Örtze
Örtze | |
---|---|
Location | |
State | Lower Saxony, Germany |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | north of Munster in the Große Heide (Bundesforst Raubkammer) |
• coordinates | 53°01′36″N 10°05′01″E / 53.02667°N 10.08361°E |
• elevation | 86 m above sea level (NN) |
Mouth | |
• location | into the Aller southeast of Winsen |
• coordinates | 52°40′17″N 9°55′54″E / 52.67139°N 9.93167°E |
• elevation | 30 m above sea level (NN) |
Length | 62 km (with Aue and Wietze 70 km) |
Basin size | 770 km² |
Basin features | |
Progression | Aller → Weser → North Sea |
River system | Weser |
Landmarks |
|
Tributaries | |
• left | Kleine Örtze, Schmarbeck and Sothrieth (discharge as the Landwehrbach in die Örtze), Weesener Bach, Angelbach |
• right | Ilster, Wietze, Brunau, Brandenbach, Hasselbach, Mühlenbach |
The Örtze is a river in the North German state of Lower Saxony, which rises north of Munster in the Große Heide (in the Raubkammer federal forest) and, after 62 kilometres (39 mi), joins the Aller southeast of Winsen.
Source and course
The Örtze valley is an old glacial valley. It was formed during the Saale glaciation about 230,000 to 130,000 years ago by the drainage of meltwater from the ice sheet which cut 20 to 50 metres deep into the plateaus of the southern Lüneburg Heath. The upper Örtze has incised its own, much smaller valley into the sandur beds and the roughly 4 kilometre wide, flat glacial valley floor.
The source region of the Örtze and its several source bogs lie on the terrain of the Munster North Training Area. In order to remove suspended solids and sediments which are washed away during heavy rains from the tank training areas with their sparse covering of vegetation, four successive lakes - the so-called Munoseen - have been created on the Örtze, and, on the Ilster, the main headstream of the river, there is a further dam pond. The Örtze is the largest river on the Southern Heath or Südheide and drains its central area, between the rather longer Böhme to the west and the Ise to the east. It has a relatively steep incline. In the middle of the river in its lower course the stream flow is about 0.71 metres per second, the water depth from 0.5 m to 2 m. It is classed as a so-called summer-cold heath stream (sommerkalter Heidebach).
The Örtze passes the towns and villages of Munster (most important military base in North Germany), Kreutzen, Poitzen, Müden, Hermannsburg (reknown because of the Hermannsburg Mission), Oldendorf, Eversen and Wolthausen.
The tributaries of the Örtze are the: Ilster, Kleine Örtze, Wietze, Schmarbeck and Sothrieth (which discharge together as the Landwehrbach into the Örtze), Brunau, Weesener Bach, Brandenbach, Hasselbach, Angelbach and Mühlenbach.
The main headstream of the Örtze is the Ilster. It name recalls the largest village, which the Munster-North Training Area has to circumvent. Its largest tributary is the Wietze, which rises between Soltau and Munster and which, together with its tributary the Aue, is longer than the Örtze by a good 5 kilometres. It joins the Örtze near Müden and gave the heath village its name. The Kleine Örtze rises north of Oerrel and discharges into the Örtze near Kreutzen (parish of Faßberg). Its upper course acted, before it was renaturalised, as a drainage ditch for the former raised bog, now afforrested, in the narrow valley (nature reserve). [1] On the headstreams of the Landwehrbach lie the Faßberg military airfield (north of Schmarbeck) and numerous old kieselgur pits (either side of the Sothrieth).
Fauna and Flora
Because Örtze has largely been spared from development, a near-natural habitat has been preserved. Its water quality is classed throughout as Class II: moderately polluted (saprobic system). [2] [3] Alders, pines and spruce along the river bank provide shade, keeping the water cool even in summer and the oxygen content high. The Örtze is relatively low in nutrients. Its course is meandering and structurally-varied (strukturreich) in places and offers many places for fish to hide and spawn with its steep banks, hollows, gravel and sand banks.
The fish and animal species found in the river include: freshwater eels (Anguilla anguilla) and burbots (Lota lota), [[Grayling (species) |]] (Thymallus thymallus), brown trout (Salmo trutta forma fario), bream (Abramis brama), minnow (Phoxinus phoxinus), perch (Perca fluviatilis), (Gobio gobio), pike (Esox lucius), bullhead (Cottus gobio), roach (Leuciscus rutilus), rudd (Scardinius erytrophthalmus) and brook lamprey (Lampreta planeri). Even the endangered otter and kingfisher live here. Salmon fishing in the Örtze had been recorded since 1766, but in 1935 the last salmon was caught. Since 1982 attempts have been made to re-introduce salmon by stocking the river. The weir at Wolthausen is, however, an obstacle to fish swimming upstream. From the 16th century until 1960 the Örtze drove the water wheel of a corn mill here, today by contrast it powers a turbine next to the water wheel to generate electricity (generator). A fish pass (a fish ladder suitable for invertebrates with eight steps) is being planned.
-
Örtze Park in Hermannsburg, in spring the Örtze regularly overspills its banks
-
Örtze Park in Hermannsburg at normal water levels
-
The weir in Wolthausen
-
Örtze in the spruce woods near Hermannsburg
-
Flooded Örtze meadows
-
Örtze meadowns near Oldendorf
-
In the sandy and flat river bed just before it joins the Aller
-
Mouth of the Örtze, from the left
Boating on the Örtze
In the period 16 May to 14 October, from 9 am - 6 pm, boating is permitted on the Örtze provided it takes account of the natural environment. The only types of craft allowed are rowing boats (e.g. kayaks or canoes).[4] The Örtze may be used downstream of the mill in Müden. There are lauching places in Müden, Baven, Hermannsburg, Oldendorf, Eversen, Wolthausen and Winsen
Mentioned in literature
The regional writer Hermann Löns devoted a chapter to the Örtze with several pages. He wrote inter alia:
On the banks of the Örtze. Many rivers and streams has the Lüneburg Heath; but its truest heath river is the Örtze. As a heath maiden she has no desire for other lands; in the heath she is born and in the heath she wants to end. She is so modest, so wise and so still, like a real child of the heath; it would be an easy thing for her if she went her own way to the sea, because even in the driest summer she has enough water, the brooks and streams from the moors, the Schmarbeck and Sotriet, Lutter and Wittbeck, Wietze and Brunau, do not let her go thirsty. But there is nothing for her in the wider world.
— Hermann Löns, Mein braunes Buch – Heidbilder (1909)
Meadow irrigation
Until the 1950s the meadows in the floodplain of the Örtze were irrigated, and fertilsed by the minerals and organic substances in the river water, using a principle known as Lüneburger Rückenbau or Suderburger Rückenbau.
To irrigate the Baven meadows (Rieselwiesen) a canal was laid between 1831 and 1850 and opened in 1854. It began near Müden with a weir at the start of the diversion. Other weirs distributed the water from the canal into the meadows. Today the canal acts as a floodway.
-
Übersichtskarte der Rieselwiesen zwischen Müden und Hermannsburg
-
Ehemaliges Örtzewehr bei Müden, am Beginn des Kanals
-
Inzwischen zugewachsener Örtzekanal zwischen Müden und Hermannsburg
-
Ehemalige Auslassschleuse bei Hermannsburg/Baven
Timber rafting
History
Timber rafting on the Örtze probably began in the 17th century. On 28 February 1677 the prince's master rafter (Floßmeister), Johann Bastian Erhardt, looked into the possibility of using the river to float timber downstream from forest in the areas of Hassel, Lüß and Kalbsloh. He gave the following report to the senior foreser of Wahrenholz:
The Örtze is a good, fast waterway which, in many places, has high banks on both sides and is therefore suitable for rafting both long as well as short logs to Stedden, where the Örtze shoots into the Aller.
This expert opinion led to timber rafting being established on the Örtze.
In the 19th century, timber rafting on the Örtze assumed great importance for the region. The number of rafts increased from around 600 per year in 1868 to 1,946 in 1874, something which was reflected in the economic boom of the so-called Gründerzeit years. The construction of buildings and ships at Bremen, Bremerhaven and in the district of Wesermarsch generated the demand. Its supply, by contrast, in the wake of the division of common land in the mid-1800s, saw the transfer of large areas of old forest into private ownership and to local communities (Realgemeinden). From 1877 the number of rafts on the Örtze fell rapidly, especially when its lower reaches silted up and became too shallow. From 1912 timber rafting came to a standstill. The Celle-Soltau light railway, Celle-Munster light railway built in 1910 provided competition as did metalled roads and new sawmills in the immediate vicinity.
Number of rafts from 1869 to 1910 (from the files of the district committee for rafting on the Oertze)
Year | No. of rafts | Year | No. of rafts | Year | No. of rafts | Year | No. of rafts | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1869 | 1592 | |||||||||
1870 | 1262 | 1880 | 546 | 1890 | 182 | 1900 | 160 | |||
1871 | 1446 | 1881 | 522 | 1891 | 220 | 1901 | 135 | |||
1872 | 1733 | 1882 | 371 | 1892 | n.E. | 1902 | 134 | |||
1873 | 1788 | 1883 | 350 | 1893 | 148 | 1903 | 123 | |||
1874 | 1946 | 1884 | 286 | 1894 | 139 | 1904 | 51 | |||
1875 | 1476 | 1885 | 211 | 1895 | 145 | 1905 | 70 | |||
1876 | 1130 | 1886 | 257 | 1896 | 206 | 1906 | 61 | |||
1877 | 695 | 1887 | 207 | 1897 | 216 | 1907 | 17 | |||
1878 | 583 | 1888 | 255 | 1898 | 186 | 1908 | 31 | |||
1879 | 611 | 1889 | 232 | 1899 | 201 | 1909 | 22 | |||
1910 | 14 |
References
Source
- Jürgen Delfs: Die Flößerei auf Ise, Aller und Örtze, Gifhorn 1995, ISBN 3-929632-24-1