A short but fine adventure by Keith Read more

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  • Poland
  • England
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  • Day 2

    On our way

    July 12, 2024 in England ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    Tom arrived home soon after 08:00 and after a quick change we made our way to Liverpool Street Station for our connecting train to Stansted Airport arriving there just over an hour later. With no bags to check-in we went straight through security and found ourselves a table in a very large and very busy Wetherspoons where we settled ourselves down and order food and beer via the App. No queueing here!! Keeping our eye on the departure screen it was soon time to make our way to the departures gate and our Ryan Air flight to Krakow.

    After a calm flight we arrived 2 1/4 hours later in Krakow. With no bags to collect we made our way through passport control and Tom ordered an Uber and just 30 mins later we are entering our Airbnb. After unpacking what few clothes we had brought we ventured out in search of food and finding it in a lovely Polish restaurant called Marchewka Z Groszkiem where we sat at tables on the footpath eating “Golabaki” or Stuffed Cabbage Leaves in English and Polish Gnocchi for Tom washed down with a local beer …. or two.
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  • Day 3

    Wieliczka Salt Mine

    July 13, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    Earlyish start to the morning, pick up for our morning tour to the Wieliczka Salt Mine was 08:25 and we had to find where our breakfast was being served first, which was a couple of streets away. But we were fine and with plenty of time to spare we took our seats on the tour bus and set off. Tom had been here before but I truly did not know what to expect.

    After being organised into our tour group and advised that the descent may not be suitable for certain people suffering medical conditions or limited fitness in a mine that dates back to the 11th Century we began walking down the wooden spiral(ish) staircase. After making a slow descent we arrived at our 1st rest point at Level 1; 64 metres down, called “The Bono”. Around 10 minutes later the final stragglers of our group arrived. Following a short delay due to losing one of our number who had to return to the surface via the emergency lift, we continued a gradual descent walking down various passages mined in the rock.

    During the descent of varying degrees and levels we learnt more about the history of the mine, invluding tasting the salt as we walked through the tunnels, how it changed every couple of hundred years and finally arriving at the bottom of the 9 levels and 327 metres below the surface.
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  • Day 3

    Remembering the Nazi Occupation

    July 13, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    Arriving back in the Old Town Tom and I found a lovely restaurant to eat in (well outside of) in the Jewish Quarter. After lunch, we explored the area on the other side of the river Vistula. We came across the “Ghetto Heroes Square”, formerly known as Zgody Square, where during World War 2, selections would take place for the residents of the ghetto which meant life or death. Those selected to leave the ghetto were boarded onto trains and sent either to Płaszów, Belzec, or Auschwitz. Some would not even make it to the train; the elderly, sick and young, were often executed in the streets, in their homes, or even on the square itself. Today, it contains an artistic installation designed to memorialise the victims of the Ghetto. The 33 oversized chairs look back to the square’s history and the empty furniture that was discarded there. The chairs convey man’s inhumanity towards man. They capture a moment in history where human life was discarded with as much care and thought as the furniture piled in the square once was. Each chair represents a thousand lives.
    Subdued, we walked on past the Empty Chairs and made our way to our ultimate destination; The Schindler Factory. Made famous by the Stephen Spielberg film; Schindler’s List, Oskar Schindler was a German industrialist, humanitarian, and member of the Nazi Party who is credited with saving the lives of 1,200 Jews during the Holocaust by employing them in his enamelware and ammunitions factories in occupied Poland and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. Schindler's List, reflect his life as an opportunist initially motivated by profit who came to show extraordinary initiative, tenacity, courage, and dedication in saving his Jewish employees' lives and who in turn on the liberation of Poland and the end of the war saved the life of Oskar Schindler.
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  • Day 3

    Back "home" in time for tea

    July 13, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

    After stopping off for a beer on a bar barge or beer barge / cafe barge we made our way back to the old town and once again had a lovely authentic Polish meal in the outside eating area of Wrega another very popular traditional Polish restaurant. Tom had the Grillowany Gorski Ser Z Zurawina or Two Grilled Mountain Cheese with Cranberry, whilst I went for an old favourite Piers Z Kurczaka W Chrupiacej Panierce or more commonly known as Chicken Schnitzel 😋😋Read more

  • Day 4

    Why we came ........

    July 14, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    After an even earlier start, which was too early for breakfast, our bus arrived at just after 06:10 on a Sunday morning, ready for our excursion to Auschwitz-Birkenau Concentration Camp about a 90 minute drive away.
    Established in 1940 Auschwitz I. was the first and oldest part of the main camp, (the number of prisoners fluctuated around 15,000, sometimes rising above 20,000), which was established on the grounds and in the buildings of pre-war Polish barracks.
    Auschwitz II. The second part was the Birkenau camp (which held over 90,000 prisoners in 1944), also known as "Auschwitz II" This was the largest part of the Auschwitz complex. The Nazis began building it in 1941 on the site of the village of Brzezinka, three kilometres from Oswiecim. The Polish civilian population were evicted, and their houses confiscated, replaced with the all too familiar wooden huts. The greater part of the apparatus of mass extermination was built in Birkenau, and the majority of the victims were murdered here.
    Although no documents were ever found to prove the exact number of people who died within the two camps, it is widely thought that the number is over one million souls 🙏🙏❤️
    with perhaps the most famous being a 15 year old diarist, Anne Frank.
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  • Day 4

    Objective 1 - bar showing football ⚽️

    July 14, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

    After arriving back in the Old Town we went in search of a bar that was going to be showing the England versus Spain UEFA European Football Championship Final (Euro 2024) that evening. Unfortunately, to search out such a bar properly, we did have to partake in the odd beverage whilst looking for a television and ensuring they would be showing the game!!! We then walked to the Rynek Glówny or Main Square, which is the biggest; at 40,000 sq. metres Medieval (1257) plaza in Europe. During the 2nd World War occupation by Germany the name of the square was changed to Adolf Hitler Plaza. Walking around the square we took in its fabulous architecture of the Cloth Hall Museum, the Rynek Underground Museum, and the Gothic St. Mary's Basilica. Quirky stores and cafes many catering to English tourists and dressed ready for the big game. Seeing so many people with an interest in the game we decided to go back to the aptly named English Football Club and stake a claim to the last two seats in the small but multi-roomed bar before the expected rush, which inevitably came!! After the game we walked dejectedly back to our apartment.Read more

  • Day 5

    The Final Day

    July 15, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Packing and a more leisurely start, after breakfast we enquired if we could leave our bags at reception. Crossing the bridge over the River Vistula, we quickly found the old wall that we were looking for, which is the only remains of the Krakow Jewish Ghetto from the 2nd World War. Turning back towards the old time we stayed on the far bank and began walking along the banks of the River Vistula towards the Wawel Royal Castle; built between the 13th and 14th Centuries and now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. As time drifted on we took a slow walk back to the hotel where our bags were and had a beer whilst waiting for the taxi to take us back to the airport and our flight home to Stansted Airport and the rain. As it’s a “smallish” airport and no bags to collect, we quickly made our way to the train platform. I use the word “quickly” in the most looseness of terms. In reality, we had less than 15 minutes to get from passport control and onto the train. We achieved this feat with Tom running with two carry-on bags on wheels trailing on either side of him, whilst I ran trying to keep up with him and at the same time hopefully avoiding a heart attack!!Read more