Mühlberg

Mühlberg is a city in Brandenburg; actually, it can more properly be describe as a quaint village with a rich history. It contains a castle bought by a former president, trails along a slow flowing river, and streets made completely of cobblestones.

Get in

Mühlberg is an approximately 1 and a half hour drive from Dresden or Leipzig; both offers major train stations and airports. A bus also runs through the small village. The Elbe Radweg (River Elbe cycle path) passes through Mühlberg, so it is conveniently accessible by bike.

Get around

Mühlberg is a very walkable location. The entire village can be walked within an hour or so if you are not interested in learning about the various places.

See

  • Schloss Mühlberg. The castle, which is located next to the lake, is the most well known site in Mühlberg. Tours are available upon arrangements with the local caretaker.
  • Memorial Rock. There is a rock located alongside a trail by the river. The rock remembers the effort and teamwork it took to sandbag the river side in order to save the community from flooding.
  • 🌍 Marienstern Abbey.
  • 🌍 Windmill Koßdorf.

Do

Mühlberg is a great place to walk around and experience what life is like in a rural area of Germany. Many of the locals are friendly but only speak German. If you are walking late at night, be careful of group of teenagers hanging outside of a house or at the park. The undesirable elements of the community usually congregate together till the wee hour of night with their bicycles. If you ignore them, they will usually leave you alone.

Buy

There is one major market located behind the farm where you can purchase all your necessities such as food and toiletries.

Eat

The city basically falls asleep by 8:00 pm, so eat early. Next to the market, you can find a couple of eateries, including an Asian restaurant. Food is also available at bed and breakfast located throughout the village.

Drink

Sleep

Connect

Go next

  • Torgau, 25 km to the northwest, downstream and across the River Elbe
  • Riesa, 20 km to the south (upstream)

gollark: <@398682548395311124> It's a known honeypot thing.
gollark: I have it hooked to a keyboard shortcut.
gollark: I use a Python window.
gollark: People often advocate for *consequences*/good-sounding goals, and just handwave how to actually achieve those, or just come up with a nice-sounding system and handwave tricky parts.
gollark: Just figure out what results you think a political system should produce ("emotionally"/based on your moral opinions or whatever) and work out what sort of system would be practical and good at producing those results "logically".
This article is issued from Wikivoyage. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.