With a barge carrying peat from
Worpswede bound for Bremen, a
skipper had to use the rivers
Hamme,
Lesum and
Wümme. The journey took about three to four days. In the year 1754 a project was started to connect the newly founded village of Tüschendorf with the river Hamme. The canal, called
Alte Semkenfahrt, had to make an arc to pass the hill of
Weyerberg, then joining the river Hamme. While the
peat barges were in the Semkenfahrt they had to be hauled. On reaching the river Hamme, if the wind came from an easterly direction, the skipper could use
sail. But in North Germany the wind comes mostly from the west, so for the most part the skipper could set the sails only on the way back, when the barges were empty. On the way to Bremen they mostly had to
punt or to
scull. The peat barge traffic reached its peak at the end of the 19th century. For example, in the year 1880, 25,000 shiploads reached Bremen. About 5,000 to 6,000 of these shiploads used the Semkenfahrt. The cargo was in total approximately 30,000 to 36,000 cubic meters in volume. == Alte Semkenfahrt - Old Semkenfahrt ==