Commercial use A hotel-restaurant has been built on the dam wall from where rowing boats may be hired. Below the reservoir there are managed
fishponds. The Eiswoog itself is also used for fish breeding. In winter it is usually emptied of water so that maintenance may be carried out.
Fauna Fish species in the Eiswoog include
brown trout,
perch,
pike and
brook trout. The lake is privately owned, so angling is forbidden.
Herons,
bitterns,
little bitterns,
ducks,
geese and
swans are commonly seen on the Eiswoog.
Osprey, on the other hand, are only seen occasionally. One strictly protected species, the
kingfisher, nests by the lake. The
wheatear, which is rare in Germany, has been registered as a
passage migrant.
Nature trail The area around the Eiswoog is a hiking area, which offers routes from easy to challenging in nature. A three kilometre path circumnavigates the lake. In a model project by the
Kaiserslautern University of Technology part of the footpath and the facilities around the lake were modified to create a
disabled-friendly nature trail. The aim of the project was to enable the observation platform, lakeside facilities and a panoramic footpath to be accessible to people with sight and mobility disabilities and to open it up to families with prams. The section phase of construction was completed in 2009 and the nature trail opened on 25 August by the Rhineland-Palatinate Minister for the Environment, Margit Conrad. The whole project cost €325,000, of which the state funded €295,000.
Eis Valley and Stumpfwald Railway and
flat wagon The current terminal halt (
Haltepunkt Eiswoog) of the
Eis Valley Railway, which was re-opened for
tourism purposes, is only used at weekends. North of the dam, is the old railway bridge, the
Eis Valley Viaduct, which used to carry the continuation of the railway towards the west, but this section is now closed. The bridge was completed in 1932 and was in service until 1988. It is 35 metres high and, at 250 metres long, is the longest railway bridge in the
Palatinate. There is a good viewing point at its right-hand end. Roughly parallel to the Eis Valley Railway there is a 600 mm
narrow gauge line, the
Stumpfwald Railway, that is worked at certain times between Ramsen and the Eiswoog as a
heritage railway. It has
open wagons and is now a tourist attraction. == Literature ==