King of the Biebrza River

in #travelfeed5 years ago

Once, while browsing pages about Podlasie's tourist attractions, I came across the mysterious "King of Biebrza". After a short search, I found a little more information. Man has been living alone on the Biebrza River for over 20 years. A topic extremely interesting for every traveler. At the first opportunity, I get in the car and drive.

Yes, but how do you find him? I didn't find the exact address on the internet - I only came across general information that he lived in the village of Budy near the Biebrza river. I'm going so Tsarist Route - along the river. At some point I see a pub - Dobarz Manor. I stop and go in. Beautifully decorated interior, wooden tables, flowers, tablecloths on them, curtains on the windows - idyllic atmosphere. To my surprise I see "King Biebrza". He is standing near the bar. "I'm lucky" - I think to myself. I watch him. White shirt, jeans, luxuriant gray hair, a little sad expression on my face - I am surprised because he was smiling in the pictures on the internet. It will soon turn out why such a contrast. I start the conversation. "King "Eager to take up conversations. He is a very open man - he says what he thinks in advance. That's how I imagined him. He asks what I have already visited on the Biebrza - he advises what to see in the area. I ask if I can visit his property - in the end it is one of the attractions tourist on the Biebrza recommended by some tourist portals. I gladly accept my offer.

I get into the vehicle and follow the forest paths behind the car of the "King". After some time we turn into one of the alleys - I think to myself: "Good that I did not have to look for the way to his house myself, at this intersection I would not know where to turn". We reach the goal. The car park is a small forest clearing. Next to it there is a large kind of gate with the inscription "Sucha Barć". In the background you can see the landscape of the meadows of the Biebrza. We are going towards the river. A wooden house emerges from behind the trees. Next to it, an outbuilding with specific carvings on one of the walls. A farm nearby with several dogs - including several puppies. "The King" explains - "It's stupid, I took care of them." It turns out that someone abandoned small dogs in the woods. The problem is even greater because they require constant care and regular meals. That is why Mr. Krzysztof (name of "King") was so sad when I met him in Dobarz Court. The matter of the dogs doesn't leave him alone.

"King" invites me to the cottage. Just the entrance and the porch arouses my interest. Lots of different items here. Old wicker baskets, wooden sculptures, horseshoes, bells, farm tools. Everything looks like it's a hundred years old. The first impression after going inside is the incredible narrowness resulting from the huge amount of various artifacts accumulated here. First of all, there are wooden figurines of various sizes - from ordinary people, through religious figures, animals, to terrible demons. The walls are full of decorations - paintings, photos, diplomas, wrought iron crosses, kerosene lamps, old clocks. On shelves and archaic furniture - books, books, parchment scrolls, dishes, turntables, accordion, vases. Virtually every item looks antique. Mr. Krzysztof opens one of the cabinets. It shows documents and photographs related to both Polish and Russian history. It has many memorabilia of the former Osówiec fortress, whose ruins are located a few kilometers up Biebrza. As it turns out, many items Mr. Krzysztof bought from the locals. However, he brought most of the old books from Warsaw.

Years ago, Krzysztof ran an antique shop in the capital. It was in the antiquities trade that he earned enough to buy a farm on the Biebrza. Initially, he planned that this place would be visited only during the holidays. Over time, he decided to move to Bud permanently. Wife could not imagine such a life. They split up. When Mr. Krzysztof moved to Bad Biebrza, he immediately admired the local culture and history. He began collecting local works of folk art - especially sculptures by Dionysius Putra. His collection also includes everyday objects of the former Biebrza village. There are also many memorabilia related to the tsarist history of these areas.

At the end of the visit, reflection comes over me. I think it's good that I visited 'King of Biebrza'. It's nice that there are still people living without television, internet, ATMs and payment cards, but in harmony with nature and themselves. It gives food for thought - is civilization in its present shape really needed by man so much? The life of 'King Biebrza' is proof that he is not.


View this post on TravelFeed for the best experience.

Sort:  

Congratulations, Your Post Has Been Added To The Steemit Worldmap!
Author link: http://steemitworldmap.com?author=jakub1234
Post link: http://steemitworldmap.com?post=king-of-the-biebrza-river


Want to have your post on the map too?

  • Go to Steemitworldmap
  • Click the code slider at the bottom
  • Click on the map where your post should be (zoom in if needed)
  • Copy and paste the generated code in your post
  • Congrats, your post is now on the map!

Congratulations @jakub1234! You have completed the following achievement on the Steem blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :

You received more than 250 as payout for your posts. Your next target is to reach a total payout of 500

You can view your badges on your Steem Board and compare to others on the Steem Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

To support your work, I also upvoted your post!

You can upvote this notification to help all Steem users. Learn how here!

What a quiet, calm, rustic place.

Yes, it's very rustic and amazing place from another era.

Hiya, @LivingUKTaiwan here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made into our Top 3 in Daily Travel Digest #697.

Your post has been manually curated by the @steemitworldmap team and got an upvote from @blocktrades to support your work. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting us so we can keep the project going!

Become part of the Haveyoubeenhere community:


Congratulations! Your high-quality travel content was selected by @travelfeed curator @elsaenroute and earned you a reward, in form of an upvote and a resteem. Your work really stands out! Your article now has a chance to get featured under the appropriate daily topic on our TravelFeed blog.
Thank you for being part of the TravelFeed community!

Thanks for posting through TravelFeed.io! You have received a larger upvote from us. We hope to see you soon on TravelFeed.io!
Posting through TravelFeed.io also makes your post eligible to participate in the travel writing contest by @invisusmundi where you can earn up to 100 STEEM! Read the contest announcement for more information on how to participate.

We are continuously working on improving TravelFeed, recently we presented at SteemFest⁴, published our Android app and launched our Steem witness.

Please consider voting for us as a witness. If you're not sure how to do that, it's easy: Head over to our Support Us page and hit the witness voting button to vote with Steem Keychain, or Steemconnect if you are not a Keychain user. Alternatively, use this Steemconnect link or head over to the Steemit Wallet and enter travelfeed in the box.


Learn more about TravelFeed by clicking on the banner above and join our community on Discord.

What a wonderful collection of historical artifacts all in one place, would be nice to see him build a barn on the land displaying these items in less cramped area.

Living out there must be extremely quiet, a good place to reflect, away from the noise of modern day life.

He is living his dream, teaching the next generation about where their forefathers came from, it should be documented. Rare collections and people with the knowledge eventually die off and the history is lost forever.

Thanks for sharing your visit to this remote home @jakub1234

!tip

I agree and thank you

🎁 Hi @jakub1234! You have received 0.1 STEEM tip from @joanstewart!

@joanstewart wrote lately about: Piggly Wiggly Country Village Market Kwazulu-Natal South Africa Feel free to follow @joanstewart if you like it :)

Sending tips with @tipU - how to guide.

During our own travel we visited the Balkans and learned so much about living with nature, not requiring electricity, money, social media etc. It was so inspiring. Your experience reminded us of that very much.

It's nice. Greetings.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.23
TRX 0.21
JST 0.035
BTC 98664.10
ETH 3346.86
USDT 1.00
SBD 3.16