Rudolf und Siegrun Weiss, Kurt Schall (2001): Schitour Plus. Wenig Aufstieg … viel Abfahrt. Ausgesuchte Schitouren mit Aufstiegshilfen und langen Geländeabfahrten in Österreich, der östl. Schweiz und Südtirol. Schall Verlag, Wien.
The aim of this book is to provide an overview of the most important, most beautiful and most rewarding long off-piste descents in the Eastern Alps, whereby the starting points of these descents can be reached with (or at least with the support of) technical ascent aids. Today we would probably call them freeride tours or freeride descents. The book is therefore aimed at downhill-oriented skiers who want to reach the longest and most rewarding descent with as little (ascent) effort as possible.
First of all: this objective is achieved in full. We have consulted this book again and again since the noughties to our great satisfaction, whether for the rough planning of a ski trip and the associated potential downhill destinations, for travelling a very specific route described in the book or simply as a source of inspiration for mountain groups or locations that were often completely unfamiliar to us or whose existence we only became aware of through this book.
The structure of the book corresponds to the usual standard of such guide literature, but everything is still in an analogue, 0.0 version, so to speak. References to GPS coordinates or even links to GPS tracks for downloading are therefore completely absent. However, they are not missing at all. The descriptions of the tour areas, the individual routes/descents and their cartographic visualisation using map sections are based on the best available map material for the region (Austria: Official Topographical Map, Switzerland: Swiss Topo: South Tyrol: Tabacco) and are - despite being in black and white - extremely easy to read. The tours can therefore all be easily transferred to modern aids (digital navigation apps). This illustration is rounded off by a large number of (colour) photos, which, due to their age, really do appear somewhat "historical". Be it because the glaciated area documents a long-gone glacier state or because the ski fashion and the ski material used at the time are already ripe for the (ski) museum.
The difficulty rating is based on the familiar I to V scale (not difficult to extremely difficult), whereby difficulty level V is not represented in the book. Where necessary, information is also provided on alpinistic (climbing) difficulty. In addition, the susceptibility to avalanche danger is indicated in three categories (hardly, occasionally and frequently). If necessary, additional remarks regarding the steepness (in degrees) or the topographical characteristics (e.g. narrow gully, etc.) can be found in the respective description text. Atypical today is the suitability of the tour depending on the time of year (high winter / spring), but this also gives a good indication of whether the tour is a good destination for powder or firn conditions.