The Palatine Ridgeway (German: Pfälzer Höhenweg) in the North Palatine Uplands of Germany is 112 kilometres (70 mi) long and has seven recommended day stages. It is the third longest Prädikat path in the Palatinate region after the Palatine Wine Trail and Palatine Forest Trail. The long distance path was opened in autumn 2010.[1] One year later, in September 2011, it was given its status as a Prädikat path.[2]
Route
The Palatine Ridgeway runs in a semi-circle initially north around the Donnersberg, the highest mountain in the North Palatine Uplands and the whole Palatinate, then through the valleys northwest of the massif. The start point in the east is Winnweiler, the finish point in the west is Wolfstein station. Opened in spring 2011 the hiking trail runs entirely within the North Palatine Uplands. Its waymark and logo, like the other two paths, a hillside in a rectangular field, but with the differences that it is in blue and white, and has a stylised cloud and the name of the path.
Character
The path, with its climbs and descents, runs through one of the most important tourist attractions of the Palatinate: the large, forested, hill range of the North Palatine Uplands. The route has 3,300 metres (10,800 ft) of uphill and 3,200 metres (10,500 ft) of downhill gradient. Its lowest point is at 148 metres (486 ft) in the small town of Meisenheim and its highest point, at 687 metres (2,254 ft), is the summit of the Donnersberg. In addition, the trail runs in places through the valleys of the Alsenz, Moschel, Glan and Lauter, which belong to the river system of the Rhine tributary, the Nahe.
Stations and selected sights
- Weiße Grube, Imsbach
- The Donnersberg
- Celtic rampart on the Donnersberg
- Falkenstein Castle on the Donnersberg
- "Moschelland Castle" in the 17th century
- Meisenheim’s historic old town
- Alt-Wolfstein Castle near Wolfstein
Some of the stations and sights are managed comprehensively by various interest groups.[3][4]
- Chapel of the Cross
- Weiße Grube visitor mine
- Dannenfels
- Bastenhaus
- Donnersberg summit
- Keltenwall, Ludwigsturm and Donnersberg Transmitter
- Ring of castles around the massif: Falkenstein Tannenfels, Wildenstein, Hohenfels und Ruppertsecken
- Turmuhren Museum
- Ruins of "Moschelland Castle"
- Historic Altstadt
- Castles of Alt-Wolfstein and Neu-Wolfstein
References
- ↑ Wanderweg Pfälzer Höhenweg wird eröffnet. In: RuhrNachrichten, 23 September 2010. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
- ↑ Pfälzer Höhenweg: Zahlen, Daten, Fakten. Website von Rheinland-Palatinate Tourismus. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
- ↑ Palatinate-Touristik. "Sport und Fitness" (in German). Retrieved 2011-04-08. Menüpunkt
- ↑ Wanderportal Palatinate. "Wandern" (in German). Retrieved 2011-04-08. Menüpunkt
Literature
- "Wander-Auftakt mit Prädikat", Die Rheinpfalz, LEO Saison "Frühling" (in German), Ludwigshafen, pp. 8–11, April 2011
- Pfälzer Weitwanderwege: Pfälzer Weinsteig – Pfälzer Waldpfad – Pfälzer Höhenweg, Rother Wanderführer (in German) (2nd ed.), Oberhaching: Bergverlag Rother, 2016, ISBN 978-3-7633-4401-7
External links
- Der Pfälzer Höhenweg
- Pfälzer Höhenweg auf outdooractive mit gpx data