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Water & Ice · BW, Germany

Aachtopf

Germany''s largest karst spring; the Danube''s resurgence, in Aach (Hegau).

When
Jan — Dec, peak Mar — May
Best viewing
A short walk to a clear, powerful upwelling spring in a compact village setting; the spectacle is the churning water itself, best after rain or snowmelt.
Category
Water & Ice
Status
Peak season

About this spectacle

At the village of Aach in the Hegau region of Baden-Württemberg, a thunderous column of water erupts from a limestone cavern to form Germany's largest karst spring. The Aachtopf is the resurgence point for water that disappears into sinkholes in the upper Danube valley and travels underground through porous Swabian Jura limestone before re-emerging here with striking force. Visitors stand at the edge of a clear, turquoise-green pool and watch the upwelling churn the surface from below, the flow so powerful it has historically driven mills downstream. The surrounding stone walls and lush riparian vegetation amplify the sense of a hidden river suddenly returning to daylight. The phenomenon is most dramatic after snowmelt or heavy rainfall, when the spring's output surges visibly, but even in drier months the constant upwelling is mesmerising. The site is compact and easily viewed within minutes, yet the geological story — a river vanishing in one country and reappearing kilometres away — gives it an outsized intellectual and visual fascination.

When to go

Jan — Dec, peak Mar — May

Getting there

Nearest airport: FDH. Nearest city: Singen.

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