For wildlife lovers - polish Białowieża National Park

e to spend time outdoors and often develop friendships that remain for life. Therefore, tourist trips are organized at different times of the school year for extra classes organized this type of trips can also be organized during

For wildlife lovers - polish Białowieża National Park

school trips to the Polish tourist destinations

Visiting tourist spots has become a traditional part of schooling. Teachers know that thanks to such tours children have the chance to spend time outdoors and often develop friendships that remain for life. Therefore, tourist trips are organized at different times of the school year for extra classes organized this type of trips can also be organized during the holidays. You just have to remember to organize trips for children in these places, which will be attractive to them. Such places, willingly visited by children, can be centers of forest and tourist villages. During the fun much easier it will also give children information about the history of various places Polish.


Stołowe Mountains

Stołowe Mountains (Polish: st??w?v?); also known as the Table Mountains (Polish: Góry Stołowe, Czech: Stolové hory, German: Heuscheuergebirge) are a 42-kilometre (26 mi)-long mountain range in Poland and the Czech Republic, part of the Central Sudetes. The range is situated southeast of the Krkonoše Mts. The Polish part of the range is protected as the Stołowe Mountains National Park.1 The highest peak of the range is Szczeliniec Wielki at 919 m (3,015 ft) a.s.l.2345

The range is formed of sandstone and, as the only one in Poland, presents plated structure with sheer mountain ledges.6 Among the tourist attractions there are two massifs: Szczeliniec Wielki on which the labyrinth, and Skalniak on which the labyrinth Błędne Skały (Errant Rocks). There are several notable rock formations, among them Kwoka ("Hen"), Wielbłąd ("Camel"), Małpa ("Monkey"), Głowa Konia ("Horse Head"), Fotel Pradziada ("Great Grandfather's Armchair").

Źródło: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sto%C5%82owe_Mountains


Historical facts from Poland - Czocha Castle

Czocha Castle (German: Tzschocha, Latin: Caychow) is a defensive castle in the Czocha village (Gmina Lesna), in Lubań County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship (southwestern Poland). The castle is located on the Lake Leśnia, near the Kwisa river, in what is now the Polish part of Upper Lusatia. Czocha castle was built on gneiss rock, and its oldest part is the keep, to which housing structures were later added.

Czocha Castle began as a stronghold, on the Czech-Lusatian border. Its construction was ordered by Wenceslaus I of Bohemia, in the middle of the 13th century (1241?1247). In 1253 castle was handed over to Konrad von Wallhausen, Bishop of Meissen. In 1319 the complex became part of the dukedom of Henry I of Jawor, and after his death, it was taken over by another Silesian prince, Bolko II the Small, and his wife Agnieszka (see Duchy of Silesia). Origin of the stone castle dates back to 1329.

Źródło: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Czocha_Castle