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Seestraße 54, 18374 ZingstGBP 36 - 136

guest review score: N/A
These non-smoking apartments include a balcony and kitchen. They are just a few steps from the sandy beach and the pier in Zingst. Guests have free us… More
Seestraße 60, 18374 ZingstGBP 52 - 208

guest review score: N/A
This 4-star hotel features modern rooms and a spa with indoor and outdoor swimming pools. It overlooks the beach and Zingst Seebrücke pier in the Bal… More
Boddenweg 2, 18374 ZingstGBP 64 - 176

guest review score: N/A
This 4-star hotel offers 3 restaurants, family-friendly leisure activities and a large spa area with swimming pool. It is tranquilly located on the Zi… More
Klosterstr. 20a, 18374 ZingstGBP 58 - 993

guest review score: N/A
Just 200 metres from Zingst’s main beach and pier, this elegant hotel offers classical-style rooms with private balconies and flat-screen TVs. It fe… More
Seestrasse 52-53, 18374 ZingstGBP 40 - 128

guest review score: N/A
This 3-star hotel offers modern accommodation, regional cuisine and a relaxation area. It is just 50 metres from the Baltic Sea, next to the pier on t… More
Hafenstr. 04, 18374 ZingstGBP 31 - 110

guest review score: N/A
With its beautiful location at the Zingst harbour, and a wonderful view of the bird reserve island of Kirr, our hotel is the ideal destination for a r… More
 

Zingst: Guide


Zingst Peninsula is the easternmost portion of the three-part Fischland-Darß-Zingst Peninsula, located in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany between the cities Rostock and Stralsund on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea. The area is part of the Pomerania|Pomeranian coast. Zingst Peninsula extends eastward nearly 20 kilometres and has a width of just 2 to 4 kilometres.

Zingst serparates the Baltic Sea from the Bodden Inlet, which belongs to the Darß-Zingster-Boddenkette (Darß-Zingst Bodden Chain), a large or cranes. In spring and fall, up to 3,000 birds gather there before their migration to and from Spain . Most of the estuary and the eastern end of the peninsula are part of the National Park Vorpommersche Boddenlandschaft (Western Pomerania Lagoon Area National Park).

Until the early 1870's, Zingst was an island, separated from Darß by the Prerowstrom, a narrow strait. A storm tide in 1874 closed the strait, which had connected Bodden Inlet and the Baltic Sea. A road now connects Zingst and Darß on a 100 metre wide land bridge.

The soils of Zingst consist almost entirely of sand. The sand is white in colour which makes it popular with sunbathers and tourists. Dunes border the Baltic Sea and enclose low ground about half a metre below sea level. The low land results in swampy conditions in the interior of the peninsula, and these swamps offer habitat to a wide variety of wilfdlife. There are also ruins of a slawischen castle barrier, the Hertesburg are on Zingster side.

Settlement

East of the Prerowstrom, surrounded by countryside and the Freesenbruchs, is the town of Bath (population 8,000), which was created by the unification of the settlements of Pahlen, Hanshagen and Rothem ho. Hanshagen and Pahlen date from the 13th Century.

The nearby town of Zingst has a population of about 3,200.

Rocket Experiments

During the Cold War, when the area was part of East Germany, the eastern part of the peninsula was a restricted military area, used for meteorological rocket experiments. Various experiments were conducted between 1970 and 1992 in an area known as Sundi Meadows. There were 5 launches of the Polish rocket "Meteor 1E" in the early 1970's. On October 21, 1988 launches of Russian of the "MMR06-M" type rockets began. The restricted area measured just 23.6 kilometres by 25.5 kilometers. As the rockets reached heights up to 80 kilometres, the launch angle of the unguided rockets had to be determined with an accuracy of 2 degrees in order to prevent an impact outside of the restricted area.

The first launches of MMR06-M rockets were not successful due to various technical difficulties. The first successful launch with a meteorological payload occurred on April 12, 1989. Additional launches continued for a short time after the fall of the Berlin Wall and German reunification (October 3, 1990). They were finally ended on December 19, 1990 for safety and technological reasons.

Neveretheless, between February 14, 1992 and April 10, 1992 a total of 19 Russian rockets of the MMR06-M type were launched at Zingst, of which 6 were successful. Although further rockets were still available for testing, the launches of MMR06-M rockets in Zingst were stopped in April 1992 because of the removal of German Army|German Federal Armed Forces from the place.

List of Launches

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Remarks: S = Success; PS = Partial Success; F = Failure; EF = Experiment Failure

Sources



http://www.astronautix.com/lvs/mmr06.htm
http://www.astronautix.com/sites/zingst.htm
http://www.nilu.no/projects/ccc/sitedescriptions/de/de09.html

External links



This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Zingst". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.