After damn near all day on the train we finally made it to Krakow. I am sure at times I could have walked faster than we were moving! We caught a taxi to our hotel and then caught a tram into the city to meet Janna. We came around the corner and there she was waiting patiently, with a big smile on her face. We talked continuously over a delicious dinner and then walked around the city square – getting our history lesson from our tour guide Janna. The main square or Rynek Glowny is Europes largest square measuring 200m x 200m. St Mary’s Church which is very gothic in appearance and has a couple of interesting stories around the two huge towers that are quite different to each other.
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The church is something of an oddity in that it's towers are assymetrical. The
story goes that two brothers were commissioned to build the towers and that they decided to each build one of the towers. What should have been a collaboration of talent soon became a competition with one brother demonstrating his superior speed by completing his tower early whilst the other one diligently and methodically built at his own pace. When completed the younger brother was so jealous of his brother's superior work that he murdered him before committing suicide himself.
We made plans for the next day, we would go to the salt mines and Janna had to work. And then that evening Falk her boyfriend would arrive for the weekend.
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| Murray and Janna at Rynek Glowny |
Wieliczka Salt mine
We got into the city, then we caught a bus to Wieliczka. The queues were huge, hate to think what it would be like on the weekends. Interestingly the shortest queue was the international one. There were loads of Polish people. We joined a tour that took about three hours, which we thought was a little too showy and touristic. We went down steps to 68m and then a down to 140m before returning to the surface. They have certainly done some amazing sculptures out of salt, and the walkways were well made of timber and turned hand rails. The underground chapels that we saw were pretty cool, with huge round poles holding everything up. They were painted white to try and help reflect any light there was down there. Maybe we have just been in too many mines to really appreciate this one.
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| figures made from salt |
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| you could see and taste the salt on the walls |
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| salt forcing its way through |
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| In the day, they had horses down in the mine to work |
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| The main underground chapel |
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| Famous picture carved of salt - looked 3d as it was 10cm in depth |
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| All the wooden framing was painted white to help reflect any light. |
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| Entrance to another underground Chapel that you got to by boat |
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The famous street, that was used as the 'royal route" to enter the city.
Not sure why these two are standing there! |
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The Florianska Gate at the start of the royal street.
The main city gate was build at the end of XIII century to protect the northern entrance to the city.
It became an important feature on the Royal route leading from the Sukiennice to the Wawel Palace. |
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A little hard to see, but in the distance to the right of the big tree is a building that is white.
Well this is the building that Janna is helping check architecture plans for at the moment. |
Unfortunately we woke to an overcast day with weather forecast for Zakapane sounding poor so we planned to have a sleep in and meet at midday for lunch and sight seeing. Another enjoyable day visiting the Old town, Wawel Castle from the 14th century, Collegium Maius which is the oldest surviving and still being used university in Poland. Really beautiful, I can only imagine working in a place like this would be rather special. Florian Gate, which was build so that special people had somewhere nice to walk – we walked down the road, but Janna said we were walking the wrong way so not sure if that makes us extra special or just plain not special at all! We visited the Kazimierz region, founded by King Kazimierz the Great in 1335, which later became the city to house all the Jews that were fleeing persecution from all parts of Europe. During WWII the Nazis relocated Jews to the walled ghetto in Podgorze just south of the Vistula River and most were exterminated in the nearby concentration camp. Steven Spielberg’s film the Schnindlers List is based around these areas. The eastern Jewish quarter has many synagogues and also many Jewish restaurants and a market to visit. Janna got us tickets to a music concert at a Jewish restaurant Ariel, which was enjoyable. Our waiter suggested some food options for us to try and when they arrived at the table we were surely not disappointed. The soups were delicious and the mains equally – and the best part was, it was beef – yes beef, it is not very often on all our travels we have seen beef! . The music was a guy on a piano accordion, a guy on a base and a woman playing the violin and singing. A mixture of Polish, Yiddish and German I think – whatever it was very good and most enjoyable. So after eating, listening to music and annoying a bus load of Germans we left about 10.30 to head home and get some sleep in the hope of an early start again to Zakapane.
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| Somewhere on our Krakow city tour standing in the rain! |
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| The Collegium Maius - the oldest building of learning in Poland. Originally in 1400 you could study medicine, law and the arts here. It is still used as a University today, but I am unsure what you can study here now. |
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| Falk and Murray trying their strength in the gardens of Collegium Maius |
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The day before Murray had got a haircut, and the hairdresser cut the top of his ear -
I was simply trying to even things up a bit. |
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| A great 70's cafe with yummy food for lunch. |
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| Janna and Falk |
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| All of us together |
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A picture on the wall outside a restaurant.
Haven't checked out the words yet,
but looks good to me hahaha |
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| guess who?? |
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| In the Jewish quarter - hard to see, but gumboots on the windowsills - not sure why. |
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Dinner and concert at Ariel, complete with a side show from the boys.
Murray took the plaster off his ear, then it bled, needing a serviette to mop up the blood and then the phone to compress, so Falk decided to give him a call or maybe was it the other way around anyway hilarious!
but maybe you needed to be there. |
But no – thunder storms and rain predicted, so another sleep in was in order followed by meeting up around 12 again. We headed straight to the Sunday market after fighting with our umbrellas, had a look around there in the rain, then decided a visit to one of the museums might be safest bet. We headed in that general direction walking through the beautiful cobbled streets, and were feeling a bit hungry so came across Kogel Mogel – a communist restaurant. Decor was all in red and cream, menu was printed on a full single sheet of newspaper and the name and description for example -
300% of the Norm
As big as the 6-year plan, solid as the worker-farmer alliance. Pork lion of a piglet fed exclusively with acorns from People's Guard national forests. Provided strength necessary to fight for a better tomorrow and a bone which you can take to your workers hotel.
Dad's home
Served with onions, prepared according to the recipe of wive and life-partners waiting long hours for the return of their men from party meetings.
Very cool find, and again nice food, we thought a little to fancy for communist times but still using delicous basic ingredients. From lunch we decided to go to the Mounds, there are apparently five mounds around Krakow, only four exist now. They were build as lookout from what I can gather. With umbrellas in the ready and full tummys we headed off, firstly by tram (the wrong tram- double the distance) and then by foot for 1.6km winding up the hill to the base of the mound. It was a nice walk through some big old trees. Reaching the top we looked for a toalette then headed up the ‘mound’ as we started we could see that a huge rain cloud was quickly covering Krakow. We knew we didn’t have much time to waste. We made it to the top, took some photos and headed quickly down. On a clear day the view must be amazing, it was still not bad the day we were there. We made it down just as the sky opened up and it poured down. We took cover in a small museum based on the history of the mounds for about two hours, and after playing a few rounds of eye spy we then went to the bus stop and caught the bus back closer to town. Very cool place. We walked along the Vistula River before turning and heading into town. A bit of souvenier shopping and grocery shopping and then found a cool smorgasbord type eatery for dinner and then Janna took us to an underground pub to enjoy a beer and listen to some tradition Polish music. It turned out that the guy wasn’t playing that night, but it was still a really neat little pub to visit. We said our goodbyes and headed our separate ways, hoping to see each other in the morning even if it was across the platforms, as Falk was returning to Germany on a train 10 minutes after ours left. Cut a long story short, we ended up by having breakfast at 5.30am with Janna and Falk and more final goodbyes. Note to self must watch Schindlers List.
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| Interesting tree on the way up to the Mounds. |
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| The mound |
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| Cool little tower to walk at the begining |
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| Oh my goodenss! |
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| look at those beauties - oh and the black sky behind them. |
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| Poor Krakow is going to get it soon. |
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| Falk, Janna, Murray and me on the top of the mound, minutes before it poured down. |
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| heading down quickly. |
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| Crossing the Wisla river back into the city centre. |
It was really great to see Janna again after two years and
also of course to meet Falk.
Thanks
again guys for showing us around Krakow and spending some time with us
‘fossils’.
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