Schwarzwald-Querweg Freiburg-Bodensee | |
---|---|
The trail reaches its peak near Titisee-Neustadt
|
|
Length | 180 km (112 mi) |
Location | Black Forest, Germany |
Trailheads | Freiburg, Konstanz |
Use | Hiking |
Elevation | |
Highest point | Hochfirst Tower, 1,192 m (3,911 ft) |
Hiking details | |
Trail difficulty | Easy |
Season | April to October |
Sights | Wutachschlucht |
Hazards | Slippery conditions in gorges |
The Schwarzwald-Querweg Freiburg-Bodensee ("Trans-Black Forest trail from Freiburg to Lake Constance") is a long-distance footpath that runs in an east–west direction in the Black Forest region of Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
Its western end is the city of Freiburg, in the Rhine valley; its eastern end is the city of Konstanz, on Lake Constance (German name: Bodensee). The name Querweg means "cross route", referring to the fact that the classic long-distance routes in the Black Forest, which were developed in the early 20th century, run north–south. The Querweg (as it is briefly known) was developed in the mid-1930s. The longer name is used to distinguish this path from other east–west routes in the Black Forest.
Available guide books (e.g. Bremke, 1999) describe walking the route in the west–east direction, which leads to sharp climbs on the first one or two days and then more gradual descents for the rest of the route. From Freiburg, the route passes through Stegen, Buchenbach, Hinterzarten, Titisee-Neustadt, Kappel (part of the municipality of Lenzkirch), the Wutachschlucht, Blumberg, Engen and Singen. Its total length is approximately 180 kilometres (110 mi). Its highest point is 1,192 metres (3,911 ft), at the Hochfirst Tower, just north of the village of Saig in the Lenzkirch municipality. Because the path cuts across the Black Forest, and then continues across the volcanically formed Hegau region before skirting Lake Constance in its final section, it offers a great variety of landscape and vegetation.
The route is very well marked throughout its length, using a waymark of a red and white lozenge (divided vertically, and with its longer axis horizontal) on a yellow background. According to Bremke (1999), the original planners of the route intended that the red end should always point towards Konstanz and the white towards Freiburg; this rule is generally but not universally obeyed in the waymarking in place as of 2007[update].