I was really curious now and that’s why I just had a call with a woman from the Bundesamt für Umwelt, the official federal office that is responsible for tourism in Switzerland. The woman was a little bit suprised about my question but was very kind. She told me that generally wild camping is not allowed in Switzerland (and Liechtenstein). But this law is not enforced really strictly. It heavily depends on the region, the situation and the individual police officer that will encounter you. This means, if you do wild camping where you don’t disturb anybody, and where you don’t litter the environment, or in very remote area, it is very unlikely that you will be traced down by the police. This is even more through for an igloo. As the woman of the office said, also igloos are theoretically camping. But it is very very unlikely that the police will get you out of it. Even so, if this would happen, and you really have to pay a fine, it is not very high, something around 80 to 100 Swiss francs.
From Dictionary
camp 1 n.
1. a. A place where tents, huts, or other temporary shelters are set up, as by soldiers, nomads, or travelers. b. A cabin or
shelter or group of such buildings: gathered branches and grasses for
a makeshift camp; had a fishing camp in Vermont. c. The people using
such shelters: a howl that awakened the whole camp.
Since you are a traveler and igloo is basically a temporary shelter, I believe Igloo-ing is another form of camping, thus it’s not allowed.
However there will an occupy movement in Swiss next year from 24-28 January 2012 which the activists threat to igloo camp in Ski Resort Davos. On the same time, there will be a World Economic Forum in the resort. You can try to camp here (with risk to be hurt by the police). Read the full news.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
5 Mar, 2024