Circling through Poland - with a bit of Germany thrown in.

And to finish off Wroclaw a few more 'dwarves'.

The first one was created in 2001 - Papa Dwarf

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Outside a pharmac_

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Not hard to guess

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For the guitar lovers

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Celebrating the Polish Constitution of 1997.

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The Lions Clubs

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UNICEF Accreditation

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Outside a jewellers.

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This is just a small selection
 
I thoroughly enjoyed Wroclaw and could happily have spent a few more days there. We now headed off to Berlin via the 'back roads'. The train took a pretty convoluted route through a number of smaller towns on low speed lines before joining the main line just before we crossed over the Oder River into Germany.

The morning of our departure was very foggy. This photo was taken after it had lifted a fair bit.

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Some from inside the station. It really has some pretty areas.

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A local train

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Straw bailing time

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Corn field

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This very Germanic looking tower caught our eyes in the city of Legnica. This was the former German city of Liegnitz - its population was around 97% ethnic German in 1910. After WW2 the remaining German population was expelled and replaced with Polish settlers mostly from the eastern parts of Poland that had been 'ceded' to the USSR.

"Originally built as the city gas works and ammonium tower - after 1945 converted to be a water tower. Back in the hands of the national gas company the tower is used as a workshop and storage area while the old gas works building as a climbing wall."

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The city of Lubin . Formerly Luben - it suffered the same fate as Legnica except for suffering from more war damage and experiencing atrocities from both sides of the conflict.

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This is a memorial to the arrival of the dispossessed Polish population from the lost eastern provinces.

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Another remnant of a lost industrial past.

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Another steam loco

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Out for some fishing

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Crossing the Oder River back into Germany

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The sun was at a bad angle but this is the Tesla Gigafactory about 35 km from Berlin

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We got off the train at Berlin Ostbahnhof and my wife hurt her foot but it could have been a lot worse. As she stepped down from the train, the older Polish ones are pretty high and seem to be a fair way from the edge of the German railway platforms, her foot slipped on the white paint on the platform edge and she slipped into the gap between the train and platform. She luckily only went part way down and was able to get out but she ended up with some nasty bruises on her foot and leg.

We arrived back the day before our flight because of our mistrust of the current state of the rail system in Germany. Rather than go into central Berlin we opted to stay in the leafy suburb of Köpenick. We had spent a few hours there in 2013 and thought it would be a relaxing place to spend our last day in Europe. It is also only a short trip to Berlin Brandenburg Airport


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We stayed at the Nena Apartments Berlin Adlershof. These had pretty spacious self catering apartments over several floors. We had ground floor ones.

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The street our rooms fronted onto.

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The main street. We were about 200metres from an S Bahn station.

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There was a nice Italian restaurant about 150 metres away and it was very pleasant to have one last meal outside late in the evening.

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Our flight wasn't until the evening so we left our luggage with the reception and caught a tram to the centre of Köpenick. It was only 4 stops away. There is plenty of water around this area.

it -"is a historic town and locality (Ortsteil) in Berlin, situated at the confluence of the rivers Dahme and Spree, in the southeast of the German capital."

Schloss Köpenick

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The Town Hall. Opened in 1905 and built in the "Brick Gothic" Style. It has a 54 metre high clock tower


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The inner courtyard

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It has a very nice interior especially around the main stairwell

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However the most famous thing about the Town Hall is the story of the "the Captain of Köpenick" - der Hauptmann von Köpenick . I have told this story in my TR of our 2013 trip but if you haven't come across before it is a great tale. There have been books, movies and plays created about this incident.

" --- was a German con man and impostor. In his most famous exploit, Voigt masqueraded as a military officer of the elite Prussian Guards in 1906, rounding up a number of Imperial German Army soldiers under his "command", "arresting" the Mayor of Köpenick, and "confiscating" 4,002 marks from the city treasury. Voigt then changed back into civilian clothing and disappeared with the money."

He was caught and sent to prison but ---

"Voigt was sentenced to four years in prison for forgery, impersonating an officer, and false imprisonment. However, much of public opinion was on his side. German Kaiser Wilhelm II pardoned him on 16 August 1908. There are claims that even the Kaiser was amused by the incident,"


His statue stands in pride of place outside the town hall.

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There is a small display inside

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The , not very safe, safe.

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Even an "Escape Room" adventure


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Walking around town and its waterways

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There is a large island in the river called Baumgarteninsel.

"The Spree (today the Alte Spree) then flowed around the area to the north of the meadows. To the south, there was only a small ditch, the Katzengraben (Cat Ditch), which a cat could jump over and which had been created to drain the meadows. At the end of the 19th century, as part of a river straightening project on the Müggelspree, the Katzengraben was widened and deepened to a width and depth necessary for navigation, thus turning the area into an island. Later, it was filled in and allotments were created. Since 1922, the Baumgarteninsel allotment garden complex of the Köpenick Gardeners' Association has been located on the island"


The only access to the island is by boat.

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A footbridge goes over the river and across the island but it gives no access to the island - unless you jump off it.

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The local fire station - for both land and on-water fires

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Some abandoned warehouses/factory buildings and wharf

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There is one large apartment building there

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Wandering about we came across the old 'Fisherman's Village' - Fisherkietz.

"an old fishing village (Fisherkietz) which now belongs to the Treptow-Köpenick district in Berlin.The village was inhabited by the first Slavian fishermen in the 14th century and now still has a 17 traditional fishermen's houses"


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