Munich's famous river wave, the Eisbachwelle, vanished after a dredging in early November. Authorities are working to ...
When the famed Eisbach disappeared in early November because of a city-run dredging project, O2 SURFTOWN MUC offered free sessions to river surfers.
German surfers are not stoked after one of the world's largest inland waves, in a river in Munich, disappeared following a city dredging project. Now the community is uniting to bring it back. Our ...
Munich, Germany, is a long way from the ocean and it’s pretty darn cold this time of year, but that doesn’t stop some hearty surfers from catching a wave. The Eisbachwelle is a year-round river ...
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Surfs down in Munich, river dredging kills legendary inland surf spot
Munich's beloved urban surf spot, the Eisbachwelle, is dead. Killed not by climate change or capitalism, but by an ...
The Eisbach River, a famed novelty wave in the middle of Germany’s Munich metropolis, has reopened to surfers following a tragic death in April. But, with the barriers removed and surfers allowed back ...
Visiting Munich usually makes us think of beer, bratwurst, and pretzels. Not surfing. But surfing is on the list of city attractions thanks to the Bavarian capital's Eisbach River, which is home to ...
The Eisbach, the world’s most famed river wave, has vanished. Located in Munich, Germany, the wave disappeared seemingly overnight following an annual cleaning of the waterway, leaving surfers and ...
The Eisbachwelle was a unique surfing wave on a river in Munich’s Englischer Garten that attracted surfers from around the ...
MUNICH (AP) — Germany's famous river-surfing wave in Munich has mysteriously disappeared, leaving Bavarian surfers high and dry for the first time in decades. The Isar River's man-made Eisbach (icy ...
2006-06-25 04:00:00 PDT Munich, Germany-- Flori "Air" Kummer, hot-dogger supreme of the world's tiniest surf spot, tosses his short board into the water, jumps from the concrete wall onto his board's ...
MUNICH (AP) — Germany’s famous river-surfing wave in Munich has mysteriously disappeared, leaving Bavarian surfers high and dry for the first time in decades. The Isar River’s man-made Eisbach (icy ...
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