Hund 3, © Maren Dönhoff

Aktiv auf 4 Pfoten - Erlebnistouren mit Hund

Schalkenbach

You have the choice between training walks, where the focus is on the dog's engagement or obedience, and experience tours, where, in a group, criminal cases are uncovered, long-lost treasures are found, or puzzles are solved - sometimes with the help of the dog's skills, sometimes the humans get to prove their sense of smell.
We will take a relaxed walk together and incorporate different tasks along the way. All tours are equally suitable for beginners and training-experienced dogs, as well as dogs of all ages, and the level of difficulty for the respective exercises will be tailored individually for your four-legged friend. The walks take place on a leash and there is always enough space to keep a distance if two dogs can't quite smell each other.
Pack your treat bag and join us! You can find the right tour for you at www.aktiv-auf-4pfoten.de/angebot
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At a glance

Opening hours

  • From January 1st to December 31st
    Monday
    00:00 - 23:59

    Tuesday
    00:00 - 23:59

    Wednesday
    00:00 - 23:59

    Thursday
    00:00 - 23:59

    Friday
    00:00 - 23:59

    Saturday
    00:00 - 23:59

    Sunday
    00:00 - 23:59

Place

Schalkenbach

Contact

Aktiv auf 4 Pfoten
Eichenweg 2
53426 Schalkenbach

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Laacher See in der Eifel, © Eifel Tourismus GmbH, D. Ketz

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With around 3.3 km² and a depth of 53 m, Laacher See is the largest lake in Rhineland-Palatinate. The area around the lake has been a nature reserve for almost 80 years. The last eruption of the former “Laacher volcano” occurred around 10,930 BC. B.C., about 13,000 years ago. Traces of volcanic activity can still be found in the form of volcanic outgassing, the so-called mofettes, on the eastern shore of the lake. The total ejection quantity of the outbreak at that time was about 16 km³. The eruption was one and a half times as strong as that of Pinatubo in 1991, or 6 times as strong as the eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980. Although Laacher See is widely regarded as the largest maar in the Vulkaneifel, it is scientifically not a maar and also not a real crater lake, but a water-filled caldera - a burglary crater that resulted from a collapse after the magma chamber was emptied below the volcanic cone. The volcanic mountain collapses and only the ring bead on the outer edge remains. Over time, the remaining boiler fills up with water. The Laacher See is in the Eifel, next to the neighboring Wehrer Kessel, the largest caldera and the only water-filled one in Central Europe.