Once in Mureck, one thing immediately catches our eye: Mureck, like Wildon, which we fondly remember, is a proper “street village”. Unlike a market town, the houses are built with their long side facing the street, rather than their gables. Mureck is also where our next unmissable sight is located: the remarkable Murecker Schiffsmühle (floating mill). It’s not hard to find, and it has delighted all Murradweg travellers passing this way for many a year. There is excellent signage to the floating mill and back onto the Murradweg.
Via Misselsdorf, you will now pass the “Klimaschutzgarten” (climate-friendly garden) and the “bumble-bee paradise” on your way to the Röcksee. It is well worth spending a bit of time here: take a dip in the lake before resuming your journey and enjoying the final leg in Austria. Pedalling through a wonderful riparian forest, with the occasional bend to surprise you, you now head towards the new Murturm. Standing 30 m tall, this huge steel observation tower looms above you. Its double helix structure represents DNA, the foundation of all life. After scaling the heights and admiring the view, it’s time to get back on the saddle and continue to Halbenrain through floodplains and fields shining with oil pumpkins and corn. Halbenrain is where you will find the enchanting “Käferbohnenkabinett” (a museum devoted to the scarlet runner bean). Did you know the Styrian runner bean could be used in sweet dishes? Lovingly established as “more-than-just-a-museum”, the “Cabinet” uses film footage and photos to illustrate how the bean develops over the seasons: from cultivation to processing to culinary uses.
From Halbenrain, we continue to Bad Radkersburg; there’s only a few more kilometres to go before we’re finally there. Now you can enjoy a well-earned coffee, ice cream, or whatever else takes your fancy. You might even like to rest your weary legs at the Parktherme. Or quench your thirst with a good glass of wine.