Coburger Hütte — Seebensee & Drachensee
The Wave (Coyote Buttes North)
Coburger Hütte — Seebensee & Drachensee vs The Wave (Coyote Buttes North): Intensity Score Comparison
The Wave (Coyote Buttes North) is unequivocally more demanding overall (+9 points). While Coburger Hütte — Seebensee & Drachensee is a serious endeavor, The Wave (Coyote Buttes North) pushes the limits further, particularly regarding technical seriousness and exposure.
Model-based (not a field report) · Evaluates overall route demand, not danger.
Coburger Hütte — Seebensee & Drachensee
This is one of the most celebrated hikes in Tyrol, connecting two distinct alpine basins. Starting from the Ehrwalder Alm, a broad forest path leads to the Seebensee (1,657m), a turquoise lake that perfectly reflects the Zugspitze (2,962m) on clear days. The adventure continues with a steep, serpentine ascent of another 300 meters to the Coburger Hütte and the moody Drachensee (Dragon Lake). The hut sits on a high rock rib, overlooking both lakes and providing one of the most dramatic mountain vistas in the Mieminger Gebirge.
The Wave is perhaps the most heavily photographed and tightly regulated natural attraction in the American Southwest. Situated in the Coyote Buttes North Special Management Area of the Paria Canyon-Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness, it is a magnificent, surreal basin of swirling, intersecting U-shaped troughs of Navajo sandstone. The rock is fiercely striated with vivid red, orange, yellow, and white banding, formed by Jurassic-era sand dunes compacted over millions of years and then eroded by wind and water. Because the landscape is incredibly fragile, access is strictly limited by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to a tiny number of lucky lottery winners per day. There is no marked trail; hikers receive a pictorial map and GPS coordinates to cross wild, trackless slickrock and deep sand to locate the formation.
Head-to-Head Metric Analysis
HikeMetrics Hazard Scale — Explanation
The HikeMetrics Hazard Scale is a proprietary 5-point classification system that evaluates hiking routes across five dimensions: physical demand, technical complexity, altitude exposure, weather risk, and rescue accessibility.
Unlike generic star ratings, the Hazard Scale is calibrated against altitude profiles, elevation gain per day, and logistical isolation factors — making it the most precise route classification system available.
Full Scale Documentation