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We are now in Oz after two amazing years of traveling Europe in our home built plane. We met many fantastic people who we are proud to call friends and have gained a much better understanding of the similarities and differences between the cultures of the different European states as well as the history and geography that have lead to these differences. We enjoy meeting people with similar interests to ourselves and learning more about other cultures. Please let us know if you're going to be in Queensland and would like to catch up for a meal and a chat.

Wednesday 5 October 2011

Other planes from the air on the Czech rally

I had hoped to get a photo of each of the other planes from the air during the rally, as it's rare that you get a photo of your plane from the air, but of course that wasn't possible.  Here are a few though!

The lovely Symon

OK-KUR-02

OK-KUR-02


OK-KUR-03
And back again to idylically located Frydlant flying club


Monday 3 October 2011

Czech-Polish air rally

We had great fun flying to 5 destinations on the Saturday and here are a few group pictures to commemorate the occasion



Maybe not my favourite beer, but definitely my favourite beer mug!
Renaissance gardens seem to be made to be seen from the sky, which was good as it was a really hot day and despite our best efforts we didn't manage to walk there...
We went past dozens of castles.




scenic routes around the area of one of our landing spots, if only we'd had more time!
Everyone warming up to leave our last landing

Friday 30 September 2011

Polish flying rally to the Czech republic

At Kikity Syzgi told us that he was leading a weekend rally from Katowice to the Czech republic, so after a few moments' consideration we decided to miss the Elblag canal and our other plans for western Poland and go with them.

Katowice town


oops we forgot it was a landing competition until we saw the yellow markings
The rally started from Katowice a big industrial town, where we met to have some Polish specialties for lunch. After we'd eaten Jakob kindly explained what was in it :-(  Nah I don't mind some blood sausage or fermented soup.

An action packed pre rally briefing.


First stop, beautiful Frydlant in the Czech hills

Tuesday 27 September 2011

Kikity airfield

Beautiful Kikity, also on the Masurian lake system
Even at the beginning of July you have to have bad weather sometimes.  We sat in the briefing office at Ketrzyn until 4pm, waiting for a weather window to go the 30km to Kikity airfield, recommended to us by Heiko Mueller of Aerokurier. When we called to check landing fees etc. they sounded a bit bemused to hear from us, but we figured it was a language problem.

It was so damp there were dozens of these little frogs on the airfield!

When we finally arrived at Kikity, we understood the confusion: the airfield wasn't really open yet, the hotel was 99% finished and we were their first guests in their 5 star facility.  And first guests naturally have to be toasted in vodka, beer, and local beer and lemon vodka, and the other vodka, and why not whisky, oh and what about the Johnnie Walker black.....
A really talented painter was hired to decorate the walls, the planes painted here on the wall to the kitchen are the airfield's founders' planes, with Syzgi's at the top and Slavek's in the middle (we didn't meet the third founder)

The next day we couldn't understand how everyone else was so perky...  Again the weather was not the best, so everyone else stayed until they could get out safely mid-afternoon, they were kind enough to let us stay another night on our own and nurse our heads.
Storks are the club's emblem and just down the road there was a big stork nest

The airfield and hotel were built by 3 guys from Warsaw, one of whom's most easily explicable business is hotels, which is what inspired them to build a luxury hotel.  It is not yet decided exactly what they're going to do with the property: keep it as a hotel for friends and aeroclub members, open it to the public, or make it into an airpark

the view out our window (not flying weather)


Syzgi is one of the three founders of the airfield and all round good guy.
Goodbye Josip and Ida






Sunday 25 September 2011

Friday 23 September 2011

Ketrzyn Wilamovo for Hitler's bunker, Wolfsschanze or Wolf's Lair (photos from above)

The airfield with some nice Wilgas (l) and some maybe migs (r)



Julian having a beer with some nice gents at the amazing palace belonging to the owner of Ketrzyn airfield, we stayed in a lovely room for  €35 per night including the biggest hot and cold breakfast you've ever seen.  Mmmm the apple blinis....
where we stayed from above, with cow sheds out the back and those nice sculptures all over the park, you can tell them by their red colour - unfortunately the fisherman by the pond isn't easily recognisable from the air


Ketrzyn is a pretty little East Prussian town with the solid classic / jugendstil buildings to match.

Hmm should have taken a photo of the main street, but this is part of the church buildings on top of the hill.
Part of the bunker complex, note railway line leading here from Ketrzyn airfield approx 6km away.
Hitler spent 800 days of his last 3.5 years staying at this bunker complex in what is now Eastern Poland, which was the military headquarters for the eastern front.  It is a very large complex that is quite difficult to photograph as at the end of the war the Nazis tried to destroy the complex, with the limited success to be expected in attempting to destroy massive concrete buildings.  Now many remains are covered in plants and are as well disguised as they were in the war with that nifty camoflage netting.

spot the bunker

Tuesday 20 September 2011

Mazury Residence Airpark in Gizycko, Poland



We love airparks.  We go to look at them all, as we love the idea of living on an airfield.  This airpark is particularly Polish / Eastern in design: the airstrip isn't in the centre of the airpark, it's actually on the side.  This is because the customers of airparks in the east tend to be people who like to watch planes taking off, rather than people who fly themselves, which seems very strange to us. We were a bit concerned when we landed that we wouldn't be able to take off again because of the large amount of water on the runway and the long grass, but it was all fine, I think the wet runway is a planning issue, as you can see from the maquette of the park it's down a hill, I'm sure some ditch digging will fix this.

Landing


The maquette, you can see the grass landing strip really well
The houses are really interesting construction: concrete with a special polystyrene block with plaster coverage.

Tuesday 13 September 2011

A taste of Vilnius

And what better place to start a post on Vilnius than beautiful Trakai castle from the ground?

Like Denmark, most of the tourists in Lithuania are locals. In fact in order to walk around Trakai castle, which was beautifully restored post Soviet era, we had to ease our way through the background of four wedding parties' photo sessions.  Below is another wedding, I can imagine that tulle and high heels must be a bit uncomfortable for sailing, but hey!


Since we were lucky enough to have the loan of a car we decided to do the 80km driving tour around Vilnius, with an audio guide we'd downloaded on the internet. We figured this should take us 3 hours.

Wrong.

In fact it took 3 days and we didn't even see everything, as each stop was something really interesting: walking paths around the stations of the cross; incredible sundials; botanic gardens; old mills with their own breweries; and of course the television tower, the tragic scene of the uprising against the Soviets in 1991.

Great Lithuanian brew, probably my favourite non-German beer brewing country

Julian in the gardens of the brewery / former mill
The most amazing sundial, I have to make one of these for my garden! The boulders on the ground mark the hours.

Close up of the carvings
Beautiful view out over town centre in the evening just before a storm hit

Julian at the opera, fabulous 
In Talinn we learn a lot about recent history from the Kumu art museum, in Vilnius we learnt it from the KGB/Genocide Museum: we think of the KGB activities as being from another era, Stalin and WWII, in fact it is all very recent. Lithuania only managed to expel the KGB in 1991, up until which point they were still very active in surveillance, wire tapping and the odd torture and execution.  When I think of the German Nazi past I think of it as being a terrible past that is disconnected from our current day, as everyone who was alive and old enough to have been involved in the atrocities is now either dead or celebrating some significant birthdays.  It is quite disconcerting to think that people who committed these crimes against the population are still part of the workforce (case in point, the esteemed Vladimir Putin).

Isn't this a fantastic piece of Soviet architecture???
Anyway I don't like to dwell on the unpleasantness, as Vilnius is a fantastic and very pretty city.

Wherever we go we try to cook local style, so I leave you with a picture of one of our dinners of chanterelle mushrooms, potato dumplings with cream cheese centre and some dill from Justinus' garden.

Tuesday 16 August 2011

Lithuania flying photos from Kaunas to Vilnius

Our desire to camp on the airfield caused some consternation in Kaunas.  It's not that it's never done, it just isn't done often.  Luckily this meant a flurry of communication between that the tower and the aeroclub ending with us comfortably ensconced in the aeroclub's bunkroom, too kind.

Kaunas is a nice airfield and a comfortable bike ride into a pretty little town, well worth a stop.  The next day the weather was a bit damp and we were feeling a bit deflated after a somewhat stressful and noisy month in budget hotels across the Baltic and had been contemplating packing up and going West where things are simple. Luckily at that point Justinus, a TV producer arrived to fly back to Vilnius and said that it was impossible for us to visit his country without seeing Vilnius. He most kindly lent us his car and house as he was off on holidays to Egypt.

Justinus' very nice Dynamic a fast going places carbon fibre plane
The picturesque Trakai castle fortuitously lay directly en route
From this bigger scale pic you can see how Trakai's in the middle of a lake system

Justinus with his plane, I like this photo as it gives a slight impression of how active Justinus is: he's constantly performing a multitude of tasks each of which takes his full attention.