A well-known pilgrimage route - the Mariazell Founders' Way - leads from Seewiesen to the Seeberg Pass. It is said that in 1157 ...
... the abbot of the monastery of St. Lambrecht sent a confrere with a statue of the Virgin Mary to do pastoral work. After a long walk, an insurmountable rock blocked the way, whereupon the rock split and opened the path. Magnus placed the statue there on a tree stump and built a "cell" (monk's dwelling). Since then, this place is called Mariazell. The church there, already since the 17th century the most important pilgrimage destination of the Habsburgs and since 1907 basilica, houses a late Romanesque image of grace, the Magna Mater Austriæ , and is still considered the most important pilgrimage site in Austria and one of the most important in Europe.
Before the further course of the Gründerweg allows a visit to Archduke Johann's Brandhof, the BergZeitReise branches off again at the Seebergsattel and turns towards the mountain range of the Veitschalpe to allow for an overnight stay in the Meranhaus in the evening. There we meet the Styrian prince again, since this mountain accommodation was so named in memory of his family. In 1845, in fact, the son of Archduke Johann obtained the title of "Count of Merano".
The "Rotsohler (Rotzula)" is said to live near the Rotsohlalm. This legendary figure, who lives here, is an embodiment of the Krampus and his trademark is a heavy horse's foot. When the days become shorter, this creature is said to free himself again and again from his chain, which holds him during the year, and to chase the valley with the icy storm wind. The name, by the way, derives from the "red sole", the ore-bearing rock that is abundant here. Knowing about this rough fellow, it is not surprising that the "Teufelssteig" (devil's path) leads up to the Hohe Veitsch nearby. This steep ascent is also part of the Veitscher Grenzstaffellauf , an ultra-alpine marathon that has attracted numerous mountain runners to the Veitsch every year since 1986.