Team Poland Tour of the Southwest: Part 2

June 28, 2016

There are now eight of us on seven bikes: Ela is the sole woman, riding on the back of the V-Strom with husband Marcin. We’ve taken to referring to our group as The Princess and The Seven Dwarves after the gnomes in Wrocław. (“Snow White” isn’t used here).

After breakfast we travel to another place that defies description: this one hidden in the forest. We ride a short distance to a parking area, then hike up a trail into the forest.

Beautiful road through the woods.

If it wasn’t so well marked today, you would never expect to find this:

It looks like a fairly small entrance to a mine or cave in the mountain. However, once you enter, the enormity of it is mind-boggling. This is Osowka, part of the “Riese” (German for “Giant”) project initiated by the SS during WWII. A series of seven individual underground complexes that were intended to be joined together, but were never finished. The intended use is still not known today, but it is theorized that they were to be used for manufacturing. The tunnels are large enough to easily drive large trucks through.

 

The complex is so large that parts of it have not yet been explored. This huge complex, with all of its’ tunnels, caves, rooms, etc, is part of what supports the legend of a “gold train” that is rumored to be in one of the tunnels. The story is that the train was loaded with 300 tons of gold, jewels, weapons, and works of art, and was then placed in the tunnel and buried by the Nazis. In 2015, two men claimed to find the train using ground penetrating radar. Later exploration by a Polish team of scientists discredited the “find”, but nobody has dug down to the tunnel as of today. There seemed to be a lively discussion amongst our group — some believers and others naysayers. As Michau put it, regardless of whether it exists or not, the rumor is good for tourism and the local economy.

We left the Riese and headed towards the Table Mountains and further into the Sudety mountains.

A very wide variety of motorcycles, and the Table Mountains, a bit like our Colorado mesas. L-R: Michau (Honda VT650), Lukasz (BMW F650), Paweł (Kawasaki ER500), me (Yamaha XT250), Grzegorz (BMW 1200), Mariusz (KTM640), Marcin (Suzuki V-Strom.

Further on we passed a ski resort, and then to Kudowa-Zdroj, and the Kaplica Czaszek, or Chapel of Skulls. This small church (The Church of St. Bartholomew) is adorned with the skulls and bones of over 3,000 people. Another 21,000 skeletons rest below the church, and you can see many of them through a trap door in the floor of the church. The bones were collected in the late 1700s from mass graves of people who died of cholera and during the Thirty Years War.

 

They didn’t allow photos inside, so I had to borrow these off the internet, but yes, it looks exactly like that.

 

Looking through the trap door to the skeletons in the basement.

After the Chapel of Skulls, we stopped for a great late lunch of local fish (trout) & chips, and then said goodbye to Grzegorz and Mariusz as they were headed home.

Lunch break.

 

Fish & Chips, Polish-style, with sauerkraut.

 

Saying goodbye to Mariusz and Grzegorz after lunch.

Down to five bikes, we headed for our camping destination in the mountains. We had been riding along the border with Czech Republic for a while, and the road now followed the river that was the border, so we stopped at a short bridge for some border crossing photos.

Entering Czech Republic

 

Re-entering Poland. No guards, no official documents needed. Takes about two seconds to cross the border. Much different than in the past, or in present-day Latin America and Africa.

 

Friendship Border photo.

At this point I handed my camera to Ela and she took some photos while we were riding to our camp.

 

 

This is the first time I’ve seen how big I look on the bike. It is way more comfortable than it looks in the photo.

In the evening we camped at Zajazd Gosciniec, a beautiful spot in the remote mountains. Our campsite was decorated with mannequins and Halloween decorations. It was a little weird to step out of my tent in the middle of the night and have people looking at me. Each time I was startled before I realized they weren’t real.

This is as close as I came to picking up Polish women. 🙂

 

Don’t ask. I have no idea.

 

There were these cool old ruins behind our campsite.

 

Right next to our campsite we noticed was a depiction of the Princess and the Seven Dwarves. So we made Ela pose for us.

 

Pietr showed up from Czech Republic (which is actually only about 30 yards away from here). He rides a Honda VT500 and attends a lot of rallies in Poland and Czech Republic.

We had another great BBQ dinner, cooking kielbasa sausages over an open fire. And more vodka, of course. Including Lubrowka Bison Grass vodka, another first for me.

4 thoughts on “Team Poland Tour of the Southwest: Part 2

  1. great time, great weather, great landscapes, great company !!

    a pity that such a great time passes quickly,

    but we have memories and hope for next meeting in future, next year Pat?
    greetings
    marius (osso)

    • It may be a couple of years before I get back to Poland, but you can count on it Marius. Thanks for the ride, and the friendship. It was a great time. And if you decide to come to the States, you always have a place to stay!

  2. The movie “Monuments Men”.was about the massive underground cache of jewels, art and gold found after the German surrender. I suspect much embellishment of the story for the movies.
    My Dad was a medic with 3rd Army (Patton) 6 Calvary (Armored units-tanks) and never made it to Poland after Bergen-Belsun. He was wounded. At a recent reunion, The surviving unit told of raiding Hitlers stables for horses to be able to go where tanks couldn’t. Mind you, these guys were all over 80. I never knew any of this as my Dad never said a word about the war.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*
*
Website

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.