HerrZeit by Adolf Herr Cuckoo CLock - Octoberfest
A detailed cuckoo clock with the October Beer Festival theme. The house has a shingled roof with a pretty attic windows on each side. The beer drinkers raise a toast to one another in time to the cuckoo call, which is once on the half hour and on the full hour according to the time. Two alternating melodies - Edelweiss and Happy Wanderer - play every hour. Meanwhile the Bavarian Couples dance around the maypole, the water wheel turns and the Black Forest Dancers on the balcony turn around in time to the music. The clock comes with wooden pine cones and is personally signed at the back by the manufacturer Adolf Herr. His signature guarantees the experience of 7 generations of clock-workmanship. This clock comes with a certificate of authenticity (AHC). In stock
Clock Movement:
8-Day(weekly wind-up) Regula rack strike movement with night off.
Clock-Face:
Wooden dial, diameter 4 Inches (10 cm), with wooden hands.
Dancing Figurines:
Handcarved and handpainted wooden couples in Black Forest costume.
Pendulum:
HerrZeit bolt pendulum with fine adjustment.
Musical Movement:
Reuge musical movment (28 tones) with two different melodies (Edelweiß & The Happy Wanderer).
Chime:
Diameter 12cm (4,7 ) burnished
Cuckoo-Bird:
HerrZeit wooden cuckoo (handcarved).
Color:
walnut dark.
Publication Year:
2019
Designer:
Juergen Herr
Manufacturer | HerrZeit by Adolf Herr |
Weight net: | 13.4 kg |
Weight gross: | 14.4 kg |
Height: | 42 cm/16.5 inch |
Width: | 43 cm/16.9 inch |
Depth: | 27 cm/10.6 inch |
Warranty | 2 years product warranty |
Material | Wood |
Type | Authentic Black Forest Cuckoo Clock |
Origin | Made in Germany |

HerrZeit by Adolf Herr
Adolf Herr – Creator of Black Forest Clocks of long tradition
In 1730 Anton Ketterer built the first cuckoo clock. In the 1780´s Adolf Herr´s ancestor, Johann Hiller, already built clocks in the Black Forest. His son in law, Johann Baptist Rainer, born in 1763 continued the clock making tradition. His son in law, Christian Herr, born 1814 was clock maker, too. From then on, the clock making art was handed down from father to son. Bernhard Herr, born 1842, Robert Herr, born 1876, and Rudolf Herr, born 1901, established a family tradition in making fine clocks. Adolf Herr, Rudolf´s son, married to Gerlinde Eble, whose great-grandfather, and father had also been clockmakers, opened his own business in 1977 – the House of Black Forest Clocks. He, and his son Juergen (7th generation) has been creating cuckoo clocks in ever since, inventing new designs and, above all, new movements that have found a new place in many households in Germany and overseas.