Dear all,
Some of you
will be arriving to Poland on Friday night, which will give you some time on
Saturday morning to visit our lovely capital city. Below is a short guide with
all the necessary information, little maps and a walking tour option in one of
my favourite parts of Warsaw (you would need to have a week to see it all!). As
we do not want you to get lost, let’s stay in the centre and plan a trip that
will at the same time lead you to the meeting point, from where our handsome,
moustached driver will take you to Białystok.
1.
Check
which hotel/hostel you are going to stay at. You should be able to grab a
little map from there and ask the way to the Old Town – Stare Miasto, which is also where we will start our trip. In any
problems you can always contact me as Ola will probably be too busy being
beautiful.
My English number is (+44) 7583581457, and
Polish (+48) 790018667.
2.
Let
yourself wander through the little streets of the Old Town, you might want to
grab a breakfast in one of little restaurants. Zapiecek (there are many, I marked only two on the map) is the most
popular one, but there are many beautiful ones in there. However, bear in mind
that they serve mostly heavy meals, including pierogi (traditional Polish ravioli-ish dish), and not everyone likes
them for breakfast, especially fried and served with pork cracklings as a side
dish (yummy). Although, if you are British, that would be exactly what your stomach might expect for breakfast ;)
Picture 1: You can had a nice walk anywhere you want from
the street Podwale to Brzozowa (marked with arrows). It’s not
as big as it seems!
3.
When you go a bit further inside the Old Town, into the Old Town Market
Place, you will see a statue of mermaid with a sword – symbol of Warsaw. There
is also a big Royal Castle. You might want to visit it inside. Remember that
it’s quite big so it can take you a while! Castle tours are organised from 10AM
on Saturdays, and cost PLN 22.00 (GBP 4.50). A guided tour in a foreign
language costs PLN 110.00 (GBP 22.00), which might be a good idea if you come
in a group. You can check it all here:
4.
As
you probably will not have too much time, a simple walk should be enough, so
from the Old Town you should take the direction of the street Krakowskie Przedmieście. When walking
along this street, you will pass many little pubs, bars (which are better
hidden) and shops. There is also University of Warsaw (Uniwersytet Warszawski) – my own lovely school :) and
our President’s palace along the way. If you turn from the main road for a
while, you will see the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier – there are always guards
next to it. Go back to Krakowskie
Przedmieście, and the street will smoothly change to ul. Nowy Świat. You need to walk (and admire) until you get to a
massive palm tree.
The tree is situated on Charles de Gaulle’s roundabout at Aleje Jerozolimskie (Jerusalem Avenue)
and was a vision of a Polish artist who wanted to create a bond between Israel
(remember, Jerusalem Avenue) and Poland. As weird as it is, everyone loves the
palm tree :)

It will be in front of this building that the
bus will pick you up to take you to the best party in your lives – Ola and
Leszek’s wedding! The trip will last for about 3 hours so take a book and don’t
eat too much – the massive nosh-up is yet to come!
IMPORTANT THINGS TO KNOW:
-
You
can use public transport, but do not forget to buy and validate your ticket!
You can enter by any door (not like in London) and you need to buy bilet normalny (normal ticket, as
opposed to not normal i.e. for students ;)).
-
Don’t
cross the road on red light, even if it’s the middle of the night and you are
alone. The Polish police only wait for it.
-
People
usually talk English, so you can ask young people for the road if ever you feel
lost :)
-
Any
questions – let me know!
P.S. If you need these small guidelines in a Word or PDF format please comment this post and Ola or myself will send it to you via e-mail.
~ Asia, the lil' sister aka. Maid of Honour