[Mecklenburg-Vorpommern] [Interactive Map] [german]

The Rostock Heath (Rostocker Heide) -
Purveyor of oxygen and hunting grounds to the local aristocracy


Rostock Heath In the year 1919, the brothers Adolph and Rudolf Ahrens wrote about a little jewel, East of the Gates of Rostock, a little booklet bound in lustreless grey.
Since then, it can be found in many Rostock households. The Heath, once the Rostocker’s most valued place for excursions, even before
Warnemuende, is a woodland area extending over 12,000 hectares and a unique landscape. It is an autonomous cultural circle awakening out of a forty year long neglect.

Along the whole of the German sea coast, from the Dutch to the Polish border, it is the one and only woodland area bordering the sea. Yet the Heath is but the dismal remnants of the last German primeval forest which, 800 years ago, stretched from Luebeck to the Isle of Ruegen.

Rostock Heath
Rostock Heath

After the sale of the western half of this forest landscape in 1252 by Prince Borwin to the Town of Rostock, one had, at the beginning of the Hanseatic time, absolutely endless timber reserves to use to build the proud ‘Hansekogge’. The eastern part remained from the turn of the Century till the end of the Second World War the hunting grounds of the court of the princes of Mecklenburg.

The old dignified hunting lodge in Gelbensande remains, up until today, the architectural witness of this history.

Orchids and ice birds, breeding cranes and century-old oak trees make the Heath a landscape worth seeing.
It is the climate, unique in Germany, resulting from the mixture of forest and sea air, whose healing properties motivated the Doctor of the court, Karl von Mettenheimer to open the first sea hospice for the treatment of sick children in Graal-Mueritz. In this way, the first sea health resort in Germany was created.

Rostock Heath

Rostock Heath

The President of Mecklenburgian forestry, Hermann Friedrich Becker, was, since 1791, the first of a line of prominent foresters to leave their mark on this cultivated forest. Russian Tsars, Danish Kings wrote the history of the place. After the end of the Second World War, restricted areas, reserved for the hunting pleasure of Government officials and for military purposes, spread over the Heath. It was forbidden to print hiking maps. One forgot this landscape.

Since 1990, this trend was reversed. The military and the hunting society of the ancient DGR-leadership lost the extensive woodland. Travel guides were allowed to praise this region again and Rostock´s oxygen producer is now open for walks and trips by friends of nature. Stoertebeker’s fabulous hiding place spreads romantics.

Rostock Heath