Where Baltic Sea waves roll to the Beach of California

When a stiff breeze blows the clouds over the spring sky and the Baltic Sea surprises the viewer in a quick change with deep blue, sparkling turquoise and menacing grey, then this is better than television. Above our heads there is a farther sky, on the horizon the sailboats with their snow-white sails seem to fly over the waves, the wind plays with our hair and drives salty sea air into our lungs. Protected in the beach baskets, holiday guests with thick books have made themselves comfortable, for handicapped visitors there is a beach wheelchair available free of charge Best Beaches Vacations in Florida. When you spend your holidays in the region of the Schleswig-Holstein Baltic coast, you quickly realize what the old-fashioned term "summer freshness" means. The region with its yellow rape fields, green dikes and white beaches is perfectly suited for Rolli riders, and municipalities such as Schönberg and laboratory have been well-adjusted for visitors with handicaps. This makes it all the more incomprehensible that there are hardly any wheelchair accessible accommodation.

A fresh wind almost always blows here. If you want to use the 20 kilometre long paved track at the foot of the dike between Schönberger Strand and the harbour Laboratory for the bike, you should check from which direction it is blowing. It is advisable to start against the breeze and then relax with your back wind. The plain way along the beach with a view of the beach oats and the Baltic Sea is ideal for Rollifahrer. On a warm spring day with a bright blue sky, the local signs "Brazil" and "California", which glow yellow on the dike, are confusing, therefore, only at second glance. The names are not a joke, but supposedly due to shipwrecked parts that were once found here.

Cafes, fishermen's huts, bakeries, restaurants and a supermarket are lined up at the Schöneberger beach as if on a pearl necklace, all accessible and of price and quality are ground-level. Just like the whole place-here you can relax comfortably-let who wants to see and be seen should prefer Timmendorfer beach or Scharbeutz in the Lübeck Bay to the holiday sights.

A sin worth on this mile is the frieze cuts, consisting of fresh cream and plum between puff pastry waffles in "Grandma's Kaffeestuuv". In summer these are served by waitresses in old-fashioned aprons also on the sheltered dike terrace with Baltic Sea view. Barrier-Free is the thatched's from the 17th century, which houses "Grandma's Kaffeestuuv", unfortunately not. A fish bun is also part of the Baltic Sea holiday. The importance of crabs, roast herring, baked fish, mackerel and co. between two halves of the bun in the North can be read from the fact that the world Fish Bun Day is celebrated once a year. A large selection is only a few metres away from the fishermen's huts. At simple wooden tables you can enjoy your catch with a beer. If you are looking for a nostalgic harbour flair, you can find delicious fresh from the sea from the boat or in the quaint local area of laboratory.

From here, the region of Probst with its 19 municipalities stretches northeast along the Kiel Bay to Stakendorf just behind the Schöneberger strand. Its history begins in the year 1226, when the then Landgrave Adolf IV gave this area to a Benedictine monastery so that it would be settled and Christianized from there. In the documents of the monastery's head, also called Probst, the area was named "Cloistered Preetzer Probst". In the course of the centuries it became a short "provost" and from the inhabitants the "Probst eggs". A privileged position was taken by the Probst egg farmers, who in contrast to the serfs of the surrounding estates were personally free and their farms largely managed as owners or in lease. The fertile soil has been and will be used intensively for cereal cultivation. The seed was considered to be the granary of the region, and its cereals had been sought after centuries at home and abroad.

The grain that gave the Probst eggs a lot of prosperity is celebrated every summer with the Probst eggs Korntagen. For four weeks, everything revolves around the healthy gift of nature with horse-drawn carriage rides through corn fields, corn flowers honey costs at the beekeeper, visit to the Krokauer mill and much more. The 19 municipalities compete in this period with artful straw figures. Visitors can then discover impressive sculptures or whole ensembles of straw at the pond or the entrance to the village – from a stork wedding couple including a straw church to penguins on an ice floe to a pig in a reclining chair.
Besides the Korntagen there is also a lot of culture in the summer of the Probst. On the square in front of the 260 metre long Schöneberger pier, there will be concerts of rock and pop over Jazz B every weekend.
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