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Kurtenwaldbach

A stream from the Bergisches Land that winds through the Wahner Heide and ends by seeping into a pond at Gut Leidenhausen — never reaching a river.

Outdoor

The Kurtenwaldbach is a stream roughly 11.5 km long in North Rhine-Westphalia. Its course ends in an unusual way: instead of flowing into a larger river, the water disappears into a pond.

At a Glance

Type
Stream in North Rhine-Westphalia
Length
approx. 11.5 km
Source
Forsbach district of Rösrath (Rheinisch-Bergischer Kreis)
End
seeps into a pond at Gut Leidenhausen
Location (Cologne section)
Eil district, Porz borough
Notable feature
passes through the Wahner Heide
Did you know?

The Kurtenwaldbach doesn't flow into a river or lake – it simply seeps into a pond at Gut Leidenhausen, disappearing into the ground.

Course

The stream rises in Forsbach and flows in a south-westerly direction along the boundary between residential development and the Königsforst woodland. It passes beneath Kölner Straße, flows through the Waldhausteich pond, and then runs under the A3 motorway before continuing through the Wahner Heide.

An Unusual Ending

Beyond the Grengeler Mauspfad path, the Kurtenwaldbach turns south and reaches Gut Leidenhausen. There, its water seeps into a pond — meaning the stream never connects to any receiving watercourse.

Map

Blue dots: other places nearby — tap to explore.

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Auto-generated, last verified: 2026-06-26