BootsnAll Travel Network



Articles Tagged ‘Poland’

More articles about ‘Poland’
« Home

Warsaw Rising

Sunday, September 14th, 2008

My stop in Poland was brief as best, mostly due to the fact I wasn’t really planning on going but unfortunately the visa strict Belarus lies between Ukraine and my next destination of Lithuanian. So I decided to stop over for a day rather than take the direct 16 hour bus. I hate buses…although ironically after my avoidance techniques I ended up on the worst bus of all to get to Vilnius…an overnight bus…but anyway, that’s another (and not nearly as painful) story.

I had visited Krakow, where my train arrived into, on my last trip around Eastern Europe and was keen to see something different so I skipped through and caught the first train straight up to the capital Warsaw, it had been a long journey on the train to get there and I was tired and hungry by the time I got to Krakow. This probably didn’t help me miss the fact there is actually a one hour time difference which was a bit confusing when trying to buy a ticket and I tried to argue with the ticket lady about it until she politely pointed out the time was in fact 3.30 not 4.30. But it was amazing how the train station people were helpful and spoke English! I managed to get a train leaving immediately and somehow ended up with a bag of M&M’s to eat…another healthy addition to my day of train station bought junk food. I had taken a slow train so arrived in Warsaw about 10.30pm, a long 16 hour day on the trains. I walked to my hostel and went straight to bed. I only had a day in Warsaw as I would leave on the evening on a night bus so I headed out alone for a mega day of walking and seeing a lot of stuff in a short space of time. It was actually really nice to be in a western style city, probably the most western place I had been so far.


I managed to get my bus ticket and walked around the wide streets and parks eventually getting to the Warsaw Rising museum which was about the fight against Germans and the Soviet invasion. Basically Poland was screwed by everyone, being in a bad location in terms of other people wanting your land. It’s always sad to learn more about how so many of these eastern European countries were screwed by both Germany and Russia for so long with one bad regime following the next. The Warsaw Rising was when Warsaw tried to hold out against the Germans but lost, the museum was really interesting and really well put together with lots of interesting information also lots of horrific scenes from the fighting and the concentration camps which are mostly around Poland. Very sad but a good museum,  and made my walking around the city more interesting as I learnt a bit more about the important sites. Heaps of the city was destroyed but there is still a very impressive but touristy old town that I checked out with a really good market square.

I had a nice healthy lunch at a vege café to have a break from the incredibly stodgy Ukrainian food. As my bus wasn’t until 11 that night I went to a mall and window shopped in H&M and some other clothing shops, not that I can actually carry any more clothes, but it was nice to look around and not just look at churches and old buildings!


(The big building dubbed Stalin’s Birthday cake)

Back at the hostel I got chatting to an English guy and went to a jazz bar for a quick drink then it was time to get my bags and jump on the 9 hour bus to Vilnius, the Lithuanian capital. So a short but action packed day in Warsaw, I actually liked the city, not many people do but I guess it was a nice change from other places I had been, and had people who were actually helpful and friendly! Like they actually wanted to serve me! Amazing!

The bus ride was actually good as there was an Aussie and an English travelling together-Tom and Hal and another Aussie guy, Joe sitting near me, plus a group of Romanian girls who spoke perfect English so I had a cool journey chatting to them and got a bit of sleep arriving nice and early in Vilnius where the 4 of us headed to our hostel.

salt anyone?

Thursday, November 2nd, 2006

So I find myself yet again surrounded by an inordinate amount of salt. The first time being the salt flats in Bolivia now this time 100’s of meters underground in salt mines just outside of Krakow. Myself, Laura (american chick), Matt (Lauras friend, aussie living in UK) and sweet chillie philly (American guy from Philidelphia, hence the name. Ended up spending the next week or so with him and a few others) caught the bus out to who-knows-where to check out these mines. Luckily we arrived just in time to jump in with the english tour and started a very long descent into the mines which are only used now for tourists. These mines were a lot different from Bolivian silver mines as I could actually stand, breath and see (all very good things). So we wandered aroud these very old mine shafts where they used to mine salt and it seems they must have had a bit of time on their hands as the workers carved lots of stuff out of salt. It doesnt look like white powdery salt, more like a greeny rock. So there are statues and churches carved out of this salt stuff. The most impressive being a massive chapel made entirely out of sat, including chandeliers, tiles floors, a copy of ‘the last supper’ and to top it all off a life sized statue of the pope! They even hold weddings in there! Its just so impressive cause you literally are right underground and theres all this stuff, and massive halls and gift shops, toilets even a restaurant, bar and function room. Its a bit surreal but very very cool, despite a bit chessy. So we spent a bit of time under ground checking all this out, licking the walls (yep they do taste salty) and had some food before catching the scaryist lift in the world back up to the surface.

Back in town we met up with Cameron and Boris and went to the greatest Polish restaurant ever. Its all just so cheap! So had a massive amount of food, all very heavy Polish food, fish, potatoes and my favourite perogies which are like little dumpling things filled with good stuff, we had fruit ones, cheese ones…so many perogies…I think I just like the word!

Sweet Chillie Philly headed off to Prague on the overnight train with some other chicks we’d meet and the rest of us went to a few bars before heading home. Last day was spent at Aushwitz as explained, dinner again at the Polish place then myself, Cameron and Boris took the long overnight train to Prague. After all the dodgy stories I’d heard of this train ride it was nice to have some people to travel with! Cameron even had a guitar so we spent a lot of the evening singing Radiohead very loudly and trying to get a bit of sleep. We arrived in Prague 7am with all of our belongings which is all ways good! another day another country, another language, another crazy currency….

Lets get depressed

Wednesday, November 1st, 2006
Its kind of weird asking people if Aushwitz was good, its like well yeah its worth going to but good? How can a death camp be good, and so why do we all go out there for a day trip? ... [Continue reading this entry]