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LIVING IN GERMANY

8 interesting festivals to check out in Germany this summer

From traditional wine festivals to sailboat races to concerts or every form, there are plenty of new experiences to be had in Germany this summer. As days get longer and the season begins to change, here's some interesting events to consider adding to your calendar.

dragon breathing fire
A scene from the folk play "Der Drachenstich" during the dress rehearsal. The festival with 350 amateur actors is said to be the oldest folk play in Germany, happening each summer in Furth in Wald. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Armin Weigel

The Würzburg Wine Village

Wine lovers in Germany would be well advised to start this summer with a visit to the Lower Franconian city of Würzburg to join in a celebration of the region’s 1,200-year-old wine-making traditions.

This year’s festival is scheduled from May 29th to June 9th, and takes place at Würzburg’s Upper and Lower Market Squares.

With 12 different innkeepers serving local wines and fare, bands performing traditional music, and the ‘Franconian Wine Princesses’ donning their dirndls, you can expect a stimulating atmosphere similar to that of a beer fest, but with a much bigger focus on grape-based libations.

If the Wine Village doesn’t work for your schedule, Würzburg hosts a number of wine fests from spring through early fall. The city’s wine events start in April with the ‘Wine Press Hall Festival’ (Kelterhallen Weinfest), and end with the city’s wine parade (Weinparade Würzburg) in September. 

For more information see the Würzburg Wine Village website.

Rock im Park

One of Germany’s biggest rock music festivals, this year’s Rock im Park lineup has some big names that are sure to please rock fans who grew up in the 80s, 90s, or even after the 2000s.

Rock im Park takes place from June 7th to 9th in Nuremberg. Tickets include on-site camping.

With rock legends like Green Day and Queens, Dropkick Murphys and Queens of the Stone Age among the festival’s headliners, this year’s Rock im Park is sure to draw in quite the crowd.

Find more information at the festival website.

Sea You Festival

Some music festival goers seek out the best artist line-ups, whereas others seek out the best environments to camp and party in. Sea You Festival, self-described as “one of the most beautiful beach festivals in Germany” aims to deliver both.

inflatable flamingos on a lake

Inflatable flamingos on Lake Tunis with a floating dance floor in the background. Sea You is one of the largest festivals for electronic music in the southwest. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Philipp von Ditfurth

This year Sea You will take place on the shore on Tunisee, near Freiburg, from July 19th to the 21st.

Located in one of Germany’s sunniest locales, Sea You is among the county’s warmest music festivals on offer. Visitors can float on the lake nearby to cool off between music performances at one of the festival’s seven stages. 

More information and tickets can be found at Sea You’s website.

48 Stunden Neukölln

48 hours Neukölln is the largest independent art festival in Berlin, taking place in Berlin’s Neukölln neighbourhood each summer.

This year’s festival will begin on June 28th, and continue for two days with numerous events taking place in a multitude of venues throughout Berlin’s most ethnically diverse neighbourhood.

This year’s theme is “urban silence”. According to the events organisers, most related events will take place within walking distance of the Karl-Marx-Strasse, Boddinstrasse or Sonnenallee U-Bahn and S-Bahn stations.

More information and an event program is available on the event’s website.

Kieler Woche

This one is for sailors and sailing enthusiasts: based in the capital city of the northern state Schleswig-Holstein, Kiel week consists of a series of speed sailing races as well as music performances and other related events.

This year’s Kiel week officially starts on June 22nd, with ‘classic week’ (which includes races between bigger classic style sailboats) starting the week before.

The city of Kiel boasts a long history as a sailing hub – this will be the 143rd Kieler Woche. Watching a high-speed sailing race can be a thrilling experience for sailors and non-sailors alike, and the event offers an excuse to travel to the North Sea at the top of summer.

Find information in English here.

Eat Play Love

Boasting abundant street food, watersports, and live music – Cologne’s Eat Play Love festival has a little something for everyone looking to liven up their weekend with some summer vibes.

This year’s festival is scheduled to start on August 15th.

Located at Fühlinger See, Eat Play Love is readily accessible from Cologne by bus, S-Bahn or U-Bahn, and beyond its food and music offerings, it is host to a world class wakeboarding competition.

Find more information and tickets on the festival’s website.

Der Drachenstich

Every August Furth in Wald, a small Bavarian town near the Czech border, is home to Germany’s oldest folk theatre event, “The Dragon Sting.”

Based partly on myth and partly on regional history, Der Drachenstich, is an epic theatrical work complete with an enormous fire-breathing dragon. 

In addition to the performance, visitors are invited to observe the pageant parade, on August 11th this year, which includes 1,200 costumed performers, 250 horses, Medieval carriages, cannons, palanquins, and music groups.

Find more information at the Drachenstich website.

Wattolümpiade

Each August the mud olympics, or Wattolümpiade, brings athletes from around the world to the banks of the Elbe River in Brunsbüttel to compete in a series of games, all in the middle of the river’s thick mud.

two men in mud

Participants in the Wattolümpiade throw themselves into the mudflats. At the charity event recreational athletes compete in the disciplines of mudflat soccer, mudflat handball, wooliball and mud sledge racing. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Marcus Brandt

But according to the event’s organisers, this year’s Wattolümpiade on August 17th will be the event’s official finale. 

While official registration for the event has already been filled, an announcement on the event website assures aspiring mud athletes that: “This much is certain: If you want to get dirty again for a good cause, you will definitely get the opportunity to do so.”

Competitive games include mudflat football, wading handball, and mud sled races among others, and the event is designed to raise money for cancer patients in Schleswig-Holstein.

More information is found at the Wattolümpiade website.

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EVENTS

Seven unmissable events happening around Germany in May 2024

The weather is heating up and it feels like summer is just around the corner. Here are some events you can check out around Germany in May.

Seven unmissable events happening around Germany in May 2024

There are interesting happenings to be found in Germany all year around, but for most of us living in the Bundesrepublik, there is something magical about the late spring season. 

With April’s last cold snap now firmly in the rearview, Germany seems to come alive again as the weather heats up and the trees fill out with fresh green foliage. With folk festivals on, beer gardens and restaurant patios opening up, and local parks filling up with picnickers and day-drinkers, it feels as if the whole country is emerging from hibernation. 

Here are a few events from around the country to keep you entertained this May.

Starting off with dancing into May and Germany’s Labour Day

To properly start off the month of May, many Germans start dancing in April.

Tanz in den Mai, or to ‘dance into May’, is a German tradition that is celebrated at folk festivals and dance parties around the country. Many of these events start on the evening on April 30th and last until the early hours of May 1st so that attendees can quite literally dance into the beginning of the month.

April 30th also happens to be Walpurgisnacht, which historically was a night for scaring away the witches, but in modern times is more often a night for dancing around open fires and related festivities.

May 1st, which falls on a Wednesday this year, is Labour Day in Germany – a national holiday. The German Trade Union Confederation (DGB) will be hosting a rally in Hanover, and Berlin’s annual Revolutionary May Day demo will be taking place in Neukölln and Kreuzberg.

READ ALSO: ‘Tag der Arbeit’: What to do on May 1st in Germany

For those who would rather party than rally on the holiday, there will be abundant opportunities for daytime dancing and drinking to be found.

May 1st to 5th – Baumblütenfest Werder

The 145th Tree Blossom Festival in Werder, on the Havel River about an hour outside of Berlin, is a celebration of the blossoming fruit trees and includes a carnival for five days at the start of May.

The focus for most visitors is on trying a number of locally produced fruit wines, and taking in the views of blossoms by the riverside.

Tours of blossoming trees in Werder’s courtyards and gardens begin at the end of April, and then the city’s carnival opens on May 1st. From May 3rd the carnival is expanded into a folk fest including larger live music stages and a large market.

The festival’s grand finale takes place on May 4th with a parade through the city centre, from 11am, led by the Tree Blossom Queen, and a fireworks display planned for the evening.

Rhine in Flames

The Rhine in Flames events offer visitors beautiful fireworks displays over the Rhine River Valley.

May 4th – Rhine in Flames in Bonn

The Rhine River Valley is commonly listed among Germany’s most scenic locations. 

Rhine in Flames, or Rhein in Flammen, offers visitors a chance to see the World Heritage Site of the Upper Middle Rhine Valley under the red glare of a magnificent fireworks display.

The entire Rhine in Flames event actually takes place over five nights, each at a different city on the Rhine River, with the dates spanning from early spring to autumn. But this year’s event will kick off on May 4th with a fireworks display that will be visible from the shores of the river between Bonn and the neighbouring town of Linz.

More information can be found at the event’s website.

May 9th – 12th – Hafengeburtstagsfest in Hamburg 

Hamburg’s Port Anniversary fest amounts to a colourful celebration by the water, complete with a beautiful firework display.

The best views of the Port of Hamburg and the Hafengeburtstagsfest are found along the Jan-Fedder-Promenade. Here stalls are set-up along the harbour mile, selling foods and local delicacies.

From the Landungsbrücken, you can watch the event’s top attractions including Friday evening’s ‘Elbe in Concert’ with a fireworks show and Saturday’s ‘magical light illumination’ presented by AIDA cruises.

There are also water parades, including the world’s only tugboat ballet, where guests can witness a pirouette performed at 3000 horsepower.

May 12th – 19th: International Dixieland Festival

Jazz fans might be surprised to learn that Dresden’s International Dixieland Festival is Europe’s oldest festival for old-timey jazz music.

This year’s lineup is full of both German and international (mostly European) bands and soloists, including: the Brass Band Rakovnik from the Czech Republic, the Louis Armstrong Celebration Band from the Netherlands, and Mama Shakers from France, among many others.

The Dixieland Fest website does note that the event overlaps with several other large events in Dresden, so affordable accommodation may become scarce. 

Festival attendees are advised to make bookings early, and to look at accommodation options around the city along major S-bahn lines. (Which is actually a good tip for travelling in Germany in the summer in general.)

Visitors hold up their beer mugs at one of Germany’s many beer festivals. Photo: Christof STACHE/AFP

May 16th – 27th: Erlangen’s ‘Der Berg’ Fest

If you’re already dreaming of Oktoberfest, May has a number of spring beer fests in villages across Germany, and especially in Bavaria.

One such fest is Erlangen’s Der Berg (The Mountain), so named because it takes place on the town’s tallest hill.

Erlangen is a small town in central Germany near Nuremberg. It happens to be the German village that is furthest from the sea, but that doesn’t stop Der Berg from having some fried fish sandwiches on offer.

READ ALSO: Five reasons foreigners should move to Nuremberg

Der Berg is certainly significantly smaller than Munich’s world renowned Oktoberfest, but it offers similar attractions – including carnival rides, jubilant sings and dancing, and of course local beers served up in a big litre Maßkrug.

May 29th-June 6th: Würzburger Weindorf

For all the aspiring sommeliers and oenophiles, Würzburg’s annual ‘Wine Village’ offers a pleasant way to end the fifth month in 2024 – or to drink your way into June.

It may be little known beyond Germany, but Würzburg is proud of its centuries-old winemaking tradition, which dates back to the Middle Ages. If that’s news to you, then the Würzburger Weindorf is among the best events for an introduction to Franconian viticulture.

Here you can try wine varietals that you may not have heard of before, such as the Müller-Thurgau or the sparkling Scheurebe, and you can pair your tastings with hearty Franconian faire, like Würzburg bratwurst or local dumplings.

This year the festival kicks off on Wednesday May 29th at 5pm, and then is open daily from 11am to 11:30pm.

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