Nock Mountains ( Nockberge , from Nock meaning "rounded hilltop", cf. Nockerl ) subgroup west of Flattnitz Pass , including Mt. Eisenhut , 2,441 m (8,009 ft), in the province of Styria . The Nationalpark Nockberge located along the scenic Nockalm Road in Carinthia has been a protected landscape area ( IUCN V) since 1987. The Nock Mountains also stretch down to major Carinthian lakes such as

208-548: Is still practiced in Bavaria , Austria , Slovenia , Italy , France and Switzerland , except in their most frequented tourist centers. In some places, cattle are taken care of by local farmer families who move to higher places. In others, this job is for herdsmen who are employees of the cooperative owning the pastures. Most Alpine pastures are below 2,400 m (7,900 ft); all are below 2,800 m (9,200 ft). The higher regions not suitable for transhumance are known as

234-567: The Alps , that is, a seasonal droving of grazing livestock between the valleys in winter and the high mountain pastures in summer ( German Alpwirtschaft, Almwirtschaft from the term for "seasonal mountain pasture", Alp, Alm ). Transhumance is a traditional practice that has shaped much of the landscape in the Alps, as without it, most areas below 2,000 m (6,600 ft) would be forests. While tourism and industry contribute today much to Alpine economy, seasonal migration to high pastures

260-495: The Black Death and the wars of this era. Cattle production was much less manpower-intensive than farming, which was ideal with the reduced population. However, cattle production is much more capital- and especially land-intensive. Cattle production became an investment opportunity for monasteries and citizens of nearby cities. The investors would purchase the cattle and then rent the beasts out to small farmers or to herders for

286-455: The High Alps . The German word Alp or Alm (meaning "seasonal mountain pasture", from Old High German alpa, alba ) is originally identical to the name of the Alps (German Alpen ) itself, probably a pre-Roman (and possibly pre-Indo-European ) term for "mountain". In French, the corresponding word for "alpine pasture" is alpage . Evidence survives of a transhumance economy in

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312-691: The Millstätter See and Ossiacher See . Other peaks include: The Gurktal Alps consist mainly of three tectonic plates: at the bottom, the "mica schist plate", in the middle the "Murau plate", and the "Stolzalpen plate" at the top. The lowest plate is made of mica schist, the middle plate is made of greenstone slates, phyllite, and marble. The top plate, the Stolzalpen plate, consisted of slates of originally similar age, but which have been transformed and now appear with clay slates, volcanic rocks, and limestone. The landscape has numerous mountain pastures and

338-636: The Nock Mountains and Kreischberg in the Metnitz Mountains . The Nock Mountain region is well known for its spas. The Karlbad along the Nockalmstraße is the oldest farmers' healing spring in Austria. The method of creating the baths (with spring water and hot rocks) has remained unchanged since the 17th century. Transhumance in the Alps Alpine transhumance is transhumance as practiced in

364-609: The Alpine pastures, either helpful or causing mischief; in particular, this is to punish the cruelty or discourtesy of a bad Senn . In many cases, the stories tell about curses on specific Alps , appearances of the devil or spirits of earlier Sennen , etc. In 1997, Austria had over 12,000 sites where 70,000 farmers took care of about 500,000 cattle. Alpine pastures amount to a quarter of the farmland. Bavaria had 1,384 sites hosting 48,000 cattle, about half of them in Upper Bavaria and

390-636: The Alps dating to the later Neolithic period (c. 3000 BC), with evidence for pastures above the treeline reported for the Bronze Age (17th to 11th centuries BCE) in the Northern Limestone Alps . The transhumance system in the Alps has remained virtually unchanged since at least the High Middle Ages , with a document referring to a summer pasture from 1204. Along the edge of the Alps, starting around 1300 in west and central Switzerland and

416-413: The animals being kept mainly for fertilizer and plowing rather than food. However, in both regions the yearly movement was generally similar. Throughout the year, most of the population of the village remained on the valley floor and farmed the surrounding land for grains and hay. In the spring the herdsmen took the animals up to the middle pastures on the mountain slopes. In the summer, pigs were left in

442-460: The cattle markets. In the communities located in the central Alps, the herds were more diverse. Generally there were large herds of sheep with much smaller cattle herds and other animals such as pigs and goats. While the inhabitants of the Alps had practised transhumance for thousands of years, during the Late Middle Ages it became increasingly important as the population decreased following

468-558: The distinctive flavour that determines more than 30 Alpine cheeses, including Alpkäse , Bergkäse and Sura Kees . The chief shepherd in charge of the Alp and responsible for the cheese production is known as the Senn . The Käsestraße Bregenzerwald (Bregenz Forest cheese trail) in Vorarlberg is an association of farmers which aims at contributing to the maintenance of small scale agriculture and

494-606: The diversity of local products in the Bregenz Forest . Members of the association include dairymen who will inform tourists about artisan cheese production. Some people spent the winters isolated in the high pastures. In Johanna Spyri 's novel Heidi , the " Alp-Öhi "" ("high-pasture grandfather") is such a person, despising and despised by the villagers. Transhumance contributes a great deal to traditional Alpine culture, such as Yodel , Alphorn or Schwingen . Swiss folklore also records many traditional tales about mythological creatures such as dwarves (Barbegazi, etc.) inhabiting

520-678: The east, the Neumarkt Pass in Upper Styria separates it from the adjacent Lavanttal Alps . The Gurktal Alps can be divided into five subgroups: At the southern end of the Gurktal Alps is the Klagenfurt Basin. Here there are seven smaller mountain chains: The Gurktal Alps are, along with the Lavanttal Alps to the east, sometimes classified as part of the Noric Alps . However, this term

546-539: The middle pastures while the rest of the animals were moved to the high alpine pasture. At the end of September the animals were moved back to the lower pastures and cattle were stabled in the following month. Sheep and goats were stabled in December, unless the winter was mild, then they remained at the middle pastures with the pigs. In the regions where breeding dominated, the farms were relatively large and isolated from each other. Where both breeding and farming were mixed,

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572-591: The mountain valleys, the fields near the communities were cultivated every year (sometimes producing two crops a year in Ticino ) while the outer fields and alpine pastures were more often allowed to lie fallow or used as a meadow. Alpine transhumance has a strong impact on the production of cheese in the Alps. It ensures that cows, sheep and goats produce high-quality aromatic milk, the so-called Heumilch ("hay milk"), based on their special diet of natural meadow grasses. The use of hay milk in cheese production contributes to

598-598: The other half in the Allgäu . In Switzerland , about 380,000 cattle including 130,000 milk cows as well as 200,000 sheep are in summer on high pastures. Milk from cows here is usually made into local cheese specialities, handmade using traditional methods and tools. Alpine pastures amount to 35 percent of Swiss farmland and 13 percent of the entire country. The total population of mountain farmers has decreased to about 43,000 (in 1980) from 160,000 (in 1910). The farmers that are involved in mountain farming only make up about 15% of

624-473: The plots were generally smaller and common fields were shared between the community. During the Middle Ages many fields were converted into meadows, because of the prevalence of the breeding. In the north the fields were rotated without a fallow period. They were cultivated for 2 to 5 years, then used as a meadow (and fertilized by the animals) for 3 to 10 years before going back under cultivation. However, in

650-420: The summer. The smaller alpine communities generally did not want "foreign" cattle pastured in their alpine pastures, which led to conflicts between the alpine farming communities and the neighboring cities and monasteries. Conflicts over grazing rights and ownership of the alpine meadows led to several wars within what is now Switzerland, including the pivotal Battle of Morgarten (1315), which started due to

676-703: Was the site of transhumance agriculture. The Gurktal Alps were also a mining area for iron and silver . Magnesite deposits are still being exploited near Radenthein . Tourism is the now most important economic sector. The valleys of the Gurktal Alps cater for tourists in summer and winter. The leading tourist area is Bad Kleinkirchheim , followed by Turracher Höhe ( Predlitz-Turrach and Reichenau ), Falkert (Reichenau), Innerkrems ( Krems in Kärnten ), Flattnitz , Afritz and Katschberg ( Rennweg am Katschberg ). The largest ski areas are Katschberg-Aineck, Innerkrems-Schönfeld-Karneralm, Turracher Höhe and Gerlitzen in

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