Category
page 3Bernese Alps
Nasse Strahlegg
mountain in Switzerland
Schnidejoch
thumb|Descending to Wildhorn (March 2007).
thumb|Early Bronze Age pins, the one found at Schnidejoch in the middle.
The Schnidejoch is a mountain pass in the Bernese Alps, at above sea level, cutting across the ridge connecting the Schnidehorn and the Wildhorn.
Wysshorn
The Name Wysshorn stands for three subpeaks of the Schinhorn in the Bernese Alps, which are: Nördliches Wysshorn (3625 m); Mittleres Wysshorn (3545 m); Südliches Wysshorn (3482 m).
Klein Wellhorn
mountain in Switzerland
Strahlhorn
mountain in Switzerland
Gumihorn
The Gumihorn is a mountain of the Bernese Alps, the highest point of the Schynige Platte ridge, located at the western end of the Schwarzhorn group. It forms a limestone tower, overlooking the valley of the Lütschine. At , it is the highest summit lying west of the Loucherhorn.
Kranzberg
mountain of the Bernese Alps
Stockhorn
north of Baltschieder in Valais
Eiger north face
thumb|Lake Thun with [[Eiger (left), Mönch and Jungfrau]]
The Eiger-Nordwand is one of the great north faces of the Alps. The Eiger () is part of the Bernese Alps in Switzerland, and its north face rises over 1,800 meters (5,900 ft). With alpine climbing routes that are up to four kilometers long, the face hosts some of the Alps' longest and most demanding climbing routes, with significant risks from rockfall and avalanches. The wall gained fame through dramatic climbing attempts and ascents, heightened by its visibility from Grindelwald and, even more clearly, from the Wengernalp Railway