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Tales and Legends of the Tyrol

Chapter 75: THE DACE FISH OF THE GERLOS-SEE.
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About This Book

A curated collection of folk tales and regional legends drawn from the Tyrolean mountains, presented as short narratives tied to specific landscapes and landmarks. The pieces feature supernatural figures and phenomena—fairies, giants, witches, spirits, and enchanted creatures—that intersect with ordinary people and local belief. Several stories function as origin tales for unusual topography, lost treasures, petrified figures, and sunken dwellings, while others offer moral or cautionary motifs. Varied in length and tone, the arrangement emphasizes atmosphere and oral tradition, moving between eerie, tragic, and playful moods to evoke the character of mountain life.

THE DACE FISH OF THE GERLOS-SEE.

On the banks of the Krummbach, near the village of Gerlos, lie three mountain lakes, one of which swarms with millions of dace, of which, however, nobody in the whole valley dares to eat, because, it is said, they were originally put there by a Venediger-Manndl, and have the property of throwing all those who partake of them into a decline.

The legend says that a long time ago, a wicked peasant of that valley took it into his head to exterminate all his neighbours secretly and by degrees, so that he might eventually become the sole proprietor of the valley, and therefore he paid a heavy sum to a Venediger-Manndl to give him some poison fish to put into the lake. But his wicked plan ill repaid him, for he is now compelled to lie for ever at the bottom of the See, where the dace constantly feed upon his body, there being no other thing for them to eat in the whole lake; and, as fast as they eat, the body of the wicked plotter grows up again.

The belief in this dreadful legend is so firmly fixed in the minds of the inhabitants, that, even were they starving, they would rather die than touch one of the poison fish in the lake, and their indignation would be extreme did even any stranger try to take a fish out of the prohibited water.