The Echaz is a 23 km long river in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, a tributary of the Neckar.
Source of the Echaz
Echaz valley
Look from Albrand in north direction over the upper Echaztal valley and the community of Lichtenstein with the districts Honau - in the picture right down - and Unterhausen in the background, left the castle Lichtenstein (August 2008)
The Neckar is a 362-kilometre-long (225 mi) river in Germany, mainly flowing through the southwestern state of Baden-Württemberg, with a short section through Hesse. The Neckar is a major right tributary of the Rhine. Rising in the Schwarzwald-Baar-Kreis near Schwenningen in the Schwenninger Moos conservation area at a height of 706 m (2,316 ft) above sea level, it passes through Rottweil, Rottenburg am Neckar, Kilchberg, Tübingen, Wernau, Nürtingen, Plochingen, Esslingen, Stuttgart, Ludwigsburg, Marbach, Heilbronn and Heidelberg, before discharging on average 145 m3/s (5,100 cu ft/s) of water into the Rhine at Mannheim, at 95 m (312 ft) above sea level, making the Neckar its 4th largest tributary, and the 10th largest river in Germany. Since 1968, the Neckar has been navigable for cargo ships via 27 locks for about 200 kilometres (120 mi) upstream from Mannheim to the river port of Plochingen, at the confluence with the Fils.
The Neckar near Stuttgart
Schwenninger Bog, the source of the Neckar
The Neckar in Tübingen, between the Neckarinsel at the left and the Neckarfront of the old town at the right
The Neckar near Neckarsulm