Rheinsteig
Description
- Name Rheinsteig
- Distance de sentier 320 km, 199 milles
- Durée en jours 16 jours
- Début de sentier Bonn
- Fin de sentier Wiesbaden
- Classement Traildino EW, Marche facile, sentier de la nature
Rhine valley, Bonn – Wiesbaden, 320 km, 18 days.
The Rheinsteig is a popular trail along the Rhine, passing many historic castles and market towns, wandering through vineyards and beautiful beech and oak forests. In the depths of the valley, the legendary river meanders. Today the river is a busy thoroughfare. On both banks run heavily traveled roads and railways. And on the water itself big towboats fight themselves upstream between Holland and Switzerland.
The Rheinsteig was opened in 2005. Other paths existed of course, including the Rheinhöhenweg (the route on the west side of the river coincides with the E8) and Rheinburgenweg, a path along the many castles. These trails are still there, but the Rheinsteig pushed them into oblivion somehow.
The Rheinsteig was noisily promoted through all media. Uschi from Ober-Kestert remembers the thousands of hikers snapping the streets of her little village - 10 houses, 19 people - with their sticks. A real shock! The following year she chased the horses from her shed, converted it into a café and B & B, and since then she welcomes walkers from all countries.
The vast hordes of the first years have disappeared, perhaps because everywhere in Germany "Steigs" have been created. These trails must meet certain standards in terms of marking and quality. The Rheinsteig was the beginning of an important revival of long distance footpaths in Germany. Those who hike the Rheinsteig, understand why. The trail is well marked and laid out, it carefully chooses the most beautiful spots, and is very well documented with its own website, multiple map series and guides. And along the Rhine, it is easy to find shelter for the night. Every village counts at least one hotel. A train connects the walker in a jiffy to Bonn, Koblenz and Wiesbaden.
Also fun for the interested hiker: you'll make a step back in time, some forty, fifty years, when tourism was booming here. Past glory now. Many hotels still function. Others are empty and poorly maintained. It is part of the charm of this path.