Bride And Groom (rock Formation)
Geography
The Bride and Groom lie southwest of the town near Dahn Youth Hostel at a height of 232 m above sea level (NN). Opposite them to the northeast, on the other side of the Wieslauter stream, rises the symbol of Dahn, the 70-metre-high Jungfernsprung crag. The surrounding Dahner Felsenland region is particularly rich in such strikingly shaped bunter sandstone rock formations, that have better withstood the weathering and erosion of softer layers of rock.
Sport climbing
In the South Palatinate Climbing Area the Bride and Groom are a much sought-after destination. According to the nomenclature used by sport climbers they are two towers between which there is a chimney, known as the Großer Kamin ("Great Chimney") and which is rated as a medium (III) climbing grade on the UIAA scale. The difficulty of the total of eleven climbing routes on the rocks varies from grades I to VII-.
References
- ^ New view at hidden treasures of nature Archived April 25, 2014, at the Wayback Machine at www.dahner-felsenland.net. Retrieved 19 Nov 2013
- ^ diejugendherbergen.de. "Jugendherberge Dahn". Archived from the original on 2024-05-24. Retrieved 2012-02-21.
- ^ Topographic map 1:25,000 Rheinland-Pfalz, No. 6812 Dahn, 2004 edition.
External links
- swissmountains.ch: Braut & Bräutigam Archived 2012-06-03 at the Wayback Machine (basic data)
- wanderportal-pfalz.de: Rundwanderung 50: Dahner Felsen- und Burgenrunde (with location plan)
- Climbing impressions from the Palatinate: Braut und Bräutigam (photo report)