Jane & Rog’s Eastwards Coddiwomple (15 Viewers)

Affiliate links here may earn MHF compensation

cliffanger

LIFE MEMBER
Apr 15, 2013
4,983
34,747
Saltford
Funster No
25,562
MH
Hymer A class
Exp
Since 2013
Nearby there was a fragment of the true cross. Sadly it’s only allowed out on special occasions and for parties.
I’ve seen so many fragments, together with thorns from the crown, blood encased in crystal, wood from the manger, etc.

Dawn Mousy and I could tell you the story of when we thought we were going in to a church to see the Shroud of Turin couldn’t we Dawn …. :rofl:
 
Sep 21, 2016
4,080
15,494
DERBYSHIRE
Funster No
45,235
MH
Frankia i740
Exp
since 2007
I’ve seen so many fragments, together with thorns from the crown, blood encased in crystal, wood from the manger, etc.

Dawn Mousy and I could tell you the story of when we thought we were going in to a church to see the Shroud of Turin couldn’t we Dawn …. :rofl:
ummm now you have my interest, pray tell:unsure:
 
Oct 27, 2017
1,454
3,283
Perth
Funster No
51,142
MH
Hymer A Class
Exp
Since 2014
Thank you, but you are far too kind. My (Jane) only publishing fame is a technical book about Symbian OS. It had a readership of literally tens of people.
I could make your Symbian readership up to eleven, or maybe even twenty-one, but I would save it for an "insomniacal" night. Apparently not a proper word, unless you also read the Urban Dictionary!
 

cliffanger

LIFE MEMBER
Apr 15, 2013
4,983
34,747
Saltford
Funster No
25,562
MH
Hymer A class
Exp
Since 2013
ummm now you have my interest, pray tell:unsure:
I hate to hijack Jane and Rog’s thread, so here’s an abridged version (I can’t find the original thread)

….. one abiding memory will be Dawn Mousy and I, in our bright summery outfits, queuing up in a church in the South of France, really excited because we thought we were about to see The Shroud of Turin.

The church was packed to the rafters, as it would be if the Shroud of Turin was ‘on tour’! We joined the right flank of three queues, on the right side of the aisle - and we moved slowly up the queue of very sombre dressed worshippers. Nothing strange there we thought, only to be confronted at the
head of the queue with a coffin!

Me: “It’s a coffin!”

Dawn: “What - they keep the shroud in a coffin - how weird...!”

Me: No! We’ve just gate crashed a funeral!”

To this day we thank our lucky - whatever - that we didn’t join the central queue who were given holy oil to sprinkle on the coffin whilst offering up a prayer to the deceased!

In our defence, the photo on top the coffin was of a young motorbiker (hence the packed church) who we hope would have smiled at two hapless females, in the wrong place but for all the right reasons! ….

Again, my apologies Jane and Rog, but I hope it gave you a smile!

Subscribers  do not see these advertisements

 
OP
OP
Jane And Rog

Jane And Rog

LIFE MEMBER
Jan 19, 2019
1,384
8,369
Ashford, Kent
Funster No
58,099
MH
Adria Twin 640 SGX
Exp
A few years
I hate to hijack Jane and Rog’s thread, so here’s an abridged version (I can’t find the original thread)

….. one abiding memory will be Dawn Mousy and I, in our bright summery outfits, queuing up in a church in the South of France, really excited because we thought we were about to see The Shroud of Turin.

The church was packed to the rafters, as it would be if the Shroud of Turin was ‘on tour’! We joined the right flank of three queues, on the right side of the aisle - and we moved slowly up the queue of very sombre dressed worshippers. Nothing strange there we thought, only to be confronted at the
head of the queue with a coffin!

Me: “It’s a coffin!”

Dawn: “What - they keep the shroud in a coffin - how weird...!”

Me: No! We’ve just gate crashed a funeral!”

To this day we thank our lucky - whatever - that we didn’t join the central queue who were given holy oil to sprinkle on the coffin whilst offering up a prayer to the deceased!

In our defence, the photo on top the coffin was of a young motorbiker (hence the packed church) who we hope would have smiled at two hapless females, in the wrong place but for all the right reasons! ….

Again, my apologies Jane and Rog, but I hope it gave you a smile!

Love it! Sounds just like something we’d do!
 
OP
OP
Jane And Rog

Jane And Rog

LIFE MEMBER
Jan 19, 2019
1,384
8,369
Ashford, Kent
Funster No
58,099
MH
Adria Twin 640 SGX
Exp
A few years
Yesterday’s map:


IMG_0903.jpeg
 
OP
OP
Jane And Rog

Jane And Rog

LIFE MEMBER
Jan 19, 2019
1,384
8,369
Ashford, Kent
Funster No
58,099
MH
Adria Twin 640 SGX
Exp
A few years
It’s been a fairly uninteresting day today although we did get stopped by the police.

We left the car park at Kazimierz Dolny and drove kindof north. We’re camped at the “House of the Stork” near to the European Bison reserve where our ancestral bison are kept in grassy idil for future generations.

It’s a great place and they actually have a stork wandering around living in peace with the camp dog and and the camp cat. We haven’t told Flynn about any of them.

IMG_9493.jpeg

A pet stork!

We’re here because Białowieża Forest is one of the largest remaining parts of the primeval forests that covered Europe - i.e. it’s been forest since forests were invented. It’s also incidentally home to over 800 European bisons although the ancestry of the bison is somewhat in question - they were nearly wiped out by a couple of wars that happened around here and have been subject to a lot of selective breeding. There are also wolves and lynx.

We are also only 3km from the Belarus border which is why the police stopped us. They are looking for illegal imigrants driving towards Belarus in a bright orange campervan with UK plates.

Also, we notched up 2000 miles today sometime before lunch stopped at traffic lights.

IMG_8278.jpeg

Winner
 
OP
OP
Jane And Rog

Jane And Rog

LIFE MEMBER
Jan 19, 2019
1,384
8,369
Ashford, Kent
Funster No
58,099
MH
Adria Twin 640 SGX
Exp
A few years
We also played this, which Rog isn’t mentioning because I won!

IMG_8295.jpeg


I’m the pink chaps. It’s a rule in our house that Rog always has to be yellow else he sulks, so I’m just whatever other colour there is. Not that I mind. Not one bit.

Subscribers  do not see these advertisements

 
Oct 12, 2009
11,124
24,502
SW London, Poland and all Europe
Funster No
8,876
MH
A Class N+B Arto 69GL
Exp
Since 2009
It’s been a fairly uninteresting day today although we did get stopped by the police.

We left the car park at Kazimierz Dolny and drove kindof north. We’re camped at the “House of the Stork” near to the European Bison reserve where our ancestral bison are kept in grassy idil for future generations.

It’s a great place and they actually have a stork wandering around living in peace with the camp dog and and the camp cat. We haven’t told Flynn about any of them.

View attachment 918705
A pet stork!

We’re here because Białowieża Forest is one of the largest remaining parts of the primeval forests that covered Europe - i.e. it’s been forest since forests were invented. It’s also incidentally home to over 800 European bisons although the ancestry of the bison is somewhat in question - they were nearly wiped out by a couple of wars that happened around here and have been subject to a lot of selective breeding. There are also wolves and lynx.

We are also only 3km from the Belarus border which is why the police stopped us. They are looking for illegal imigrants driving towards Belarus in a bright orange campervan with UK plates.

Also, we notched up 2000 miles today sometime before lunch stopped at traffic lights.

View attachment 918706
Winner

I prefer butter myself:LOL:
 
OP
OP
Jane And Rog

Jane And Rog

LIFE MEMBER
Jan 19, 2019
1,384
8,369
Ashford, Kent
Funster No
58,099
MH
Adria Twin 640 SGX
Exp
A few years
Yesterday’s map. We’re right next to Belorus. Yesterday the nice camp site lady and I were swapping languages to try and settle on a common one.

CSL: “German, Russian, Bylorussian, Polish of course, and a little German.”

Me (outfaced): Well, English, French and a little German, I suppose.

I didn’t mention my Latin O’ Level. It’s proved to be just about as useful as you might imagine.

IMG_0904.jpeg
 
OP
OP
Jane And Rog

Jane And Rog

LIFE MEMBER
Jan 19, 2019
1,384
8,369
Ashford, Kent
Funster No
58,099
MH
Adria Twin 640 SGX
Exp
A few years
Soon after nine, we walked down to the entrance of the park to enquire about bison viewing and primordial forest hiking. Białowieża National Park is the last untouched lowland forest in Europe - but you can’t just casually stroll in, no, you have to arrange a 4 hour guided walk with a park ranger. If you don’t speak Polish, the cost is a massive £104, whether there is one person on the tour or ten, so we rushed back to the campsite to see if our friendly Swedish neighbours wanted to share with us. The answer was yes, so Rog went back to buy tickets, then to be told that the only time available was 4:30pm tomorrow.

The Swedes had to head off north towards their frozen wastelands, and we were less sure about the value without them sharing the cost, so we ditched the idea too.

Looking at the leaflet I took with me, there are a lot of interesting tours to be had - dawn bird spotting (lots of rare species) and night tours with exciting night binoculars supplied. Not sure if they are available in English, but what we’ve found is that it’s definitely worth phoning ahead and trying to book.

We waited for the rain to stop, then went for a walk along a nature trail just outside the national park - good for Flynn not being actually banned, although he (possibly) did have to wear his rather fetching yellow muzzle.

IMG_8310.jpeg

Not impressed

The path was good for my ankle too, as it was well-groomed with boardwalk sections. I did end up with 15,000 steps once we were finished though!

IMG_9507.jpeg


The highlight was spotting a black woodpecker - an impressive bird with a red crown, rather like a certain bald husband when he’s forgotten the factor 50…

IMG_0905.jpeg


Not my photo

We came out by the bison zoo area, whose car park was full of stalls selling everything the thirsty hiker could desire - stuffed furry toy bison, fridge magnets, and mead. Not, sadly, ice creams or freshly-made lemonade.

Rog checked out the zoo and returned with water, hurrah! The vending machine was keen to reassure him that its TCP/IP stack was in good working order - always something I like to check before slaking my thirst.

IMG_8318.jpeg


Despite this, Flynn still managed to find not one, but two muddy puddles to bathe in, necessitating a close encounter with Denby’s outside shower when we got back to camp.

IMG_8322.jpeg

In trouble? What, me?

We ate out at the local hotel which has also won a best 100 in Poland award 3 years running. My soup was probably the highlight for me (cold cucumber, dill and beetroot) but we did also manage a reprise of “can we have the lard to go” with Rog’s starter.

IMG_9514.jpeg


IMG_9515.jpeg


Fish for us both for mains.
IMG_9517.jpeg


IMG_9516.jpeg
 
Oct 12, 2009
11,124
24,502
SW London, Poland and all Europe
Funster No
8,876
MH
A Class N+B Arto 69GL
Exp
Since 2009
Soon after nine, we walked down to the entrance of the park to enquire about bison viewing and primordial forest hiking. Białowieża National Park is the last untouched lowland forest in Europe - but you can’t just casually stroll in, no, you have to arrange a 4 hour guided walk with a park ranger. If you don’t speak Polish, the cost is a massive £104, whether there is one person on the tour or ten, so we rushed back to the campsite to see if our friendly Swedish neighbours wanted to share with us. The answer was yes, so Rog went back to buy tickets, then to be told that the only time available was 4:30pm tomorrow.

The Swedes had to head off north towards their frozen wastelands, and we were less sure about the value without them sharing the cost, so we ditched the idea too.

Looking at the leaflet I took with me, there are a lot of interesting tours to be had - dawn bird spotting (lots of rare species) and night tours with exciting night binoculars supplied. Not sure if they are available in English, but what we’ve found is that it’s definitely worth phoning ahead and trying to book.

We waited for the rain to stop, then went for a walk along a nature trail just outside the national park - good for Flynn not being actually banned, although he (possibly) did have to wear his rather fetching yellow muzzle.

View attachment 919090
Not impressed

The path was good for my ankle too, as it was well-groomed with boardwalk sections. I did end up with 15,000 steps once we were finished though!

View attachment 919091

The highlight was spotting a black woodpecker - an impressive bird with a red crown, rather like a certain bald husband when he’s forgotten the factor 50…

View attachment 919092

Not my photo

We came out by the bison zoo area, whose car park was full of stalls selling everything the thirsty hiker could desire - stuffed furry toy bison, fridge magnets, and mead. Not, sadly, ice creams or freshly-made lemonade.

Rog checked out the zoo and returned with water, hurrah! The vending machine was keen to reassure him that its TCP/IP stack was in good working order - always something I like to check before slaking my thirst.

View attachment 919093

Despite this, Flynn still managed to find not one, but two muddy puddles to bathe in, necessitating a close encounter with Denby’s outside shower when we got back to camp.

View attachment 919094
In trouble? What, me?

We ate out at the local hotel which has also won a best 100 in Poland award 3 years running. My soup was probably the highlight for me (cold cucumber, dill and beetroot) but we did also manage a reprise of “can we have the lard to go” with Rog’s starter.

View attachment 919099

View attachment 919100

Fish for us both for mains.
View attachment 919103

View attachment 919106


Looks like good food. I am guessing food, without drinks was 150 Zloty, unless tourist prices.

How does Rog compare with the Black WoodPECKER?

Subscribers  do not see these advertisements

 
Last edited:
Sep 7, 2017
683
2,169
Funster No
50,394
Soon after nine, we walked down to the entrance of the park to enquire about bison viewing and primordial forest hiking. Białowieża National Park is the last untouched lowland forest in Europe - but you can’t just casually stroll in, no, you have to arrange a 4 hour guided walk with a park ranger. If you don’t speak Polish, the cost is a massive £104, whether there is one person on the tour or ten, so we rushed back to the campsite to see if our friendly Swedish neighbours wanted to share with us. The answer was yes, so Rog went back to buy tickets, then to be told that the only time available was 4:30pm tomorrow.

The Swedes had to head off north towards their frozen wastelands, and we were less sure about the value without them sharing the cost, so we ditched the idea too.

Looking at the leaflet I took with me, there are a lot of interesting tours to be had - dawn bird spotting (lots of rare species) and night tours with exciting night binoculars supplied. Not sure if they are available in English, but what we’ve found is that it’s definitely worth phoning ahead and trying to book.

We waited for the rain to stop, then went for a walk along a nature trail just outside the national park - good for Flynn not being actually banned, although he (possibly) did have to wear his rather fetching yellow muzzle.

View attachment 919090
Not impressed

The path was good for my ankle too, as it was well-groomed with boardwalk sections. I did end up with 15,000 steps once we were finished though!

View attachment 919091

The highlight was spotting a black woodpecker - an impressive bird with a red crown, rather like a certain bald husband when he’s forgotten the factor 50…

View attachment 919092

Not my photo

We came out by the bison zoo area, whose car park was full of stalls selling everything the thirsty hiker could desire - stuffed furry toy bison, fridge magnets, and mead. Not, sadly, ice creams or freshly-made lemonade.

Rog checked out the zoo and returned with water, hurrah! The vending machine was keen to reassure him that its TCP/IP stack was in good working order - always something I like to check before slaking my thirst.

View attachment 919093

Despite this, Flynn still managed to find not one, but two muddy puddles to bathe in, necessitating a close encounter with Denby’s outside shower when we got back to camp.

View attachment 919094
In trouble? What, me?

We ate out at the local hotel which has also won a best 100 in Poland award 3 years running. My soup was probably the highlight for me (cold cucumber, dill and beetroot) but we did also manage a reprise of “can we have the lard to go” with Rog’s starter.

View attachment 919099

View attachment 919100

Fish for us both for mains.
View attachment 919103

View attachment 919106
The food looks fabulous... muddy dog less enticing :)
 
OP
OP
Jane And Rog

Jane And Rog

LIFE MEMBER
Jan 19, 2019
1,384
8,369
Ashford, Kent
Funster No
58,099
MH
Adria Twin 640 SGX
Exp
A few years
Coddiwompling day 26: Not on my watch

We waited out a brief rain shower then left the forest. We stopped to take a photo of this weirdly coded road sign before… we got stopped by the police again. This would not be our only rub with borders today. Happily he got a look at (and a lick from) Flynn and let us go.

IMG_8333.jpeg

Does not apply, we are under 5.2m wide

Onward to the “land of open shutters”; supposedly a lovely set of villages with… open shutters. We may be missed the main event here because we just saw a town where the shutters probably didn’t close and weren’t that well painted. OK but, to misquote Michelin: not worth a detour. Anyway, onward to the Green Mosque.

The drive to the green mosque was… interesting. Garmin suggested a circuitous route north then returning south. 100km to travel 30km as the crow squawks.

IMG_9520.jpeg

Be serious

We didn’t believe it. Would you? So after consulting Google and Apple Maps we set off directly east towards the mosque. Garmin got increasingly alarmed about the route. We discussed why it might be wrong: Could there be a bridge out? Maybe it had a broken map or a ferry wasn’t working today? We were driving down a well maintained road but… we were alone. Suddenly we saw signs saying “Lorries left, VIP bus right”. We were neither and also both. We chose a lane at random. Immediately it hit us: Apple and Google had chosen a shortcut through Belarus! We had plausible deniability (and a green card, if not a visa) so we carried on. At least we could get to the border and be turned away. At the last minute A&G were correct: a right turn north about 150m from the border. We passed a couple of scary looking mIlitary bases and then we were good.

IMG_9522.jpeg

Make a U turn in 150m


A brief interlude here for a Belarusian joke. Whatever your think about Russians etc, a corrupt government gives you good jokes:

One day Lukashenko is driven through a village in his limo. They run over somebody's pig. Lukashenko, an honest person, stops, gives his driver $100 and tells him to find the killed pig's owner and apologize. The driver leaves and isn't back until two hours later, dead drunk. Lukashenko yells at him: “Are you crazy?” The driver replies: “I haven't done anything wrong: I took the money, put the pig into the sack, placed it on my back, walk down the village street and yell – Dear people! I'm Lukashenko's driver and I've just killed this pig! – and suddenly they're all running towards me, with tears of happiness in their eyes, and start pouring me drinks, one after another…”

The green mosque is one of a few remnants of medieval Poland's Muslim Tatar community. Given the prediction from Sandomierz Cathedral I was on full alert and wore and extra scarf. We snuck our way into the mosque with a Polish group - we even got 50% off because the guide didn’t speak English. The guide was a local tartar, luckily there still wasn’t much beheading on offer. After a while of not understanding a word, we waved goodbye and skipped early.

IMG_8339.jpeg

Green
From the mosque, even more ever north. Despite being more nervous of getting stoppedby the increasing number of border guards, police and military vehicles, we’ve not been collared again. The countryside here is great - smooth roads through deep forest. We landed at Camping U Tolka (///completed.compass.taxpayer) it’s between two lakes so Flynn is doubly happy.



The owner of Camping U Tolka was especially pleased that we speak a bit (r) and a lot (J) of french. He’s an ex Legionnaire. Wikipedia says Poles are one of the biggest national groups in La Legion.

Jane cooked chicken curry for dinner and we played Caïrn. The curry was a very welcome change to the relentless pork a lard. Not that I don’t like lard.

IMG_9531.jpeg

Burn

IMG_8357.jpeg

Think

Codiwomple rating: Nearly accidentally drove into Belarus. This is double plus Codiwomple.

Ankle update: After yesterday’s uber scamper the flipper hinges seem intact so it’s got to be 10/10. Also - just incase you’re not keeping up - yesterday was the start of the fourth (and hence final) week with the Awful Brace.

Subscribers  do not see these advertisements

 
Last edited:

Lenny HB

LIFE MEMBER
Oct 18, 2007
54,705
155,972
On the coast in West Sussex
Funster No
658
MH
Carthago Compactline
Exp
Since 2008 & many years tugging
I hate to hijack Jane and Rog’s thread, so here’s an abridged version (I can’t find the original thread)

….. one abiding memory will be Dawn Mousy and I, in our bright summery outfits, queuing up in a church in the South of France, really excited because we thought we were about to see The Shroud of Turin.

The church was packed to the rafters, as it would be if the Shroud of Turin was ‘on tour’! We joined the right flank of three queues, on the right side of the aisle - and we moved slowly up the queue of very sombre dressed worshippers. Nothing strange there we thought, only to be confronted at the
head of the queue with a coffin!

Me: “It’s a coffin!”

Dawn: “What - they keep the shroud in a coffin - how weird...!”

Me: No! We’ve just gate crashed a funeral!”

To this day we thank our lucky - whatever - that we didn’t join the central queue who were given holy oil to sprinkle on the coffin whilst offering up a prayer to the deceased!

In our defence, the photo on top the coffin was of a young motorbiker (hence the packed church) who we hope would have smiled at two hapless females, in the wrong place but for all the right reasons! ….

Again, my apologies Jane and Rog, but I hope it gave you a smile!
We are not the only ones then. In Portugal we walked into a barracks at the back of a palace there was a big wig solder lying in state, whoops.
 
Oct 24, 2007
1,473
3,604
Funster No
705
Yesterday’s map. We’re right next to Belorus. Yesterday the nice camp site lady and I were swapping languages to try and settle on a common one.

CSL: “German, Russian, Bylorussian, Polish of course, and a little German.”

Me (outfaced): Well, English, French and a little German, I suppose.

I didn’t mention my Latin O’ Level. It’s proved to be just about as useful as you might imagine.

View attachment 918784
We were there five years ago and had a bizarre day out on our bikes into Belarus. ( With a day visa ). I guess you can't do that anymore.
 

Join us or log in to post a reply.

To join in you must be a member of MotorhomeFun

Join MotorhomeFun

Join us, it quick and easy!

Log in

Already a member? Log in here.

Latest journal entries

Funsters who are viewing this thread

Back
Top