Poland Krakow Old Town

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  • Day 5

    Museo Czartoryski

    February 25 in Poland ⋅ ☀️ 7 °C

    Cracovia
    Senza perdere troppo tempo...
    Questa era la collezione di un nobiluomo polacco, donata alla nazione per 100 milioni quando il valore del solo pezzo forte era stimato 250 e il valore totale 2,5 miliardi! Motivo? Bah, vai a sapere...

    La collezione va dalle cineserie alle armi, dalle sculture ai dipinti. Tra questi il motivo per cui sono venuto a Cracovia, dulcis in fundo...
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  • Day 5

    Ultimi tour

    February 25 in Poland ⋅ ⛅ 3 °C

    Cracovia
    In attesa dell'ermellino, ripasso in qualche chiesa trovata chiusa o "in messa". Ho la fortuna di trovare la Santissima Trinità aperta (chiostro compreso) ma la perla è stata la basilica della piazza del mercato. Vedo una porta aperta e penso fosse per i turisti (dove fai biglietto), invece mi ritrovo dietro il prete che dice messa 🤣😂🤣
    Ma quante messe dicono in un giorno? Ma se la prendono una pausa???

    Ultima, una chiesa vicina all'ermellino, sprangata al primo giro di visita, oggi aperta, mi ha dato un'impressione di gay pride. Vero, Marghe?
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  • Day 3

    Miniere di sale

    February 23 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

    Wieliczka
    Terzo livello
    Attraverso tre laghi, scendiamo a 130 metri di profondità, fino ad una camera così grande che ci fanno bangee jumping. E dopo aver respirato l'atmosfera di Shining in inverno, prendo l'ascensore (135 metri in 40 secondi in un barattolo di lamiera bucherellata) e "infine uscimmo a rimirar le stelle". Spero...Read more

  • Day 14

    Krakau 2.0

    September 28, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    Wir haben herrlich geschlafen und heute scheint die Sonne ☀️ wieder.
    Zeit für Kaffee ☕️ in Krakau.
    Heute wollen wir uns die Orte, die uns gestern per bike 🚴🏻 besonders gefallen haben noch mal genauer anschauen.
    Wir starten mit dem Bischofspalast den Johannes Paul II. berühmt gemacht hat, durch eine spontane Rede zum Volk aus dem Fenster des Gebäudes, den schicken Tuchhallen aus dem 13. Jh. , die für den Handel in der Stadt auf dem Großen Markt - dem größten mittelalterlichen Markt Europas geschaffen wurden und gleich danach gibt es einen Kaffee ☕️ um den Trompeter der Marienkirche zu erleben.
    Der Trompeter spielt ein Lied zu jeder vollen Stunde aus den Fenstern der Kirche in jede Himmelsrichtung.
    Laut einer Sage wurde ein Spieler im 13. Jh. dabei vom Feind von einem Pfeil getroffen und deshalb vollendet er sein Spiel im letzten Fenster nicht.
    Dann geht es weiter am Wawelsberg mit dem königlichen Palast vorbei Richtung Kazimierz - dem jüdischen Viertel mit sehr unterschiedlicher Geschichte.
    Heute sind wir aber auch dort um das älteste orginal erhaltene Café in Krakau zu besuchen und auf dem Neuen Markt eine typischen polnischen Snack zu testen Zapiekanki … ein langes Baguette mit Pilzen und diversen Kräutern.
    Jetzt wird es langsam Zeit für den Rückweg - der Tag war lang.
    Wir spazieren an der Weichsel-Promenade entlang. Kommen am Feuer 🔥 speienden Drachen vorbei zurück zu unserer Hilde und sind platt.
    Ein sehr schöner camping empfängt uns ausserhalb von Krakau.
    Jetzt wird chillaxt
    - Füsse hoch !
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  • Day 4

    Salzmine Wieliczka

    August 20, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

    Heute geht es wahrhaftig in eine Stadt unter Tage. Seit 700 Jahren wird in Wieliczka auf neun Ebenen Salz abgebaut. Wir besuchen die 3 obersten Ebenen und enden am Ende auf 135 Meter unter Tage. Über 800 Stufen bringen uns hinab in den Berg. Auch wenn die offizielle Förderung von Steinsalz 1996 eingestellt wurde, arbeiten noch heute 900 Menschen im Berg. 400 sind Führer, welche bis zu 8000 Leute täglich führen. Auch für Sicherungsarbeiten sind etliche Bergleute erforderlich.
    Einst war das Salz so wertvoll wie Gold, und die unterirdischen Gänge von Wieliczka waren ein Quell unermesslichen Reichtums.
    Im Laufe der Jahrhunderte wurde das Bergwerk zu einem wahren unterirdischen Königreich. Die Bergleute, die hier arbeiteten, schufen nicht nur Gänge und Kammern, sondern auch kunstvolle Kapellen, Statuen und Kronleuchter, alles aus Salz gemeißelt. Die berühmteste unter ihnen ist die Kapelle der Heiligen Kinga, die tief im Inneren des Bergwerks liegt, ein Ort von atemberaubender Schönheit.
    Am Ende der Tour erfahren wir, dass wir nur 1 Prozent der Miene gesehen haben. Ein Wahnsinn und keine Sorge, ein Lift brachte uns wieder nach oben.
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  • Day 1

    Krakau und die Hohe Tatra

    August 17, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 29 °C

    Statt in die Alpen oder nach Südtirol sind wir unterwegs nach Polen. Mit viel Vorfreude starten wir zu dieser Tour, einer Kombination aus Kultur und Natur.
    Zuerst geht’s nach Krakau. Die Stadt gehört zu den ältesten und wohl schönsten Polens und sie lockt uns mit ihrer reichen Geschichte.
    Nur wenige Stunden von Krakau entfernt liegt die Hohe Tatra, das höchste Gebirge der Karpaten, wo unsere Wanderschuhe zum Einsatz kommen sollen.
    Für die nächsten drei Tage steigen wir in der gemütlichen Art & Garden Residence, einem Boutique-Designhotel in der Innenstadt, ab. Bei einem ersten Spaziergang am Nachmittag tauchen wir ein in den besonderen Charme von Krakau.
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  • Day 7

    Kraków - UNESCO World Heritage Site

    August 14, 2024 in Poland ⋅ 🌙 22 °C

    I could have perhaps done with a rest day by Lake Turawa. Instead I tried to do Kraków in a day including a tour of Wieliczka salt mine. I really don’t think I’ve done this place justice as there is so much to see. I’m left feeling puzzled by my own frantic energy!Read more

  • Day 33

    Fuck the Polish train system!

    July 19, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

    Even before the train left Budapest we had warning signs. There were two sets of numbers on each carriage so initially we got on the wrong one. Eventually got to the right carriage and there were two people sitting in our seats. They had set them selves up and wouldn’t move. I found out later that they sell more tickets than there are seats and locals just sit where they want. Rose shouted at them and they eventually left. I was in seat 57, and there was no seat 57! Then I realised there were a number of people all wandering around looking for seats that didn’t exit. Chaos before we’d even left the station! And it was HOT, so we were stressed and knackered before the journey started.

    Initially I thought it was. a 6 hour trip, but I’d miscalculated and it was 9 hours. The train kept stopping, sometimes for up to 20 minutes all along the way.. We had our own little ‘room’ within the carriage with all or our luggage packed into the overhead storage compartments. It was small and cramped, and as the journey went along, it got stifling hot in there. No air flow, no air conditioning. And then we made our big mistake! At about the 7 hour point, we went to the cafe carriage to cool down and get a drink. While we were there the train stopped for about 20 minutes, which was nothing unusual.

    Of we went again, Alice snd I decided to go back to our carriage, but we couldn’t find it! We went up and back a number of times and eventually found a conductor, who was having an argument with a number of other people. That was when we discovered that during the last stop, the end of the train, including the carriage with ALL OF OUR LUGGAGE had disconnected! We were in the front of the train heading to Warsaw, while our luggage was now heading to Krakow! All we had was our handbags, with credit cards and passports. Hard to explain what realising this felt like. Panic!

    There were about 15 people in the same situation- all tourists. There may have been announcements, but not in English. Apparently a conductor walked up and down our carriage and told people it was going to happen, but people were sitting in random seats all over the train, and we were in the cafe car! There was no information on our tickets or at the train station. The conductor said ‘but everyone just knows’!

    I won’t go into every detail of the next two days, It was spent speaking to incompetent people who didn’t really care, waiting at the information desk, being told to come back at a certain time, only to come back and nothing had changed. Explaining the situation to new people when staff changed. Rose had put AirTags in our large suitcases so we knew they were in a town by the Ukrainian boarder, but no one seemed to know how to get them back. A stressful, chaotic, frustrating and generally shit time.

    Yesterday was meant to be a full day private tour of WW2 sites around Krakow and then to Auschwitz. In the end Tom and Rose went while Alice and I headed back to the train station yet again. And a miracle occurred! While we were explaining the situation AGAIN to a new person, the door opened and there were all our large suitcases 🎉🎉🎉. Unbelievable! Still missing were our 4 carryon bags. Tom’s had his CPAP machine in his, so we needed to find them.

    More phone calls. We gave them a detailed description of the 4 bags and finally they located 2, Tom’s and mine. They would not, however, send them back! No explanation but they wouldn’t do it!! Alice and I bought tickets, ran to the train and about 1 minute later we were on our way to Przemyśl, about 2.5 hours from Krakow on the Ukrainian boarder. It was a full train and again they had sold more tickets then seats. We were told to stand up, or just go and find any seat that looks like it’s not being used. Usual Polish train system chaos!

    We were a little anxious walking into the lost property system in Przemyśl, but another miracle occurred! Behind the door in this tiny office, in a tiny lost property space were ALL our bags! Rose and Ali’s bag was there along with Tom’s and mine. Our shopping bag was even there with food from our train trip still inside. We had not lost 1 single item! Once we took our bags off the shelves there was hardly any lost property there. God knows why they couldn’t work out what was ours.

    An extremely traumatic 2.5 days which never want to repeat!

    What have we learnt?
    1. Never catch a Polish train!
    2. Put AirTags on all our luggage (big and small bags)
    3. Have your name and address on all items
    4. Google translate is fantastic
    5. Never leave your bags, even if you think they’re safe
    6. RAA only has a $700 claim limit for lost luggage. That is pathetic!
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  • Day 164

    Krakau

    June 27, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

    Das Paris an der Weichsel, die heimliche Hauptstadt Polens.
    Eine große, weitläufige Altstadt mit vielen Gassen. Mal wieder an jeder Ecke Geschichte. Dadurch, dass nicht alle Häuser restauriert sind, fühlte ich mich in der Zeit zurückversetzt.
    Die Stadt ist lebendig und sehr atmosphärisch.
    Leider war es heute so heiß, dass es sehr anstrengend war. Wir sind platt wie Hund.
    Haben einen schönen Platz außerhalb von Krakau gefunden. Mal sehen, wie lange wir bleiben.
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  • Day 15–16

    Krakow

    June 18, 2024 in Poland ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    The day started with me taking a 10am train from berlin to krakow, which took about 7 hours. Here i left my companian Nik whilst he went to Ibiza and i was to tour Auschwitz. Not contrasting activities at all...

    The train ride was relatively unpleasant on a surprising 36 degree day. My first class carriage had "airconditioning" which didnt function at all, as the train had so many airgaps that whatever air was being processed im sure was whisked away into nature. The Polish trains also had this rather odd hogwarts express layout where all the seats were 3 abreast facing another 3 people with no table in between. Making for lots of odd and awkward head gestures between people. So i knuckled down and glued my sweaty back to the seat and enjoyed the polish scenery.

    One of the most amazing things (for me) about poland is that their currency the polish zloty is very weak compared to the aud (1AUD = 2.7 zlt) making things for me rather cheap compared to the overpriced nature of Germany 🇩🇪. Polish is also such a phenomenaly hard language to speak that everyone spoke very good English by default. To give you an idea of how difficult polish is to an english speaker hello in polish is spelt cześć or witam. Now, myself trying to form full sentences of that through google Translate, was very impossible. I tried not to be a demanding American and ask first if english was okay in the native tongue. But alas, even that i couldn't manage.

    The salt mine tour I booked conveniently included a complimentary 7pm tour of old town Krakow. I had no expectations besides that id been told good things. Krakow was set out very defensively with the entrance into the town guarded by a castle with a moat and drawbridge that in older times had to be entered before you could gain access to the town. With large 10m or so brick walls all over the town it was a migty impressive sight. Entering the boulevard there, i noticed there was certainly no shortage of dessert shops. In fact i somewhat struggled to find a spot to have a non sugary meal afterwards. The guide informed us that the square is the oldest medievel square in Europe with a vast 200x200m size and he certainly wasn't wrong. It was a very impressive sight. There was also a church which was the peoples church that had one steeple under construction. A rather tall church, we were told the public funded it extensively back in the day so that the 'people' appeared as wealthy and aided in building a good sense of community.

    I headed back to my tiny apartment with no airconditioning with the bed placed annoyingly at the highest point of the apartment in the attic for a hot, sweaty, and rather uncomfortable sleep. Waking at 5am the next day for Auschwitz birkenau (to be covered separately).

    The day after this i went to this place called the salt mines. Which i had no expectations of what to expect. I assumed with the name like salt mine and, being offered alongside my Auschtwitz tour, it was connected in a concentration/labour camp sort of way. I was quite wrong. With the salt mine being established in the 1200s it was not connected at all.

    To start off, I was warned of 1000s of steps and cramped headroom descending to depths of 190m. This only served to make me more excited, remembering my time in broken hills old mines as a 6 year old, old mineshafts with timber supports and all hand tunnelled got me excited for what was to come.

    Descending 55 flights of stairs on this 100% wooden staircase took me into the first level of the mine at a mere 90m depth. There was so much wood! Everywhere, it was mental. The guide informed me that on the first level alone, 1 million cubic metres of wood were used (4mil for the entire mine). They had trunk after trunk piled on top of each other for structural support.

    With this being the oldest level most of the wood had turned solid through the humidity expanding the timber, allowing salt to pour into the timber and then the timber contracting as it cooled down leaving nothing but salt crystals inside the timber. Effectively preserving the timber and turning it into stone in the process. I'll hurry this description along now before it turns too, Lucinda, like and loses my cool casual narrative style.

    The guide absolutely loved the salt crystals. They were such "beautiful, gorgeous, thick, pure" deposits everywhere. When she would show deposits of 90% purity or more, her voice would turn into a loving romantic voice. Almost as if she was telling us about her summer romance with her high school boyfriend. We descended the mine for ages going through various airlocks until kaboom wow. We entered a chamber where the miners had tunnelled and built their own underground church. Now, I'm in Europe, theres a lot of churches I've been seeing everyday all very impressive and old, but i dont think any church i will ever see, will now be able to compare with the scale, uniqueness and charm of this church. Mining was a very dangerous job and as such they were all highly religious, which is what pushed them to build these places of worship. There was many other lovely large chambers and clear blue bodies of water inside the mine you can see in the pictures.

    I head back to my accommodation afterwards and i heard some gunshots when walking back from my solo dinner. After the initial concern i tracked the sound to this indoor gun range which intrigued me. It was very cheap to shoot a bunch of different weapon systems, so i went in (with thongs lol) and asked to shoot 3 guns, a pistol, an AR rifle and an ak. They didnt ask me if i had any experience etc. After the initial briefing on how to use the range and guns i shot the AR-15 and after 5 shots the guy was like (*polish accent "damn you're a natural") then after my mag ran out and i habitually went through my empty mag weapon drill he looked at me a bit funny but didnt say anything. Then when i shot the pistol (ignoring how he told me to hold it and instead holding it how i was trained) and got a good grouping he was like... have you done this before? I told him i was an ex rifleman and then he goes. "Ahh for fuuucks sake shouldve told me now i look like big idiot to you." This turned into me giving a mini seminar to him and his colleague about why we hold the pistol the way we do. How i hold the rifle etc (bringing the rifle to my eyes, not my head to the rifle... allows you to get a sight picture quicker). Finally when i shot the AK (which im familiar with as we had to train with it, as you're expected to know how to operate enemy combatants weapons) the polish guys got a bit of a hard on i think, i felt like quite the celebrity and very SAS like shooting while wearing thongs, a bucket hat and a tshirt and shorts.

    Also dear readers, im aware there is a competing blog in the form of an unsavoury human aka my little sister Lucinda. This lesser publication with its fancy "laptop," and "proper grammar." Will not be able to compete with the authenticity and many photos published in this publication i assure you. This may be due to active sabotage on my part when I see the editor in a week. (Luci if you read this im totally joking)
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