© DB AG / Faruk Hosseini

Unspoiled nature with cattle and birdsong

Do you want to see Heck cattle that are almost as tall as a man and rare wild horses grazing on a former army training area? No problem. The animals fulfil the role of landscape gardeners, ensuring the land is grazed sustainably. The Aschaffenburg natural heritage trail is three kilometers long and leads you around the untouched pastures where the animals roam. Numerous other rare animal and plant species have also settled here over time.
 
Information boards along the nature trail describe the flora and fauna and provide information about its development from an army training area to a national heritage site. Visitors with smartphones can scan QR codes to listen to the songs of the birds living here. In addition to insect tours, various hands-on activities to create biotopes are offered. They especially appeal to children, who are invited to get to know the environment in a playful way.

Heck cattle and wisent, or European bison, are perfect for landscape maintenance.
Heck cattle and wisent, or European bison, are perfect for landscape maintenance.
About a dozen Heck cattle keep the meadows at the Aschaffenburg natural heritage site in ideal condition.
About a dozen Heck cattle keep the meadows at the Aschaffenburg natural heritage site in ideal condition.
Wild horses help Deutsche Bahn preserve habitats.
Wild horses help Deutsche Bahn preserve habitats.
Prewalski's horses graze land near Aschaffenburg, making sure that these areas do not become overgrown.
Prewalski's horses graze land near Aschaffenburg, making sure that these areas do not become overgrown.
One of the foals with his mother.
Offspring at the Przewalski wild horses in the Nature Park Aschaffenburg.
The wild horses at the paddock in the Nature Park Aschaffenburg.
The wild horses supports the Deutsche Bahn with the landscape conservation.
One of the wild horses.
The Przewalski wild horses live in the Nature Park Aschaffenburg.
One of the foals with his mother.
Now, two foals complement the herd of Przewalski's wild horses in the Nature Park.