Saturday 1 June 2013

Scandinavian Safari - Ready for Off

Well here we are again preparing to set off on another expedition in the Liberator. This time it's a "Scandinavian Safari". We will catch the ferry next Saturday (8th June) from Harwich to Esbjerg in Denmark and then drive to Copenhagen to catch another ferry up to Oslo. 

From Oslo we plan to drive right up through Norway to its (and Europe's) most northerly point, hopefully getting into the Arctic Circle in time for the midnight sun. We will then return south through Finland and Sweden and eventually cross "The Bridge" back to Copenhagen and home. 
 
We've allowed ourselves four weeks for the journey, which will revisit some of the places we passed through in 2007 on our "Round the Baltic" expedition as well as including some new ones. We haven't done Norway before so that promises to be spectacular and fun and I am also trying to include some venues from the "Nordic Noir" genre of crime fiction that I have been reading quite a lot recently! So Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm, Ystad and of course "The Bridge" will feature, as well as some other less well known sites.

We just need to get the clutch master cylinder replaced  on Tuesday and tax the Liberator (from the end of June, which we can't do until Wednesday 5th), and then we should be all set to head down south on Friday.

I don't plan on trying to do a daily diary but I hope we will manage to post some pictures and comments from time to time along the way.


Thursday 7 July 2011

Playing catch-up


Due to a lack of free wifi I haven't managed to update the blog for several days so this is a bit of a catch up. Last Saturday we moved on in the Czech Republic to a campsite about 15km from the centre of Prague and we then had two days of site-seeing in the city. There was a bus that stopped right outside the campsite but the journey in required two changes (another bus and then a tram) and took about 90 minutes each way. There is a lot to see in Prague and there seemed to be a lot going on but I think we managed to get a flavour of the place. The tram took us into Wenceslas Square, really a wide boulevard with large shops and hotels on either side and a statue of the “Sainted King” at the top. We then walked to the Old Town, in the rain on Sunday but again in better weather on the Monday. We also found a little area of lanes and courtyards off the Old Square, where there were some interesting old shops with antiques and bric a brac. We then went on over the Charles Bridge, and on Monday we actually made it up the steep hill to the Castle and did a tour of the old Royal Palace, St Vitus' Cathedral and various other attractions, before walking back to Wenceslas Square, (complete with a branch of Marks and Spencer!) to get the tram back. Tuesday was a Czech public holiday and we decided to have a bit of a quieter day. We stayed around the campsite and then had a stroll into the nearby village.
The weather had not been so good since we got into the Czech Republic, probably not their fault! It brightened up a bit on Tuesday and then got even hotter on Wednesday as we drove back into Germany.
We stayed for one night on a site in a forest that used to be a training camp for the Stasi!! The present owners have made it into a very attractive and popular holiday site, despite its unfortunate history. Soon after we arrived the hot weather broke into a short but heavy thunder shower. However the warm weather had returned by this morning. We had a very long drive today in hot sunshine not helped by running out of LPG at an inconvenient place half way up a hill and having to coax the engine to keep going on petrol despite the usual sticking carburettor float problem, until we could pull into a garage forecourt in the next town. Edith was not at all happy about this! Fortunately the force must have been with us as the Opel dealership next door sold LPG and after that we had an incident free journey, except for a small spot of navigational difficulty in finding the correct exit from the autobahn. We are now back on the site at the Edersee National Park where we stayed on our first night and the plan is to stay here for two nights and then go up to Cologne for a couple of nights before heading back to Rotterdam for the ferry home.

Friday 1 July 2011

Monsoon Season

We didn't make it to the open-air museum, in fact we sat in the van, watching the rain .... and thunder and lightening and reading our books from about 11.00am until 8 in the evening when we dashed across to the hotel next door, for a meal and a change of scenery! It continued to rain all night and after putting the tent/awning away soaking wet and carrying all the washing which had been on a washing line since yesterday morning and was also drenched, we left the site and headed further west into the Czech Republic. The rain eventually petered out late morning, and by mid-afternoon we arrived at a somewhat surreal site beside a lake. The plumbing and electrics, and the site generally,  have the look and feel of "Soviet era - circa 1960" and nearby there is a group of campers who appear to be from the Czech branch of the owners club for a small Citroen hatchback car. Next to the camping field is a bar with an outside seating area and a "Live performance" from a local very loud Blues band! However, the rain has held off and the sun even shone for a while, so we have got the tent and the laundry dry.

The plan is to go on to a site on the outskirts of Prague tomorrow and spend a couple of days exploring the city. The weather forecast doesn't sound too promising but hopefully we can find enough to see undercover to cope with the wettest bits.

Thursday 30 June 2011

Czech and Slovakia

The following day was even more overcast so we never did do the funicular railway in Zakopane. However, we went for a stroll round the town looking for a suitable place for coffee and cakes and ended up climbing right up out of town and on to the entrance to the Tatry National Park! As there seemed to be lots of people going in and coming out we thought it might be worth a look, so we paid our zlotys and set off up a forest track. The weather went from overcast to raining to hail and then to a thunder storm and still we walked! Eventually we found a lot of Polish people sheltering at a log cabin restaurant serving soup etc. About 10 minutes further on took us to a waterfall, which was the place everyone seemed to be heading for. On the way down we stopped for soup and the sun came out, but only briefly.
The following day there was excitement on our campsite as there was fresh snow visible on the mountains! We left Zakopane and took the Liberator up through the Tatra mountains and into Slovakia. There were some spectacular views from the roadside of the snow capped mountains.




We spent three nights at a site near to the town of Levoca which is an almost intact medieval town with a pretty town square and many impressive old buildings.







 





We took a bus trip to Spissky Hrad (Castle) about 15km away, the largest medieval castle in Slovakia or even Europe depending which guide book you read!









Later in the adjacent town whilst waiting for the bus Edith was excited to find her own dress shop!

Yesterday we drove on again out of Slovakia and into the Czech Republic and the small town of Roznov. The weather was not good, with rain most of the way, and although we had some pleasant warm sunshine this morning, the heavens have just opened as I have been typing this and a heavy thunder shower is now in progress! This town's claim to fame is an open air folk museum which we thought sounded worth a visit but is beginning to seem less attractive by the minute!!

Friday 24 June 2011

The Tatra Mountains

We spent the last day in Krakow visiting the Salt Mine at Wieliczka. A fascinating trip down into a mine which has been worked for over 400 years and contains many sculptures in salt and several chapels, which the miners created so that they could pray, for safety before and during their long shifts.
We then spent the Corpus Christi public holiday staying on a small and rather primitive site in the Carpathian foothills beside a large reservoir.

As the site was very cheap and located right beside the lake with a bar and boats to hire, it was quite popular with the locals some of whom were camping and an even larger number arrived as day visitors.
We went out for a ride on the bikes on Thursday morning and found ourselves following large church processions in two villages we passed through.

This morning, after a heavy thunder storm in the night, the morning brightened up and we moved on to Zakopane. This weekend seems to be the start of the school holidays here so every Polish man and his family seemed to be heading into Zakopane. However we located the campsite we were looking for and then caught a bus into the town centre. Zakopane is very much geared to the tourists with souvenir stalls by the thousand, a kind of Polish version of Blackpool's Golden Mile. A major highlight seemed to be the opportunity to bungee jump, hanging by the ankles, from a large crane! The Tatra Mountains form the backdrop to the town, although the cloud was a bit low this afternoon.


Tomorrow we plan to take the funicular railway up to the top of a local peak from where the Tatra range can be more easily viewed.

Monday 20 June 2011

Auschwitz and "king" of the Marksmen


A visit to the Auschwitz - Birkenau museum is never going to be the high spot of a holiday in Poland but we felt that having come so close to it we really should go and visit it. It also seemed to be an appropriate activity for a Sunday when the weather forecast was for showers and slightly cooler weather. We both found it informative and different from our preconceptions. The first camp at Auschwitz (Oswiecim in Polish) was quite compact. It had been a Polish army barracks and had that look and feel to it, although the displays inside buildings were quite distressing.

The later camp at Birkenau, was only about 3 kilometres away and was administered from Auschwitz, and that was unbelievably vast. About 175 hectares, which meant nothing to me, but to see the rows of huts, was amzing. Many were of wood and were burnt by the Nazis but the brick built stoves and chimneys were left standing which made it all the more grim.

Some of the huts had been built of brick and these were left as they had been found, and were open for visitors to look at. 

Birkenau is the camp that had the railway arch entrance and the unloading ramps for the trucks with lookout towers for sentries to keep watch.

There is a large international memorial in the area of the gas chambers here, which were also destroyed by the fleeing Nazis but one of those at Auschwitz remains as a kind of shrine.

The previous day on a bright and sunny Saturday we took a minibus into the city centre and wandered around Old Krakow. Quite attractive and with the largest town square in Poland, even bigger than the one at Wroclaw! In some ways the size of it made it a bit less appealing, that and the very “touristy” feel of the place. We were “lucky” enough to be there on the day of the colourful ceremony of the Enthronement of the “king” Marksman! The Marksmen's Brotherhood is a guild that has lasted since the Middle Ages when they trained the townspeople to fight off invaders.
The “king” is the winner of a shooting competition and the outgoing one passes on an ancient silver cock to his successor at this lavish ceremony which involves a service in the cathedral and what sounded like a speech from a politician! The parade consisted of people in medieval dress including a group of musicians and several carrying bows and arrows.

Today, Monday, we are having a bit of a lazy day in camp and catching up on laundry, partly because the weather is even more unsettled than yesterday. We had intended to visit the nearby Salt Mines today but that will now be tomorrow's treat.

Friday 17 June 2011

Krakow or bust!



On Thursday morning we set off from Wroclaw in the general direction of Krakow with the intention of stopping for an overnight en-route.
It was a hot day and we stopped around mid-day at the small town of Kluczbork for a break and a coffee. We found a small arty coffee shop (quite unusual for rural Poland) with record sleeves of Bob Marley, and original artwork on the walls and selling CDs and books as well as coffee tea etc.
It was run by a young man who had moved here from Wroclaw to settle with his wife, and had seen the possible business oportunity. We had some good coffee and a pleasant chat with him, within the limits of his English.
The contrast in the quality of some of the roads is quite amazing. There are brand new ultra modern roads built to best European standards which connect directly to old Polish rural roads with potholes and deep grooves worn by decades of heavy trucks on the soft tar during hot summer weather. They even have a road sign to warn you about the “tramlines” - erecting signs is clearly cheaper than repairing the roads!

We drove on to Czestochowa, where there was a campsite adjacent to the Monastery of Jasna Gora which has a painting of a “Black Madonna” which is reputed to have performed miracles and the monastery is therefore a place of pilgrimage. All quite big business it would seem judging from the size of the car and coach parks and the various catering establishments including the camping site which had grown up around it. Also rows of market stalls selling quite tasteless souvenirs as well as children's toys including replica sniper rifles!
We didn't go into the monastery, but had a walk into the town and a beer at a pavement bar. We got back to the site just as a short thunder shower passed over.

Friday morning was a bit cooler and breakfast was briefly interrupted by a shower of rain but the day brightened up quite quickly and the temperature indicators on the motorway round Krakow were showing 24 degrees when we arrived. We chose a campsite about 12 km south of the city which has a bus service into the centre from outside the gate. We have just rested and relaxed since arriving mid-afternoon and will venture into the city tomorrow.