
Witness to earliest human settlements
About 30 kilometres outside of Merano there is one of the
oldest natural monuments of South Tyrol: The ancient larches of Ulten, which are probably over 850 years old and represent the oldest conifers in Europe. Furthermore they bear witness to the human settlements on the far side of the Ulten Valley, growing at the edge of an avalanche forest that was to protect the farms above the hamlet of “Ausserlahn” from avalanches.
Once you look at these
three larches, it becomes clear how mighty they are.
Growing 1430 metres above sea level, they bear the marks of all weathers; their trunks measure up to 8 metres in diameter and they are up to 35 metres high. They could be even higher, had they not been struck by lightening. The fourth larch was also lost to external adversities: It fell over in 1930. This, at least made it possible to count its rings and so determine its age: It was, at the time it fell, more than 2000 years old.
Information and access
Next to this natural monument, a
trilingual information chart – in German, Italian, and English – displays the relevant facts concerning the larches:
The State Office for Landscape Ecology provides an overview of their natural and cultural peculiarities. A seating area and a little fountain made from larch wood, as well as the new and easily hikeable meadow path leading towards the larches, make the Ulten primeval larches
an attractive place to visit.