Nick and I are not beer drinkers as a rule, but we both enjoy the occasional cold one in the sun at lunchtime. In Scandinavia this was an unaffordable luxury, as it was likely to cost us half our daily budget. So we promised each other we'd treat ourselves when the opportunity arose. Throughout the Baltic States either the weather was against us, or we were moving on in the afternoon in areas with virtually zero blood alcohol limits for driving. When the cold weather arrived in Lithuania and Northern Poland we thought we had lost our chance. And then suddenly, the weather changed, we found ourselves free parking in a ski resort in the Slovakian Tatras, and we worked up a thirst climbing up a third of a mountain. So today we sat in glorious sunshine, in shorts and t-shirts, on a terrace, drinking beer. Gosh it tasted good.
No idea what we were drinking |
900m ascent in a phone box |
What Elsa saw |
Right now it was the Tatras that had our full attention as we sat in the sun with our beers, gazing at the peaks behind and the panorama below. Nick generously offered to wait with the dogs if I wanted to go up to the very top, he knows how I love to get to the top of mountains, but sadly the tickets were sold out for the day. Instead we relaxed in the sun, then enjoyed a locally inspired lunch of goulash and pork knuckle to sustain us for the return leg. It took a couple of hours to climb back down the mountain, with both spaniels on their best heel-walking behaviour - essential if one is to avoid a rather more precipitous descent than intended. We shall all sleep well tonight.
The path back down |
Dobczyce castle. Because it was there |
We parked up for the night in a small car park after a bit of good natured haggling with the attendant. Park4Night reviews had warned us of a tendency to hide the rates and overcharge foreign tourists, but he was remarkably phlegmatic when I insisted: "My friend said 20 zloty." And that was what we paid, having carefully husbanded our last remaining cash in preparation. We left the spaniels in the van, and set off to explore Zakopane. We were expecting a small mountain resort. What we found was basically the Polish version of Banff (the Canadian one, not the Scottish one) with the best part of a mile of posh shops and restaurants, every outdoor brand you have ever seen, magnificent wooden villas, and crowds the like of which we hadn't seen since the last encounter with a cruise ship. It all felt a little surreal, but rather impressive too.
A busy night in Zakopane |
The outskirts of Zakopane |
We had decided to cross into Slovakia via the border village of Lysa Polana, and to take the mountain road from Zakopane to get there. Having initially dismissed the road as being too curvy, I had used Google Maps Streetview to establish that there was a white line and a good surface, it was only 18km, and we had driven much worse. The road itself was indeed fine. But it was a Sunday in the middle of period of warm and dry weather in October. The whole of southern Poland was trying to get to trail heads in the Tatras, and those that couldn't get into car parks were parking on the road. I managed to squeeze Florence through the gaps, but there was nowhere to pull over to let traffic past, so I was treated to a couple of loud blasts of the horn for daring to be on the road holding people up. I breathed a sigh of relief as I saw the more major road ahead, and was about to follow Nick's direction to turn right at the roundabout, when I saw that the turning had a 3m height limit. I turned left instead, and pulled into the first space off the road.
Florence is 2.9m high. But she has a 15cm rigid aerial on top. We have survived a 3.2m height limit with relative comfort. But what was this obstruction, and could it rip her aerial off? Having established that a) it was a relatively main road, b) the weight limit was 7.5 tonnes and c) the alternative meant a long diversion, we decided to risk it. There were a lot more cars parked in the road, the massive car parks for hikers at Lysa Polana were completely full and traffic was backing up, but we made it through the border, and we still haven't the faintest idea what the height limit was about. There was no bridge, didn't appear to be low hanging branches, no cliff walls looming over us... we shall probably never know, but suddenly we were in Slovakia.
Not a bad place to stop for lunch |
It was almost lunchtime, and so we pulled over at the first piece of rough ground with no cars, and took a deep breath. To our surprise, we were at a modest trailhead. Nothing too popular, but there were a few people returning from a hike, and we had managed to get one of only about six spaces. Given that we were planning to spend the night in a popular hiking resort, we felt it made sense to stay put until spaces were likely to become available later. After lunch we watched the Scotland-Japan Rugby World Cup match, and then spent an hour or so exploring the path we had parked beside. At about 4pm we headed on to Tatranská Lomnica, and found a space fairly easily in the top tier, which is where campers are supposed to park. Luckily it was Sunday evening, and most people have to go back to work. Oh well.
Beautiful area you are visiting. Brilliant pics thank you. 😁 x
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