MUNICH — "It was gnarly. Dangerous. Only the most experienced could surf it," says Jakob Netzer of what local surfers have come to call the "E1," an ever-churning wave along a mountain stream that flows through central Munich — a swell that non-surfers and tourists know as the Eisbachwelle or "ice stream wave."
"And it's very sad the wave is not working," says Netzer, staring at where the wave once regularly appeared, just below a bridge that marks the entrance to the city's English Garden.
In early November, as city engineers finished dredging the bottom of the Eisbach — a two-kilometer-long (1.2-mile) canal that is a side arm of the Isar River — they opened the floodgates to find the Eisbachwelle , typically a 1.5-meter (4.9 feet) high summit of icy river water, had transformed i

KLCC

America News
Local News in Indiana
Daily Voice
Nola Entertainment
Cache Valley Daily
Associated Press US and World News Video
Mohave Valley Daily News
The Mercury News Bay Area
AlterNet