Hochbühelweg


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The trail leads up to the Zwischenmühl Ridge, the name of the mountain ridge between the valleys of the rivers Große and Kleine Mühl. From there you have a wonderful view far into the Mühlviertel, the Bohemian Forest and the Bavarian Forest.
0 km You leave Peilstein in an easterly direction, walk past the Raiffeisenbank to the Völtl electrical shop. Before the right-hand bend begins, cross the road and turn left into Hopfenweg at Marktstraße no. 9 and then immediately left into Mühlweg. At a gradient of 27%, the trail descends into the valley, where you cross the road to Julbach and the Kleine Mühl river in the hollow. Immediately afterwards you are in front of the ...
700 m Hofwies biotope (rest bench and information board). After a short, steep climb, you reach the village of Stierberg and walk through it. At the small chapel of the Virgin Mary, take the path to the left and shortly afterwards pass a rest bench. The markings lead you towards the forest. Now you can hear the rushing of the Kirchbach stream more and more clearly. The Vogelstimmenweg leads up the opposite side of the stream and the two meet at the ...
1.9 km Sausenden Schlucht (rest bench and information board). Together with the Weg der Entschleunigung and the Falkensteinerweg 110, the trail leads up to the road to Kirchbach. Turning left, you leave the road again shortly afterwards and turn right onto the meadow path. Before the forest, the Vogelstimmenweg leaves you in the direction of Galgenplatz. You continue slightly uphill to ...
4.0 km Oberneudorf. In the centre of the village, don't overlook the turn-off to the left towards Schlägl. The Hochbühelweg follows the road until ...
4.6 km into the forest. Here you separate from the Weg der Entschleunigung and the Falkensteinerweg. A detour (900 m) to the pilgrimage church of St Wolfgang is worthwhile. Turn left here and follow the road gently uphill through the fields. After leaving the road, follow the yellow signs and tree markings.
You have now reached the highest point of the hike. Field and forest paths follow along the slope with recurring views of the Kleine Mühl valley. You pass the ...
7.1 km Hauer, a beautiful cairn farm and the highest situated farmer in Peilstein, and hike on to the ...
8.0 km Thiergrubspitz. Here you are on the Zwischenmühl ridge, where you can let your gaze wander northwards to the Bohemian Forest, westwards to Bavaria and southwards over the Mühlviertel hills. Follow the road to Kirchbach for a short while and before you reach the village sign, turn right onto the dead-end road.
You head downhill towards the beautiful farmstead and pass it on the right. Keep left at the fork in the path. The path leads you down into the Blumauerbach valley, where another ...
9.9 km biotope "Blumau" awaits you (rest area and information board). At the Blumauerbachl stream, change sides at the small stone bridge. Watch out for the stream bed with its many stones. A beautiful forest path begins. You soon reach the village of Martschlag, walk through it and reach the Julbach-Peilstein road.
You have to walk down the road for a few hundred metres, however, you are offered a beautiful view of Peilstein. Take the Exenschlag goods road and walk uphill towards the village. Here you walk briefly on the Julbach-Peilstein road and turn left at the hairpin bend, where the path leads you back over the Krebsenbach valley to ...
14 km Peilstein
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Please get in touch for more information.
Markt 7
4153 Peilstein im Mühlviertel
Phone +43 5 07263 - 200
E-Mail boehmerwald@muehlviertel.at
Web www.muehlviertel.at/
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1. The tours presented for hiking, walking, biking and road biking, mountain biking, motorbiking, horseback riding, climbing, cross-country skiing, and going on skiing and snowshoe tours etc. are to be considered non-paid tour recommendations and only serve as non-binding information. We have no intention of concluding a contract with the users of this website. The utilisation of the data does not lead to the establishment of a contract with us.
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Construction-related measures or other influences (e.g. landslides and similar occurrences) can lead to temporary or permanent changes in a route (e.g. loss of a bridge and similar occurrences). Such occurrences can lead to part of the route or the entire route becoming impassable.
The use of the data as well as undertaking (riding, walking, taking etc.) the recommended tours or using the network of paths occurs at users’ own risk and on their authority. In particular, users themselves are responsible for the choice of route, outdoor orientation, adherence to traffic rules, supplies and equipment for tours listed in Point 1 (e.g. bicycle etc.), wearing a helmet, estimating their own fitness, recognising dangers and maintaining an appropriate velocity. We exclude ourselves from any liability whatsoever for damages, in particular accidents, that occur whilst taking part in the recommended tours.
2.Some of the tours lead over roads with normal traffic conditions. Please observe that there is an increased risk which can be avoided by means of appropriate attention and proper estimation and implementation of one’s own abilities. For this reason, please travel a route that is unfamiliar to you slowly and with special care. Pay constant attention to potential dangers and always observe traffic. Do not leave the routes featured in descriptions.
The potential use of private roads, in particular forestry roads and agricultural transport roads, can be subject to legal restrictions, which must be observed and adhered to.
The normal traffic rules apply. Each user (e.g. biker, motorbiker) is responsible for adhering to these rules and maintaining his/her bike/vehicle and its equipment (lights, brakes etc.) in good working order. Each user is also responsible for ensuring that he/she rides at a velocity that is appropriate for the conditions and his/her skill level and for maintaining sufficient distance to the rider in front. We explicitly recommend adjusting velocity to correspond to the respective field of vision, wearing a helmet, using reflective clothing (or similar) and employing bicycle lights in line with regulations.
3.Each tour requires good physical fitness as well as detailed planning. We explicitly recommend only taking the tours in the case of optimal healthiness.
We recommend that you conclude an accident and liability insurance policy. Use an onboard computer that displays the respective kilometres travelled per day and is calibrated for the front wheel.
4.Special for mountain bikers – Fair-play rules:
Mountain biking is one of the most wonderful outdoor leisure-time activities. Whilst biking or on a mountain biking tour, mountains and lakes, meadows and cabins are re-discovered in new ways. A couple of rules for fair play in the forest help to avoid conflicts whilst mountain biking.
a.Pedestrians have the right of way: We are accommodating and friendly to pedestrians and hikers. Upon encountering these fellow travellers, we alert them by using the bicycle bell and slowly overtake them. We avoid paths with heavy pedestrian traffic altogether. Take nature into account: We do not leave refuse behind.
b.The braking distance should be half of the total distance visible: We ride at a controlled pace, are ready to brake and maintain a braking distance half as long as the total distance visible, especially in curves, because we always have to count on obstacles on the path. Damage to the path, stones, branches, wood piles, grazing livestock, cattle grids, barriers, tractor-type forestry machines and authorised vehicles pose dangers that we need to be ready for.
c.Don’t drink and drive!: Do not drink alcohol when mountain biking. Take care at stop-off points (dealing with bike racks, dirty shoes or clothing).
It is obligatory to provide first aid!
d.Marked routes, closed paths and blockades: Keep to the marked routes, observe the blockades and accept that these roads are primarily for agricultural and forestry use!
Blockades can often not be avoided and are in your own interest. Biking beyond the intended path and outside of opening times is punishable and turns us into illegal bikers.
e.We are guests in the forest and behave accordingly, including vis-à-vis forestry and hunting staff. Whilst mountain biking, mobile telephones and music players are forbidden! Biking requires your full attention.
f.Avoid unnecessary noise. Out of consideration to the animals living in the wild, we only bike during full daylight. As a principle, we always wear our helmet (even when riding uphill)! Don’t forget emergency supplies: We always have a repair set and bandages along.
g.Don’t overestimate your skills: We should not overdo it when it comes to biking technique and physical fitness. Take the level of difficulty posed by the route into consideration and make a precise estimate of your experience and skills as a biker (braking, bell, lights)!
h.Close gates: We approach grazing livestock at a walking pace and close every gate behind us. We should avoid causing escape and panic reactions in the animals. Nothing stands in the way of the fun and athletic challenge in the mountains and forests!
i.Traffic rules: The general traffic rules (StVO) apply for all the mountain biking routes and we adhere to them. Our bike therefore needs to be in perfect technical condition and equipped in line with the traffic rules, including brakes, a bell and lights. We inspect and service our mountain bikes regularly anyway.
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Interactive elevation profile
Create PDF
Tour-Details
Paths covering: