Pośredni Mięguszowiecki Szczyt / Prostredný Mengusovský štít, Tatra National Park
Facts and practical information
Mięguszowiecki Indirect Summit-a peak at the Polish-Slovak border, located within the Main Foreign Foreign of the Tatra Mountains southeast of Mięguszowieckie Szczyt Wielki and northwest of Mięguszowieckie Szczyt Czarny.
The peak has three vertices, with heights 2389, 2383 and 2388 m. The highest is the closest to Mięguszowiecka Pass of Wyżnia, the lowest is the middle. In the ridge to Mięguszowiecka, two turnicians stand out: the Milówka needle and a thin needle separated by Szczerbina between the needles. In addition to them, there are many other vertices in the Mięguszowiecki Indirect Summit.
Mięguszowiecki The indirect peak is the lowest in the group of Mięguszowieckie peaks. There are two walls: the north-east wall to a glacial boiler called Bańdzioch. It has a height of about 370 m, is partly solid, partly grassy and fragile. On the left, she is limited by a gully falling from the pass under the Chłopkiem, on the right, the gully of the Mięguszowiecka Pass of Wyżnia. It is cut with three horizontal rock formations. In order from the bottom they are: the lower west of fresh, the west of lifeguards, the upper west of fresh. There are also several vertical formations: the right pillar falling from the Milówka needle. His lower spur is just at the outlet of the gully of the Mięguszowiecka Pass of Wyżnia; Depression rights called the Komarnicki Gutter; Wall belt between the upper west of fresh and west rescuers. It contains two convex rock formations: depression of meal and sewage law; Central pillar, or Pillar of Orłowski; Left depression consisting of three parts: left sewage, fresh tower and depression over the upper west of fresh; Left pillar, or fresh pillar.
The southwest wall of about 300 m high and falls over the Great Hińczowy Staw in the Hińczowa Valley. He stretches from the depression of the pass under the peasant to the gully falling from Mięguszowiecka Pass Wyżyj. Its upper part obliquely crosses the Great West - an intermediate Mięguszowiecka bench in the lower part passing into a gully falling to the piarg.
The Polish wall, falling into Bańdziocha is particularly impressive, the Slovak wall is smaller. Władysław Cywiński acknowledges her in one sentence: not this class. However, both are not popular among mountaineers. More often than these walls they walk the ridge of Mięguszowieckie peaks. Two Mięguszowieckie peaks are usually overcome by one pass; Indirect and great.
Two very rare species of plants grow on the rocks of this peak, occurring in Poland only in the few positions in the Tatra Mountains: the nastolist rock and one -flowered cornea.
Tatra National Park
Pośredni Mięguszowiecki Szczyt / Prostredný Mengusovský štít – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Rysy, Veľké Hincovo pleso, Chata pod Rysmi, Kôprovský štít.