Moravské vinařské stezky Places at former Iron
Transcription
Moravské vinařské stezky Places at former Iron
GreenwaysMoravské through European history stezky and nature vinařské Z Mělníka k Prameni Labe Places at former Iron Curtain Iron www.labska-stezka.cz Curtain Trail – European| www.greenways.cz Greenbelt – EuroVelo 13 eurovelo.cz I greenways.cz EUROVELO ROUTES IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC ARE COORDINATED MO RAV S K BY É VTHE I N A ŘS K É PARTNERSHIP S T E Z KFOUNDATION Y P RO V O Z U JE EuroVelo 13 / The Iron Curtain Trail in South Moravia and Lower Austria Places at former Iron Curtain 1 n Remnants of the military road, guard towers, and tank traps in South Moravia. Introduction With the end of World War II an Iron Curtain began to come down across Europe. To build its complete length of 7,000 km took a number of years, and eventually divided Europe in two. For over forty years it was an impermeable barrier between the countries of the socialist East bloc led by the Soviet Union, and the democratic West led by the United States. This heavily-guarded line claimed thousands of human lives, and became the symbol of a divided Europe and a divided world. The Cold War ended in the late 1980s and early 90s when the east bloc was quickly swept by a wave of democratic revolutions, when the communist regimes of the various countries fell like dominos. After more than two decades of the democratization process we can now say that the threat embodied by the Iron Curtain is a thing of the past. Crossing the international borders between the former East and West gets easier every year. The barbed-wire fences, walls, gates, guard towers, and the trigger-ready border guards have all disappeared. The legacy of the Iron Curtain should never be forgotten; on the contrary, it should always be remembered how high a price for freedom was paid by the inhabitants of the former east bloc. This brochure will tell you about several European projects built around the history of the “Without memory there is no identity.” Václav Havel Iron Curtain and the natural beauties within its corridor from the standpoint of low-impact tourism in the region of South Moravia, and its reach across the border into Lower Austria. Partnership Foundation, April 2012 Contents The Iron Curtain Trail .......................…… str. 2 The Iron Curtain Trail focuses on the history of this barrier, the way it worked, and what it looked like. The European Green Belt ……............…… str. 13 The European Green Belt focuses on the natural wealth that lies along the Iron Curtain corridor and the great potential of the belt for foot tourism. EuroVelo 13 …...................................…… str. 27 EuroVelo 13 is devoted to the European longdistance bicycle route of the same name that leads through the Iron Curtain corridor and crosses back and forth between South Moravia and Lower Austria. 2 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 3 Iron Curtain Trail The first bricks in the wall The term Iron Curtain was coined by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1946, in reference to the ideological division of Europe after the Second World War. At first it was just a political concept, but over time it became a physical, military-guarded barrier that the countries of the eastern bloc erected along their western borders. Its backbone was formed by barriers in the form of barbed-wire fences or walls, but it actually included the adjacent strip along the border, in some places several kilometers wide, which was off-limits. This line officially served to prevent the penetration by enemy “infiltrators” from the “imperialist” west to the east (for example intelligence agents), who might subvert the established order of the so-called people’s democratic states. For the socialist countries the Iron Curtain became a deadly instrument of their power, preventing citizens from escaping to the democratic western countries. The legal right to travel abroad was completely unattainable for most citizens, not only to the west of the Iron Curtain, but within the east bloc as well. Armed border guards and the military were assigned to prevent illegal crossing of the border, and thousands of inhabitants of the east bloc died at their hands. From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the Continent. Behind that line lie all the capitals of the ancient states of Central and Eastern Europe. Winston Churchill, 1946 The governments of the eastern bloc were very much aware of the importance of the Iron Curtain for the long-term stability of the totalitarian regime. For the entire duration of the Cold War they were constantly engaged in perfecting it. For the regime, uncontrolled emigration of its citizens meant not only the loss of labor force including its intellectual elites, but also serious cracks in the ideological facade. The most important destination or transfer point in this regard was West Berlin, an island of freedom within the totalitarian bloc, which East Germans could relatively easily get to. Between 1949 and 1961 almost 3 million East German citizens fled to the West this way. Thus officials of the GDR finally undertook radical measures: on August 13, 1961 they in effect surrounded West Berlin with their armed forces, cut links between it and the GDR, and built a concrete wall 165 km long around its entire perimeter, which they guarded day and night by their armed forces. n Barbed wire has become a symbol of the Iron Curtain n Remnants of the military road, guard towers, and tank traps in South Moravia. The Iron Curtain comes down On the borders of Czechoslovakia the situation became tense after the events of February 1948, when the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia came to power. Two days earlier, on 23 February 1948, the already-communist-controlled Ministry of the Interior revoked all passports, and began requiring exit papers for all those travelling abroad. In October of that year a law was adopted that defined unauthorized crossing of the country’s borders as a criminal act. One year later the communist dictatorship took away its citizens’ right to acquire travel documents. Even so, by 1951 according to official numbers nearly 12,000 people had emigrated from Czechoslovakia (the true numbers were probably much higher). Many people of this post-1948 wave of emigration left their homeland under threat of political persecution, imprisonment, expulsion from school, or loss of employment, loss of property during the process of nationalization, etc. Most of them chose to escape into Bavaria via forested Šumava Mountains, which until 1951 was weakly guarded. Even so, knowledge of the local terrain – and a healthy dose of luck – was necessary to get across. This was provided by the smugglers, who undertook the activity either from conviction, or for money. Another way to get to the West was over the border with Austria. At first this choice was not ideal, because until 1955 the part of Austria adjacent to Czechoslovakia was part of the Soviet zone of occupation. Refugees here risked detention by the Soviets and return to Czechoslovakia. A mass exodus of Czechoslovak citizens was to be prevented by hermetically sealing a 750 km stretch of the country’s border with Germany and Austria. The decision was taken in 1951 to create a set of physical barriers, and establish a new border guard corps built on the Soviet model. Thus a real Iron Curtain began to take form. It was manned by several brigades of border guard soldiers. Some 16,000 guards were deployed in all, and furnished with all the powers of the military and security forces. Most were recruited from the ranks of politically reliable citizens – draftees and career soldiers. Over the course of time the corps would take on graduates from the Border Guard Military Academy in Prague, founded for this purpose in 1951. Officials at the highest levels studied at Soviet schools and underwent training by the Soviet secret service, the KGB. 2 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 3 Iron Curtain Trail The first bricks in the wall The term Iron Curtain was coined by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1946, in reference to the ideological division of Europe after the Second World War. At first it was just a political concept, but over time it became a physical, military-guarded barrier that the countries of the eastern bloc erected along their western borders. Its backbone was formed by barriers in the form of barbed-wire fences or walls, but it actually included the adjacent strip along the border, in some places several kilometers wide, which was off-limits. This line officially served to prevent the penetration by enemy “infiltrators” from the “imperialist” west to the east (for example intelligence agents), who might subvert the established order of the so-called people’s democratic states. For the socialist countries the Iron Curtain became a deadly instrument of their power, preventing citizens from escaping to the democratic western countries. The legal right to travel abroad was completely unattainable for most citizens, not only to the west of the Iron Curtain, but within the east bloc as well. Armed border guards and the military were assigned to prevent illegal crossing of the border, and thousands of inhabitants of the east bloc died at their hands. From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the Continent. Behind that line lie all the capitals of the ancient states of Central and Eastern Europe. Winston Churchill, 1946 The governments of the eastern bloc were very much aware of the importance of the Iron Curtain for the long-term stability of the totalitarian regime. For the entire duration of the Cold War they were constantly engaged in perfecting it. For the regime, uncontrolled emigration of its citizens meant not only the loss of labor force including its intellectual elites, but also serious cracks in the ideological facade. The most important destination or transfer point in this regard was West Berlin, an island of freedom within the totalitarian bloc, which East Germans could relatively easily get to. Between 1949 and 1961 almost 3 million East German citizens fled to the West this way. Thus officials of the GDR finally undertook radical measures: on August 13, 1961 they in effect surrounded West Berlin with their armed forces, cut links between it and the GDR, and built a concrete wall 165 km long around its entire perimeter, which they guarded day and night by their armed forces. n Barbed wire has become a symbol of the Iron Curtain n Remnants of the military road, guard towers, and tank traps in South Moravia. The Iron Curtain comes down On the borders of Czechoslovakia the situation became tense after the events of February 1948, when the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia came to power. Two days earlier, on 23 February 1948, the already-communist-controlled Ministry of the Interior revoked all passports, and began requiring exit papers for all those travelling abroad. In October of that year a law was adopted that defined unauthorized crossing of the country’s borders as a criminal act. One year later the communist dictatorship took away its citizens’ right to acquire travel documents. Even so, by 1951 according to official numbers nearly 12,000 people had emigrated from Czechoslovakia (the true numbers were probably much higher). Many people of this post-1948 wave of emigration left their homeland under threat of political persecution, imprisonment, expulsion from school, or loss of employment, loss of property during the process of nationalization, etc. Most of them chose to escape into Bavaria via forested Šumava Mountains, which until 1951 was weakly guarded. Even so, knowledge of the local terrain – and a healthy dose of luck – was necessary to get across. This was provided by the smugglers, who undertook the activity either from conviction, or for money. Another way to get to the West was over the border with Austria. At first this choice was not ideal, because until 1955 the part of Austria adjacent to Czechoslovakia was part of the Soviet zone of occupation. Refugees here risked detention by the Soviets and return to Czechoslovakia. A mass exodus of Czechoslovak citizens was to be prevented by hermetically sealing a 750 km stretch of the country’s border with Germany and Austria. The decision was taken in 1951 to create a set of physical barriers, and establish a new border guard corps built on the Soviet model. Thus a real Iron Curtain began to take form. It was manned by several brigades of border guard soldiers. Some 16,000 guards were deployed in all, and furnished with all the powers of the military and security forces. Most were recruited from the ranks of politically reliable citizens – draftees and career soldiers. Over the course of time the corps would take on graduates from the Border Guard Military Academy in Prague, founded for this purpose in 1951. Officials at the highest levels studied at Soviet schools and underwent training by the Soviet secret service, the KGB. 4 Greenways through European history and nature could live and work. However, people without permanent residence in the zone needed a special pass to enter. This would be granted for visits by relatives, for example, or travelling to work. Among the population of the zone and even further into the interior lived so-called assistant border guards who would report suspicious persons whose behavior indicated an intention to over the line. The assistants were thus part of the border guard intelligence service, which had its informers among people on the other side of the border as well. The selection of ideal candidates, quality training and ideological drill, was designed to produce dedicated border guards, determined to defend the country’s borders whatever the price. In the vast majority of cases, of course, the main task was to prevent illegal crossing of the border from the East to the West. To do this border guards were authorized to use deadly force; though officially only after verbal warnings went unheeded. Unofficially, the border guards often shot first and gave the warning afterward. Likewise the border guards often fired at fleeing people who were already into the territory of the neighboring country. Barbed wire and high voltage Along the border with Germany and Austria, a forbidden zone up to 2 km wide was made almost completely off limits to the civilian population, who could enter the zone only with a special pass. Especially in the Šumava Mountains and other hilly and remote areas, the population was removed and dozens of villages demolished. Between the forbidden zone and the interior of the country there was a 6- to 10-km-wide border zone where civilians The backbone and most import part of the forbidden zone were the military engineering barriers consisting of a system of up to three barbed wire fences up to 2 meters high. These were installed in the area from a few hundred meters to 2 km before the border. All trees and bushes within several dozen meters were cleared, which in forested areas created a great scar that is still easy to make out today. Over time these barriers expanded further into the interior, so that border guards would have more time to stop people before getting to the border. Fences were built in the center of the strip with 3 to 6 thousand volts of electricity running through them, which between 1952 and 1963 served as a frightening deterrent to anyone considering running away to the West. On the border with Bavaria the situation was even worse. In 1952-1965 the border there was actually mined. Naturally, these measures were also deadly to the border guards themselves. Altogether 27 of them died from electrocution, 18 from land mine explosions, and many others were seriously injured. Partly because of this, but mostly because of strong international protests (some 150 escapees were killed by these means), the measures were later eased. The minefields were removed and the high-tension wires were replaced by a lowtension signal wall that was not fatal, but served as a warning system to nearby border guards that someone was trying to get over. Within a few minutes of an alarm, border guards from the barracks or the closest monitoring station could get to the place where the barrier had been violated. They moved to the spot along the socalled signal road, a service drive (in later years mostly surfaced with asphalt or concrete panels) which followed along the fences. The precise point of crossing the fence was visible in the 20 m wide strip of plowed earth along the fence, which was sprayed with herbicide to remove any vegetation, Places at former Iron Curtain making the footprints of those fleeing clearly visible. Along the entire length of the fence, wooden and later metal guard towers sprung up that made it easy to monitor each segment. At night the border zone could be lit up by powerful spotlights and tripwire illumination flares. Border guards were also assisted by service dogs, whose keen sense of smell helped them quickly track down and detain escapees. The independent attack dogs served as a kind of substitute for electric fences. In some of the more difficult-toaccess segments, where the fence was very near the actual border, they were placed in pens which automatically opened when the signal wall was tripped. The dogs served as advance guard until the border patrols could reach the site. However, the use of independent dogs proved to be just as inhumane as the electrified fences, as seen in the case of nineteen-year-old East German Hartmut Tautz. In the summer of 1986 he tried to get across the Iron Curtain near Bratislava, when he was stopped by independent attack dogs just 20 m short of the border. He died of severe wounds in hospital some hours later. There were far fewer official border crossings for automobile traffic between Czechoslovakia and 5 West Germany and Austria than there are today. And they were closely guarded – for example, with heavy gates that could not be broken by a moving vehicle. Historically less-important roads leading to the west were closed permanently, for example by digging up the road. On the watercourses that crossed the state border, underwater grates and observation platforms were set up to prevent escape to the West under water. Larger rivers like the Danube were monitored by motorboat patrols. Trains crossing the border were subject to thorough searches, even freight trains where people could hide in coal wagons, for example. Victims of the Iron Curtain Despite all the pitfalls and security measures, there were people who were determined to risk their lives, or at best long prison sentences, to get over the border. Their yearning for freedom, democracy, and a chance to pursue one’s goals was so strong (and their chances of legally travelling to the West so negligible) that their conscience gave them no other choice. We will probably never know the exact number of those who from 1951 to 1989 made it across the Iron Curtain from our country. The constant perfecting n In the past only the border guards could enjoy this beautiful view from behind the Iron Curtain into Austria over the River Dyje (picture taken from the bridge to Hardegg). 4 Greenways through European history and nature could live and work. However, people without permanent residence in the zone needed a special pass to enter. This would be granted for visits by relatives, for example, or travelling to work. Among the population of the zone and even further into the interior lived so-called assistant border guards who would report suspicious persons whose behavior indicated an intention to over the line. The assistants were thus part of the border guard intelligence service, which had its informers among people on the other side of the border as well. The selection of ideal candidates, quality training and ideological drill, was designed to produce dedicated border guards, determined to defend the country’s borders whatever the price. In the vast majority of cases, of course, the main task was to prevent illegal crossing of the border from the East to the West. To do this border guards were authorized to use deadly force; though officially only after verbal warnings went unheeded. Unofficially, the border guards often shot first and gave the warning afterward. Likewise the border guards often fired at fleeing people who were already into the territory of the neighboring country. Barbed wire and high voltage Along the border with Germany and Austria, a forbidden zone up to 2 km wide was made almost completely off limits to the civilian population, who could enter the zone only with a special pass. Especially in the Šumava Mountains and other hilly and remote areas, the population was removed and dozens of villages demolished. Between the forbidden zone and the interior of the country there was a 6- to 10-km-wide border zone where civilians The backbone and most import part of the forbidden zone were the military engineering barriers consisting of a system of up to three barbed wire fences up to 2 meters high. These were installed in the area from a few hundred meters to 2 km before the border. All trees and bushes within several dozen meters were cleared, which in forested areas created a great scar that is still easy to make out today. Over time these barriers expanded further into the interior, so that border guards would have more time to stop people before getting to the border. Fences were built in the center of the strip with 3 to 6 thousand volts of electricity running through them, which between 1952 and 1963 served as a frightening deterrent to anyone considering running away to the West. On the border with Bavaria the situation was even worse. In 1952-1965 the border there was actually mined. Naturally, these measures were also deadly to the border guards themselves. Altogether 27 of them died from electrocution, 18 from land mine explosions, and many others were seriously injured. Partly because of this, but mostly because of strong international protests (some 150 escapees were killed by these means), the measures were later eased. The minefields were removed and the high-tension wires were replaced by a lowtension signal wall that was not fatal, but served as a warning system to nearby border guards that someone was trying to get over. Within a few minutes of an alarm, border guards from the barracks or the closest monitoring station could get to the place where the barrier had been violated. They moved to the spot along the socalled signal road, a service drive (in later years mostly surfaced with asphalt or concrete panels) which followed along the fences. The precise point of crossing the fence was visible in the 20 m wide strip of plowed earth along the fence, which was sprayed with herbicide to remove any vegetation, Places at former Iron Curtain making the footprints of those fleeing clearly visible. Along the entire length of the fence, wooden and later metal guard towers sprung up that made it easy to monitor each segment. At night the border zone could be lit up by powerful spotlights and tripwire illumination flares. Border guards were also assisted by service dogs, whose keen sense of smell helped them quickly track down and detain escapees. The independent attack dogs served as a kind of substitute for electric fences. In some of the more difficult-toaccess segments, where the fence was very near the actual border, they were placed in pens which automatically opened when the signal wall was tripped. The dogs served as advance guard until the border patrols could reach the site. However, the use of independent dogs proved to be just as inhumane as the electrified fences, as seen in the case of nineteen-year-old East German Hartmut Tautz. In the summer of 1986 he tried to get across the Iron Curtain near Bratislava, when he was stopped by independent attack dogs just 20 m short of the border. He died of severe wounds in hospital some hours later. There were far fewer official border crossings for automobile traffic between Czechoslovakia and 5 West Germany and Austria than there are today. And they were closely guarded – for example, with heavy gates that could not be broken by a moving vehicle. Historically less-important roads leading to the west were closed permanently, for example by digging up the road. On the watercourses that crossed the state border, underwater grates and observation platforms were set up to prevent escape to the West under water. Larger rivers like the Danube were monitored by motorboat patrols. Trains crossing the border were subject to thorough searches, even freight trains where people could hide in coal wagons, for example. Victims of the Iron Curtain Despite all the pitfalls and security measures, there were people who were determined to risk their lives, or at best long prison sentences, to get over the border. Their yearning for freedom, democracy, and a chance to pursue one’s goals was so strong (and their chances of legally travelling to the West so negligible) that their conscience gave them no other choice. We will probably never know the exact number of those who from 1951 to 1989 made it across the Iron Curtain from our country. The constant perfecting n In the past only the border guards could enjoy this beautiful view from behind the Iron Curtain into Austria over the River Dyje (picture taken from the bridge to Hardegg). 6 Greenways through European history and nature of 1968. Thousands of people that summer decided not to come back from vacation in the Western countries or Yugoslavia. Tens of thousands of others left the CSSR soon after August 1968 while it was still possible. From the spring of 1968 until October 8, 1969 the borders with the FRG and Austria remained relatively open, until the new government, now led by the pro-Soviet Husák, finally was able to put an end to the changes introduced by the pro-reform Dubček government. The year and a half when it was possible to travel freely was totally unique in the history of the communist regime in Czechoslovakia. Never before or after was it so easy to get out of socialist Czechoslovakia. By the late 1970s and 1980s, after the deepest part of the so-called normalization, some possibilities opened up for travel to the West or at least to the socialist (but independent of the Soviet Union) Yugoslavia. It was still very difficult, but the Czechoslovak “jail” opened up a few cracks, and from 1979 on some 5,000 people a year successfully emigrated. of the barrier made it harder and harder to do, and so probably only a few dozen people a year were able to make it. We have a better idea of the sad number of victims: some 350 civilians (of whom 200 were shot) and 648 border guards, of which 208 committed suicide and 67 were shot by their colleagues (deliberately while trying to escape over the border; or accidently). Getting over From 1948 to 1989 several hundred thousand people emigrated from Czechoslovakia to the West. Official numbers speak of 200 thousand; the highest estimates are a half million. We have already talked about the period before the Iron Curtain went up (1948-1951). But what came afterward? The largest wave of emigrants (at least 65 thousand) took advantage of the temporary hesitation of the regime and left the country in 1968–1969 after the invasion of Czechoslovakia by the armies of the Warsaw Pact on August 21, 1968. It put a sudden end to the democratization, liberal reforms, and political relaxation (a.k.a. “socialism with a human face”) begun by Dubček’s government: the Prague Spring Some people, for example, failed to return from work-related abroad where they were sent by their employer. This decision was not easy, however, as it meant separation from family, who could be persecuted by the regime. Especially in the 1980s it was easy for most people, even for whole families, to get permission to travel to Yugoslavia, a “fraternal socialist country”, and the promised land for summer holidays. This was a good chance for people who wanted to emigrate to the West. There was no Iron Curtain between Yugoslavia and neighboring Italy and Austria, so one could get to the west over an unguarded border (usually in the mountains), or often even by the regular border crossing, if the border guard was sufficiently benevolent. And last but not least there were those who set out to visit Cuba with a layover in some foreign city, perhaps Montreal, where one had to get off the plane while it was being refueled. In the airport terminal they would ask for asylum. Most emigrants did not have a pre-arranged place in a foreign country; they left their homeland with empty hands, and often had to sit out months in a refugee camp. Here they had to wait for their documents to be issued that would allow them to gain asylum. The risk, the uncertainty, and the awareness that they would have to start again at the Places at former Iron Curtain bottom, was understood as the price of the freedom for which they longed. In the late 1970s and early 1980s there were those whose emigration was forced, who found their departure for the west suddenly hastened by the authorities. Forced exile meant permanent deportation from Czechoslovakia; most of the ones exiled in this way were signatures of Charter 77 (a document and a civic initiative that criticized the Czechoslovak communist regime for suppressing the human and civil rights that the CSSR had agreed to in 1975 under international agreement). The government found these people extremely inconvenient, even dangerous. Under operation Asanace (Sanitation), the goal of which was to isolate Charter 77’s main organizers, the State Security (StB) subjected a number of dissidents to harassment, blackmail, and threats of imprisonment to force them to leave the country. What did one have to do during the era of so-called “real socialism” in Czechoslovakia to be allowed to legally leave the country? From today’s perspective the conditions attached to leaving the country might seem like a bad joke. It was not enough to have a valid passport or visa (necessary for all the West European countries). Much more was needed, including a great deal of patience and a strong stomach, because the entire n Remnants of the Iron Curtain near Čížov 7 incredibly long bureaucratic process was extremely degrading. Around the end of the 1970s it became easier to travel to the West or Yugoslavia, but there were still an inordinate number of barriers. One’s chances of getting permission decreased if a person was “politically unreliable”, or the more members of a family wished to travel at once. After requesting a certificate of a clean criminal record, which usually took several weeks to obtain, it was necessary to get a permit to leave the country. It clearly stated the number of days a person was allowed to spend abroad, and a precise list of the countries he could visit. After 1970 it was possible to get a permanent exit visa to the East European countries, so it was not necessary to go through the complicated process every time. It was much more difficult to get permission to travel to Western Europe. This process could take months, but success was not guaranteed. It was granted only on the recommendation of a whole series of various person and organs, for example one’s employer or school, the ROH (Revolutionary Labor Movement), military officials, municipal officials, the Communist Party’s street committees, and so on. Often an interview with the cadre department at one’s workplace was required. Your fate was in the hands of people you didn’t know. The granting of permission to leave was not the end of the ordeal. Travelling to the democratic foreign 6 Greenways through European history and nature of 1968. Thousands of people that summer decided not to come back from vacation in the Western countries or Yugoslavia. Tens of thousands of others left the CSSR soon after August 1968 while it was still possible. From the spring of 1968 until October 8, 1969 the borders with the FRG and Austria remained relatively open, until the new government, now led by the pro-Soviet Husák, finally was able to put an end to the changes introduced by the pro-reform Dubček government. The year and a half when it was possible to travel freely was totally unique in the history of the communist regime in Czechoslovakia. Never before or after was it so easy to get out of socialist Czechoslovakia. By the late 1970s and 1980s, after the deepest part of the so-called normalization, some possibilities opened up for travel to the West or at least to the socialist (but independent of the Soviet Union) Yugoslavia. It was still very difficult, but the Czechoslovak “jail” opened up a few cracks, and from 1979 on some 5,000 people a year successfully emigrated. of the barrier made it harder and harder to do, and so probably only a few dozen people a year were able to make it. We have a better idea of the sad number of victims: some 350 civilians (of whom 200 were shot) and 648 border guards, of which 208 committed suicide and 67 were shot by their colleagues (deliberately while trying to escape over the border; or accidently). Getting over From 1948 to 1989 several hundred thousand people emigrated from Czechoslovakia to the West. Official numbers speak of 200 thousand; the highest estimates are a half million. We have already talked about the period before the Iron Curtain went up (1948-1951). But what came afterward? The largest wave of emigrants (at least 65 thousand) took advantage of the temporary hesitation of the regime and left the country in 1968–1969 after the invasion of Czechoslovakia by the armies of the Warsaw Pact on August 21, 1968. It put a sudden end to the democratization, liberal reforms, and political relaxation (a.k.a. “socialism with a human face”) begun by Dubček’s government: the Prague Spring Some people, for example, failed to return from work-related abroad where they were sent by their employer. This decision was not easy, however, as it meant separation from family, who could be persecuted by the regime. Especially in the 1980s it was easy for most people, even for whole families, to get permission to travel to Yugoslavia, a “fraternal socialist country”, and the promised land for summer holidays. This was a good chance for people who wanted to emigrate to the West. There was no Iron Curtain between Yugoslavia and neighboring Italy and Austria, so one could get to the west over an unguarded border (usually in the mountains), or often even by the regular border crossing, if the border guard was sufficiently benevolent. And last but not least there were those who set out to visit Cuba with a layover in some foreign city, perhaps Montreal, where one had to get off the plane while it was being refueled. In the airport terminal they would ask for asylum. Most emigrants did not have a pre-arranged place in a foreign country; they left their homeland with empty hands, and often had to sit out months in a refugee camp. Here they had to wait for their documents to be issued that would allow them to gain asylum. The risk, the uncertainty, and the awareness that they would have to start again at the Places at former Iron Curtain bottom, was understood as the price of the freedom for which they longed. In the late 1970s and early 1980s there were those whose emigration was forced, who found their departure for the west suddenly hastened by the authorities. Forced exile meant permanent deportation from Czechoslovakia; most of the ones exiled in this way were signatures of Charter 77 (a document and a civic initiative that criticized the Czechoslovak communist regime for suppressing the human and civil rights that the CSSR had agreed to in 1975 under international agreement). The government found these people extremely inconvenient, even dangerous. Under operation Asanace (Sanitation), the goal of which was to isolate Charter 77’s main organizers, the State Security (StB) subjected a number of dissidents to harassment, blackmail, and threats of imprisonment to force them to leave the country. What did one have to do during the era of so-called “real socialism” in Czechoslovakia to be allowed to legally leave the country? From today’s perspective the conditions attached to leaving the country might seem like a bad joke. It was not enough to have a valid passport or visa (necessary for all the West European countries). Much more was needed, including a great deal of patience and a strong stomach, because the entire n Remnants of the Iron Curtain near Čížov 7 incredibly long bureaucratic process was extremely degrading. Around the end of the 1970s it became easier to travel to the West or Yugoslavia, but there were still an inordinate number of barriers. One’s chances of getting permission decreased if a person was “politically unreliable”, or the more members of a family wished to travel at once. After requesting a certificate of a clean criminal record, which usually took several weeks to obtain, it was necessary to get a permit to leave the country. It clearly stated the number of days a person was allowed to spend abroad, and a precise list of the countries he could visit. After 1970 it was possible to get a permanent exit visa to the East European countries, so it was not necessary to go through the complicated process every time. It was much more difficult to get permission to travel to Western Europe. This process could take months, but success was not guaranteed. It was granted only on the recommendation of a whole series of various person and organs, for example one’s employer or school, the ROH (Revolutionary Labor Movement), military officials, municipal officials, the Communist Party’s street committees, and so on. Often an interview with the cadre department at one’s workplace was required. Your fate was in the hands of people you didn’t know. The granting of permission to leave was not the end of the ordeal. Travelling to the democratic foreign 8 Greenways through European history and nature world and socialist Yugoslavia also depended on obtaining a foreign currency allotment. Outside of the black market it was the only way one could legally exchange Czechoslovak crowns for foreign currency. The Czechoslovak state bank again granted these on the basis of various recommendations and political reliability. Only limited amounts of money could be exchanged, and each year it could only be done until the end of March. The only thing that could save you from having to have the currency allotment was a notarized, open invitation to visit a country (from a family member, for example, or another emigrant). More weeks were spent applying for the appropriate visa or visas. If the bank allowed the transaction, after filling out customs and currency statements and paying for the special stamp, the currency could be exchanged. University graduates were required to leave their university degree with their employer for the time of their absence. Underwater to freedom Many people’s efforts to fulfill the requirements for legal travel to the Western countries were in vain, and permission to travel was denied. The minds of many people who wanted to emigrate began to focus on an illegal crossing of state borders. “Let the evil jaws of the warmongers turn to stone / hold your weapon firmly / aim your shot straight Places at former Iron Curtain and true / firmly defend the people and your homeland!” Poem For Peace, 1951 Now let us tell some of the fascinating stories of people who succeeded in their courageous plans for fleeing across the border. Although no one tried to shoot their way to freedom like the members of the Masin Brothers group in the 1950s, in most cases it was still a real drama, decided by minutes or seconds, and reliant on major doses of luck, and often on precise and long-term preparation, study of the area and use of skills, inventiveness, good tactics, good timing, and quick legs. Unfortunately, the longed-for freedom was not always waiting at the end – unsuccessful attempts resulted in many years’ imprisonment. “We didn’t want to shoot. But we got into situations where we had to shoot. It was either us or them. The regime declared class war. Not us. They killed and executed. We were supposed to face them with our bare hands?" Milan Paumer, member of the Masin Brothers armed group The “classic way” over the border, on one’s own two legs, chose Václav Bařina, Miloš Ostrčilík, and two other young people, on 20 September 1985, when they dug, cut, and crawled under the wire near the village of Úvaly, near Valtice on the border with n „Freedom tank" 9 Who are the people who crossed the Iron Curtain? And what were their reasons? What were their lives like in the free world? Who are the ones who helped them get away, and who are the ones who guarded the border against “violators”? Find out about the true stories that happened at real places along the borders of Czechoslovakia from the internet archive at www.pametnaroda.cz. Austria. Václav Bařina began to prepare his escape after not getting a currency allotment for a trip to Yugoslavia. “When I was planning the escape I would wake up dreaming I had a bullet in me.” Václav Bařina From his old classmate who served with the border guards he obtained valuable information on how the wall functions and the pitfalls that awaited. He chose Úvaly for his escape because his colleague Miloš Ostrčilík had permanent residence there. This border town was off limits to most people, only locals and their visitors could go there, and there was a border guard checkpoint on road to the village. After a few trips to Úvaly together the border guards became used to seeing Bařina, and luckily for him the village had no informer to inform of his suspicious surveying of the terrain. On the day of the last visit to Úvaly, the day they escaped, Bařina and Ostrčilík were joined, unplanned, by two other young men who knew that, paradoxically, there was a place that would not be visible from the nearby guard towers even in good weather and good visibility. That was because in good weather the tower was unoccupied, and they relied on covering that ground from the other two nearby towers. Despite becoming panicked, tripping the wire and warning the guards, all four of the young men managed to get through the wire and run off into Austria. Not all relied on their bare hands and quick legs alone. Some refugees tried to get over using brute force, by crashing through in an armored or heavy n Motorized hang glider of „Bird man“ (picture from archive of Bavarian border police) vehicle. In 1953 František Uhlík and seven others succeeded in smashing through the barbed wire in a repaired halftrack left over from World War II. In 1961 the iron bar at the Česká Velenice crossing was broken by an armored Tatra 128 containing 7 people, including former political prisoners Josef Měrka and Luboš Králíček. The latter had one unsuccessful attempt at escape behind him from trying to cross the border near Břeclav in 1950. The seemingly least-guarded part of the border was the air, watched by anti-aircraft ground units and fighter planes. Flying to the west was the riskiest and most difficult way to get out, and very dangerous. On Friday, March 24, 1950, three ČSA domestic passenger flights with a total of 85 people on board took off from three different cities, Brno, Bratislava, and Ostrava. Flying the planes were pilots who had served on the western front during the Second World War. Popelka, Angetter, Doleža, and Světlík together with other members of the crew and passengers had a pre-arranged plan for a brave escape across the border. Some of them had relatives on board (travelling under assumed names), but there were also passengers who had no idea what was about to transpire, including a delegation of miners from Ostrava and a member of the secret police. Among the informed was the mother of famous Czech figure skater Aja Vrzáňová, who was on her way to Great Britain to join her daughter. “After taking off I was at the controls. Before Havlíčkův Brod I turned off the autopilot and set 8 Greenways through European history and nature world and socialist Yugoslavia also depended on obtaining a foreign currency allotment. Outside of the black market it was the only way one could legally exchange Czechoslovak crowns for foreign currency. The Czechoslovak state bank again granted these on the basis of various recommendations and political reliability. Only limited amounts of money could be exchanged, and each year it could only be done until the end of March. The only thing that could save you from having to have the currency allotment was a notarized, open invitation to visit a country (from a family member, for example, or another emigrant). More weeks were spent applying for the appropriate visa or visas. If the bank allowed the transaction, after filling out customs and currency statements and paying for the special stamp, the currency could be exchanged. University graduates were required to leave their university degree with their employer for the time of their absence. Underwater to freedom Many people’s efforts to fulfill the requirements for legal travel to the Western countries were in vain, and permission to travel was denied. The minds of many people who wanted to emigrate began to focus on an illegal crossing of state borders. “Let the evil jaws of the warmongers turn to stone / hold your weapon firmly / aim your shot straight Places at former Iron Curtain and true / firmly defend the people and your homeland!” Poem For Peace, 1951 Now let us tell some of the fascinating stories of people who succeeded in their courageous plans for fleeing across the border. Although no one tried to shoot their way to freedom like the members of the Masin Brothers group in the 1950s, in most cases it was still a real drama, decided by minutes or seconds, and reliant on major doses of luck, and often on precise and long-term preparation, study of the area and use of skills, inventiveness, good tactics, good timing, and quick legs. Unfortunately, the longed-for freedom was not always waiting at the end – unsuccessful attempts resulted in many years’ imprisonment. “We didn’t want to shoot. But we got into situations where we had to shoot. It was either us or them. The regime declared class war. Not us. They killed and executed. We were supposed to face them with our bare hands?" Milan Paumer, member of the Masin Brothers armed group The “classic way” over the border, on one’s own two legs, chose Václav Bařina, Miloš Ostrčilík, and two other young people, on 20 September 1985, when they dug, cut, and crawled under the wire near the village of Úvaly, near Valtice on the border with n „Freedom tank" 9 Who are the people who crossed the Iron Curtain? And what were their reasons? What were their lives like in the free world? Who are the ones who helped them get away, and who are the ones who guarded the border against “violators”? Find out about the true stories that happened at real places along the borders of Czechoslovakia from the internet archive at www.pametnaroda.cz. Austria. Václav Bařina began to prepare his escape after not getting a currency allotment for a trip to Yugoslavia. “When I was planning the escape I would wake up dreaming I had a bullet in me.” Václav Bařina From his old classmate who served with the border guards he obtained valuable information on how the wall functions and the pitfalls that awaited. He chose Úvaly for his escape because his colleague Miloš Ostrčilík had permanent residence there. This border town was off limits to most people, only locals and their visitors could go there, and there was a border guard checkpoint on road to the village. After a few trips to Úvaly together the border guards became used to seeing Bařina, and luckily for him the village had no informer to inform of his suspicious surveying of the terrain. On the day of the last visit to Úvaly, the day they escaped, Bařina and Ostrčilík were joined, unplanned, by two other young men who knew that, paradoxically, there was a place that would not be visible from the nearby guard towers even in good weather and good visibility. That was because in good weather the tower was unoccupied, and they relied on covering that ground from the other two nearby towers. Despite becoming panicked, tripping the wire and warning the guards, all four of the young men managed to get through the wire and run off into Austria. Not all relied on their bare hands and quick legs alone. Some refugees tried to get over using brute force, by crashing through in an armored or heavy n Motorized hang glider of „Bird man“ (picture from archive of Bavarian border police) vehicle. In 1953 František Uhlík and seven others succeeded in smashing through the barbed wire in a repaired halftrack left over from World War II. In 1961 the iron bar at the Česká Velenice crossing was broken by an armored Tatra 128 containing 7 people, including former political prisoners Josef Měrka and Luboš Králíček. The latter had one unsuccessful attempt at escape behind him from trying to cross the border near Břeclav in 1950. The seemingly least-guarded part of the border was the air, watched by anti-aircraft ground units and fighter planes. Flying to the west was the riskiest and most difficult way to get out, and very dangerous. On Friday, March 24, 1950, three ČSA domestic passenger flights with a total of 85 people on board took off from three different cities, Brno, Bratislava, and Ostrava. Flying the planes were pilots who had served on the western front during the Second World War. Popelka, Angetter, Doleža, and Světlík together with other members of the crew and passengers had a pre-arranged plan for a brave escape across the border. Some of them had relatives on board (travelling under assumed names), but there were also passengers who had no idea what was about to transpire, including a delegation of miners from Ostrava and a member of the secret police. Among the informed was the mother of famous Czech figure skater Aja Vrzáňová, who was on her way to Great Britain to join her daughter. “After taking off I was at the controls. Before Havlíčkův Brod I turned off the autopilot and set 10 Greenways through European history and nature a course for Munich. Klesnil said to me, “What do you think you’re doing?” I said, “Josef, remember what I told you not long ago? We are flying to the West!” He said to me, “You dummies, Procházka and I were organizing the same thing,” he almost burst into tears; he knew this was it and it was too late. He accepted it.” Vít Angetter, flight lieutenant The flight over the border was perfectly planned, and all three planes made it safely into Bavaria. Altogether 27 people decided to ask for asylum. The rest chose to return home. Several people tried to get over the Iron Curtain on motorized hang gliders. There was a chance of success at night, but they had to fly very low to avoid radar. But in that case the border guards on the ground could detect the craft and shoot it down. On August 28, 1984, two men tried to escape by flying a hang glider from the Pálava Hills. Their flight ended tragically – the glider crashed while still on Czechoslovak territory. One of the men died at the site, the other spent six months in the hospital and then two and a half years in prison. A slower, but less noisy means of escape by air was the hot-air balloon. In 1983, in the spirit of his grandfather’s motto that “you can’t help where you were born, but you can help where you live”, two-time champion of the CSSR in speed cycling Robert Hutyra tried to make his way to freedom. Places at former Iron Curtain On the night of 7/8 September, 1983, with his wife, two children, and his racing bike, they went up near Znojmo in their own homemade balloon. The wind blew kindly on the Hutyras and lofted them over to Austria. The balloon was observed by the border guard, but they hesitated to fire; they were not sure whether the refugees weren’t already in Austrian airspace. The bottom of Hutyra’s balloon’s basket was reinforced with a steel plate meant to deflect bullets. The border guards finally stood down, and the Hutyra’s balloon landed near the village of Falkenstein. The Hutyras eventually gained asylum in the USA. Libor Veselský of Břeclav planned to escape in his hang glider. But during one of his test flights he crashed and broke it. An air escape was now out of the question for Veselský. But he soon came up with an even more creative method – an underwater escape across the Dyje River. With a diving suit and camouflaged by a hollowed-out log, on the rainy night of May 17, 1985 he submerged himself in the river. Over the course of three hours he managed to swim for 5.5 km until, frozen but happy, he resurfaced safe on the Austrian side. He was helped by the rain, which allowed him to float undetected under several guard bridges, and avoid being spotted in the strong halogen lights that shone on the river. n Iron Curtain monument at Čížov 11 n Museum of the Czech Border Fortifications in Šatov The Iron Curtain is torn down On December 4, 1989, in the euphoria of the Velvet Revolution, the border with the West was opened, and that same month the barbed wire separating the CSSR from Austria between Hatě and Kleinhaugsdorf was ceremonially removed by the first post-1989 foreign minister Jiří Dienstbier and his Austrian colleague Alois Mock. Less than a week later there was a ceremonial cutting of the wires at the town of Nové Domky u Rozvadova on the Czech-Bavarian border. By mid-1990 almost all the barbed-wire fences on the Czechoslovak border were been removed, and only a few remnants of the Iron Curtain were left. For over 20 years the ravages of time have been eating away at what’s left of the Iron Curtain. In the fields and meadows you would have a hard time finding the evidence, and some of the scars left in the Czech and Moravian forests are quickly healing, too. If it weren’t for the former signal roads that lead along the border, which are used today by hikers and cyclists; and if it weren’t for the Moravian vintners who saved some of the guard towers to watch over their vineyards, we might have a hard time finding where the Iron Curtain was. In the region of South Moravia we can find a rare remnant of the Iron Curtain outside the town of Čižov in the Podyjí National Park, where there is now a simple Iron Curtain Memorial. It consists of a single wall of barbed wire about 300 m long, the signal road, and one guard tower. An information panel tells you about the history of the Iron Curtain, and by prior arrangement the personnel from the nearby park visitor center can tell you about it as well. Another important relic of the Iron Curtain is found in the Dyje triangle south of Břeclav, along almost the entire western border of the Soutok game reserve. All but forgotten stands a wall of barbed wire a couple of kilometers long, which today serves as a barrier to animals. For this purpose the fence lost its upper wires that reached out to the sides, and has been given regular chain link sections and sometimes wooden planks. Cyclists and walkers passing by do not even realize that they are walking along the actual wires that were long part of a physical barrier thousands of kilometers long between the East and the West. Climbing plants, grasses, and sediment from the occasional floods are beginning to swallow some of the fence, but the original gates in the fence that occur every 100-200 meters and which the border guards used in their pursuit of escapees and movement between the layers of wire, betray the fact that this is no ordinary fence. In the village of Šatov we find the Museum of the Czechoslovak Fortifications dating from 1935– 1938, which has a new section devoted to the Iron Curtain, featuring a guard tower, several fields of wire barriers, and a field of the kind of anti-tank barriers known as “Czech hedgehogs”. The original Iron Curtain line of barbed wire went through here 10 Greenways through European history and nature a course for Munich. Klesnil said to me, “What do you think you’re doing?” I said, “Josef, remember what I told you not long ago? We are flying to the West!” He said to me, “You dummies, Procházka and I were organizing the same thing,” he almost burst into tears; he knew this was it and it was too late. He accepted it.” Vít Angetter, flight lieutenant The flight over the border was perfectly planned, and all three planes made it safely into Bavaria. Altogether 27 people decided to ask for asylum. The rest chose to return home. Several people tried to get over the Iron Curtain on motorized hang gliders. There was a chance of success at night, but they had to fly very low to avoid radar. But in that case the border guards on the ground could detect the craft and shoot it down. On August 28, 1984, two men tried to escape by flying a hang glider from the Pálava Hills. Their flight ended tragically – the glider crashed while still on Czechoslovak territory. One of the men died at the site, the other spent six months in the hospital and then two and a half years in prison. A slower, but less noisy means of escape by air was the hot-air balloon. In 1983, in the spirit of his grandfather’s motto that “you can’t help where you were born, but you can help where you live”, two-time champion of the CSSR in speed cycling Robert Hutyra tried to make his way to freedom. Places at former Iron Curtain On the night of 7/8 September, 1983, with his wife, two children, and his racing bike, they went up near Znojmo in their own homemade balloon. The wind blew kindly on the Hutyras and lofted them over to Austria. The balloon was observed by the border guard, but they hesitated to fire; they were not sure whether the refugees weren’t already in Austrian airspace. The bottom of Hutyra’s balloon’s basket was reinforced with a steel plate meant to deflect bullets. The border guards finally stood down, and the Hutyra’s balloon landed near the village of Falkenstein. The Hutyras eventually gained asylum in the USA. Libor Veselský of Břeclav planned to escape in his hang glider. But during one of his test flights he crashed and broke it. An air escape was now out of the question for Veselský. But he soon came up with an even more creative method – an underwater escape across the Dyje River. With a diving suit and camouflaged by a hollowed-out log, on the rainy night of May 17, 1985 he submerged himself in the river. Over the course of three hours he managed to swim for 5.5 km until, frozen but happy, he resurfaced safe on the Austrian side. He was helped by the rain, which allowed him to float undetected under several guard bridges, and avoid being spotted in the strong halogen lights that shone on the river. n Iron Curtain monument at Čížov 11 n Museum of the Czech Border Fortifications in Šatov The Iron Curtain is torn down On December 4, 1989, in the euphoria of the Velvet Revolution, the border with the West was opened, and that same month the barbed wire separating the CSSR from Austria between Hatě and Kleinhaugsdorf was ceremonially removed by the first post-1989 foreign minister Jiří Dienstbier and his Austrian colleague Alois Mock. Less than a week later there was a ceremonial cutting of the wires at the town of Nové Domky u Rozvadova on the Czech-Bavarian border. By mid-1990 almost all the barbed-wire fences on the Czechoslovak border were been removed, and only a few remnants of the Iron Curtain were left. For over 20 years the ravages of time have been eating away at what’s left of the Iron Curtain. In the fields and meadows you would have a hard time finding the evidence, and some of the scars left in the Czech and Moravian forests are quickly healing, too. If it weren’t for the former signal roads that lead along the border, which are used today by hikers and cyclists; and if it weren’t for the Moravian vintners who saved some of the guard towers to watch over their vineyards, we might have a hard time finding where the Iron Curtain was. In the region of South Moravia we can find a rare remnant of the Iron Curtain outside the town of Čižov in the Podyjí National Park, where there is now a simple Iron Curtain Memorial. It consists of a single wall of barbed wire about 300 m long, the signal road, and one guard tower. An information panel tells you about the history of the Iron Curtain, and by prior arrangement the personnel from the nearby park visitor center can tell you about it as well. Another important relic of the Iron Curtain is found in the Dyje triangle south of Břeclav, along almost the entire western border of the Soutok game reserve. All but forgotten stands a wall of barbed wire a couple of kilometers long, which today serves as a barrier to animals. For this purpose the fence lost its upper wires that reached out to the sides, and has been given regular chain link sections and sometimes wooden planks. Cyclists and walkers passing by do not even realize that they are walking along the actual wires that were long part of a physical barrier thousands of kilometers long between the East and the West. Climbing plants, grasses, and sediment from the occasional floods are beginning to swallow some of the fence, but the original gates in the fence that occur every 100-200 meters and which the border guards used in their pursuit of escapees and movement between the layers of wire, betray the fact that this is no ordinary fence. In the village of Šatov we find the Museum of the Czechoslovak Fortifications dating from 1935– 1938, which has a new section devoted to the Iron Curtain, featuring a guard tower, several fields of wire barriers, and a field of the kind of anti-tank barriers known as “Czech hedgehogs”. The original Iron Curtain line of barbed wire went through here 12 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 13 The European Green Belt Borders divide, nature unites n Museum of the Iron Curtain in Valtice a few meters south of the signal road. The area is dominated by the pre-WWII-era bunker surrounded by metal hedgehogs, which is open to the public in the summer. The Museum of the Iron Curtain opened in 2011 the former border guard barracks above Valtice. A half-hour tour tells visitors about the Iron Curtain’s technical aspects and means, the border guards’ equipment, and period documents. The exhibit includes a real detention cell, and a demonstration model of the wire barriers. A 13th panel is located at the Mikulov castle along with a bell of freedom. Here the Trail of Freedom starts for walkers and cyclists which links all the panels. It was opened in 2011 by the civic association Paměť with the attendance of several successful escapees. The stories of those who successfully and unsuccessfully tried to cross the Iron Curtain are told on 12 panels in Czech and German along 2 km of former signal road southeast of Mikulov. n Remnants of the barbed wire in the Soutok reserve The Iron Curtain was a long belt of “no-man’s land” between the East and West, which was up to several kilometers wide in some places. Entering this area without a special permit was strictly forbidden; economic activity was severely limited. Paradoxically this created a unique “green belt” the whole way across Europe that was spared many of the negative impacts of human activity, such as massive pollution or loss of biodiversity. It’s no accident, then, that shortly after the fall of the Iron Curtain and the subsequent opening up of this land to the public, the most valuable natural localities were declared protected areas by the various countries, in the form of national or natural parks, biosphere reserves, or protected areas under the program Natura 2000. Although the territory we are talking about is mainly the forbidden border zones of the east-bloc countries, the natural environment in the adjacent area along the other, western side of the border profited as well from the decline in human activity. This, too, was part of the reason that protection of this green belt eventually turned into a European-wide initiative which grew out of the original idea for a green belt between East and West Germany that was signed by more than 400 nature protectionists at a meeting in the Bavarian town of Hof, near the East German border. Here’s where the name Green Belt was first introduced. At present dozens of organizations and groups interested in protecting the European Green Belt are being directed by a European coordinating group; the Czech representative is the Partnership Foundation. The European Green Belt, nearly 12,500 km long, passes through 24 European countries; in 2003 former Soviet president Michail Gorbachev became its patron. Although it cannot be said that the green belt represents a completely contiguous chain of original ecosystems, we can imagine it as a necklace that connects on a European scale unique concentrations of natural jewels and other valuable natural localities rich in flora and fauna, including many endangered species. For these the possibility of safer migration between individual regions and countries can be HELSINKY OSLO PETROHRAD STOCKHOLM RIGA LŰBECK BERLÍN GDAŇSK VARŠAVA PRAHA VÍDEŇ BRATISLAVA BUDAPEŠŤ BĚLEHRAD BUKUREŠŤ SOFIE decisive, while intensive economic activity and construction is a threat to them. At a time of reopened borders and the development of economically-underdeveloped border areas (especially on the east bloc side), it is very important to be aware of this and prevent the fragmentation of biotops. Interest in the natural wealth of the green belt does not have to conflict with economic development in the border regions. On the contrary, whether it be development of the tourist industry, agriculture, or industry, the principle of sustainability must be observed; that is, the low-impact integration of human activity into a given environment. The Green Belt in South Moravia Unlike the largely forested and mountainous areas of the green belt in Bohemia, its South Moravian segment continues through to much lower elevations. The cultured landscape here is more agricultural than forestry-based, with the fields, meadows, and vineyards for which South Moravia is so well known. 12 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 13 The European Green Belt Borders divide, nature unites n Museum of the Iron Curtain in Valtice a few meters south of the signal road. The area is dominated by the pre-WWII-era bunker surrounded by metal hedgehogs, which is open to the public in the summer. The Museum of the Iron Curtain opened in 2011 the former border guard barracks above Valtice. A half-hour tour tells visitors about the Iron Curtain’s technical aspects and means, the border guards’ equipment, and period documents. The exhibit includes a real detention cell, and a demonstration model of the wire barriers. A 13th panel is located at the Mikulov castle along with a bell of freedom. Here the Trail of Freedom starts for walkers and cyclists which links all the panels. It was opened in 2011 by the civic association Paměť with the attendance of several successful escapees. The stories of those who successfully and unsuccessfully tried to cross the Iron Curtain are told on 12 panels in Czech and German along 2 km of former signal road southeast of Mikulov. n Remnants of the barbed wire in the Soutok reserve The Iron Curtain was a long belt of “no-man’s land” between the East and West, which was up to several kilometers wide in some places. Entering this area without a special permit was strictly forbidden; economic activity was severely limited. Paradoxically this created a unique “green belt” the whole way across Europe that was spared many of the negative impacts of human activity, such as massive pollution or loss of biodiversity. It’s no accident, then, that shortly after the fall of the Iron Curtain and the subsequent opening up of this land to the public, the most valuable natural localities were declared protected areas by the various countries, in the form of national or natural parks, biosphere reserves, or protected areas under the program Natura 2000. Although the territory we are talking about is mainly the forbidden border zones of the east-bloc countries, the natural environment in the adjacent area along the other, western side of the border profited as well from the decline in human activity. This, too, was part of the reason that protection of this green belt eventually turned into a European-wide initiative which grew out of the original idea for a green belt between East and West Germany that was signed by more than 400 nature protectionists at a meeting in the Bavarian town of Hof, near the East German border. Here’s where the name Green Belt was first introduced. At present dozens of organizations and groups interested in protecting the European Green Belt are being directed by a European coordinating group; the Czech representative is the Partnership Foundation. The European Green Belt, nearly 12,500 km long, passes through 24 European countries; in 2003 former Soviet president Michail Gorbachev became its patron. Although it cannot be said that the green belt represents a completely contiguous chain of original ecosystems, we can imagine it as a necklace that connects on a European scale unique concentrations of natural jewels and other valuable natural localities rich in flora and fauna, including many endangered species. For these the possibility of safer migration between individual regions and countries can be HELSINKY OSLO PETROHRAD STOCKHOLM RIGA LŰBECK BERLÍN GDAŇSK VARŠAVA PRAHA VÍDEŇ BRATISLAVA BUDAPEŠŤ BĚLEHRAD BUKUREŠŤ SOFIE decisive, while intensive economic activity and construction is a threat to them. At a time of reopened borders and the development of economically-underdeveloped border areas (especially on the east bloc side), it is very important to be aware of this and prevent the fragmentation of biotops. Interest in the natural wealth of the green belt does not have to conflict with economic development in the border regions. On the contrary, whether it be development of the tourist industry, agriculture, or industry, the principle of sustainability must be observed; that is, the low-impact integration of human activity into a given environment. The Green Belt in South Moravia Unlike the largely forested and mountainous areas of the green belt in Bohemia, its South Moravian segment continues through to much lower elevations. The cultured landscape here is more agricultural than forestry-based, with the fields, meadows, and vineyards for which South Moravia is so well known. 14 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain n Bodies of water play an important role in the green belt of South Moravia The greatest jewels of the South Moravian Green Belt are the Podyjí National Park and the Dolní Morava Biosphere Reserve, which includes the Pálava Hills Protected Landscape Area, the Lednice-Valtice Area, and the region of floodplain forests south of Břeclav to the confluence of the Dyje (Thaya) and Morava (March) Rivers. It is remarkable that besides the border with Austria, or the former Iron Curtain, the entire territory of the South Moravian green belt unites the Dyje River flowing through the countryside from west to east. The Dyje thus forms the second backbone of the green belt of South Moravia, which in several places also corresponds to the first, the country’s border with Austria. The hiking trails of the South Moravian green belt, which we will talk about later, are almost exclusively concentrated in the Podyjí National Park and the Dolní Morava Biosphere Reserve. The marked tourist trails referred to in the text can be found in the map segments at the end of this brochure. Podyjí National Park and Thayatal The Podyjí National Park was formed out of the former protected landscape area as of July 1, 1991. It protects the 40-km-long and up to 220-meterdeep Dyje River canyon between Vranov nad Dyjí and Znojmo. Covering an area of only 63 km² (and 29 km² of protected buffer zone) it is the country’s smallest national park; but the range of its natural wealth is comparable to some of the largest protected areas. The area merits its highest of category nature protection not only for the deep river valley, one of the most unspoiled in the CR, but also the heath and steppe habitat on its Eastern edge. In the Podyjí we find plants and animal species typical for the cooler Hereynicum areas of Central Europe, with representatives of warmer Pannonian from the former Yugoslavia and Hungary. This is reflected in the large populations and variety of flora and fauna in the Podyjí National Park. There are more than 1,300 species of higher plants, of which several dozen are specially protected (for example Alpine Cyclamen, Showy Mullein, Greater Pasque Flower, Dwarf Iris, Black False Hellbore, and 18 types of orchid). In the western part are submontane beechwood with fir and yew, which toward the east turn into stands of oak-hornbeam wood. Among the rarer species are Cornelian Cherry, Common Juniper, Common Cotoneaster, and wild cherry. In localities subject to temperature inversion we find Sycamore Maples, European Bladdernut, and alpine rose. Of the animal kingdom, 65 species of mammal make their home in Podyjí National Park (including the Bicolored Shrew, Field Vole, Brandt’s Bat, and European Otter), 152 species of birds, of which two thirds nest here (for example the Black stork – symbol of the Podyjí NP, Hoopoe, Kingfisher, Honey Buzzard, and Eurasian Eagle-owl), seven species of reptile (including European Green Lizard, and Aesculapian snake), fourteen species of amphibian (Great Crested Newt, Fire Salamander, and several types of frog), and a large number of insects, such as the Praying Mantis, Rhinoceros Beetle, Owlfly, Mantispid, Stag Beetle, Great Capricorn Beetle, and twelve specially-protected species of butterfly. The fish population on the Dyje River in the national park was negatively affected by the construction of the Vranov Dam in the 1930s. Since then the current of the Dyje River downstream from the dam has been colder. The current is different too, adjusted to the needs of the electric power station on the dam instead of the needs of the fish. The number of species has declined and the river has changed from a barbell zone to a trout zone, and it also prevents fish from migrating upstream. In 1965 the Znojmo dam was built, preventing fish from migrating downstream as well. Even so the environment in Podyjí is of rare quality, paradoxically thanks to the former Iron Curtain, when most of this area lay within the forbidden border zone. Except for the forest cuts for the border fences, which are almost overgrown today (but can still be seen from the Železné schody lookout), nature in Podyjí has been left to natural processes without major human influence. Another great benefit for the Podyjí has been the creation of the Thayatal National Park (13.3 km²) on the Austrian side of the river as of January 1, 2000. This created a bilateral protected national park Podyjí – Thayatal, which has produced even benefits for nature (for example in the form of joint projects by environmentalists from the two countries), exchange of data and experience, etc.) as well as for visitors, who can use the interconnected network of hiking trails and bi-lingual information panels. n Dyje River Valley The Podyjí National Park can be discovered on foot along more than 80 km of hiking trails marked with the Czech Tourist Club’s classic stripes and arrows, and in the Thayatal along 25 km of route marked with colored panels. These easy to moderate trails are laid out so as to take you to all the points of interest in the area, and introduce you to the characteristic features of this unique area. If you make use of the connections and crossroads between the two, you can walk the whole area from Vranov nad Dyjí in the west to the Havranice heath and the town of Znojmo in the east. At important sites on both sides, multi-lingual information tables are placed to tell you about the natural and historic points of interest in this area. You can also get information at the visitor center above the town of Hardegg. From spring to fall both parks offer a number of guided thematic walks and rides. n Alpine rose 15 14 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain n Bodies of water play an important role in the green belt of South Moravia The greatest jewels of the South Moravian Green Belt are the Podyjí National Park and the Dolní Morava Biosphere Reserve, which includes the Pálava Hills Protected Landscape Area, the Lednice-Valtice Area, and the region of floodplain forests south of Břeclav to the confluence of the Dyje (Thaya) and Morava (March) Rivers. It is remarkable that besides the border with Austria, or the former Iron Curtain, the entire territory of the South Moravian green belt unites the Dyje River flowing through the countryside from west to east. The Dyje thus forms the second backbone of the green belt of South Moravia, which in several places also corresponds to the first, the country’s border with Austria. The hiking trails of the South Moravian green belt, which we will talk about later, are almost exclusively concentrated in the Podyjí National Park and the Dolní Morava Biosphere Reserve. The marked tourist trails referred to in the text can be found in the map segments at the end of this brochure. Podyjí National Park and Thayatal The Podyjí National Park was formed out of the former protected landscape area as of July 1, 1991. It protects the 40-km-long and up to 220-meterdeep Dyje River canyon between Vranov nad Dyjí and Znojmo. Covering an area of only 63 km² (and 29 km² of protected buffer zone) it is the country’s smallest national park; but the range of its natural wealth is comparable to some of the largest protected areas. The area merits its highest of category nature protection not only for the deep river valley, one of the most unspoiled in the CR, but also the heath and steppe habitat on its Eastern edge. In the Podyjí we find plants and animal species typical for the cooler Hereynicum areas of Central Europe, with representatives of warmer Pannonian from the former Yugoslavia and Hungary. This is reflected in the large populations and variety of flora and fauna in the Podyjí National Park. There are more than 1,300 species of higher plants, of which several dozen are specially protected (for example Alpine Cyclamen, Showy Mullein, Greater Pasque Flower, Dwarf Iris, Black False Hellbore, and 18 types of orchid). In the western part are submontane beechwood with fir and yew, which toward the east turn into stands of oak-hornbeam wood. Among the rarer species are Cornelian Cherry, Common Juniper, Common Cotoneaster, and wild cherry. In localities subject to temperature inversion we find Sycamore Maples, European Bladdernut, and alpine rose. Of the animal kingdom, 65 species of mammal make their home in Podyjí National Park (including the Bicolored Shrew, Field Vole, Brandt’s Bat, and European Otter), 152 species of birds, of which two thirds nest here (for example the Black stork – symbol of the Podyjí NP, Hoopoe, Kingfisher, Honey Buzzard, and Eurasian Eagle-owl), seven species of reptile (including European Green Lizard, and Aesculapian snake), fourteen species of amphibian (Great Crested Newt, Fire Salamander, and several types of frog), and a large number of insects, such as the Praying Mantis, Rhinoceros Beetle, Owlfly, Mantispid, Stag Beetle, Great Capricorn Beetle, and twelve specially-protected species of butterfly. The fish population on the Dyje River in the national park was negatively affected by the construction of the Vranov Dam in the 1930s. Since then the current of the Dyje River downstream from the dam has been colder. The current is different too, adjusted to the needs of the electric power station on the dam instead of the needs of the fish. The number of species has declined and the river has changed from a barbell zone to a trout zone, and it also prevents fish from migrating upstream. In 1965 the Znojmo dam was built, preventing fish from migrating downstream as well. Even so the environment in Podyjí is of rare quality, paradoxically thanks to the former Iron Curtain, when most of this area lay within the forbidden border zone. Except for the forest cuts for the border fences, which are almost overgrown today (but can still be seen from the Železné schody lookout), nature in Podyjí has been left to natural processes without major human influence. Another great benefit for the Podyjí has been the creation of the Thayatal National Park (13.3 km²) on the Austrian side of the river as of January 1, 2000. This created a bilateral protected national park Podyjí – Thayatal, which has produced even benefits for nature (for example in the form of joint projects by environmentalists from the two countries), exchange of data and experience, etc.) as well as for visitors, who can use the interconnected network of hiking trails and bi-lingual information panels. n Dyje River Valley The Podyjí National Park can be discovered on foot along more than 80 km of hiking trails marked with the Czech Tourist Club’s classic stripes and arrows, and in the Thayatal along 25 km of route marked with colored panels. These easy to moderate trails are laid out so as to take you to all the points of interest in the area, and introduce you to the characteristic features of this unique area. If you make use of the connections and crossroads between the two, you can walk the whole area from Vranov nad Dyjí in the west to the Havranice heath and the town of Znojmo in the east. At important sites on both sides, multi-lingual information tables are placed to tell you about the natural and historic points of interest in this area. You can also get information at the visitor center above the town of Hardegg. From spring to fall both parks offer a number of guided thematic walks and rides. n Alpine rose 15 16 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain north. Your trail will take you through a large area of heath (which blooms beautifully purple in the Indian Summer), containing rare thermophilic species of plants and insects. In the following list you will find more historically and touristically interesting and attractive places n Green Lizard n Black Stork You can find the calendar of events at (www.nppodyji.cz a www.np-thayatal.at). ders of the Dyje meet – the Austrian Umlauf and the Ostroh in Moravia. Beside the unforgettable scenery of the deep river valley, there is also a fine view from here of the nearby ruined castle of Nový Hrad. When touring the park you won’t find crowds of tourists. You’ll have the time and the peace to enjoy the views from the overlooks high above the Dyjí River canyon, with its slopes adorned with healthy forests and numerous rock outcroppings and scree fields. Don’t miss the rock landing with obelisk above Ledové sluje, and the Smugglers’ Trail (on the red-marked hiking trail), which leads to it from the south on the edge of a steep forested slope on the Moravian side of the border. The Dyje River quietly hums at the bottom, or rushes loudly in places where small dams were built to service the water mills there. All that is left of the mills today are some old foundations and the meadows where they had their barns and outbuildings. Today these meadows are valued for their rich variety of wildflowers, which in turn support many insects, including a great variety of butterflies. Last but not least are the marvelous views down into the Dyje canyon from the left bank above the Znojmo reservoir at the Králův stolec overlook, and from Sealsfield’s Rock overlook on the right bank. The Austrian side of the Dyje River valley is best explored via the red-marked hiking trail “Thaytalweg” between Hardegg and the ruined castle Kaja, which is probably the most beautiful marked trail in the Thayatal Park. About halfway through you come to a narrow rock formation where two mighty mean- On the Moravian side, the river and meadows are best discovered via the yellow and blue hiking trail following the big meander and the Šobes vineyard. Here you can observe life on the river from two suspended foot bridges directly over the Dyje. And while you’re in Šobes, don’t forget to visit its famous vineyard, one of the most beautiful in all of Europe, on the north bank of the river facing south. The grapevine has been grown here since the Middle Ages, while the locality has been inhabited since the Stone Age. Right by the vineyard there is a stand where during the tourist season you can taste wine from this vineyard (mainly Pinot Gris and Blanc, Rhine Riesling and Welsch Riesling). The extraordinary Šobes locality produced wines served at the table of the Czech kings. From the trail junction Pod Šobesem, over the bridge and meadow on the marked trails is a little less than a kilometer. You can admire some other vineyards on the eastern edge of both national parks above the winemaking towns of Retzbach, Hnanice, Havraníky, Popice, and Konice, where the rows of vines stretch out towards the eastern horizon, and southward into Austria. Distant vistas are offered by a hike along the yellow and red trails, from the pilgrimage site of Heiliger Stein to the south, to the town of Znojmo in the 17 which you should not miss in your wanderings through Podyjí and Thayatal National Parks: 1) The smallest town in Austria, Hardegg, is set harmonically into the narrow basin of the Fugnitz stream at its confluence with the Dyje. It is dominated by a castle atop the rock, the origins of n Marked hiking trails in the Podyjí NP and Hardegg overlook. n Rock formations near Šobes nSuspension bridge over the Dyje River below Šobes. 16 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain north. Your trail will take you through a large area of heath (which blooms beautifully purple in the Indian Summer), containing rare thermophilic species of plants and insects. In the following list you will find more historically and touristically interesting and attractive places n Green Lizard n Black Stork You can find the calendar of events at (www.nppodyji.cz a www.np-thayatal.at). ders of the Dyje meet – the Austrian Umlauf and the Ostroh in Moravia. Beside the unforgettable scenery of the deep river valley, there is also a fine view from here of the nearby ruined castle of Nový Hrad. When touring the park you won’t find crowds of tourists. You’ll have the time and the peace to enjoy the views from the overlooks high above the Dyjí River canyon, with its slopes adorned with healthy forests and numerous rock outcroppings and scree fields. Don’t miss the rock landing with obelisk above Ledové sluje, and the Smugglers’ Trail (on the red-marked hiking trail), which leads to it from the south on the edge of a steep forested slope on the Moravian side of the border. The Dyje River quietly hums at the bottom, or rushes loudly in places where small dams were built to service the water mills there. All that is left of the mills today are some old foundations and the meadows where they had their barns and outbuildings. Today these meadows are valued for their rich variety of wildflowers, which in turn support many insects, including a great variety of butterflies. Last but not least are the marvelous views down into the Dyje canyon from the left bank above the Znojmo reservoir at the Králův stolec overlook, and from Sealsfield’s Rock overlook on the right bank. The Austrian side of the Dyje River valley is best explored via the red-marked hiking trail “Thaytalweg” between Hardegg and the ruined castle Kaja, which is probably the most beautiful marked trail in the Thayatal Park. About halfway through you come to a narrow rock formation where two mighty mean- On the Moravian side, the river and meadows are best discovered via the yellow and blue hiking trail following the big meander and the Šobes vineyard. Here you can observe life on the river from two suspended foot bridges directly over the Dyje. And while you’re in Šobes, don’t forget to visit its famous vineyard, one of the most beautiful in all of Europe, on the north bank of the river facing south. The grapevine has been grown here since the Middle Ages, while the locality has been inhabited since the Stone Age. Right by the vineyard there is a stand where during the tourist season you can taste wine from this vineyard (mainly Pinot Gris and Blanc, Rhine Riesling and Welsch Riesling). The extraordinary Šobes locality produced wines served at the table of the Czech kings. From the trail junction Pod Šobesem, over the bridge and meadow on the marked trails is a little less than a kilometer. You can admire some other vineyards on the eastern edge of both national parks above the winemaking towns of Retzbach, Hnanice, Havraníky, Popice, and Konice, where the rows of vines stretch out towards the eastern horizon, and southward into Austria. Distant vistas are offered by a hike along the yellow and red trails, from the pilgrimage site of Heiliger Stein to the south, to the town of Znojmo in the 17 which you should not miss in your wanderings through Podyjí and Thayatal National Parks: 1) The smallest town in Austria, Hardegg, is set harmonically into the narrow basin of the Fugnitz stream at its confluence with the Dyje. It is dominated by a castle atop the rock, the origins of n Marked hiking trails in the Podyjí NP and Hardegg overlook. n Rock formations near Šobes nSuspension bridge over the Dyje River below Šobes. 18 Greenways through European history and nature n The former signal road in the east part of the Podyjí is lined by vineyards perfect for nordic walking. The Znovin Znojmo winery’s information panel tells about the local wine tradition and local points of interest. Don’t resist the temptation to visit one of the wine cellar streets and taste the excellent wine being offered. which go back to the 10th century. The village is so picturesque that it became a popular summer destination back in the late 19th century. That era was ended by the Second World War, and the period from 1948 to 1989 when the Iron Curtain made Hardegg the “town at the end of the world”, as the population moved away and the economy declined. Reopening of the border bridge across the Dyje in 1990 on the initiative of the local citizens brought the slow revival of cross-border tourism. Today Hardegg is the heart of the Thayathal National Park and the main gateway to the hiking trails in the area. From the town, its castle, and the Dyje River valley there are excellent views of the nearby rock formations: Einsiedler, Hennerweg, Maxplateau, Reginafelsen, and the Hardegg overlook over on the Moravian side. 2)The ruins of the hunting castle Nový Hrádek stand amidst the thick forest of the Podyjí’s central part. From its observation platform there is a spectacular view of the Dyje meandering around Places at former Iron Curtain 19 Hallamassková overlook, Mniszek Cross, and Tanečnice). The Clary Cross overlook gives the best view of the dam and water at the Vranov Reservoir, which invites you for a cool refreshing swim in the summertime. the Ostroha on the Moravian side and the Umlaufberg on the Austrian side. The relief of the terrain gives the impression of three rivers flowing around the castle. 3)The 800-year-old castle ruins of Kaja not far from Merkersdorf in Austria stand on a rocky crest surrounded by two streams. From the 23-mhigh tower there is a beautiful view of the forest in the Thayatal National Park in the valley of the Kajabach stream, and further onward within the Podyjí National Park. The castle, which was visited frequently from 1252 to 1278 by Czech King Přemysl Otakar II., features the residential hall of the medieval castle, fountain, armory, knightly hall, chapel, and dungeon tower. 4)Vranov nad Dyjí is commanded by its Baroque pearl of a chateau, rising high on a cliff above a bend in the Dyje River. From the chateau one looks down at the village and neighboring slopes, each with their own favorite overlook points: 5)The royal town of Znojmo, high on the left bank of the Dyje River valley, is besides Hardegg and Vranov one of the three main gateways to the Podyjí National Park and Thayatal. In the historic town center, which is an urban moment zone, you will find much of the old town wall still standing, along with old townhouses, and several churches and monasteries, Znojmo castle, and the town’s extensive, up to four-story underground catacombs from the 13th to 17th century. The Romanesque Rotunda of St. Katharine dating to 1037, with frescoes from 1134, are a national cultural monument. The enormous Loucký Monastery, though still unrestored, is worth a visit; it includes a museum of wine barrel making and the wine archive of the Znovín Znojmo winery. The atmosphere of the town is enhanced by the terraces above the Dyje River, which wind with their little paths and rocky overlooks. The prettiest view into the valley is from the gallery of St. Václav’s Chapel or from the Hradišťě Terraces, you see the Znojmo Reservoir, and a fine technical monument, the 48-m-high and 220-m-long viaduct over the Dyje valley dating from 1871. The best views of the entire town are found from the top of the town hall’s 80-meter-high tower – in good weather you can n Chateau Vranov nad Dyjí. n Plaque commemorating the re-opening of the border between the CR and Austria in April, 1990, and a view of Hardegg from the Hardegg overlok. 18 Greenways through European history and nature n The former signal road in the east part of the Podyjí is lined by vineyards perfect for nordic walking. The Znovin Znojmo winery’s information panel tells about the local wine tradition and local points of interest. Don’t resist the temptation to visit one of the wine cellar streets and taste the excellent wine being offered. which go back to the 10th century. The village is so picturesque that it became a popular summer destination back in the late 19th century. That era was ended by the Second World War, and the period from 1948 to 1989 when the Iron Curtain made Hardegg the “town at the end of the world”, as the population moved away and the economy declined. Reopening of the border bridge across the Dyje in 1990 on the initiative of the local citizens brought the slow revival of cross-border tourism. Today Hardegg is the heart of the Thayathal National Park and the main gateway to the hiking trails in the area. From the town, its castle, and the Dyje River valley there are excellent views of the nearby rock formations: Einsiedler, Hennerweg, Maxplateau, Reginafelsen, and the Hardegg overlook over on the Moravian side. 2)The ruins of the hunting castle Nový Hrádek stand amidst the thick forest of the Podyjí’s central part. From its observation platform there is a spectacular view of the Dyje meandering around Places at former Iron Curtain 19 Hallamassková overlook, Mniszek Cross, and Tanečnice). The Clary Cross overlook gives the best view of the dam and water at the Vranov Reservoir, which invites you for a cool refreshing swim in the summertime. the Ostroha on the Moravian side and the Umlaufberg on the Austrian side. The relief of the terrain gives the impression of three rivers flowing around the castle. 3)The 800-year-old castle ruins of Kaja not far from Merkersdorf in Austria stand on a rocky crest surrounded by two streams. From the 23-mhigh tower there is a beautiful view of the forest in the Thayatal National Park in the valley of the Kajabach stream, and further onward within the Podyjí National Park. The castle, which was visited frequently from 1252 to 1278 by Czech King Přemysl Otakar II., features the residential hall of the medieval castle, fountain, armory, knightly hall, chapel, and dungeon tower. 4)Vranov nad Dyjí is commanded by its Baroque pearl of a chateau, rising high on a cliff above a bend in the Dyje River. From the chateau one looks down at the village and neighboring slopes, each with their own favorite overlook points: 5)The royal town of Znojmo, high on the left bank of the Dyje River valley, is besides Hardegg and Vranov one of the three main gateways to the Podyjí National Park and Thayatal. In the historic town center, which is an urban moment zone, you will find much of the old town wall still standing, along with old townhouses, and several churches and monasteries, Znojmo castle, and the town’s extensive, up to four-story underground catacombs from the 13th to 17th century. The Romanesque Rotunda of St. Katharine dating to 1037, with frescoes from 1134, are a national cultural monument. The enormous Loucký Monastery, though still unrestored, is worth a visit; it includes a museum of wine barrel making and the wine archive of the Znovín Znojmo winery. The atmosphere of the town is enhanced by the terraces above the Dyje River, which wind with their little paths and rocky overlooks. The prettiest view into the valley is from the gallery of St. Václav’s Chapel or from the Hradišťě Terraces, you see the Znojmo Reservoir, and a fine technical monument, the 48-m-high and 220-m-long viaduct over the Dyje valley dating from 1871. The best views of the entire town are found from the top of the town hall’s 80-meter-high tower – in good weather you can n Chateau Vranov nad Dyjí. n Plaque commemorating the re-opening of the border between the CR and Austria in April, 1990, and a view of Hardegg from the Hardegg overlok. 20 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain n The Pálava Hills from the north. see not only the Pálava Hills to the east, but the Austrian Alps to the south as well. Znojmo’s biggest festival, during which the town reverts to the era of King Jan of Luxembourg, is the annual wine harvest in October, with a medieval procession and crafts market. 6)You will find more information about the Iron Curtain Memorial in the village of Čížov on page 11. Dolní Morava Biosphere Reserve The Dolní Morava Biosphere Reserve lies in the southernmost tip of the South Moravia region along the borders with Austria and Slovakia, with an area of 320 km². Thanks to its natural and cultural wealth the Dolní Morava represents a unique territory in the Czech Republic and all of Europe. There are few other places where the relationship between people and nature is in such symbiosis, producing a picturesque, cultivated countryside. On the other hand the alluvial landscape so highly valued today was originally created in a large part by humans’ negative impact on nature. The colonization of the highland watersheds of the Dyje and Morava Rivers in medieval times resulted in major deforestation and extensive erosion. Sediment was carried downstream and deposited in the lowlands, creating new soil layers and changing the vegetation in the newly-created swampland, floodplain forest, and the other elements of the ecosystem dependent on them. On the other hand it was quite recently that both the upper and lower sections of the Dyje were severely regulated (for example by the construction of the Nové Mlyny Reservoir north of the Pálava Hills. This restricted the regular spring flooding of the area, and some localities were in danger of drying out. Controlled flooding was introduced later to compensate. The western part of the reserve is dominated by the Pálava Hills, visible from afar across the surrounding flat countryside. They are capped by white limestone cliffs that host dry-loving grasses, bushes, and rock and forest steppes. To the east lies the less-craggy plateau of the Milovice Forest, with thermophilic hornbeam growth and Pannonian oakhornbeam woods; the forest and the Pálava Hills together form the Pálava Protected Landscape Area. The situation of the Pálava at the edge of two zoogeographic zones, Pannonian steppe and Central European deciduous forest make the region quite unique. It is one of the warmest and driest localities in the CR, and is at the northern edge of distribution of dozens of Southern European plant and animal species (for example Blue Oat Grass, Large Flower Sandwort, Ethiopian Sage, and Bush Cricket). Because of this the area is the most species-diverse in all of the CR, with more than 200 species found only here (for example Stipa eriocaulis or endemit, and the most unique species – Dianthus lumnitzeri palaviensis). And thanks to their caves, limestone crevasses, and old trees, the Pálava Hills have one of the richest bat populations in the CR. 21 n A sample of the flookplain terrain along the Dyje. Pálava is also one of three bird areas in the Dolní Morava reserve that are part of the Natura 2000 project. The species Hoopoe, Barred Warbler, Syrian Woodpecker and Corn Bunting all have their largest populations in the CR right here. Křivé Lake national nature reserve near the Nové Mlyny dam is the beginning of a belt of floodplain forest along the Dyje River that hosts a large colony of the Great Cormorant. To the east of the Pálava Hills lies the Lednice-Valtice Area, tucked into the arc of the Dyje river turning towards the southeast as far as the small chateau of Lány south of Břeclav. Here, over the course of more than six hundred years, the family Liechtenstein built and composed a landscape that is regarded today as the largest artificially-cultivated landscape in Europe. In a sense it is actually a nature park interlaced with floodplain forests and alluvial meadows along the Dyje River, its side channels and oxbow lakes, its chateau parks with their classicist follies from the 18th and 19th centuries. For these reasons but also the Lednice-Valtice Area was added to the UNESCO List of World Heritage sites in 1996. The Lednice Fishponds in the area (part of the Natura 2000 system of bird areas, and a national nature reserve) are an important locality for Graylag Goose, Spoonbill Duck, Red-crested Pochard, and especially the Black-crowned Night Heron (Nycticorax nycticorax), which has two -thirds of its entire population in the CR nesting here. n Upupa epops, or Hoopoe (above) and Iris humilis Georgi subsp. arenaria. Foto archive CHKO Pálava. 20 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain n The Pálava Hills from the north. see not only the Pálava Hills to the east, but the Austrian Alps to the south as well. Znojmo’s biggest festival, during which the town reverts to the era of King Jan of Luxembourg, is the annual wine harvest in October, with a medieval procession and crafts market. 6)You will find more information about the Iron Curtain Memorial in the village of Čížov on page 11. Dolní Morava Biosphere Reserve The Dolní Morava Biosphere Reserve lies in the southernmost tip of the South Moravia region along the borders with Austria and Slovakia, with an area of 320 km². Thanks to its natural and cultural wealth the Dolní Morava represents a unique territory in the Czech Republic and all of Europe. There are few other places where the relationship between people and nature is in such symbiosis, producing a picturesque, cultivated countryside. On the other hand the alluvial landscape so highly valued today was originally created in a large part by humans’ negative impact on nature. The colonization of the highland watersheds of the Dyje and Morava Rivers in medieval times resulted in major deforestation and extensive erosion. Sediment was carried downstream and deposited in the lowlands, creating new soil layers and changing the vegetation in the newly-created swampland, floodplain forest, and the other elements of the ecosystem dependent on them. On the other hand it was quite recently that both the upper and lower sections of the Dyje were severely regulated (for example by the construction of the Nové Mlyny Reservoir north of the Pálava Hills. This restricted the regular spring flooding of the area, and some localities were in danger of drying out. Controlled flooding was introduced later to compensate. The western part of the reserve is dominated by the Pálava Hills, visible from afar across the surrounding flat countryside. They are capped by white limestone cliffs that host dry-loving grasses, bushes, and rock and forest steppes. To the east lies the less-craggy plateau of the Milovice Forest, with thermophilic hornbeam growth and Pannonian oakhornbeam woods; the forest and the Pálava Hills together form the Pálava Protected Landscape Area. The situation of the Pálava at the edge of two zoogeographic zones, Pannonian steppe and Central European deciduous forest make the region quite unique. It is one of the warmest and driest localities in the CR, and is at the northern edge of distribution of dozens of Southern European plant and animal species (for example Blue Oat Grass, Large Flower Sandwort, Ethiopian Sage, and Bush Cricket). Because of this the area is the most species-diverse in all of the CR, with more than 200 species found only here (for example Stipa eriocaulis or endemit, and the most unique species – Dianthus lumnitzeri palaviensis). And thanks to their caves, limestone crevasses, and old trees, the Pálava Hills have one of the richest bat populations in the CR. 21 n A sample of the flookplain terrain along the Dyje. Pálava is also one of three bird areas in the Dolní Morava reserve that are part of the Natura 2000 project. The species Hoopoe, Barred Warbler, Syrian Woodpecker and Corn Bunting all have their largest populations in the CR right here. Křivé Lake national nature reserve near the Nové Mlyny dam is the beginning of a belt of floodplain forest along the Dyje River that hosts a large colony of the Great Cormorant. To the east of the Pálava Hills lies the Lednice-Valtice Area, tucked into the arc of the Dyje river turning towards the southeast as far as the small chateau of Lány south of Břeclav. Here, over the course of more than six hundred years, the family Liechtenstein built and composed a landscape that is regarded today as the largest artificially-cultivated landscape in Europe. In a sense it is actually a nature park interlaced with floodplain forests and alluvial meadows along the Dyje River, its side channels and oxbow lakes, its chateau parks with their classicist follies from the 18th and 19th centuries. For these reasons but also the Lednice-Valtice Area was added to the UNESCO List of World Heritage sites in 1996. The Lednice Fishponds in the area (part of the Natura 2000 system of bird areas, and a national nature reserve) are an important locality for Graylag Goose, Spoonbill Duck, Red-crested Pochard, and especially the Black-crowned Night Heron (Nycticorax nycticorax), which has two -thirds of its entire population in the CR nesting here. n Upupa epops, or Hoopoe (above) and Iris humilis Georgi subsp. arenaria. Foto archive CHKO Pálava. 22 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain The remaining part of the Dolní Morava reserve lies in the floodplain triangle south of Břeclav, bounded by the Dyje River and the border with Austria on the west, and the Morava River and the border with Slovakia on the east. The territory is one big floodplain of these rivers and the smaller river Kyjovka, which share a network of canals, old blind channels, and the swamps between them. From an ecological standpoint it is one of the most valuable, richest, and most dynamically changing landscapes in the CR. The entire area is basically uninhabited by man, but there are plenty of animals, especially protected ones. We find eleven species of amphibian (for example the Common Spadefoot Toad, Danube Crested Newt, and Swedish Swamp Frog); of the mammals there is a strong population of European Beaver and permanent inhabitation by River Otter. The Soutok reserve, which occupies practically the entire triangle, provides a home for many deer and boar as well. The Soutok-Tvrdonice area is an important ornithological locality, and is part of the Natura 2000 system. At least 205 bird species have been observed here, among them twelve different birds of prey, including Red Kite and Brown Kite, White-tailed Eagle, Saker Falcon, Honey Buzzard, and Eastern Imperial Eagle, the rarest bird of prey nesting in the CR. Especially on solitary dead oaks in the meadows near Pohansko and Lány, the eye of the visitor may be drawn by the number of large nests belonging to the White stork and Grey Heron, in which you can see busy activity throughout the season. Within the floodplain vegetation, on the other hand, you can observe several pairs of Black Stork, and in hollow trees Black Woodpecker, Stock Dover, Collared Flycatcher, Middle Spotted Woodpecker, Short-toed Treecreeper, and Grey-Headed Woodpecker. The lowland meadows are the home for large populations of Corn Crake. The unregulated sections of the Dyje and Kyovka Rivers and their banks are a perfect habitat for the Sand Martin, Little Ringed Plover, Common Kingfisher, and Common Sandpiper. n From August to November the mowed meadows of the alluvial countryside south of Břeclav are scatted with the very poisonous autumn crocus, or naked lady (above). The skeletons of centuries-old oaks are amost a symbol of Pohansko (below). The Dolní Morava reserve offers wonderful opportunities for hiking outings where you can encounter this area’s incredible natural and cultural wealth. A number of hiking trails and instructional routes can be found in the Pálava Hills as well as the LedniceValtice Area. The area of floodplain forest and meadows south of Pohansko has no marked trails, but the former Iron Curtain signal roads can be used, and n Improvised trail markings south of Pohansko will guide you along the signal road and a walking trail to where the Morava and Dyje Rivers meet (below). 23 22 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain The remaining part of the Dolní Morava reserve lies in the floodplain triangle south of Břeclav, bounded by the Dyje River and the border with Austria on the west, and the Morava River and the border with Slovakia on the east. The territory is one big floodplain of these rivers and the smaller river Kyjovka, which share a network of canals, old blind channels, and the swamps between them. From an ecological standpoint it is one of the most valuable, richest, and most dynamically changing landscapes in the CR. The entire area is basically uninhabited by man, but there are plenty of animals, especially protected ones. We find eleven species of amphibian (for example the Common Spadefoot Toad, Danube Crested Newt, and Swedish Swamp Frog); of the mammals there is a strong population of European Beaver and permanent inhabitation by River Otter. The Soutok reserve, which occupies practically the entire triangle, provides a home for many deer and boar as well. The Soutok-Tvrdonice area is an important ornithological locality, and is part of the Natura 2000 system. At least 205 bird species have been observed here, among them twelve different birds of prey, including Red Kite and Brown Kite, White-tailed Eagle, Saker Falcon, Honey Buzzard, and Eastern Imperial Eagle, the rarest bird of prey nesting in the CR. Especially on solitary dead oaks in the meadows near Pohansko and Lány, the eye of the visitor may be drawn by the number of large nests belonging to the White stork and Grey Heron, in which you can see busy activity throughout the season. Within the floodplain vegetation, on the other hand, you can observe several pairs of Black Stork, and in hollow trees Black Woodpecker, Stock Dover, Collared Flycatcher, Middle Spotted Woodpecker, Short-toed Treecreeper, and Grey-Headed Woodpecker. The lowland meadows are the home for large populations of Corn Crake. The unregulated sections of the Dyje and Kyovka Rivers and their banks are a perfect habitat for the Sand Martin, Little Ringed Plover, Common Kingfisher, and Common Sandpiper. n From August to November the mowed meadows of the alluvial countryside south of Břeclav are scatted with the very poisonous autumn crocus, or naked lady (above). The skeletons of centuries-old oaks are amost a symbol of Pohansko (below). The Dolní Morava reserve offers wonderful opportunities for hiking outings where you can encounter this area’s incredible natural and cultural wealth. A number of hiking trails and instructional routes can be found in the Pálava Hills as well as the LedniceValtice Area. The area of floodplain forest and meadows south of Pohansko has no marked trails, but the former Iron Curtain signal roads can be used, and n Improvised trail markings south of Pohansko will guide you along the signal road and a walking trail to where the Morava and Dyje Rivers meet (below). 23 24 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain n Mikulov chateau with the help of a map it’s easy to get all the way to the confluence of the Dyje and Morava Rivers on the Czech-Austrian-Slovak border, and from there find a way back to civilization. The information centers in Břeclav, Lednice, Mikulov, and Valtice will gladly provide you with maps, guides, and further information about this region. The Pálava Hills are best discovered along the fourteen-kilometer red hiking trail, which will take you from Mikulov to Dolní Věstonice along the entire Pálava ridge. This is a physically more demanding day trip on which you will have to climb and descend several hundred meters, but if you are game you will not be disappointed. The rewards are magnificent views out into the picturesque countryside, and the enchanting steppe flora that bloom on the ridge’s back. It is richest and most beautiful in the spring, when it is in full bloom. Hundreds of purple and yellow Dwarf Irises, and dozens of scattered Phesant’s Eye, Greater Pasque Flower, and Basket of Gold, or Gold Alyssum. On the trail you may scare up a handsome Green Lizard. You can learn about the nature and geology of the area on the Turold and Děvín instructional trails that tie into the red trial. Your outing to the Pálava will also be an excursion to longago history. You can visit the ruins of the gothic castles of Sirotčí hrádek and Dívčí hrady, marking the n Valtice Chateau 25 panorama of the Pálava; you will go to places where once stood Slavonic fortified settlements, Celtic oppida, and where mammoth hunters lived in the late Stone Age. The dust of their ancient village has yielded a world-famous archeological artifact – the Venus of Věstonice, dating to 29,000 – 25,000 B.C. Besides the Pálava’s natural beauty and rich history, the region is also known today for its wine culture. The slopes of the Pálava Hills are lined with vineyard rows cultivated by local vintners for centuries, producing excellent wines while at the same time creating a unique cultured landscape. On the red trail you will encounter some of these vineyards, but if you want to devote some more time to wine you should take the Mikulov Wine Trail, which connects Mikulov with the other winemaking village in the area, with information panels to tell you about the local wine tradition. Probably the loveliest wine village that shouldn’t be missed is Pavlov, which is also an urban monument reserve for its rural folk architecture. The town of Mikulov, at the southern tip of the Pálava Hills, is the cultural center of this region, and definitely deserves a visit. Its imposing Baroque chateau provides the town its main feature. On the historic town square you can admire several Renaissance town houses with figural sgraffito decoration and arcades on the courtyard. Important monuments include the tomb of the Dietrichstein family that ruled here from the 16th century until 1945. After walking around the town center, make sure to take the instructional trail to Mikulov’s Jewish Quarter, where thirteen plaques will tell you something about the former ghetto district, which housed the second-largest Jewish community in the Czech lands after Prague. The best views of Mikulov are offered by Kozí hrádek, the chateau, and the top of the Holy Hill, which you can reach along the bluemarked trail along the Stations of the Cross. On the hill and the nature reserve that surrounds it stands the chapel of St. Sebastian, which can be seen from far across the countryside. The amazing view and pure magic of this place will compel you to stand for a time in wonder. After the Pálava Hills the Lednice-Valtice Area offers more relaxed trails with minimal elevation changes. Probably the only uphill climb you’ll have to make is the walk up to the colonnade Reistna Hill overlooking Valtice, from which you can see the n Former signal road leading up the Reistna (above), and the view of the Pálava Hills from the instructional wine trail. entire Lednice-Valtice area, the Pálava, and far into Austria. During the Cold War an observation point was set up here by the border guards from which they had the whole area under surveillance. From the Reistna you can see the many hectares of vineyard surrounding Valtice, once the main residence of the Liechtenstien family, today the “wine capital” of the Czech Republic. If you’d like to learn something about the local wine tradition you can 24 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain n Mikulov chateau with the help of a map it’s easy to get all the way to the confluence of the Dyje and Morava Rivers on the Czech-Austrian-Slovak border, and from there find a way back to civilization. The information centers in Břeclav, Lednice, Mikulov, and Valtice will gladly provide you with maps, guides, and further information about this region. The Pálava Hills are best discovered along the fourteen-kilometer red hiking trail, which will take you from Mikulov to Dolní Věstonice along the entire Pálava ridge. This is a physically more demanding day trip on which you will have to climb and descend several hundred meters, but if you are game you will not be disappointed. The rewards are magnificent views out into the picturesque countryside, and the enchanting steppe flora that bloom on the ridge’s back. It is richest and most beautiful in the spring, when it is in full bloom. Hundreds of purple and yellow Dwarf Irises, and dozens of scattered Phesant’s Eye, Greater Pasque Flower, and Basket of Gold, or Gold Alyssum. On the trail you may scare up a handsome Green Lizard. You can learn about the nature and geology of the area on the Turold and Děvín instructional trails that tie into the red trial. Your outing to the Pálava will also be an excursion to longago history. You can visit the ruins of the gothic castles of Sirotčí hrádek and Dívčí hrady, marking the n Valtice Chateau 25 panorama of the Pálava; you will go to places where once stood Slavonic fortified settlements, Celtic oppida, and where mammoth hunters lived in the late Stone Age. The dust of their ancient village has yielded a world-famous archeological artifact – the Venus of Věstonice, dating to 29,000 – 25,000 B.C. Besides the Pálava’s natural beauty and rich history, the region is also known today for its wine culture. The slopes of the Pálava Hills are lined with vineyard rows cultivated by local vintners for centuries, producing excellent wines while at the same time creating a unique cultured landscape. On the red trail you will encounter some of these vineyards, but if you want to devote some more time to wine you should take the Mikulov Wine Trail, which connects Mikulov with the other winemaking village in the area, with information panels to tell you about the local wine tradition. Probably the loveliest wine village that shouldn’t be missed is Pavlov, which is also an urban monument reserve for its rural folk architecture. The town of Mikulov, at the southern tip of the Pálava Hills, is the cultural center of this region, and definitely deserves a visit. Its imposing Baroque chateau provides the town its main feature. On the historic town square you can admire several Renaissance town houses with figural sgraffito decoration and arcades on the courtyard. Important monuments include the tomb of the Dietrichstein family that ruled here from the 16th century until 1945. After walking around the town center, make sure to take the instructional trail to Mikulov’s Jewish Quarter, where thirteen plaques will tell you something about the former ghetto district, which housed the second-largest Jewish community in the Czech lands after Prague. The best views of Mikulov are offered by Kozí hrádek, the chateau, and the top of the Holy Hill, which you can reach along the bluemarked trail along the Stations of the Cross. On the hill and the nature reserve that surrounds it stands the chapel of St. Sebastian, which can be seen from far across the countryside. The amazing view and pure magic of this place will compel you to stand for a time in wonder. After the Pálava Hills the Lednice-Valtice Area offers more relaxed trails with minimal elevation changes. Probably the only uphill climb you’ll have to make is the walk up to the colonnade Reistna Hill overlooking Valtice, from which you can see the n Former signal road leading up the Reistna (above), and the view of the Pálava Hills from the instructional wine trail. entire Lednice-Valtice area, the Pálava, and far into Austria. During the Cold War an observation point was set up here by the border guards from which they had the whole area under surveillance. From the Reistna you can see the many hectares of vineyard surrounding Valtice, once the main residence of the Liechtenstien family, today the “wine capital” of the Czech Republic. If you’d like to learn something about the local wine tradition you can 26 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 27 EuroVelo 13 By bicycle along the Iron Curtain Trail n Reistna colonnade (left). Pohansko also features several well-restored bunkers from the Czechoslovak border fortifications of 1936–1938. combine a climb up the Reistna with the 5-km-long Valtice Instructional Wine Trail, which starts on the town square and takes you through the local vineyards past 19 information panels (and along a section of the Iron Curtain signal road as well). You can end up back at Valtice’s Baroque chateau, richly decorated with sculptures and ceiling paintings. In the chateau cellar you will find the Wine Salon of the Czech Republic including full wine tasting facilities; the cellar provides you the unique opportunity to taste some of the one hundred best wines from Moravia and Bohemia. Each year the wines are chosen by the National Wine Competition, and it’s a sure thing that some of the wines will be from Valtice. For relaxation and inspiration you can walk down behind the chateau to the Tiree Chmelar Herb Garden, a nature garden that is a model for sustainable gardening. Our destination is the chateau, in the style of English Gothic, its interiors decorated with exquisite cassette ceilings. Next to the chateau stretches the oldest palm greenhouse in Europe containing exotic plants from all over the world, and a magnificent chateau park. In the park you can take a boat ride, or climb the 60-meter-tall Minaret, offering a fantastic view of the area; on the other side of the park is the romantic artificial ruin called Jan’s Castle. Between Valtice and Lednice you can choose from a combination of three marked walking trails that will take you past the most popular Romantic follies in the Lednice-Valtice Area, which date from the time of the Liechtensteins: the triumphal arch known as the Rendez-vous, the chapel of St. Hubert, the Temple of the Three Graces, the Border Chateau, Pond Chateau, and Apollo’s Temple. The 11-km-long Lednice Fishponds instructional trail takes you around three of the four Lednice ponds until you get to the Lednice chateau park; on the way eight information panels tell you about the local flora, fauna, history, and architecture. Last but not least, you can continue south from Břeclav to Pohansko, where in the 9th century there was an important fortified settlement of the Great Moravian Empire, and where today stands another romantic structure left by the Liechtensteins, the Pohansko lodge. In the Soutok game reserve the route is joined by the Pohansko instructional trail, with five infopanels telling you more about the finds at this important archaeological locality. The Niva Dyje (Dyje Lowlands) nature reserve between Lednice and Břeclav is best seen via the green-marked trail that leads from Janův Hrad (Jan’s Castle) and corresponds with the Lužní les (Floodplain Forests) instructional trail with fifteen information panels about the water regime in the floodplain forest, flood control measures, and the areas plant and animal life. The EuroVelo 13 cycling routes, also called the Iron Curtain Trail, is part of an emerging pan-European network EuroVelo. When it is finished the route will copy the line of the former Iron Curtain, which during the Cold War divided Europe into Eastern and Western blocs. With a length of 9,500 km, it leads from the Barents Sea on the Norway-Russia border to the border between Bulgaria and Turkey on the Black Sea, crossing 20 countries. In the Czech Republic it is planned to lead along 491 km of border and connect the border areas of the CR and Bavaria, and Upper and Lower Austria. The goal of the EuroVelo project, which is coordinated by the European Cycling Federation, represented in the CR by the Partnership Foundation, is to link together a backbone network of cycling routes and thus support cycling as an instrument for spending free time and an everyday means of traveling to work, school, entertainment, or shopping. At the same time the project supports sustainable tourism and regional development, environmental protection, improve the health of the population, and cultural exchange as well. At present there are 14 EuroVelo long-distance bicycle routes that are being constructed on existing or planned national bicycle routes of the individual states according to the unified criteria of the European Cycling Federation. In the CR the main coordinator of EuroVelo 13 is the Partnership Foundation, working with all of the important partners from the Czech Republic, Germany, and Austria. EuroVelo 13 in South Moravia and Lower Austria Compared to the rest of the EuroVelo 13 route along the Czech border with Germany west of the town of Aš, this part offers less demanding segments that even casual bikers can handle. Most of the trails lead along less-frequented communications, forest trails, and the former signal road, which provide sufficiently safe and comfortable surfaces. n Map of EuroVelo 13 (above) and example of Czech national bicycle route signage (left), to which the EuroVelo 13 logo will be added in 2013. 26 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 27 EuroVelo 13 By bicycle along the Iron Curtain Trail n Reistna colonnade (left). Pohansko also features several well-restored bunkers from the Czechoslovak border fortifications of 1936–1938. combine a climb up the Reistna with the 5-km-long Valtice Instructional Wine Trail, which starts on the town square and takes you through the local vineyards past 19 information panels (and along a section of the Iron Curtain signal road as well). You can end up back at Valtice’s Baroque chateau, richly decorated with sculptures and ceiling paintings. In the chateau cellar you will find the Wine Salon of the Czech Republic including full wine tasting facilities; the cellar provides you the unique opportunity to taste some of the one hundred best wines from Moravia and Bohemia. Each year the wines are chosen by the National Wine Competition, and it’s a sure thing that some of the wines will be from Valtice. For relaxation and inspiration you can walk down behind the chateau to the Tiree Chmelar Herb Garden, a nature garden that is a model for sustainable gardening. Our destination is the chateau, in the style of English Gothic, its interiors decorated with exquisite cassette ceilings. Next to the chateau stretches the oldest palm greenhouse in Europe containing exotic plants from all over the world, and a magnificent chateau park. In the park you can take a boat ride, or climb the 60-meter-tall Minaret, offering a fantastic view of the area; on the other side of the park is the romantic artificial ruin called Jan’s Castle. Between Valtice and Lednice you can choose from a combination of three marked walking trails that will take you past the most popular Romantic follies in the Lednice-Valtice Area, which date from the time of the Liechtensteins: the triumphal arch known as the Rendez-vous, the chapel of St. Hubert, the Temple of the Three Graces, the Border Chateau, Pond Chateau, and Apollo’s Temple. The 11-km-long Lednice Fishponds instructional trail takes you around three of the four Lednice ponds until you get to the Lednice chateau park; on the way eight information panels tell you about the local flora, fauna, history, and architecture. Last but not least, you can continue south from Břeclav to Pohansko, where in the 9th century there was an important fortified settlement of the Great Moravian Empire, and where today stands another romantic structure left by the Liechtensteins, the Pohansko lodge. In the Soutok game reserve the route is joined by the Pohansko instructional trail, with five infopanels telling you more about the finds at this important archaeological locality. The Niva Dyje (Dyje Lowlands) nature reserve between Lednice and Břeclav is best seen via the green-marked trail that leads from Janův Hrad (Jan’s Castle) and corresponds with the Lužní les (Floodplain Forests) instructional trail with fifteen information panels about the water regime in the floodplain forest, flood control measures, and the areas plant and animal life. The EuroVelo 13 cycling routes, also called the Iron Curtain Trail, is part of an emerging pan-European network EuroVelo. When it is finished the route will copy the line of the former Iron Curtain, which during the Cold War divided Europe into Eastern and Western blocs. With a length of 9,500 km, it leads from the Barents Sea on the Norway-Russia border to the border between Bulgaria and Turkey on the Black Sea, crossing 20 countries. In the Czech Republic it is planned to lead along 491 km of border and connect the border areas of the CR and Bavaria, and Upper and Lower Austria. The goal of the EuroVelo project, which is coordinated by the European Cycling Federation, represented in the CR by the Partnership Foundation, is to link together a backbone network of cycling routes and thus support cycling as an instrument for spending free time and an everyday means of traveling to work, school, entertainment, or shopping. At the same time the project supports sustainable tourism and regional development, environmental protection, improve the health of the population, and cultural exchange as well. At present there are 14 EuroVelo long-distance bicycle routes that are being constructed on existing or planned national bicycle routes of the individual states according to the unified criteria of the European Cycling Federation. In the CR the main coordinator of EuroVelo 13 is the Partnership Foundation, working with all of the important partners from the Czech Republic, Germany, and Austria. EuroVelo 13 in South Moravia and Lower Austria Compared to the rest of the EuroVelo 13 route along the Czech border with Germany west of the town of Aš, this part offers less demanding segments that even casual bikers can handle. Most of the trails lead along less-frequented communications, forest trails, and the former signal road, which provide sufficiently safe and comfortable surfaces. n Map of EuroVelo 13 (above) and example of Czech national bicycle route signage (left), to which the EuroVelo 13 logo will be added in 2013. 28 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 29 n Čížov In planning your outing, make use of the map segments at the end of this guide; there you will find the routes marked by a bold purple line and the EuroVelo 13 logo. On them you will find many other bicycle routes that either cross EuroVelo 13 or run concurrently with it for awhile. Especially the backbone route of Greenways Prague-Vienna, the Moravian Wine Trail, the Wienviertl Wine Trail, Liechtenstein Trail, the Brno-Vienna Bicycle Trail, EuroVelo 9, the Kamp-Thaya-March trail, Greenway Vranovsko, and Greenway Region of the Renaissance are all very inviting and can hold you in the region a good bit longer]. It’s up to you whether you’ll choose to explore the EuroVelo 13 by itself or combine it with a longer-term visit to the region and make some detours outside the corridor. This guidebook is not big enough to tell you about all the trails, but in case of interest do refer to the list of recommended links in the back. n The green and whilte logo of a smiling bike is the logo of Cyclists Welcome in the CR. n Rest stop at Vratěnín (above right) and the fields outside of Vratěnín where the spiritual legacy and the legacy of the 2nd World War stand almost side by side. If you are looking for restaurants, hotels, pensions, campgrounds, or other tourist destinations that are bike-friendly, choose those that have the Cyclists Welcome certificate. You can find an overview of certified places in the Czech Republic at www. cyklistevitani.cz. You’ll find similar businesses and services on the Austrian side at www.radviertel.at or www.weinviertel.at. Recommended segments on EuroVelo 13 Drosendorf – Vratěnín – Uherčice – Hardegg (40 km) EuroVelo 13 enters South Moravia from the west through the border crossing at the village of Vratěnín, coming from the medieval village of Dro- n The EV13 route intersects with the Liechtenstein Trail and the Moravian Wine Trail. sendorf in Austria. Just over the border, by the pond, is a nice place to sit down and relax by the Greenways Vranovsko and Greenways Region of Renaissance information panels. On the way towards Uherčice, in the fields beyond the roadside crosses and statues of the saints, you will notice the concrete bunkers built in 1936–1938 as part of the Czechoslovak fortification system prior to World War II. After passing through Uherčice you descend through the woods to the deep valley of the Dyje River, then climb up again to the picturesque hamlet of Stálky. From there until the village of Felling in Austria you ride through mildly rolling, sparsely inhabited countryside. Outside the village of Šatov with its beautiful ponds and after crossing again into Austria, the flooded quarry of Bergwerkssee offers an excellent swimming opportunity. After Felling, you enter the forest bastions of Thayatal National Park, and begin a sharp descent into the Dyje valley and the village of Hardegg with its excellent castle. Don’t miss the park’s modern visitors’ center, though you must climb to the edge of the forest by the road to Merkersdorf. Afterward, cross bridge over the Dyje River and into the Podyjí National Park. Drosendorf, the region’s tourist hub, has a lovely historic center surrounded by the longest (2 km) surviving medieval walls in Austria. This town on the Dyje is an oasis for people looking for a quiet vacation. It offers a wide range of tourist accommodation and food services. Vratěnín, Village of the Year CR for 1996, is an urban monument zone featuring 24 cultural monuments, and its intimate village commons, the fishpond and the old post office (now the town hall) are complemented by a number of wooden statues from recent sculpture workshops. Uherčice features a very large Renaissance chateau dating to the 16th century, with fine stucco and painted decoration, which suffered much damage 28 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 29 n Čížov In planning your outing, make use of the map segments at the end of this guide; there you will find the routes marked by a bold purple line and the EuroVelo 13 logo. On them you will find many other bicycle routes that either cross EuroVelo 13 or run concurrently with it for awhile. Especially the backbone route of Greenways Prague-Vienna, the Moravian Wine Trail, the Wienviertl Wine Trail, Liechtenstein Trail, the Brno-Vienna Bicycle Trail, EuroVelo 9, the Kamp-Thaya-March trail, Greenway Vranovsko, and Greenway Region of the Renaissance are all very inviting and can hold you in the region a good bit longer]. It’s up to you whether you’ll choose to explore the EuroVelo 13 by itself or combine it with a longer-term visit to the region and make some detours outside the corridor. This guidebook is not big enough to tell you about all the trails, but in case of interest do refer to the list of recommended links in the back. n The green and whilte logo of a smiling bike is the logo of Cyclists Welcome in the CR. n Rest stop at Vratěnín (above right) and the fields outside of Vratěnín where the spiritual legacy and the legacy of the 2nd World War stand almost side by side. If you are looking for restaurants, hotels, pensions, campgrounds, or other tourist destinations that are bike-friendly, choose those that have the Cyclists Welcome certificate. You can find an overview of certified places in the Czech Republic at www. cyklistevitani.cz. You’ll find similar businesses and services on the Austrian side at www.radviertel.at or www.weinviertel.at. Recommended segments on EuroVelo 13 Drosendorf – Vratěnín – Uherčice – Hardegg (40 km) EuroVelo 13 enters South Moravia from the west through the border crossing at the village of Vratěnín, coming from the medieval village of Dro- n The EV13 route intersects with the Liechtenstein Trail and the Moravian Wine Trail. sendorf in Austria. Just over the border, by the pond, is a nice place to sit down and relax by the Greenways Vranovsko and Greenways Region of Renaissance information panels. On the way towards Uherčice, in the fields beyond the roadside crosses and statues of the saints, you will notice the concrete bunkers built in 1936–1938 as part of the Czechoslovak fortification system prior to World War II. After passing through Uherčice you descend through the woods to the deep valley of the Dyje River, then climb up again to the picturesque hamlet of Stálky. From there until the village of Felling in Austria you ride through mildly rolling, sparsely inhabited countryside. Outside the village of Šatov with its beautiful ponds and after crossing again into Austria, the flooded quarry of Bergwerkssee offers an excellent swimming opportunity. After Felling, you enter the forest bastions of Thayatal National Park, and begin a sharp descent into the Dyje valley and the village of Hardegg with its excellent castle. Don’t miss the park’s modern visitors’ center, though you must climb to the edge of the forest by the road to Merkersdorf. Afterward, cross bridge over the Dyje River and into the Podyjí National Park. Drosendorf, the region’s tourist hub, has a lovely historic center surrounded by the longest (2 km) surviving medieval walls in Austria. This town on the Dyje is an oasis for people looking for a quiet vacation. It offers a wide range of tourist accommodation and food services. Vratěnín, Village of the Year CR for 1996, is an urban monument zone featuring 24 cultural monuments, and its intimate village commons, the fishpond and the old post office (now the town hall) are complemented by a number of wooden statues from recent sculpture workshops. Uherčice features a very large Renaissance chateau dating to the 16th century, with fine stucco and painted decoration, which suffered much damage 30 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain n Painted Cellar in Šatov n Uherčice chateau n Vratěnín under socialism (it was used by a cooperative farm and by the army). Extensive renovation has been going on since 1996, and the monument is slowly coming back to life. Its grounds include gardens, an English park, and an artificial castle ruins. Langau, graced by a Baroque statue of St. Jan of Nepomuck, offers refreshments and services on the banks of the Bergwerksee, and an info-trail on beekeeping. The main attraction of Riegersburg is its 18th-century chateau with Baroque, Rococo, and Classicist interiors, and a perfectly-preserved kitchen with equipment still in functioning order. Founded in 1911 in the village of Felling, the family firm Mettejka that processes mother-of-pearl is the only one of its kind left in Austria. Visitors can watch how seashells and snail shells are made into mother-of-pearl buttons and jewelry, and learn something about the history of this historic craft, which once used mussels from the Dyje and Morava Rivers (recently replaced by shells from the sea). Hardegg, the smallest town in Austria, has a wonderful medieval castle, and the visitors' center for the Thayatal National Park is also a tourist center with accommodation and food services. More information on Hardegg, Thayatal National Park, and Podyjí National Park can be found at www.np-thayatal.at a www.nppodyji.cz. Hardegg – Znojmo – Šatov (43 km) After the border bridge at Hardegg you climb steeply until the edge of the woods, and from there it’s just a few rolling ups and downs more to Čížov. On n Čížov the way be sure and stop at the Hardegg Overlook, where you will be rewarded with an outstanding view of Hardegg from above on the Moravian side. In Čižov you must stop at the Iron Curtain monument. After riding down to the Čížov fishpond the asphalt road gives way to a forest trail, connecting to the former signal road, that will take you most of the way to Podmolí. After a short excursion outside the park you reenter the woods after Mašovice, where a forest trail will take you to the Králův stolec overlook into the Dyje River valley, and the Znojmo reservoir. There is another very pretty view (of the valley, reservoir, and the town of Znojmo) from the Hradišťé Terraces. Along the Gránický creek or a smaller detour through Znojmo’s historic center n Wine cellars in Šatov n The segment between Popice and Havraníky offers some excellent resting spots. 31 30 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain n Painted Cellar in Šatov n Uherčice chateau n Vratěnín under socialism (it was used by a cooperative farm and by the army). Extensive renovation has been going on since 1996, and the monument is slowly coming back to life. Its grounds include gardens, an English park, and an artificial castle ruins. Langau, graced by a Baroque statue of St. Jan of Nepomuck, offers refreshments and services on the banks of the Bergwerksee, and an info-trail on beekeeping. The main attraction of Riegersburg is its 18th-century chateau with Baroque, Rococo, and Classicist interiors, and a perfectly-preserved kitchen with equipment still in functioning order. Founded in 1911 in the village of Felling, the family firm Mettejka that processes mother-of-pearl is the only one of its kind left in Austria. Visitors can watch how seashells and snail shells are made into mother-of-pearl buttons and jewelry, and learn something about the history of this historic craft, which once used mussels from the Dyje and Morava Rivers (recently replaced by shells from the sea). Hardegg, the smallest town in Austria, has a wonderful medieval castle, and the visitors' center for the Thayatal National Park is also a tourist center with accommodation and food services. More information on Hardegg, Thayatal National Park, and Podyjí National Park can be found at www.np-thayatal.at a www.nppodyji.cz. Hardegg – Znojmo – Šatov (43 km) After the border bridge at Hardegg you climb steeply until the edge of the woods, and from there it’s just a few rolling ups and downs more to Čížov. On n Čížov the way be sure and stop at the Hardegg Overlook, where you will be rewarded with an outstanding view of Hardegg from above on the Moravian side. In Čižov you must stop at the Iron Curtain monument. After riding down to the Čížov fishpond the asphalt road gives way to a forest trail, connecting to the former signal road, that will take you most of the way to Podmolí. After a short excursion outside the park you reenter the woods after Mašovice, where a forest trail will take you to the Králův stolec overlook into the Dyje River valley, and the Znojmo reservoir. There is another very pretty view (of the valley, reservoir, and the town of Znojmo) from the Hradišťé Terraces. Along the Gránický creek or a smaller detour through Znojmo’s historic center n Wine cellars in Šatov n The segment between Popice and Havraníky offers some excellent resting spots. 31 32 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain n Jaroslavice chateau you head down into the bottom of the valley, where crossing a bridge you come to the other side and climb through the garden colonies and heaths on Kraví hora. From there take one last look back and enjoy the panoramic view of historic Znojmo. After this comes a beautiful section through Konice and Popice to Havraníky, with the Podyjí upon your right and long views into the wine country on your left. The route is lined with vineyards, as well as crosses and roadside shrines that complement the little village chapels. Outside of Havraníky we say a final goodbye to the Podyjí and enter Šatov, the last stop before the Austrian border. The hamlet of Šatov is known for its wine cellar street with many very old cellars dug into the sandstone slope. The most famous of them, the Painted Cellar (Malovaný sklep), has walls decorated with painted reliefs done between 1934 and 1968 by folk artist Maxmillián Appeltauer, who worked by candlelight alone. You can arrange a tour by appointment even outside the main season. For information on another Šatov attraction, the Museum of the Czechoslovak Fortifications go to page 11. More information on the Podyjí National Park and the Iron Curtain Memorial in Čížov and the town of Znojmo at on pages 14, 11 and 19. Šatov – Retz – Pulkautal – Jaroslavice – Laa an der Thaya (55 km) Our next segment will be in search of wine, a ride among the vineyards, through several winemaking villages, watching vintners at their work and generally imbibing the pleasant vineyard atmosphere. The region of Lower Austria known as the Weinviertel, and of course South Moravia on the Czech side, are strongly linked by their viticulture tradition, which over the centuries has given the countryside a unique character, architecture, culture, and local traditions passed down from generation to generation. The picturesque rolling countryside is adorned by endless vineyard rows, which employ many local residents the year round in cultivating the grape vine as a source of income, entertainment, and purpose in life. The wine villages with their pretty churches are identifiable by their wonderful wine cellar streets, villages where to this day each winemaking family owns at least one cellar. 33 tourist attractions. On a hill above the town stands Austria’s only operational historic windmill, from which there is a beautiful view far into the distant landscape. After a short up and down stretch to the town of Retz, which is the region’s other winemaking center after Znojmo, you will enter the flat, easy-to-bike valley of the Pulkautal, taking you to the village of Hadres. Each wine village from the border to this point will have offered lovely wine cellar streets, but the one in Hadres is interesting not only for its beauty, but for its length – it’s supposedly the longest wine cellar street in Europe. From the village of Seefeld-Kadolz with its Baroque chateau, we hop over the border to Jaroslavice. Its massive chateau, originally built in Renaissance, later redone in Baroque and Classicism, is still in deplorable condition. Behind the village lie the Jaroslavice fishponds, one of the largest bodies of water in Moravia, and a Natura 2000 bird area. They host a large nesting colony of the Black-crowned Night Heron. You can sit on the dike and rest for a bit, or read about the birds on the information panel. Between Dyjákovice and Hevlín the EuroVelo 13 route leads mostly along the former signal road. The historic town of Retz, founded in 1279, has been for centuries the center of this winemaking region, and is now a popular tourist destination. The wealth that flowed from wine in the middle ages is seen in the magnificent Renaissance buildings on the main square. Beneath them is a wine cellar 21 m long and up to 30 m deep underground, the largest historic wine cellar in Central Europe, which 500 years ago could store the harvest from the entire surrounding area. Today the Retz underground is one of its best n Weinviertel Lower Austria n Swans, the inhabitants of the Jaroslavice ponds 32 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain n Jaroslavice chateau you head down into the bottom of the valley, where crossing a bridge you come to the other side and climb through the garden colonies and heaths on Kraví hora. From there take one last look back and enjoy the panoramic view of historic Znojmo. After this comes a beautiful section through Konice and Popice to Havraníky, with the Podyjí upon your right and long views into the wine country on your left. The route is lined with vineyards, as well as crosses and roadside shrines that complement the little village chapels. Outside of Havraníky we say a final goodbye to the Podyjí and enter Šatov, the last stop before the Austrian border. The hamlet of Šatov is known for its wine cellar street with many very old cellars dug into the sandstone slope. The most famous of them, the Painted Cellar (Malovaný sklep), has walls decorated with painted reliefs done between 1934 and 1968 by folk artist Maxmillián Appeltauer, who worked by candlelight alone. You can arrange a tour by appointment even outside the main season. For information on another Šatov attraction, the Museum of the Czechoslovak Fortifications go to page 11. More information on the Podyjí National Park and the Iron Curtain Memorial in Čížov and the town of Znojmo at on pages 14, 11 and 19. Šatov – Retz – Pulkautal – Jaroslavice – Laa an der Thaya (55 km) Our next segment will be in search of wine, a ride among the vineyards, through several winemaking villages, watching vintners at their work and generally imbibing the pleasant vineyard atmosphere. The region of Lower Austria known as the Weinviertel, and of course South Moravia on the Czech side, are strongly linked by their viticulture tradition, which over the centuries has given the countryside a unique character, architecture, culture, and local traditions passed down from generation to generation. The picturesque rolling countryside is adorned by endless vineyard rows, which employ many local residents the year round in cultivating the grape vine as a source of income, entertainment, and purpose in life. The wine villages with their pretty churches are identifiable by their wonderful wine cellar streets, villages where to this day each winemaking family owns at least one cellar. 33 tourist attractions. On a hill above the town stands Austria’s only operational historic windmill, from which there is a beautiful view far into the distant landscape. After a short up and down stretch to the town of Retz, which is the region’s other winemaking center after Znojmo, you will enter the flat, easy-to-bike valley of the Pulkautal, taking you to the village of Hadres. Each wine village from the border to this point will have offered lovely wine cellar streets, but the one in Hadres is interesting not only for its beauty, but for its length – it’s supposedly the longest wine cellar street in Europe. From the village of Seefeld-Kadolz with its Baroque chateau, we hop over the border to Jaroslavice. Its massive chateau, originally built in Renaissance, later redone in Baroque and Classicism, is still in deplorable condition. Behind the village lie the Jaroslavice fishponds, one of the largest bodies of water in Moravia, and a Natura 2000 bird area. They host a large nesting colony of the Black-crowned Night Heron. You can sit on the dike and rest for a bit, or read about the birds on the information panel. Between Dyjákovice and Hevlín the EuroVelo 13 route leads mostly along the former signal road. The historic town of Retz, founded in 1279, has been for centuries the center of this winemaking region, and is now a popular tourist destination. The wealth that flowed from wine in the middle ages is seen in the magnificent Renaissance buildings on the main square. Beneath them is a wine cellar 21 m long and up to 30 m deep underground, the largest historic wine cellar in Central Europe, which 500 years ago could store the harvest from the entire surrounding area. Today the Retz underground is one of its best n Weinviertel Lower Austria n Swans, the inhabitants of the Jaroslavice ponds 34 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 35 n View of the Pálava before Úvaly Laa an der Thaya – Mikulov – Poštorná/Břeclav (51 km) From the town of Laa an der Thaya, where you can enjoy luxury relaxation at its thermal spa and swimming area, or admire its historic center by the Water Trail, you will have a flatter section across the farm country on asphalt or dirt service roads. Along them the fields are lined with lovely rows of trees that divide the land into a checkerboard. After the village of Wildendürnbach the route crosses the Galgenberg Hill, with one of the most beautiful cellar streets and vineyards in all of Austria. The traditional wine cellars here are built several floors high, which only enhances the magical sight of the peak. If you don’t mind climbing another couple of meters, go up there. On any given day during the season you can find at least one open cellar and a vintner willing to invite you in for a chat. From the cellar streets and even better from the top of the Galgenberg you can get a wonderful view over the countryside. To the northeast you see the Pálava Hills and Mikulov chateau, a further destination on your ride. But on the way to Mikulov you will want to stop at the border, where there is the most beautiful rest stop in South Moravia. It is built to resemble a wine press, and at the same time a sun dial, and offers an excellent spot for sitting down, with a nice view of Mikulov castle. On the way from Mikulov to Úvaly you travel down the old signal n Reistna, Valtice n Cyclists on the Galgenberg road, corresponding with the Iron Curtain Trail on the first part. From the signal road outside Úvaly there is an excellent view back towards the Pálava and Mikulov. The view is repeated on the border above Valtice, this time overlooking the vineyard tracts that surround Úvaly and Valtice. Don’t miss the Museum of the Iron Curtain, located in the former border post. From the signal road above Valtice you get a wonderful view of the Lednice-Valtice Area and the beginning of the Carpathians in the distance to the east. The South Moravian part of EuroVelo 13 ends at the Poštorná – Reinthal border crossing. If you want to ride further along the former Iron Curtain, you can remain on the Moravian side of the border and set out along the main Greenway Prague-Vienna route, which copies exactly the former signal road in this area. This flat segment between the fields (except for the Přerov Hill) has a good asphalt surface. If we are lucky and catch the prevailing western breeze at our backs we can really start clipping along. There are nice stops on this section at the village of Jevišovka, which has a lovely stork rest and the ecofarm Jáňův dvůr in Nový Přerov. n Rest stop on the border with a view of Mikulov n Pumpkin field between Jaroslavice and Hrádek 34 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 35 n View of the Pálava before Úvaly Laa an der Thaya – Mikulov – Poštorná/Břeclav (51 km) From the town of Laa an der Thaya, where you can enjoy luxury relaxation at its thermal spa and swimming area, or admire its historic center by the Water Trail, you will have a flatter section across the farm country on asphalt or dirt service roads. Along them the fields are lined with lovely rows of trees that divide the land into a checkerboard. After the village of Wildendürnbach the route crosses the Galgenberg Hill, with one of the most beautiful cellar streets and vineyards in all of Austria. The traditional wine cellars here are built several floors high, which only enhances the magical sight of the peak. If you don’t mind climbing another couple of meters, go up there. On any given day during the season you can find at least one open cellar and a vintner willing to invite you in for a chat. From the cellar streets and even better from the top of the Galgenberg you can get a wonderful view over the countryside. To the northeast you see the Pálava Hills and Mikulov chateau, a further destination on your ride. But on the way to Mikulov you will want to stop at the border, where there is the most beautiful rest stop in South Moravia. It is built to resemble a wine press, and at the same time a sun dial, and offers an excellent spot for sitting down, with a nice view of Mikulov castle. On the way from Mikulov to Úvaly you travel down the old signal n Reistna, Valtice n Cyclists on the Galgenberg road, corresponding with the Iron Curtain Trail on the first part. From the signal road outside Úvaly there is an excellent view back towards the Pálava and Mikulov. The view is repeated on the border above Valtice, this time overlooking the vineyard tracts that surround Úvaly and Valtice. Don’t miss the Museum of the Iron Curtain, located in the former border post. From the signal road above Valtice you get a wonderful view of the Lednice-Valtice Area and the beginning of the Carpathians in the distance to the east. The South Moravian part of EuroVelo 13 ends at the Poštorná – Reinthal border crossing. If you want to ride further along the former Iron Curtain, you can remain on the Moravian side of the border and set out along the main Greenway Prague-Vienna route, which copies exactly the former signal road in this area. This flat segment between the fields (except for the Přerov Hill) has a good asphalt surface. If we are lucky and catch the prevailing western breeze at our backs we can really start clipping along. There are nice stops on this section at the village of Jevišovka, which has a lovely stork rest and the ecofarm Jáňův dvůr in Nový Přerov. n Rest stop on the border with a view of Mikulov n Pumpkin field between Jaroslavice and Hrádek 36 Greenways through European history and nature n Rest stop in Jevišovka The most authentic atmosphere of the Iron Curtain is found after continuing from the Poštorná – Reinthal border crossing, along the former signal road to the Soutok reserve south of Břeclav, where the fence surrounding the reserve for several kilometers is an actual remnant of the original barbed wire fences (more on page 11). Along with that you be amazed by the natural surroundings in this part of the Dolní Morava reserve (more information on page 20). The new thermal spa in the town of Laa an der Thaya, the center of this micro-region, has made it a new tourist destination for Austrian, Czech, Slovak, and Hungarian visitors. The historic part of town is dominated by the new town hall from 1898 and the remnant of the 15th-century castle. Running through the town is the Dyje Mill Run, a 31.6 km-long bit of technical history and an important man-made watercourse of southern Moravia and the town of Laa an der Thaya. One outlying hamlet nearby, Hanfthal, is named after its main product: it has a hemp museum, and even makes hemp wine. n Rest stop in Hevlín More information about Mikulov, the Iron Curtain Trail, Valtice, and the Museum of the Iron Curtain on pages 25, 27 and 12. Places at former Iron Curtain 37 n Cycle tourists on former military road near Jevišovka (above left), the former military road in the Soutok game reserve, which runs along an original Iron Curtain the former barbed wire fence, offers excellent cycling conditions (above right) and Jáňův dvůr eco-farm, certified accommodation Cyclists Welcome. For more information: Routes and trails: n Greenways: www.greenways.cz n Moravian Wine Trail: www.stezky.cz n Greenways Prague-Vienna: www.pragueviennagreenways.org n Iron Curtain Trail: www.ironcurtaintrail.eu n EuroVelo: www.eurovelo.org Cycling services and tourist information: n Cyclists Welcome: www.cyklistevitani.cz n Cycling in South Moravia: www.cyklo-jizni-morava.cz n Cycling in Lower Austria: www.lower-austria.info n Greenways Travel Club: www.gtc.cz n St. James Trail: www.jakubskacesta.cz n ČD Bike hire: www.cd.cz/en/volny-cas/pujcovnykol-cd/jihomoravsky-kraj/-8343/ n E-Bikes in Weinviertel: www.velovital.com/weinviertel Information on the region and wine: n South Moravia: www.jizni-morava.cz n National Wine Center: www.vinarskecentrum.cz Information on parks and nature: n Podyjí National Park: www.nppodyji.cz n Thayatal National Park: www.np-thayatal.at n CHKO Pálava: www.palava.cz n Dolní Morava Biosphere Reserve: www.dolnimorava.org n Czech Ornithological Society: www.cso.cz n Tiree Chmelar Herb Garden: www.bylinkovazahradavaltice.cz n Thayatal National Park: www.thayatal.com n European Green Belt: www.europeangreenbelt.org 36 Greenways through European history and nature n Rest stop in Jevišovka The most authentic atmosphere of the Iron Curtain is found after continuing from the Poštorná – Reinthal border crossing, along the former signal road to the Soutok reserve south of Břeclav, where the fence surrounding the reserve for several kilometers is an actual remnant of the original barbed wire fences (more on page 11). Along with that you be amazed by the natural surroundings in this part of the Dolní Morava reserve (more information on page 20). The new thermal spa in the town of Laa an der Thaya, the center of this micro-region, has made it a new tourist destination for Austrian, Czech, Slovak, and Hungarian visitors. The historic part of town is dominated by the new town hall from 1898 and the remnant of the 15th-century castle. Running through the town is the Dyje Mill Run, a 31.6 km-long bit of technical history and an important man-made watercourse of southern Moravia and the town of Laa an der Thaya. One outlying hamlet nearby, Hanfthal, is named after its main product: it has a hemp museum, and even makes hemp wine. n Rest stop in Hevlín More information about Mikulov, the Iron Curtain Trail, Valtice, and the Museum of the Iron Curtain on pages 25, 27 and 12. Places at former Iron Curtain 37 n Cycle tourists on former military road near Jevišovka (above left), the former military road in the Soutok game reserve, which runs along an original Iron Curtain the former barbed wire fence, offers excellent cycling conditions (above right) and Jáňův dvůr eco-farm, certified accommodation Cyclists Welcome. For more information: Routes and trails: n Greenways: www.greenways.cz n Moravian Wine Trail: www.stezky.cz n Greenways Prague-Vienna: www.pragueviennagreenways.org n Iron Curtain Trail: www.ironcurtaintrail.eu n EuroVelo: www.eurovelo.org Cycling services and tourist information: n Cyclists Welcome: www.cyklistevitani.cz n Cycling in South Moravia: www.cyklo-jizni-morava.cz n Cycling in Lower Austria: www.lower-austria.info n Greenways Travel Club: www.gtc.cz n St. James Trail: www.jakubskacesta.cz n ČD Bike hire: www.cd.cz/en/volny-cas/pujcovnykol-cd/jihomoravsky-kraj/-8343/ n E-Bikes in Weinviertel: www.velovital.com/weinviertel Information on the region and wine: n South Moravia: www.jizni-morava.cz n National Wine Center: www.vinarskecentrum.cz Information on parks and nature: n Podyjí National Park: www.nppodyji.cz n Thayatal National Park: www.np-thayatal.at n CHKO Pálava: www.palava.cz n Dolní Morava Biosphere Reserve: www.dolnimorava.org n Czech Ornithological Society: www.cso.cz n Tiree Chmelar Herb Garden: www.bylinkovazahradavaltice.cz n Thayatal National Park: www.thayatal.com n European Green Belt: www.europeangreenbelt.org 38 Greenways through European history and nature Information on towns and villages: n Valtice: www.valtice.eu n Znojmo: www.znojmocity.cz n Mikulov: www.mikulov.cz Iron Curtain: n About the Iron Curtain Trail: www.ironcurtaintrail.eu Partnership Foundation: nwww.nadacepartnerstvi.cz Places at former Iron Curtain 39 38 Greenways through European history and nature Information on towns and villages: n Valtice: www.valtice.eu n Znojmo: www.znojmocity.cz n Mikulov: www.mikulov.cz Iron Curtain: n About the Iron Curtain Trail: www.ironcurtaintrail.eu Partnership Foundation: nwww.nadacepartnerstvi.cz Places at former Iron Curtain 39 40 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 41 40 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 41 42 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 43 42 Greenways through European history and nature Places at former Iron Curtain 43 44 Greenways through European history and nature Partnership Foundation (Nadace Partnerství) helps people to protect and improve their living environment. It provides grants, specialized knowledge and services, and inspiration from abroad. It supports public involvement in planting trees, protecting nature, low-impact transportation and hiking, using renewable sources of energy, and creating quality public spaces. Over the 21 years of its existence it has contributed over 280 million crowns in support of 3 000 projects. Together with four sister foundations in Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia it is part of the Environmental Partnership Association. WW W.N A DAC E PA RT NERS T VI.CZ Through the Greenways program the Partnership Foundation supports the development of cycling routes and trails, or natural corridors for sustainable tourism. Greenways not only contributes in the area of environmental protection and the cultural heritage, it also brings together citizens, officials, and businesses to join in planning and improvement of life in their communities. The Partnership Foundation coordinates for example the Greenways Prague-Vienna, Greenways Krakow-Moravia-Vienna, and the Moravian Wine Trails. WW W.G R E E N WAYS .C Z A joint project between the Partnership Foundation, the Region of South Moravia, Czech Tourist Authority, and the Austrian partner Weinviertel Tourism GmbH called Experience the Land of Wine and History by Bike was supported by the European Union from the European Fund for Regional Development. Thanks to the project a number of cross-border tourist products will appear, along with a clear and unified system of bicycle route signage in the South Moravian region; a new trail EuroVelo 13 – Iron Curtain Trail will be marked, and thirty new rest stops for cyclists will be built. Published by PF in 2012 with support from the European Fund for Regional Development Texts by: Jakub Smolík, Daniel Mourek Translation: Todd Hammond, Barbora Hammondová Cooperation from: NP Podyjí, Pálava Protected Landscape Area Photos: archive CCRJM, archive NP, archive CHKO Pálava, Jakub Smolík, Petr Lazárek, Richard Nebeský, Thomas Falch Maps: European Cycling Federation, Shocart, a.s. Cover photo: Vojtěch V. Sláma Design and composition: sumec+ryšková Print: POINT CZ, s.r.o. ISBN 978-80-904918-4-7