마지막 업데이트: 3월 29, 2026
하이라이트 • 역사적 장소
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하이라이트 • 호수
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The ferry does not always stop there in Ludwigsburg as scheduled. In the low season only after calling and booking in advance with the shipping company on +49 160 95100208. The crew is very helpful with bicycles and the trip to Greifswald costs €15 including the bicycle.
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Everything froze in February... really something.
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very small port, but you take what you get :-))
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The Söllkensee was created in the 19th century by peat extraction in "Küsterbäcks Moor", a meltwater channel of the Greifswald terminal moraine. Today it is a natural monument and spawning ground for common toads and moor frogs. In the north-eastern part, the new siltation process is clearly visible. A cotton grass peat bog has formed here, which is partly forested with downy birches.
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One of many places here where you can enjoy a beautiful view of the Bodden.
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Next door there is a large car park (now free of charge in autumn).
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Koos is the second largest island in the Greifswalder Bodden and is part of the nature reserve Insel Koos, Kooser See and Wampener Riff of the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. Administratively, the island belongs to the urban area of the Hanseatic City of Greifswald, but is an exclave. It is closed to the public (apart from a short access road that can only be used by authorized motor vehicles). Access to the island is free for cyclists, the island itself may not be used and is blocked by a gate.
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The Söllkensee is not written "Sölkensee" but "Söllkensee". The Söllkensee is a bog in the Helmshagener Forest. The Söllkensee was created in the 19th century by peat extraction in "Küsterbäcks Moor", a meltwater channel of the Greifswald terminal moraine. Today it is a natural monument and spawning ground for common toads and moor frogs. In the north-eastern part, the new siltation process is clearly visible. A cotton grass peat bog has formed here, which is partly forested with downy birches (bot.: sheath cotton grass peat moss community, Eriophoro-Sphagnetum recurvi). The floating pondweed (Potamogeton natans) can be discovered in the open water area. The name of the Söllkensee is probably derived from the word "Soll", which describes Ice Age dead ice holes in the north German lowlands and was used here in a somewhat broader sense for a small body of water. Originally, the locals called the lake "dat Sülkenmuur" and at the end of the 19th century it developed into an attraction for those seeking relaxation, who traveled especially with the small train from Greifswald. According to legend, an old privy councilor from Charlottenburg walked here. Impressed by the place, he suggested to the owner of the inn in Potthagen that they set up signposts from the village to the lake and thus show the excursionists the beauty of the area. However, according to the legend, the old privy councilor found the name “Sülkenmuur” too daunting and boggy. And so the “Sülkenmuur” became the Sölkensee. Both names – Sölkensee and Söllkensee – are common today. North of the Söllkensee is the Plagens lime tree. It is said that the forest warden Plagens planted this tree in 1933 and built a bench next to it to enjoy his retirement here. Link: https://weithagen.info/naturweit/soellkensee/
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