CanalPlanAC

River Sarre

 
 
Information about the waterway

The River Sarre is a large river and is part of the Waterways of Mainland Europe. It runs for 90 kilometres through 9 locks from Moselle - Sarre Junction (where it joins the Moselle) to Sarreguemines Junction (where it joins the Canal de la Sarre).

The maximum dimensions for a boat to be able to travel on the waterway are 30 metres long and 6.75 metres wide. The maximum headroom is 4.75 metres. The maximum draught is 3 metres.

Moselle - Sarre Junction
Junction of the Moselle with the River Sarre
Schleuse Kanzem 4.57 kilometres 0 locks
Saarburg Wassersportclub 9.13 kilometres 1 lock
Schleuse Serrig 16.06 kilometres 1 lock
Schleuse Mettlach 27.19 kilometres 2 locks
Schleuse Rehlingen 46.71 kilometres 3 locks
Dillingen Yacht Haven 48.63 kilometres 4 locks
Schleuse Lisdorf 56.98 kilometres 4 locks
Schleuse Saarbrucken 71.04 kilometres 5 locks
Saarbrucken Boat Club 77.62 kilometres 6 locks
Schleuse Gudingen
Douane (A Custom house or Customs authority)
80.03 kilometres 6 locks
German - France Border 81.01 kilometres 7 locks
Sortie de l'écluse de Grosbliederstroff 83.46 kilometres 7 locks
Pont de l'Ecluse de Grosbliederstroff 83.53 kilometres 7 locks
Ecluse 30 Grosbliederstroff 83.56 kilometres 7 locks
Bassin de retournement de Grosbliederstroff 83.75 kilometres 8 locks
Passerelle de Grosbliederstroff 84.46 kilometres 8 locks
Entrée de l'écluse de Grosbliederstroff 84.86 kilometres 8 locks
Pont d'embranchement de l'autoroute N61A
Expressway spur bridge
85.68 kilometres 8 locks
Sortie de l'écluse de Welferding 88.33 kilometres 8 locks
Ecluse 29 de Welferding 88.44 kilometres 8 locks
Pont du Welferding 88.84 kilometres 9 locks
Entrée de l'écluse de Welferding 89.07 kilometres 9 locks
Pont Ferroviaire Oblique de Sarreguemines 89.42 kilometres 9 locks
Sarreguemines Junction
Junction of the River Sarre with the Canal de la Sarre at Sarreguemines
90 kilometres 9 locks
 
 
Maps
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External websites
 VisuRiS — associated with Waterways of Mainland Europe
The official inland waterway resource for Belgium with actual traffic and planned operations on the waterways. Also has voyage planning and notices to mariners
 Wassersportclub Saarburg e.V. 1978 — associated with Saarburg Wassersportclub
Homepage des Wassersportclub Saarburg e.V.1978 und des Sportboothafen Saarburg
 
Wikipedia

There is no page on Wikipedia called “River Sarre”

Wikipedia pages that might relate to River Sarre
[Saar (river)] Saar (/sɑːr/, also US: /zɑːr/, German: [zaːɐ̯] (listen); French: Sarre [saʁ]) is a river in northeastern France and western Germany, and a right tributary [Sarre] a town in Italy Sarre, Kent, a village in the United Kingdom Sarre river or Saar, a river in France and Germany Sarre (Bode), a river of Saxony-Anhalt [Canal de la Sarre] la Sarre, originally called Canal des Houillères de la Sarre, connects the Canal de la Marne au Rhin in Gondrexange to the canalised river Sarre (German: [La Sarre] intersection of Routes 111 and 393, on the La Sarre River, a tributary of Lake Abitibi. In addition to La Sarre itself, the town's territory also includes [Rivière du Sud (La Sarre River tributary)] rivière du Sud (English: River of the South) is a tributary of the La Sarre River, flowing in the municipalities of Macamic and La Sarre, in the Abitibi-Ouest [Canal des Salines] France. In its full extent it would have connected the river Sarre at Sarralbe with the river Moselle at Metz, via Dieuze and Château-Salins. Only 4km [Sarre-Union] older towns that were unified on 16 June 1794. On the east bank of the Sarre river is the town of Bouquenom (German: Bockenheim) and on the west bank the [Sarre (Bode)] The Sarre is a river in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. It is a left tributary of the Bode, which it joins near Groß Germersleben. List of rivers of Saxony-Anhalt [Sarre Penn] 2306°E / 51.3381; 1.2306 Sarre Penn is a tributary of the River Stour in Kent, England, joining with the River Wantsum near Sarre, where it is known locally [Sarre (department)] Sarre was a department in the First French Republic and First French Empire. Its territory is now part of Germany and Belgium. Named after the river Saar
 
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