Some great routes there.
The Day 10 one is a goody with the Timmelsjoch and Jaufenpass.
I did that in 2016.Stayed in Obergurgl then rode over the two passes named above and went to Innsbruck to collect g/f who had flown in, then back to Vipiteno for the night.
It’s a great place.It’s in Italy but used to be Austrian so they still mainly speak German and the food is far more Austrian than Italian.
“VIPITENO IS ONE of the most attractive towns in the region trapped in the ‘wrong’ country, i.e. South Tyrol (or, as the Italians call it, Alto Adige). This region has a complex and moving history. In 1918 South Tyrol was annexed by Italy, drawing a frontier along the Brenner Pass. Like a scythe this cut violently through an area of collective culture and nationality. There were protests, but to no avail. Although for a few years the new Italian nationality of this German-speaking population was not evidentially enforced, the rise of Fascism was about to plunge their South Tyrolean identity into chaos.
With Benito Mussolini in power, South Tyrol/Alto Adige was subject to ‘Italianisation’ by force. German schools were closed and Italian superseded German as the official language in public offices. For the next 60 years this region would be subject to continual identity flux, including a choice for inhabitants to emigrate to Germany in 1939 or remain as true Italian citizens, being annexed to Nazi Germany in 1943, and then returning to Italian hands after the war. This crisis culminated in the late 1960s with the South Tyrolean Liberation Committee committing fatal acts of terrorism in protest against the lack of autonomy in the region’s government.
In the late 1960s an agreement was reached for greater self-government of the South Tyrol province, and it has since grown into one of the wealthiest and highest rated places to live in Italy. “