Wroclaw-Köln (825km), Monday morning
I get up at 5.30 to get a tram after 6 o’clock. I have to go till the final station, from there walk about 10 Minutes to find the last big gas station on the mainstreet going unto the highway. It is cold and snowing like crazy and still dark. I can’t find the streets that seemed to be so easy-to-find on the map.. First mistake: I don’t ask locals..
Finding the highway
I walk and walk in the direction that seems right for me, it can’t be far away, it must be somewhere here. But after everycorner there’s a new street and there are less and less cars, and the people I ask for the way to the highway just tell me to keep going in this direction.. After a 50-minutes-walk through young snow, I see the “Auchan”-supermarket-centre in front of me, but from behind. The highway A4 starts right there! But it’s dark and snowing and i can’t make out the beginning of the A4 cause I’m surrounded from many streets now. As I walked around the whole huge centre I realize that the entrance of the highway had been right where I started walking around.. man! It’s already 8 o’clock as I reach the gas station on the entrance ramp. Muddy wet snow covers the streets and the gas station up to 20cm, there are few cars and they drive very slowly. It’s hard to keep an arm stretched out while having a heavy rucksack on the back… but well, after 15 minutes a car stops, going to Legnica, which is a town between Wroclaw and the border, still on the highway.

Wroclaw-Legnica: 76km / snowfall
The driver sells candy bars like Mars, Snickers etc. to stores, and he puts my backpack right on all the stuff. He’s very nice, doesn’t speak much english, and lets me out in the gasstation at the exit of Legnica, telling me I was crazy and that he wishes me all the best. Thank you, I can need it.. Very small gas station, a lot of cars parked, no people around, no cars driving unto the highway, and still snow, snow, snow. The highway is covered with it, too, and it would be easy for me to hitchhike right on the highway itself, as cars drive very slowly and carefully. But as I think about it some police cars show up and I decide to try it some more minutes legally. After 15min I am really cold and promise to myself that I will buy better shoes next time. Another 15 minutes pass, some people offer me rides, but in the wrong direction.
Legnica-Oberlausitz: 146km / snow, snow, snow
Finally Szimon shows up. He transports meat and is on his way home to Boleslawiec. Perfect, the highway to Zgorzelec/Görlitz ends right before Boleslawiec and the street then goes through the town and some more villages. Szimon has a CB radio and tells me that he will try to find a ride to Germany for me. We have nice talks. The A4 to the border will be opened in fall and most of the restaurants in and around Boleslawiec will have to close by then. I don’t know what is better: A highway far away from houses and bringing Poland closer to the western Europe, or hundreds and hundreds of trucks and cars going through small villages and towns, bringing some money to the restaurants… As we reach a gas station right before Boleslawiec, he says something in his CB-Radio, drops me off in the gas station and tells me to wait for some minutes there. He doesn’t know who is my next driver, but he promises me that there will be someone soon. I get out and there is already a truck, forcing his way through the snow. I open the door and yes, he’s my driver, called over CB-Radio! I climb in, he’s going till 10km before Dresden, which means for me that I will get out on Raststätte Oberlausitz, 50km before Dresden. But until we get there there is still the snow problem. We drive with around 40km/h and it’s already almost noon! I am tired and my feet are like ice… Driver doesn’t speak any german/english, so it’s a radio-ride, including some short naps..
Oberlausitz-Köln: 625km / even more snow
Arriving in Oberlausitz I quickly go to toilet to reanimate my feet! Then I prepare myself mentally for going out into the almost-snowstorm. There are not many cars, and no people outside. It’s already after noon and I heard the rumour that the highway will be closed because of too much snow. Well, I go outside and take some pictures of the cars covered with snow, as I see a man sitting in a car, eating a sandwich. The numberplate I can’t read cause its covered with snow. I approach him and he openes the window a little bit. I ask if he could give me a lift towards western germany. He replies that normally he doesn’t take strangers. I smile, step back a meter, lift my arms and say that I don’t want to force him, knowing, that for sure he will take me. He askes if I carry any weapon. I think of my selfmade “pepperspray” and of the swiss army knife, but I say “no” and he gets out of the car for helping me with the backpack.
We start going towards Dresden. Already after some km, where the street goes up a hill, we see 3 trucks standing over the whole highway. Obviously they had started to slide on the snow and can’t get up the hill, can’t be moved neither. We stand in the snow, waiting for police to come. Finally some big trucks show up that pull the other trucks up the hill. We pass, but we can’t drive faster than 60km/h. I planned to get out before Frankfurt and to go down the A5 to Switzerland. But more and more I realize that we won’t make it to Frankfurt until 6 or 7pm. Franek, my driver, is going to Köln. I write to my friend from there if she could host me for a night. She gives me a Yes and I tell Franek that I will stay until Köln. We spend almost 7 or even 8 hours together, listening to bad radio music and discussing many interesting topics. At 8.30pm the droppes me in front of the house of my friend.

Wroclaw-Köln can normally be done in about 8 hours. Including my morning walk it took me 13,5 hours…
Filed under Deutschland, Polen, Winter | Comments (2)2 Responses to “Wroclaw-Köln (825km), Monday morning”
Leave a Reply
Heya,
a humble hint for the next time:
There is a free (!) bus going from Wroclaw centre (main train station) directly to the shopping mall “bielany”, from where it’s a 3 minute walk to a gas station situated directly at A4 – it’s rather easy to get lifts to Dresden there (did it like 7 times already).
Oh, and the 8h for Wroclaw-Köln is it based on your own experience ?
cheerio,
M
thanks for the hint! I know about that bus, but I wanted to be on this gas station before 7am. There is a free TescoBus for workers – but I didn’t want to risk that they wouldn’t take me for I obviously am not going to work in Tesco….
8 hours is driving time only, no waiting times included….