Monday 1 July 2013

Bad Dürrenberg

Sorry about this one being out of order of happening ... but actually ... I'll be back in Bad Dürrenberg next week anyway :-) So kind of not out of order.
It used to be called Dürrenberg but back in the 1600's. But Johann  Gottfried Borlach  discovered a salt water spring here, and decided to create a huge  outdoor pseudo "sea air" breathing place for medicinal purposes. Lucky thing that this guy also had a lot of dosh! :) Nowadays it is considerably smaller - but still in my reckoning it is huge.
Bad = bath and Dürrenberg = Drought -hill.

Erfahren Sie mehr über Bad Dürrenberg.

Saltwater from the Bad Dürrenberg spring delivers gentle cleaning power ... so they say.

With a salt content of between six and eight percent, the Bad Dürrenberg water comes directly from a spring located next to Germany’s Saale River. To concentrate the saltwater, Johann Gottfried Borlach (1687–1768) commissioned the building of a graduation tower, a type of salt works. The graduation tower utilises an amazingly simple and energy-saving method to increase the salt content of the spring water. Pumps powered by wind energy convey the saltwater to the top of a giant, twelve-metre-high wooden frame that supports blackthorn branches. The saltwater trickles through openings in the sides and flows down over the extensive surface area of the branches, through which the wind can blow freely. The water evaporates, and concentrated and purified brine with a salt content of 22 to 24 percent emerges at the bottom.The saltwater from Dürrenberg is pure and of very high quality. It has a similar composition to water from the Dead Sea and its beneficial properties have gained worldwide recognition. Today medical authorities have recognised the healthy effects of inhaling the saline mist that is generated by the graduation process. It moistens the respiratory passages; minute salt crystals settle on the walls of the airways and dissolve secretions; the entire respiratory tract is cleansed of bacteria. Bad Dürrenberg in Germany is home to the longest salt works in the world, extending more than 636 metres.
Looking closely at the blackthorn sticks now they look like coral ;-)

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