paper map of germany with a lighter and Nine Realms pre-rolls on it, in the forest, on a car

Top 5 Places to Visit While High in Germany: Cannabis Tourism

Author: Jans Beloglazovs

|

|

Time: 11 min

The best places to visit while high in Germany pull you in slowly and stick around in memory longer than expected. Out in the open or deep below ground, Germany holds spots that pull you into another world. Mood shifts with every place, each asking its own pace. How well you plan shapes how smoothly it feels. Being ready matters just as much as showing up. Care changes everything once you are there.


Among the top choices, five stand out for their value — each comes with straightforward tips for arrival, packing, and respectful engagement. What you pack matters just as much as how you act once there. Find all the info needed to become a expert cannabis tourist all around Germany!

TL;DR: These five destinations — Schwarzwald, Sächsische Schweiz, Feengrotten, Königssee, and Externsteine — offer some of the most rewarding outdoor cannabis experiences and psychedelic experiences in Germany, each suited to a different kind of mood. Planning, preparation, and responsible travel make the difference between a memorable trip and an uncomfortable one.

Before You Go: Get There Safe

This part opens the sequence since it is weightier than the list of places you aim to reach. Most people think they are fine to drive once the high seems gone. Yet deep down, coordination slips without warning. A split-second delay in braking could ripple outward suddenly. Feeling steady means little when depth perception falters mid-turn. Laws aside, passengers trust you even when your senses misfire quietly. Judgment bends subtly long after the buzz feels absent. That mismatch, confidence versus actual response, is where harm takes root. Every spot listed here comes with solid backup options for cannabis travel in Germany:


  • Most areas link up straight through Germany's train system: Trains run by Deutsche Bahn along with local lines cover spots like Dresden, Berchtesgaden, Saalfeld, even deep into the Black Forest — fairly regular departures make it workable. Not every stop gets hourly service, yet timing stays practical.
  • BlaBlaCar steps in when rail lines stop short of the starting point: Where trains fade out, Uber often picks up. Local cabs fill what those two leave behind.
  • Spending the night means you skip the trip back altogether: Each of these places offers accommodation close by. You will find options that fit different budgets around every one.
  • Someone staying clearheaded while travelling helps keep things running smoothly: When moving together, having one person avoid substances simplifies decisions and care. A single alert member can handle directions, timing, or sudden issues without delay. That presence reduces risks quietly, without drawing attention. Plans stay on track when at least one person is fully aware of surroundings.

Wait several hours before getting behind the wheel — this is not flexible. Certain? Then okay. Otherwise hold off until it is safe.

The 5 Best Places to Visit While High in Germany

These places are not just beautiful on paper. They are the kinds of landscapes, viewpoints, and strange corners of Germany that can feel far more immersive when your senses slow down and your attention sharpens. Read on to find the spots where silence, scale, colour, and atmosphere turn an ordinary trip into something far more memorable.

1. Schwarzwald, Baden-Württemberg

Deep within Germany, trees crowd together so tightly their tops form a roof. Sunlight hardly touches ground where shadows hold steady through day. Kilometres of pines line narrow ways forward, silent except for wind shifts. Mist wraps lowland tracks now and then, making steps seem like dreams. From Feldberg's top, sight sweeps wide without stop, open in every direction. Protection covers this land fully — national park rules apply here alongside three wild zones kept apart. So please make sure to not spark up your joints in a fire hazard zone.


High up where nature takes hold, few places in Germany feel quite like this for experiencing nature while high. Thick trees crowd together, releasing the scent of pine mixed with wet soil while quiet wraps around everything. This stillness doesn't demand attention — instead, it magnifies what's already inside you. Overload never happens here; the space just reflects your presence back at itself.

Nine Realms customer taking a picture in the Baden-Wurttemberg forest

October brings fog curling through trees, leaves burning red and gold. Hike under long summer light if you prefer open trails and clear views. Reach it by train then a short ride on the local bus, just sixty minutes from Stuttgart. From Munich, allow about two and a half hours of travel. Walking the paths costs nothing at all. Park close to starting points for three to five euros.

2. Sächsische Schweiz, Saxony

Not German-sounding, yet it sure is. Imagine thick woods hugging the Elbe hide wild spires of carved stone that play tricks on your eyes. High up, the Bastei Bridge perches on crumbling towers of rock, nearly two hundred metres over the water — a lookout few forget. Some paths wander slow by the shore, others twist sharply between tight walls of ancient cliffs.


Out there, the size and shape of these rocks change how you see things. What your mind expects shifts every few steps — stone towers rise like something alien in a land where flat hills once lay. Pictures cannot prepare you for standing at Bastei's edge. A hush comes over people when they get there. Among the best nature trails in Germany, few paths through German wilderness deliver quite this feeling.


Morning light brings mist curling above the Elbe — go then. Spring or fall keeps the paths quieter. A half-hour ride from Dresden on S-Bahn, finish by bus. Hiking costs nothing at all. The bridge over the rocks asks no fee. Park your car for about four euros.

a picture of Saxon Switzerland National Park Germany taken by a Nine Realms customer

3. Feengrotten, Saalfeld, Thuringia

Back in 1993, Feengrotten claimed a spot in the Guinness World Records for being Earth's most vivid cave system. Once a working mine, it now welcomes visitors through winding passages where minerals paint the stone in countless tones — think rich blues, fiery reds, golden yellows — with lighting that brings out hidden depth. Though nature does the colouring, subtle illumination sharpens what eyes can see. Tours move slowly beneath ground level, lasting about three-quarters of an hour. Cold air lingers throughout, holding steady at 8°C from start to finish.


Down among Germany's trippy museums and hidden underground spots, Feengrotten stands out by actually living up to its wild reputation. You need to witness the glow inside those rooms to grasp how intense the colours really are. When looking for psychedelic experiences in Germany indoors, far from sunshine or open skies, few places beat this one. Pack extra clothing — down below, warmth stays constant no matter the time of year.

Most days work. Inside spaces stay open, rain or shine. To reach it: take a train plus regional bus from Erfurt — roughly ninety minutes. From Frankfurt, expect about two and a half hours of travel. Entry runs close to fourteen fifty per adult. A guided walk comes with the price.

4. Königssee Lake, Berchtesgaden, Bavaria

Deep within a narrow gap of steep mountains in southeastern Germany, Königssee sits like something retouched in photos yet untouched by illusion. Water there feels unreal — crystal-bright, swinging from bright green-blue to dark sapphire under changing skies and months. Movement comes only from silent electric vessels, leaving sound space filled just by lapping waves and bird calls. Mid-lake, always at the same spot, the craft pauses while someone sounds an old-style horn into the rock wall — sound bounces back split into phases, lingering in memory well past departure.


Out here, where Cannabis reisen Deutschland shows up in full form, few places match its depth of sensation as a high tourism destination. Not just quiet — but a hush so thick it changes how you breathe. Water shifts through shades no name fits well. Cliffs rise like they're refusing the sky. Sound bounces back at odd angles, making words feel clumsy.

Lake in Bavaria taken by a Nine Realms customer

Walking paths after? That part writes itself — movement follows stillness without thought. Summer days stretch bright from May to September, when the lake shows its clearest blue and boats run without limits. Weekends in high heat often crowd, so quieter times slip between them. Reach the spot by riding two hours on rail and bus out of Munich. From Salzburg, it sits just a short way — about twenty minutes. A round-trip ride on the boat costs near twenty euros. Paths around stay open at no charge.

5. Externsteine, Teutoburg Forest, NRW

Standing among trees, sudden stone spikes jut upward, rough against the sky. These red rocks were likely sacred long before monks shaped prayers into their walls. Not smooth monuments but raw faces cut with crosses and hollows where light slips through. Instead of blending in, they clash — like something dropped here from another world, maybe canyonlands far west. Peering from one of those old windows, you see green treetops swaying below. What feels odd isn't just the shape, but how quiet it becomes once inside.


Out among the trees, Externsteine waits without fanfare — a perfect relaxing attraction for those who like calm more than crowds. Not just odd to look at — there's something else, a feeling people pick up on even if they can't explain it. Moving slowly through the forest paths nearby, especially when hiking with cannabis, turns a short stop into hours. Quiet stays longer here.

Teutoburg forest picture taken by a Nine Realms customer

Start at dawn or wrap up near dusk — light leans gentle then and crowds stay thin. Reachable via rail and ride from Bielefeld in about forty minutes. From Dortmund, count on ninety. Entry? Always open, never charged. Wheels left behind pay a few euros to sit still.

All Five at a Glance

Destination

Region

Type of Experience

Best Season

Approx. Cost

Schwarzwald

Baden-Württemberg

Forest / Hiking

Autumn / Summer

Free + parking

Sächsische Schweiz

Saxony

Rock formations / Views

Spring / Autumn

Free + parking

Feengrotten

Thuringia

Underground / Colour

Year-round

~€14.50

Königssee

Bavaria

Lake / Silence / Alpine

May–September

~€20 boat

Externsteine

NRW

Rock / Atmosphere / Trails

Year-round

Free + parking

How to Prepare for the Trip

A visit that's thought through tends to go more smoothly. These cannabis-enhanced sights give back most when you're relaxed and moving slow — while tiny hiccups can grow into big frustrations if your nerves are already stretched. Sorting out just a handful of details ahead of time makes a difference:


Morning brings clearer clues than evening forecasts ever could. Weather on high ground changes fast — what you saw last night might already be wrong. When the path twists beyond cell towers, grab maps ahead using Maps.me or Google Maps. Live signals fade out there, so trust saved ones instead. Start by spotting the restrooms early — usually, parking areas at trail beginnings include these spots. Visitor hubs do too. Plan ahead so you're ready when nature calls. When you can, go places alongside someone dependable. Hard moments become less tense when met with a steady presence beside you. Start light when consuming, especially on trips. Fewer things go wrong with less to manage out in the wild.


What to bring:

  • Water — way more than feels necessary; a few snacks to keep going; a layer that holds heat when temperatures drop
  • Comfortable, weather-appropriate footwear — not trainers on rocky terrain
  • A fully charged phone and a compact power bank
  • Cash for parking fees and café stops along the path
  • Headphones for quiet trails; sunglasses for wide-open viewpoints
  • A light blanket or packable jacket for underground visits or elevated positions

Conclusion

Silence lives deep in Germany's wild corners, where trees stretch beyond city limits. Five spots stand out if you move slowly through green spaces with heightened senses — one place might be rocky cliffs above misty valleys, another could be flat wetlands humming at dawn. Each asks nothing, yet gives more the longer you stay. They differ wildly — one lush, one bare — but all answer waiting with quiet rewards. Stillness isn't empty. It pulses underfoot, behind leaves, inside slow air.


Slow steps bring out Germany's best outdoor cannabis experiences. These places unfold only if time stretches wide — never through hurry. Noticing grows sharper when arrival feels light and unhurried. Presence matters more than any substance ever could.


Most moments turn out better when there is purpose behind them. Choosing wisely matters — location, people around you, even small details like what you bring along. At Nine Realms, each spot listed here fits that thinking without trying too hard. Meaning shows up where planning meets desire.

"Germany has more stillness in it than most people ever find. The right trip, with the right product, changes that."

FAQ

Which of these destinations works best for a first outdoor cannabis experience in Germany?

Out here, among the trees of Schwarzwald, first steps tend to feel natural. Paths show the way clearly, so getting lost isn't likely. Peace settles in easily, helped by soft light through thick branches overhead. Movement slows on its own — no need to rush anywhere. There's nothing demanding your time or focus, just space to notice small things. Shoes matter more than gear; dressing for rain keeps options open. Attention wanders freely when expectations stay low.

Is Feengrotten suitable if I tend to feel anxious in enclosed spaces?

Most people find the rooms inside Feengrotten wide enough, lit clearly. You move through with a group, led by someone who knows the way — that keeps things steady. Still, tight places can bother some folks, even when light fills the walls. Knowing your own comfort matters, because guidance only goes so far. Decide based on how you truly react underground.

What is the best way to get to Königssee without a car?

Heading toward Königssee without driving? Trains operated by Deutsche Bahn link Munich straight to Berchtesgaden in about two hours flat. Once you arrive at the station there, hop on a local bus that keeps regular runs to the lake's docking point. Service stays frequent, paths stay clear — this spot ranks among the easier ones to reach using only transit.

Nine realms CEO and Blog Author Jans Beloglazovs

Author: Jans Beloglazovs

Emerging from Europe's strict cannabis landscape, Jan has become a known figure in the European cannabis industry through vast experience in cannabusiness and a keen understanding of the shifting trends in Europe. Co-founding the Nine Realms cannabis brand, he leverages his expertise to advocate for progressive cannabis policies and educate a broad audience.

Read more