I must thank RB again. In his trip report including Poland from earlier this year he reported on a pleasant day trip to the city of Sopot only about 15 minutes by train from Gdansk. It did look like a nice outing so I decided to also go there. However, instead of taking the train both ways we went there by boat and returned by train.
Our boat. the trip takes about an hour you pass through the port of Gdansk and out into the Gulf of Gdansk (part of the Baltic Sea) before docking at the jetty in Sopot.
Our apartment complex again
A huge amount of construction is occurring in Gdansk. These were right next door to our apartment. I did see earlier this week that Poland's economy is so strong that it is now ranked the 20th largest world economy by GDP - edging out Switzerland.
Some of the docks and shipyards we passed
A large vessel on a floating drydock. With the dirtiest smokestack I have seen in years behind it.
A nice conjunction of names. Kimberly for W.A and Hansa Shipping as Gdansk was once a major Hanseatic city.
Some old fortifications. The "Seagull Rampart" built in 1844 - 1846 by the Russians.
Approaching the Westerplatte Monument commemorating the Battle of Westerplatte in 1939.
"On 25 August 1939, the German pre-dreadnought battleship Schleswig-Holstein, under the pretext of making a courtesy call, sailed into Danzig harbour" - "On the early morning of 1 September 1939, Schleswig-Holstein fired a broadside at the Polish garrison"
en.wikipedia.org
Nowy Port Lighthouse built in 1893. Complete with a Time ball on top. It was the first lighthouse on the Baltic to use an electric light.
www.latarnia.gda.pl
Next door is the Harbourmasters office for the port of Gdansk.
