The route, which is accessible all year round, is marked by wooden signposts, made and maintained by voluntary workers. They bear the mill logo and the name Eckbach-Mühlenwanderweg. The logo depicts a house and waterwheel above a wavy line and was designed by Cosmas Kösters from Kirchheim in a school competition. The wavy line symbolizes the Eckbach, the stylized house with a water wheel represents a mill.
History
The path was created as a tourist attraction initiative of mill researcher, Wolfgang Niederhöfer, from Kleinkarlbach. On 12 October 1997 it was inaugurated by the minister president of Rhineland-Palatinate, Kurt Beck, in Großkarlbach, the village with the most surviving mills (six of seven). The suggestion made at the time to make the Großkarlbacher village mills a cultural monument and create the Leiningerland Mill Museum (Mühlenmuseum Leiningerland) was achieved in 2007.
Originally the route began by the Eckbachweiher pond and was only 19 kilometres long,[2] but in 2000 it was extended by 4 kilometres upstream to the source of the Eckbach in Hertlingshausen.[1]
^ abVerbandsgemeinde Hettenleidelheim (ed.), Das Wandern ist des Müllers Lust... auf dem Rad-, Kneipp- und Eckbach-Mühlenwanderweg (in German)
^Verbandsgemeinde Grünstadt-Land; Wolfgang Niederhöfer (eds.), Einweihung des Mühlenwanderweges am 12.10.1997 (in German)
Literature
Verbandsgemeinde Grünstadt-Land; Wolfgang Niederhöfer, eds. (1997), Einweihung des Mühlenwanderweges am 12.10.1997 : Festschrift (in German), Grünstadt und Kleinkarlbach{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Verbandsgemeinde Hettenleidelheim, ed. (2001), Das Wandern ist des Müllers Lust... auf dem Rad-, Kneipp- und Eckbach-Mühlenwanderweg (in German), Hettenleidelheim{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)