Other users have already written that the "pit stop" along the former railway line invites visitors to take a break with seating in the niches in the Wall.
I would like to add that in one of the niches there is a white information panel with historical background from 1945 (see also photos of the highlight). The text on the information board reads as follows:
"On March 6, 1945, a German Wehrmacht supply train ended here.
Because the Fuchshofen railway bridge was blown up by German soldiers on March 4, 1945, trains were backed up along the entire route, from Fuchshofen toward Jünkerath. For us ordinary consumers, this train arrived like a miracle from heaven. Word quickly spread in the surrounding villages that a supply train was stuck in Müsch. People flocked from all directions to loot some of these delicacies.
Unfortunately, a German officer tried to defend the train with his pistol at the ready. But as the American gunfire grew ever closer, he fled toward Rodder.
Now the people fell upon the food (butter, lard, stock cubes, cigarettes, cigars, etc.) like wild animals. It was horrific to watch the food being thrown from the wagons, trampled, and destroyed. Some of them ended up in the Ahr River, which was flooded.
Incomprehensible, since these things floated down the Ahr River irretrievably. Nevertheless, enough remained that everyone could carry their share home, according to their strength. This operation lasted a day, until the Americans invaded on March 8, 1945, and for us, this war, which had brought so much suffering and destruction, ended.
In any case, after all the excitement, the first thing we did was bake with the captured treasures from the supply train, just like in the 'old days,' and eat bread with good butter.
We were still collecting soup cubes (called march soup) from the train weeks later. The grease stain where the butter and lard had been thrown out of the train cars could still be seen until the early 1950s.
This was written down by a contemporary witness who was 13 years old at the time.