River Sarre

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 |
- 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
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