Schwarzwaldhochstraße

[1] The Schwarzwaldhochstraße begins in Baden-Baden and rises quickly to the main ridge of the northern Black Forest, reaching the top at the Bühlerhöhe.

A small chapel with notable stained glass windows, known locally as the Adenau Church (Adenauerkirche), sits perched on an outcrop on the heights.

From the Bühlerhöhe, the Hochstraße runs at an altitude of between 800 and 1,000 metres above sea level past several highland hotels (Plättig, Sand, Hundseck, Unterstmatt, Mummelsee, Ruhestein, Schliffkopf).

Passing below the highest mountain in the northern Black Forest, the 1,164-metre-high Hornisgrinde, the road reaches the almost circular Mummelsee, a cirque from the latest ice age.

In order to draw the growing number of tourist cars to the highland hotels, the roads in the high valleys were collectively named as a holiday route.

The Schwarzwaldhochstraße on the Mummelsee . The Vosges visible on the horizon over the fog-filled Rhine valley.
The Mummelsee
The ski slope Seibelseckle between Mummelsee and Ruhestein.