
you can take the lift in Hinterglemm and go by bike to Saalbach and vice versa, as shown in my track:Ī great addition to the trails is also the bag in Hinterglemm, with three kickers of different difficulty levels. Saalbach and Hinterglemm are 5 km apart and connected by cable cars, i.e. In Saalbach-Hinterglemm and Leogang there are also flow trails, but the ubiquitous washboards make them definitely not hardtail-friendly trails. On mine, I would only have fun in Fieberbrunn. Unused by anyone before, the carbon Specialized Stumpjumper Evo Expert performed great there and I am very happy that I had this bike there, not my own.

Saalbach xline full#
I ride a trail hardtail (Trek Roscoe 7) on a daily basis, but for this trip I left it at home and rented a full suspension bike from Bike Garden Service in Wrocław. The card gives a 30% discount on the bike ticket or 2 free cable car rides a day. When booking accommodation, it is worth choosing a place that offers the Joker Card. All bike parks have one bike ticket and are within reach by bike from one to the other, although it is quite a long journey, especially from Saalbach-Hinterglemm to Fieberbrunn. The 4 mentioned towns form 3 bike parks: Saalbach-Hinterglemm and Leogang, with several trails each, and Fieberbrunn with one trail.

I spent a week there in July this year and there is indeed a lot to do there, although under the slogan “largest in Austria”, I expected it to be even bigger. Saalbach, Hinterglemm, Leogang and Fieberbrunn are towns between Salzburg and Innsbruck, promoted as the Austria’s largest bike region.
