Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Anton Adner Denkmal Berchtesgaden

    5.0 (2 reviews)

    Anton Adner Denkmal Berchtesgaden Photos

    Anton Adner Denkmal Berchtesgaden Reviews in Other Languages

    Verify this business for free

    Get access to customer & competitor insights.

    Verify this business

    Grassl Enzianbrennerei

    Grassl Enzianbrennerei

    5.0(11 reviews)
    0.1 km
    €€€

    A must see when visiting Berchtesgaden. This distillery offers a wide range of shots (schnapps)…read moremainly from Berchtesgaden. There is a hall that shows the history and distilling process. There is also a souvenir shop that offers plenty of free samples. Don't forget to walk outside and enter the little cabin found on the left side of the distillery. You don't need to book a tour.

    I was traveling with my two college-aged children, and we had just visited Eagle's Nest (which is…read morevery nearby). We figured, if we are in Germany, we might as well learn about schnapps! It is very easy to find and a very colorful building. We didn't take the tour, but went right into the gift shop and started looking around. I have never seen so many flavors of schnapps in my life! Everything came in the little, miniature bottles, as well as medium and larger sized bottles. They have trays of samples throughout the store of 6-7 different types that you can try with small, almost thimble sized shot glasses. If you want to try a sample of a flavor not on the trays, just go up to the bar area in the middle of the store and ask for it. We tried several samples at the bar - the legal drinking age is 16 for beer/wine, 18 for alcohol. My kids are 19 and 21 (although they look younger), so they asked me if they were old enough and I said yes and that was that - no checking of ID's or anything. We settled on the Blood Orange Schnapps (which was delicious!) and the miniature bottles are 1 euro each which was quite a bargain we thought. After you leave the store don't go right back to your car - behind the store is the most amazingly clear river. You can stand on an overlook to see it - and it is literally clear! You can see every rock, pebble or fish all the way to the bottom and it was just gorgeous! So make sure you take a look. Definitely stop here to taste some German culture!

    Photos
    Grassl Enzianbrennerei
    Grassl Enzianbrennerei
    Grassl Enzianbrennerei - Museum

    See all

    Museum

    Das Kehlsteinhaus - The sign around the nest

    Das Kehlsteinhaus

    4.4(39 reviews)
    3.8 km

    Pro: The view, the history, and the crazy bus ride up and down the mountain…read more Con: The history, crazy bus ride is not for the weak. You will have to get a bus up the mountain from the bus station down the mountain, we had a rental car and it was only about 20 minutes from the central bus station in town. Once you get your ticket, go to the number of the bus at the platform, it's numbered 1 to 4. Get your merch after you come back down the mountain. The new electric buses going up the side is smooth and quiet. Info on the ride is first given in German than in English. Sit on the right side of the bus for pictures going up, left side when coming back down. Once you are up at the upper bus stop, you can walk into the tunnel for the elevator or take the 30 minutes crazy hike up to the Eagle's Nest. The tunnel is damp and wet from the moisture of the mountain, quite eerie in the tunnel and the elevator have an operator going up and down. At the top, you exit out in the tea house, where you can walk around 360 degree of the tea house. Where you exit from the elevator is where you will line up to go back down. The restaurant is both inside and outside, so pick which side you would want to see and dine accordingly. We got unlucky with cloud for the 1st hour we were up at the nest, but when it cleared up, the view was out of this world.

    Mark G. is my hubs, and I have to say, his review nailed it. He literally hit every point! This was…read morea must-see, bucket list destination, as we both have an interest with WW2 stuff. The views are SPECTACULAR! We stayed in Salzburg and had a rented car. The Kehlsteinhaus was about a 25-30 minute (very easy) drive from our hotel. Crossing the border from Austria into Germany was as easy as crossing state lines...no border patrol to worry about! Like Mark said, it is crowded, and you do need to decide how long you want to stay. What he didn't mention, is that the buses that take you up to the top, were specially built to handle the incline and change in altitude. This is why no personal vehicles are allowed. If you are afraid of heights, the best piece of advice that I can give you is to look at the floor of the bus. The road to the top is narrow, and there are very few, if any guard rails. Once you get above the tree line, you get great views, however! Once at the top, you still have another 100-200 feet to go, but this is in a brass elevator in the mountain! The building at the top is large, but easy to navigate through. The attraction inside is a red marble fireplace, which has numerous chunks missing due to the allies taking chippings as souvenirs. Take as much time as you need, but make sure you get outside to see the valleys all around, and catch a glimpse of the Königsee. You're in the Alps, people! Woo hoo!!!! 38/2020

    Photos
    Das Kehlsteinhaus - Entrance to the elevator

    Entrance to the elevator

    Das Kehlsteinhaus - Wet and damp

    Wet and damp

    Das Kehlsteinhaus - Cloud, oh boy

    See all

    Cloud, oh boy

    Salzwelten Salzburg - A shrine in the mine

    Salzwelten Salzburg

    4.1(15 reviews)
    7.6 km

    During our recent visit to Salzburg, we HAD to tour a salt mine. Salzburg means "City of salt" and…read morethere are several mines in the vicinity. We settled on the Hallein Salt Mine, one of three mines operated by Salzwelten. It was the closest to Salzburg and could be easily reached by public transportation. I'd visited the Wieliczka Salt Mine outside Kraków, Poland and found it fascinating so we wanted our family to have a similar experience. For this tour, guests are required to don miners' attire, possibly to protect their own clothes but just as possibly to facilitate an easy glide down two miners' slides that we'd encounter during the tour. Once we'd pulled the white uniforms over our street clothes, we were off to the mine. Our guide, Florian, was an excellent host. He told interesting stories and was quite approachable, but still strict about keeping our hands and feet in the car at all times - important because we'd soon be hurtling through very small tunnels cut into the rock and he didn't want anyone losing a cell phone - or worse. After a short movie about the history of salt and this particular salt mine, we were taken to the mine train. Straddling the large beam used for seating, we were soon descending into the mine. Markers on the wall and ceiling showed us how deep below the surface we'd descended. Visitors walk through even smaller tunnels after the train ride is concluded. Videos that were projected onto the rock walls of the mine at various points provided more background on this 2,600-year-old facility, and explained the various processes for extracting salt from the rock. We were invited to taste the brine that resulted from one of the extraction techniques, the vacuum evaporation method. In this method, water is pumped down one well, the salt below is dissolved, and the resulting brine is forced to the surface through another well. The resulting brine, we were told, was about three times saltier than sea water. That brine would then be pumped into underground lakes where it would evaporate, leaving salt crystals behind. Along the way, we saw a shrine that the miners had erected in the underground tunnels, as well as several drawings and carvings on the walls. Shortly into the tour, we came upon our first miners' slide. Florian gave a short briefing, stressing the importance of keeping our feet off the ground and off the rails until we'd reached the bottom, and then we were off. As the tour continued, we walked through the narrow tunnels and uneven floors of the mine and remarked how it would have been helpful to bring a flashlight along, as the lighting was not especially great. A second slide took us close to an underground salt lake, which was one of the evaporation ponds. Climbing onto a small barge, we were taken about 80 meters to the other shore. Even though we were underground, international boundaries were still observed. At one point, the tour passed from Austria into neighboring Germany, and the crossing was marked by a sign similar to one we would see when we crossed back into Austria. Near the end of the tour, we were shown a tree branch encrusted with salt crystals. Toward the end of the winter season, the miners would through leafless boughs into one of the abandoned pools. The twigs become encrusted with salt crystals and are quite dazzling, especially when the sun is shining. Called Salzburg Boughs, these became gifts salt miners would give to visitors to the mine. Despite both being "salt mines," there are some significant differences between the Hallein mine and the Wieliczka mine. The salt in the Hallein mine is embedded in the rocky soil and must be extracted through a variety of techniques while the Wieliczka miners primarily dealt with "salt domes" of more or less solid rock salt. As a result, Polish miners carved out a number of underground chapels, the largest of which is often rented out as an event venue today. They also replicated famous works of art by carving into the rock salt walls, including da Vinci's Last Supper. Both mine tours offer fascinating insights into the importance of salt, both centuries ago when it was used as currency and was vital for food preservation, and its much more humble place in today's society. Either tour is well worth the time; taking both tours will provide an excellent opportunity to "compare and contrast."

    First time here with a tour group! I can't say nothing but an amazing experience!! So interactive…read moreand fun to experience a half day of being a miner. Great staffs, clean museum and very well setups for everyone. Definitely highly recommended.

    Photos
    Salzwelten Salzburg - Our guide Florian

    Our guide Florian

    Salzwelten Salzburg - On the train heading into the tunnel

    On the train heading into the tunnel

    Salzwelten Salzburg - A cart used to move mined materials

    See all

    A cart used to move mined materials

    Anton Adner Denkmal Berchtesgaden - museums - Updated July 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...