Sunday, July 13, 2025

Munich to Landshut in four easy stages

There's a Bavarian joke that goes something like this: Kasimir and Beppo are hired by the highway department to paint stripes on a long road. On the first day, they both paint 50 meters. On the second day, Kasimir paints another 50 m, but Beppo only paints 25. On the third day, Kasimir again paints 50, but Beppo paints only 4.5. On the The fourth day, the job manager pulls Beppo aside and says, "Kasimir is painting 50 meters every day, but you're painting less and less. What's going on?" Beppo replies, "well, each day the can of paint is further and further away."

I somehow decided that I should work on connecting my 2023 Donausteig hike to my meanderings around Munich, and that I'd start this summer by hiking as far as Landshut. My original plan was to do this over three days, but then I caught a cold and felt less speedy, so I did it in four instead, with endpoints determined by the availability of train stations so I could take trains home every afternoon. And whaddya know, my hikes got further and further away, just like Beppo's can of paint. So in addition to the miles hiked, I'll note that this adventure also included almost 12 hours going back and forth on trains--which is a lot if you're doing this four days in a row, but tolerable if you're taking time off between days to process a cold.

Prior to hiking to Landshut, I had recorded walking as far north in Munich as the Nordfriedhof U-Bahn stop (although I've walked farther north than that--just not since I've been recording miles). Thus:

Day 1: Hallbergmoos south to Nordfriedhof
Day 2: Hallbermoos north to Freising
Day 3: Landshut south to Moosburg
Day 4: Moosburg south to Freising

The north/south choices were based on travel time: once north of Freising, trains take as much as 20 minutes longer heading south than north (e.g. Steinebach to Moosburg takes 86 minutes, but Moosburg to Steinebach takes 105 minutes). As much as I would have liked to follow the Isar north all the way from Nordfriedhof to triumphantly enter and hang out in beautiful Landshut, I was happy to change the narrative and save myself 20 minutes a day on trains.

Day 1: Hallbergmoos south to Nordfriedhof. To alleviate the monotony, or perhaps because I was feeling a cold coming on and wanted to expend energy while I still had it, I jogged part of the way








Day 2: Hallbermoos north to Freising

More of the same, but with airplanes, a river naturally rerouting itself and reshaping the riverbank as it went, and a Dom.






Happy 1300th birthday, Freising! 


St. Sebastian, judging from the arrows...

https://www.eder-orgelbau.de/restaurierung-renovierung/freising-dom-mari%C3%A4-geburt/


Day 3: Landshut south to Moosburg

S had never been to Landshut, so after I spent a few days sleeping off my cold, S, his bicycle, and I took a train to Landshut together. The city was delightful...



St. Martin's steeple is the 2nd tallest brick structure
in the world without stainless steel supports

Frescoes inside date to ~1500 CE








After visiting the castle grounds, S and I parted ways--he to bike back to Steinebach, and I to walk to Moosburg. The route to Moosburg followed the freeway for a long time. Between Eching and Moosburg, there was little shade on a hot, hot day, and I had forgotten my sun hat. And Moosburg--"the oldest town between Regensburg and Italy" (presumably the current Italian border)--was oddly uninspiring, perhaps because of disastrous fires in 1702 and 1865 and becoming host to the largest prisoner-of-war camp in Nazi Germany during WWII.

Leaving Landshut


Past Eching

The Beaver: Rodent of the Isar
Secrets of Beavers I

Apparently it's a secret that beavers are protected.
Do not shoot them. Spread the word.


Shade!

Long thattaway, long thisaway. TRVTH. At the top of the
hill is the Isar, channeled through a long series of locks.

Day 4: Moosburg south to Freising

After the underwhelming hike from Landshut to Moosburg, I didn't have high hopes for the stretch between Moosburg and Freising--but rolling hills and bucolic landscapes proved me wrong.


iNaturalist says this is a field of potatoes

Following train tracks beats following freeways

Storks are welcome in Thonstetten

Lots of "Moos" and lots of "-ham" in these here parts. From Old English hām to
German heim, the suffix refers to homesteads, as in Birimingham and Nottingham. 

15th-c. pilgrimage church on the outskirts of Langenbach--a nice truffle




View from the truffle. The two Isar nuclear power plants went offline in 2023. Why
make your own nuclear energy when you can buy nuclear energy from France?


At the southern end of Langenbach, I passed this painting, hung on the exterior wall of a house. So many people look at paintings and mutter, "I could have painted that," but they never do. Here, someone did. Kudos.

Blaues Pferd n + 1

Here's Franz Marc's version, which hangs in the Lenbach house:

Blaues Pferd I (1911)




Ta da! ~50 miles and 1,400 ft elevation gain, cuz the Isar flood plain is pretty flat.


Taking the train back and forth was a little tedious, even if the Deutschland Ticket made it cheap, and I suspect the scenery between Landshut and Passau or Deggendorf (where the Isar dumps into the Donau/Danube) doesn't warrant staying in hotels, so it's quite likely that this point-to-point hike has reached its end.

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