Brexbach


The Brexbach is a river, just under long, and an orographically left-hand tributary of the Saynbach in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate.

Course

The Brexbach is formed by the uniting of the Hinterster Bach and Vorderster Bach in the Grenzhausen municipal forest east of Höhr-Grenzhausen. Many consider the Hinterster Bach simply as the name for the upper reaches of the Brexbach.
From the confluence of its two headstreams by some fish ponds, the Brexbach initially runs along the upper edge of the municipality of Höhr-Grenzhausen. In the upper Brexbach valley there was once a mustard mill, which burned down in 1914 - a memorial stone marks the spot - and other mills: the Farbmühle, Niesmühle and the Kühnsmühle, none of which are used as mills any longer.
The Brexbach next reaches the village of Grenzau and flows through it below Grenzau Castle. Grenzau station is the terminus for the Brexbach Valley Railway, a line that closed to passenger services in 1989 and goods trains in 1994, but which partly reopened in 2009 as a heritage railway.
Parallel to the historical railway bed runs the Brexbach Gorge Way, a very varied and, in places, challenging, hiking trail along steep and thickly wooded hillsides. It reaches the Brexbach Valley Pathfinder Camp in a meadow bottom; for three kilometres there are camping places, some with refuge huts, and a camp chapel.
The lower reaches of the Brexbach run past the former, flow through the village of Sayn below Sayn Castle immediately next to the old defensive wall, before emptying into the Saynbach in the park of. The Saynbach discharges into the Rhine in the area of Bendorf harbour.

Tributaries