Poland - nature, hospitality and delicious cuisine

of nature, but also of national memory, museums and centers, which are produced in a variety of interesting items and the latest inventions. In all these places you can buy interesting souvenirs and document their stay using camer

Poland - nature, hospitality and delicious cuisine

Souvenirs from staying in tourist places

Tourists very keen on their whereabouts choose large cities. They like to spend time exploring the Polish monuments, not only the monuments of nature, but also of national memory, museums and centers, which are produced in a variety of interesting items and the latest inventions. In all these places you can buy interesting souvenirs and document their stay using cameras and small cameras. To the Polish tourist cities you can commute using virtually all means of communication, not only the car and bus, but also by air. Large families also like to travel by train for this reason that they can book their place in one car and feel during travel very freely.


Seven Wonders of Poland

The Seven Wonders of Poland (Polish: Siedem cudów Polski) was a short list of cultural wonders located in Poland. The creation of the list was initiated by the leading Polish newspaper Rzeczpospolita in a country-wide plebiscite held in September 2007.1 The results were published in the following month.2

Initially over 400 national monuments were selected as candidates by the magazine online-readers, however in the second round of selections a board of experts reduced the number to 27. The third and last round of public on-line voting started on 31 August 2007, to choose the top seven wonders. Results of the popular vote were announced on 21 September 2007.

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


Wikipedia - Białowieża Forest

Białowieża Forest (Belarusian: ??????????? ?????, Biełaviežskaja Pušča; Polish: Puszcza Białowieska Polish pronunciation: ?pu?t??a ?b?aw??v??ska ( listen); Russian: ??????????? ????, Belovezhskaya Pushcha) is one of the last and largest remaining parts of the immense primeval forest that once stretched across the European Plain. The forest is home to 800 European bison, Europe's heaviest land animal.2 UNESCO?s Man and the Biosphere Programme (MAB) designated the Polish Biosphere Reserve Białowieża in 19763 and the Belarusian Biosphere Reserve Belovezhskaya Puschcha in 1993.4 In 2015, the Belarusian Biosphere Reserve occupied the area of 216,200 ha (2,162 km2; 835 sq mi), subdivided into transition, buffer and core zones.5 The forest has been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site6 and an EU Natura 2000 Special Area of Conservation. The World Heritage Committee by its decision of June 2014 approved the extension of the UNESCO World Heritage site ?Belovezhskaya Pushcha/Białowieża Forest, Belarus, Poland?, which became ?Białowieża Forest, Belarus, Poland?.7 It straddles the border between Poland (Podlaskie Voivodeship) and Belarus (Brest and Grodno voblasts), and is 70 kilometres (43 miles) north of Brest, Belarus and 62 kilometres (39 miles) southeast of Białystok, Poland. The Białowieża Forest World Heritage site covers a total area of 141,885 ha (1,418.85 km2; 547.82 sq mi).8 Since the border between the two countries runs through the forest, there is a border crossing available for hikers and cyclists.

Źródło: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bia%C5%82owie%C5%BCa_Forest