Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Home is where the body is...

OK. Trip over, I trip over myself fitting myself back into a more normal routine. The trip was a great banquet of nutritious experiences, from teaching to museums to people-watching to, at the end, connecting with relations in far northeast Poland. I am thankful for the opportunity to have done it.

The first sequence of photos following are in the Augustow, Bialystok region, far northeast part of the country, near Lithuania and Belarus, and a few taken on my train travel to there, in Olsztyn.

And thanks to all of you who've shown an interest...


Monday, August 17, 2009

The church in Augustow

It's very big & dates back to the 1500s, I suppose when King Zygmunt August chartered the town.

With wealth comes...


Toys.

Jet skis, big speedboats. One of the lakes surrounding Augustow.

One thing you could say about the communist era -- They did kayak & canoe but they didn't have to deal with jet skis...

On a kiosk by the river in Augustow


Double-click on it to enlarge it -- I hope you can read it. It nicely describes the ecosystem in which Augustow rests.

The Netta River as it passes through Augustow

Watch out for moose


Between Augustow & Sztabin. It's big woods up here. The biggest woods left in Europe...

One Polish word I did learn is "Uwaga!" = Watch out!

The Parejko plot in the Sztabin cemetery

Our second cousins Zygmunt Parejko & his sister Melanie (Parejko) Talkowsi.

The Parejko plot in the Sztabin cemetery

Krzysztow died as a child (Melanie & Zygmunt's brother?)

Wincenty Parejko was Melanie & Zygmunt's dad. He was our dad Stanley Parejko's cousin.

Franciczek was our grandfather Julius' brother, father of Wincenty.

Leokadia was Wincenty Parejko's wife. I have a picture of her wake below. Her maiden name was Abramovich.

The Parejko plot in the Sztabin cemetery

Jan Parejko, Melanie & Zygmunt's brother, who has a daughter in Chicago. He died in 1992. It was probably his door that Judy & I knocked on in August, 1974 in Augustow. But he wasn't home...

Kamien, Poland

This is the village of Kamien from the highway running from Augustow to Bialystok. A couple kilometers NE of Kamien is the Parejko home-farm.

Marius and Zygmunt Parejko's Combine

They're very proud of it.

Marius' and Zygmunt Parejkos cows at pasture-

Across the road from the farmyard.

Marius Parejko in the barn

The barn on Zygmunt Parejko's farm


They milk 17 cows. I think the farm is about 70 acres.

Zygmunt Parejko's farmyard

Zygmunt was living on the farm with his dad Wicenty when his dad died in the early 70s. After that Zygmunt built the new house and all the farm buildings himself.

Some pics of Zygmunt Parejko's farm


There's a big John Deere factory in Germany.

Melanie Talkowski & Zygmunt Parejko


Brother & sister, Ron & my second cousins.

At Sunday dinner at Zygmunt's farmhouse.

Sunday dinner at Zygmunt Parejko's, Kamien


John had spoken briefly with Zygmunt (far left) when John was in Poland from his semester in Budapest six or so years ago. Zygmunt has recently retired from farming the farm his father Wicenty Parejko had obtained when Wicenty was in his early 20s. This farm is within a couple miles of where our grandfathers grew up, just northeast of Kamien.

From left -- Zygmunt, his son Mareus who is now farming the place, with his wife Edith & young daughter Julia & Zygmunt's wofe (seems I didn't get her name), and with the cap the english teacher from the Sztabin school, Denis, who was our translator. Denis spent some hours with us, on three separate occassions, but would not accept payment for his services. He's a Belarussian from Grodno, originally, and a poet.

Melanie's not really visible, on the lower left...

At Leogadia Parejko's wake

A picture of a photo Melanie showed me...

Her mother's wake, held in Zygmunt's house. Her mother was 94 when she died.

at Zbigniew Parejko's wake

I tried taking pictures of some photos Melanie showed...

Zbigniew was Ron & my second cousin, Stanislaus' (see below) brother. Zbigniew built & raced home-built airplanes, and his last design won national titles. He was killed when it crashed. Stanislaus said there was talk it had been tampered with by a competitor.

They kept saying about me: "Doesn't he look like Zbigniew?"

Sztabin -- Andrzej's house


The garage doors open into his repair shop. Wife Basia on the left, his mother Melanie on the right, and that must be Melanie's brother Stanislaus Parejko bending over to tie his shoe.

Augustow -- family

On the left, Stanislaus Parejko, Ron & my second cousin.

On the right, Melanie Talkowski, ditto.

In between, Melanie's son Andrzej and his wife Basia. I had been given Andrzej's address by a relative in Lithuania, and it was to his house I first walked up and introduced myself as a Parejko. He has a roofing business and repairs cars at his place. He has a two-stall garage with hoists & equipment...

They warm & friendly & interested in me & why I was there, but none of them knew any english...and I didn't know any Polish to speak of.

Augustow -- street scene


The old being squeezed out by the new.

Augustow -- Tourist Information

Augustow, named by King Sygismunt August for himself, is a bustling tourist town of 20,000, surrounded by lakes & some of Poland's best fishing, canoing & kayaking. When Judy & I were here 35 years ago it was a dull, drab town in the middle of great natural beauty. Now it is a noisy, crowded town, full of Polish tourists, in the middle of great natural beauty.

the Sioux Restaurant

The exotic has a clientele... who would expect this in Bialystok? Note the wooden statute. The waitresses wore cowboy hats.

The specialty of the house was steak, hamburgers, etc...so I didn't eat here.

Bialystok -- the Rynek Kosciuski

As I thought about why I liked Bialystok, I kept coming back here, to this lovely square, as the reason...pretty much all the buildings around it have been rebuilt, the Germans & Soviets having destroyed more than 3/4 of Bialystok, and murdered half its residents, between 1939 and 45...

Like the plazas in Mexico, the village squares all over Europe, the ryneks in Poland are the heart of the city. I felt again, as I did 35 years ago when Judy & I would bicycle into a village in Austria or Yugoslovia or...in the evening, and find the square full of people, that Americans cities do not have hearts.

Bialystok

Some of the local scenery...

Bialystok--the Branicki Palace

Actually a post-WWII reconstruction, as the Germans destroyed the original...

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Somewhere, over a tecza


I caught this rainbow showing off over the Rynek Kosciuski in Bialystok...

A landscape

No, not Rusk County, but up near Augustow, Poland...

Ewk!

Up in far NE Poland they do have wild woods bison, wolves, and elk...but the name of this town, taken from the train as we passed through, is not elk, but el'k, pronounced ewk...

Landscape


From the train, east of Olsztyn towards Bialystok...could have been up by Conrath...

Yet another picture of a motorcycle?

This one showed up outside my hotel one morning...note the sidecar...it had I think Swedish plates, and featured little stick-on symbols showing it'd been to Wilno, Lithuania and Augustow, Poland, where I was heading...it's NOT a Ural!

The "new" town hall in Olsztyn


"New" meaning it's only about 150 years old, as contrasted to the old town hall, about 500 years old...

Silhouttes...

I was watching a concert of gypsy music at the amfitheatr in Olsztyn (not really authentic, over-choreographed, like you'd see at a tourist attraction) as the sun was setting...workers were putting up a scaffolding on part of the castle. I thought it made a stunning photo....

Maciej

One of my student- friends from the Torun camp, who lives in Olsztyn (on the right) with his brother, left, who's in the Army. Maciej is fifteen, but his English is really quite good, he's very smart, and he's an expert on Polish military history.

Notice the genius with the shiny nose...

Which one does he mean?

Like Torun, Olsztyn makes the most of its Copernicus connection...he worked here in the castle (more pix below) for a while.

But at least I am wearing an appropriate t-shirt.

A buskar in Olsztyn

I encountered a surprising number of beggars in Poland. In Krakow they were upfront about it...they'd ask you for 2 zlotys (about 65 cents) explaining it was for beer. One sat by a cardboard box on the sidewalk labeled "For pivo (beer)..."

Lots of buskars, too, some pretty talented. There was a family who played a string trio, and this girl who was really quite good on the violin.

I donated to the more talented of them, including her...

A view over Olstyn, Poland

A view from one of the towers at the Olstyn castle.

Miss Piggy

Married women who were caught playing around in medieval Prussia were forced to wear this metal piggy-looking headgear.

Married men who were caught playing around in medieval Prussia celebrated their conquests over beer...

Copernicus' tracks of the sun

The angled lines drawn on the wall of this room were made by Copernicus. He reflected sunlight off a bowl of liquid, onto the walls, and tracked the sunset in order to exactly calculate the equinox...

Olstyn castle

Copernicus worked in this castle for several years, as a kind of local administrator. His room was I think third window from the left on the second floor...

Trzemesno train station

This is the train station at the village from which my mom's parents came (the Piotrowski side of the family), maybe 20 miles east of Gniezno.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Speed bumps...

I spent nearly five hours today at the Museum of the Warsaw Uprising, which chronicles the fight of the insurgents, from Aug. 1 to Oct. 3, 1944.

Last night on Polish TV I also caught a short clip about speed bumps that Obama is running into vizaviz health care reform. They showed that paragon of American stupidity, Rush L., and his followers, comparing Obama to Hitler. There was even a photo of Obama with a pencilled-in moustache.

Hitler and his followers killed at least 500,000 citizens of Warsaw between 1939 and 1945. That's Five Hundred Thousand. Then they reduced the entire city to rubble...And that's just Warsaw.

Obama is suggesting, as he promised in his campaign, that we bring American health care out of the 19th and into the 21st centuries. Nearly every other civilized country in the world has some form of national health care. The Poles are very happy with theirs.

Health care costs are ruining the American economy; our exports have to include in them the cost of corporate health care, while other countrys' don't. Reviving the economy & healthcare reform go hand in hand.

And for this they compare him to.....Adolph Hitler?

I am unwilling, even unable to forgive that kind of demogogic stupidity.

John is right -- anyone who compares their opponent in an argument to the Nazis, automatically loses.

I can see there will be speed bumps on my reentry into the U.S....

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Short report from Warsaw

No pix yet...internet cafes...

Arrived in Warsaw, got a cab to my hotel...Then walked through a light rain this afternoon a short distance into what used to be the Jewish ghetto. It's all apartment buildings & commerce now...the Germans destroyed it completely, of course, along with most of Warsaw.

I found the Pawiak Prison site, home of the Warsaw gestapo, where 30,000 Polish were killed, often tortured first. Then the monument to the Jewish uprising, and the actual site of Mila 18, which Leon Uris made the title of his book about the Jewish uprising. It's a low hill, under which is the bunker in which more than a hundred of the last fighters died, including their commander in chief Mordecai Anielewicz.

Tomorrow I'll circle part of the city for other sites, including the new museum of the Warsaw Uprising. Hope the rain stops.

I'm at an internet cafe in a megamall near my hotel. Maybe not as big as the mall of America, but a close second.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Parejkos, part II

I'll keep it short. I had lunch at Zygmunt's farm today, the best kielbasa and bigos, ever. He assured me it's because it's from their own, range-fed meat, or neighbors'.

I have lots of branches & fruit now on the genealogical tree. Will organize it when I get home, and with internet contacts can probably get questions answered.

John, Zygmunt mentioned someone called him a few years back from Konin, and wondered if it was my son. I said, no, couldn't have been...then after a while I remembered your call to him. They had the date written down -- they said Nov. 21, but I think it might have been Dec. 21?

Zygmunt is a hardy farmer, mostly retired now & his son Mateusz farms the place, which Zygmunt built around 1970. It is the farm he was born on, though he's completely rebuilt the barn, garages, house, etc. His father Wicenty farmed it. His father was my & Ron's father's cousin. They didn't know exactly where Wicenty grew up, i.e. where our grandfather Julius grew up, but he said it was within 3 km or so of his place, just outside Kamien.

Their knowledge of the family history ends with our grandfather's (and theirs) generation. There MIGHT be more information at Sztabin church, but that's for another day. Zygmunt & Melanie & I drove down to the Sztabin cemetery to see where their brothers, and parents are buried. I have pictures, will post when I can.

I am astonished how different Augustow is from 35 years ago when Judy & I visited. It's a thriving tourist town now -- Eagle River or such, 20,000 population -- while in 1974 it was a grey, dreary communist village. I remember the youth hostel as being probably the worst of many we'd stayed in, some of which were pretty bad, especially the outhouse at the youth hostel...unforgettable...

Will visit with Andrzej tomorrow (correction on the Aprilia, it's Andrzej's son's -- Zygmunt explained he, Zygmunt, has had 5 motorcycles over the years & would love to get another, but his wife doesn't want him to, at his age, early 70s.) Plan is to get to Bialystok for one more night, then Tuesday to Warsaw for a couple nights til Thursday flight.

Papa!

Saturday, August 8, 2009

ParejkoParejkoParejko

Whoopdewhoop.

I found them. The original Parejkos...well, like us, descendants of them...I took a bus out of Augustowo this afternoon to Sztabin, a 20-minute ride, where I searched out Andrzej Talkowski, whose mother Melanie was a Parejko. Andrzej has a very nice house, an Audi Quattro, and a really really cool Aprilia superbike. He's a mechanic.

He & his wife unfortunately do not speak english, and his daughter Magda very little. I also met their son Maciek. But they did get the local english teacher over, originally from Belarussia, and he was a great guy and a great help. Andrzej's mother came over, as did her second cousin Stanislaus who if I have it right is Remigijus' (the guy in Wilno, Lithuania who we email) father.

Well they're all great people. I learned a lot. Melanie & Stanislaus' grandfathers Jan & Franciczek were our grandfather Julius' brothers, so Melanie, Stanislaus & I (& Ron) are all second cousins. They're both older than us, but very sweet.

Tomorrow I'm taking the bus down to Kamien, just 4 km north of Sztabin, where Melanie lives. I'll get the english teacher to join us so we can look at pictures, etc. & understand what's happening. Stanislaus should join us. Andrjez & his wife can't as they have a funeral to attend. But I will see them Monday again.

Meanwhile I did learn that Kamien is the home site of the Parejkos, at least our branch...the Russians took many away to Lithuania, Belarus, etc., but they all came from Kamien. We agreed, though, that there are other Parejkos who may or may not be related, but our branch is rooted in Kamien, a tiny village about 15 km south of Augustow.

What a wonderful day. I'm glad to have lived as long as I have to meet these people. We're already talking a reunion here next year about this time...this is just the beginning...all Parejko's welcome!

More later.

Friday, August 7, 2009

Chech!

Exhausted today, maybe my six weeks' travel caught up with me. I decided to hang out in Bialystok, nap, check out the museums, slow things down.

I sat for a while in the sun beside a long pond by the Branicki Palace. It reminded me of the duck pond by the Madison Arboretum we used to take the kids to.

If you slow down enough, while it's true less happens, what happens is different. And you can't get to it without slowing down. It's the difference between charging through the woods, or sitting down and quietly watching. Letting things happen rather than making them happen.

A little toddler bends over to grab a handful of rocks from the path and throw them at a butterfly, then stands astonished watching as the butterfly flies off before he could let loose his stones... Is it in his genes -- on the Y chromosome? -- this adventure called "throwing"? It's a message from me to that other big scary place called not-me, a note to not-me to watch out. For the very reason another boy, a little later, chases some ducks with a stick -- because he can, and because not-me reacts.

It will likely take him the better part of his life, if he ever does, to learn that the ducks really don't give a f---. They have other, more important things to attend to. A little boy with a stick leaves very small ripples on pond.

A baby carriage goes by on three wheels. I glance up the path and see the other wheel, hail the family and they fix the carriage.

A ten-year old? chubby girl stops by to point out she's managed to get the bottom of her skirt wet. She tries to start up a conversation. I explain I don't understand Polish, so she wanders over to the next bench, lies down and farts loudly, for a while and finally starts to sing some silly nonsense. I think she thinks I'm very exotic, and would like to interact with me, but doesn't know how.

But the ducks here, as everywhere, climb now and then out of the water to preen, spreading oil from their oil gland under their tail all over their chest and belly, finicky that every feather be properly moussed-in-place.

Two teenage boys practice swordsmanship with homemade wooden swords. They're pretty good. It's a natural progression from throwing rocks & chasing ducks with a stick, to testing yourself against another Other, who shows more interest in your skills than a butterfly or duck. Deuce game. Service!

The young folk here, less formal than their elders, don't greet one another with "Dzien dobry." To them, it's "Chech." And bye! or byebye! isn't Dowidzenia, it's:

"Pa!", or "Papa!"

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Be A Weestock

Or, Bial'ystok more precisely.

Had a nice visit with Maciej, my student from Torun, and his brother who's in the Polish Army, on a month's vacation at home. This Polish Army stuff doesn't sound too bad -- he comes home most weekends (8 hour train ride each way) and gets long vacations, too...

The train this morning filled up quickly with about 50 middle-school students off on a camping trip, so for half or more of the 4 hour trip it was standing room only. Remembrances of Trains Past, when Judy & I stood all night long on the way to Augustow.

I'm recently arrived in Bialystok, probably 20 miles from the Russian border. The Lonely Planet guide pointed me to spartan but clean private rooms ($25/night) in a kind of hostel, run by and right behind, the big Orthodox church. I'm impressed; booked a room for two nights.

Had this idea: I need help getting in touch with the relatives, who likely only speak Polish. So I stopped at the local English-language school and asked if they had a teacher or adept student who could help me either on the phone or actually come with me to the supposed relatives. But they drew a blank, at least for now.

So tomorrow I think I'll take a bus up to Augustow, knock on some doors and maybe they'll know someone speaks English -- or German. In this part of the country Russian is the second language, of course...

I'm at a handy internet cafe just up the street from my digs, so I can keep you up to date on this the last, or next-to-last, leg of my trip. But no pix, I think...actually I don't have many.

The country between Olsztyn & here is SO much like N. Wisconsin, a mix of rolling hills, woods, and fields with holsteins pastured. They do have storks here, though, with their big nests either on chimneys or platforms provided...it's considered good luck to have a stork in the yard.

OK. More, later.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Blahblahblah...blahblah

No pictures. Can't seem to find a USB port on this old compaq at the hotel...

I started my trip in Kujawiak/Pomarska (a region of Poland, in which Torun lies), come up from Malopolska (southern Poland, actually "little Poland") where I motorcycled the hills, through Wielkopolska (Big Poland) and now into Warmia & Masuria...am in Olsztyn tonight, about 40 miles south of the Russian border up near Kaliningrad. It seems a really nice city. Will explore its museums & castles tomorrow, & meet with a student from the Torun camp, Maciej Sendrowski, who I became friends with. Macie is a fountain of knowledge about Polish military history...

My German skills, or what little they are, have come in handy on this trip...more useful than english, I'd say. I used German to communicate with the owners of the Villa Nova down by Jelenia Gora. And since that's in the Sudetenland, back & forth between Poland, Czech & German, German was real useful there at museums, stores, etc.

It came in handy in a different way today. I bought a ticket for a 10:47 train from Gniesno to here in Olsztyn. Managed to find the right platform (Peron, in Polish) and waited. I always ask someone on the platform if this is the right place to get the train to wherever I want to go. Yep, to Olsztyn, they assured me. Right on time a train pulls up with Olsztyn written on it, so I get on...the ride is fine til the conductor looks at my ticket, frowns dramatically, sits down & starts to spill rapid Polish in my direction. I expained: "Nie rozumium po polsku..." "I don't understand Polish..." He looked like I'd just handed him the worst day of this month...But an older fellow nearby asked me if I spoke German. "Yah, Ein bischen," I explained...a little...so anyway I learn via German that I'm on the wrong train. But it goes to Olsztyn? I ask...Yes, but it's the wrong train. Seems as though this train headed for Olsztyn via Gniesno (where I got on) was an hour late, and arrived at Gniesno just ahead of the train my ticket was for. The conductor insisted I get off at the next stop -- which happened to be Torun, where I spent 3 weeks at english camp -- and get on the right train.

I did. When I got on, I realized my ticket was for a dirty old bumpy train and I'd mistakenly gotten onto a smooth, clean new train...Guess my fare wasn't enough to merit staying on...

We did, however, shortly after Gniesno, pass through the little village of Trzemesnov, which is where the Piotrowski side of the family is from. Ron & I were there a couple years ago; it's hard to follow up on Piotrowski family history because it's such a common name. I managed to snap a picture of the train station in Trzemesnov, and as we went through I couldn't help but imagine what is what like for Frank (& I think at the same time, his brother John) to head off to America, leaving the parents behind, pretty sure you'll never see them again. I doubt in the 1870s that they took a train, though it's possible. What courage that took. It was a moment of reflection for me...as my eyes passed across the landscape I thought: these are the same hills & valleys Frank once saw....

The German presence in Poland is everywhere, not just in the history, but with present German tourism. There's hardly been a hotel I've stayed in that wasn't flooded with them. At breakfast this morning, all I heard around the tables was German...As a young lady at the Olsztyn castle this morning explained to me, Poles are fed up with them...

Had a really good zurek (Polish fermented rye soup with egg & kielbasa), pierogis with chanterelle mushrooms scattered over them, and after the meal a hundred mls of hot Polish mead...Well, somebody's got to do it!

One more night in Olsztyn then to Bialystok for the last five days or so before going back to Warsaw for a day of touring on Wed. next, Thursday my flight.

I'm getting a bit worn out by the travel routine, and long to just relax in my own bed, on the deck, in the backyard in Menomonie around a campfire, and get out on the tennis court. But I also don't want to leave Poland. I've really come to enjoy it -- filthy toilets, bird crap all over the sidewalks, smelly streets, third-world rural villages, grey rundown buildings, having to pay anywhere from 50 cents to almost a dollar just to pee in the train station toilets, scurrying with all the other passengers to get on the train, hefting luggage through the narrow aisles to find a seat, and there never are enough, so some are left standing; and all. As Norman Davies says in his history, Poland is the Heart of Europe...and that's because of the people, with more heart than organization or sometimes common sense.

It's an interesting question if there is such a thing as a national character. Are the english different from the Irish or Scots or Germans or Thai or Brazilians? That's a testable hypothesis, and in my opinion, resoundingly yes. (I'm too embedded in it to be able to describe the American character....)

But Poles remind me of Scots. They have an attitude about them -- the men, at least, going about their day with their middle finger to the world. Now the Scots have it worse, and are itching for a fight. With the Poles, in my opinion, it's more intellectual than somatic. It comes I think in part from their realization, through their history, that the world is not fair...and so they have this edge to them, a creative, independent streak. It is what took them to the Church during the Communist times -- screw you, Mr. Soviet, if you don't what us to go to church, then that's what we'll do. But it's also what has taken them out of the Church now that Communism has gone; the young, at least, have turned that attitude towards the Church, who they see as the authority which has replaced Communism. But that creative spark shows itself all the time here.

Last night I sat and watched some performances in Olsztyn's town square -- various acts -- including a heavy metal band. They were pretty good, actually -- as I've said before, I am amazed at the level of musicianship I encounter here, regardless of whether I like the genre. The singer sang entirely in english...but I thought: this is kinda over the top, heavy metal from America. What's it about?

It's about exploring what you were not allowed to, for 40 years of communism. It's a kind of cultural adolescence (and I think that describes Poland today.) This iss naturally going to lead to excesses, as happens in adolescence. So there's this infatuation with pop culture from the U.S. A kind of natural selection will occur, I think, but my only fear is that the multinational pop culture driven with $$ will swamp out and drive extinct the native species of culture, the old Polish folk culture...this kind of extinction of course is happening all around the world, biologically.

At the museum in the Olsztyn castle I saw (and have a picture of) lines drawn on the wall by Copernicus to calculate the equinox, and visited the room he wrote the first part of his De Revolutionibus in. He lived & worked in the Olsztyn castle for several years, as a local administrator, and like Einsten while busy with his job (Einstein as patent official), followed his true calling in his spare time...

I also found some portraits of William II and William III of Nassau-Orange, in the portrait gallery of the museum. The synchronicity is that one of them (I forget which) was the monarch for whom the Oranges parade in Ireland, and because of their color, the monarch butterfly was named...and, there is a chain of stores called Orange here in Poland...and, I read via an exhibition last evening of a Polish sprite whose name I've forgotten who during the Jarulselski martial law years (early 1980s) invented happenings around Wroclaw & elsewhere in which they wore little hats like dwarves and were called Oranges; Orange as a kind of protest to Reds....

Take care....

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Bogdan's hotel, the Villa Ambassada in Boleslawiec

Bogdan was generous to let me stay here with Mirko & friends, & provide food...He's done a really tremendous job of renovating the building. More about him in other pictures.

Mirko & friends

Mirko & the Glinolud group recently back from the Woodstock event...sharing stories...

Zamnek Grodziec

One of several medieval castles (Zamek is castle, this one is just outside the wee village of Grodziec.) we explored in the area...getting here on the m.c., though only ten miles or so off the local highway, was a real adventure. I didn't think I'd make it...and leaving, almost got lost on the local rural roads. It's been renovated some, and is a local tourist attraction. Lovely inside....

Macin

Mirko's good friend & fellow-Glinolud, who helped me find the Villa Nova and let me his map of the mountains near Karpacz. He lives in Boleslawiec but bicycles the about 25 miles each day each way to work...he's also a tai-kwando master and a really really nice person.

Memento Mori

A bas-relief on the side of a chruch in Boleslawiec.

Glass

Because there's a tradition of local glass-works, Jelenia Gora museum has an incredible collection of fine glass, going back 300 years and more...they have 7000 pieces in their collection, considered one of the best in Europe. I wish I could show more of the pics I took....here's an example....

Local folk-art

A piece of local folk-art in the Villa Nova hotel...actually more a B&B, not a big hotel...

Mountain hostel

A view of the mountain hostel, across a small lake...