











Poland, Warsaw, Mazovia. Spirit of place, development, 
 human spirituality; consciousness.












The old tyres, that had been used prevent landslip from the sides of the embankment leading up to the ramp are still here, piled in heaps (below). There are signs that someone has tried to set them on fire, mercifully without any great success.
Below: Where once ran rails. This shot leads me to ponder whether this land (to the west of the scrapyard on Karczunkowska) will be part of the plot. The new road will run to the east, emerging on Karczunkowska opposite ul. Nawłocka. So what will happen here?
Below: looking like a blasted WWI battlefield on the Western Front, mud churned up by machinery, earth heaped up in great mounds, then frozen. 
Below: the newly-arising road linking Mysiadło with ul. Karczunkowska. Will it be called ul. Żmijewska (Adder Street), as it once was before the Rampa site was built? (See this post.) How long before this new road starts disgorging hundreds of cars an hour onto ul. Karczunkowska?
Below: abandoned building on ul. Karczunkowska. Not sure what its purpose was, today a hang-out for the local substance-abuse community. Further investigation required!
 Below: A final look at the Jeziorki Stonehenge, the last remaining pillar that once held up the ramp. The destruction of this site has been without doubt the biggest local event of 2008. I wonder what will be here in a year's time...
 
Moni, Eddie and I arrived at my parents yesterday, where the big excitement was the recent arrival of a flock of ten parrots, who seem to have domeciled themselves in the back garden. The willow tree (apparently one of the finest in southern England, and subject to a tree preservation order), which has served as a perch to wood pigeons and other local species, is now regularly visited by several parrots at a time. As I write, Eddie tells me there's five in the tree.
Can anyone say what type of parrot this is? Where are they from? How did they get to West London? Are they likely to breed in this climate? Where will they nest?
Staying three days at my brother's family in Derbyshire, we were blessed with perfect weather on Boxing Day. Ideal to walk off the gastronomic excesses of Yuletide. As I've mentioned, Derbyshire has some of England's most beautiful countryside, something that's missing in Mazowsze. The rural aesthetic there is quite different, more stark.
 Above: A well maintained hedgerow, undulating landscape and rationally sized fields. The low winter sun casts long shadows, even at midday.
 Part of our walk took us across the Ecclesbourne Valley Railway, which leads from Duffield to Wirksworth. I hope that before too long this line will run again, both for rail freight (from the quarries at Wirskworth) and for tourism. Right: A mile marker along the single-track like, indicating that we are 133 and three-quarter miles from London St Pancras.
 Flying yesterday from Warsaw to Heathrow by BA (civilised flight - from Okecie's Terminal 2 rather than that blasted cattleshed, Etiuda, and at 12:30 not 06:00), I took the 80-400mm lens in the hope of some good air-to-air shots. And I was rewarded, somewhere over Holland, when an Air France Airbus A330 that had been flying parallel and ahead of our aircraft turned towards us and flew over. A split second later and the Airbus had shot past. Photo's lack of sharpness due it being taken through two panes of less-than-optically-perfect and smudged glass.
It's been a good year at work; over the course of the past 12 months, six people have joined us in our Warsaw office and two have moved on. The vector of business has been upward. How will things be next year? Photo by Natalia, gingerbread man by Tessa, Chateau Perey by Avis (the car hire firm's generosity paid off, as I hired one of its cars at Manchester airport the very next day).
 The photo is a two-shot stitched-up panorama (click to enlarge), which clearly shows the extent of development to the south of Jeziorki (observe the horizon). Now this 14 hectare site is being made ready for even more.
 I spoke to the security guard at the site entrance, who told me that from his information, the first phase of the rampa development would be 50 houses plus a health centre. He couldn't say whether the new road would connect to ul. Borówki or whether it would run down further towards Nowa Iwiczna. Either way, if this road were to be made public, it would bring immediate relief to the residents of Mysiadło and/or Nowa Iwiczna, and hundreds more cars to clog up Karczunkowska each morning. 
At four minutes past midday GMT (London time/four past 1pm Warsaw), the sun reached the southernmost extreme of its journey relative to the earth's surface, caused by the earth's tilt. The South Pole is enjoying 24 hours of daylight, the North Pole is in 24 hours of darkness. Here at 51 degrees north, the day is at its shortest, at 7 hours and 42 minutes. The resultant gloom is literally depressing. The weather is not helping; no snow, +5C, drizzle, dark grey sky even at midday.

The biggest downside for me with this monster lens is changing it in the field. Juggling a large bit of glass (my standard 18-200mm zoom) and this huge one, four lens caps, two lens hoods, the body and the lens case with cold fingers is risky. The solution is a second body. But then the prime lens in a two-lens outfit should be wider than 18mm; ideally a 12-80mm zoom - from ultrawide through to portrait. Toting two bodies with two lenses overlapping between 80mm and 200mm makes little sense when weight is key.
Two foot of glass? The extreme end of this zoom lens is 400mm, on a DX sensor camera this is the equivalent of a 600mm lens on a 35mm film camera. Which, if it were a long tube without any fancy optics foreshortening the focal length, would be two foot long!
 This photo, taken in the early 1980s, is the nearest you'll get to the flatness of Mazovia in the UK. This is Cambridgeshire, near Ramsey. Like Mazowsze, I get an instant sense of recognition here. Indeed this is the one and only part of the UK where I'd catch that atmosphere or klimat. This is not the American Midwest, nor the Texas Panhandle, but feels like it; the Fens. Eerie horizon-to-horizon flatness, straight roads, telegraph poles converging into infinity, a vast sky. Like America, but unlike Mazowsze, the fields are big. Time to don my field jacket, shoulder my army-surplus M1 carbine, and go hunting jackrabbit in the scrub.
On the left is my first car, EYE 522 J, a Morris Minor van. Photo taken with a Leica M2, 35mm f2 Summicron lens.
The similarity with Mazowsze is evident in the photo below. This ul. Raszyńska looking from Zgorzała towards Nowy Podolszyn.
Above: Nowy Świat, Warsaw's poshest retail thoroughfare. Christmas lights? Very tasteful. Pre-Christmas sales? Come off it. Consumer confidence is still high. Unemployment is still falling. New car sales are up 9% in the year to November compared to the same period in 2007. The banking sector and property developers may be wreathed in gloom, but elsewhere, the Polish economy looks to have enough impetus to leap the yawning chasm of global financial crisis and make it to the other side - just - without falling in. EU-funded infrastructure projects will help.
 UPDATE: 18 December - gloomy industrial production figures for November 2008, much worse than analysts expected - an 8.9% year-on-year fall. Oh dear.
The new PKP Koleje Mazowieckie (KM) timetable sees an increase in the number of morning rush hour services from Piaseczno and beyond into central Warsaw from five to seven. From the new year, Warsaw public transport tickets will be valid on KM trains all the way out to Zalesie Górne. These improvements should, I hope, lead to an increase in people commuting into town by train, and a decrease in the number of cars on ul. Puławska. Which is good, because in early 2009, the authorities plan to paint a bus lane down Puławska from ul. Karczunkowska all the way up to ul. Poloneza. Hell for drivers! (Can it get worse? YES.) Above: Corner of ul. Farbiarska and ul. Ludwinowska on Tuesday morning.
 I read in Gazeta Wyborcza today that the full moon is at its nearest point to earth (perigee), nearer than at its farthest point (apogee)by a full 40,000 km (25,000 miles). A good once-in-3,233-days opportunity to wield the 80-400mm Nikkor, erect it on a massive tripod, and snap you this glorious full-color (!) snap.
Over the summer, my mother-in-law gave me a history of Warsaw published in 1974 (Historia Warszawy, M.M. Dozdowski, A Zahorski), which contained this fascinating map of Warsaw and surrounding areas as it would have looked in the 16th Century. Below is a section of the map, focused on Jeziorki. Click to enlarge either map.
 This suggests that Jeziorki has been around since the 15th Century, the property of a nobleman (rather than of the church or of royalty). Looking around; Dąbrówka dates back to the 15th Century, Podolszyn was called Podolszynie-Dukaty, Łady (pron. 'Wuddy') was Łady-Gramnice, Gramnice itself would have been where that chicken farm is on the road between Łady and Dawidy; Dawidy would have been within the Las Kabacki forest, Grabów would have been called Jemielinek and Jaworowa - Jaworowo; Falenty was once Falęta. The whole area was ill-served with inns (karczmy) or mills (młyny). The fishponds around Raszyn and Rybie were once extensive marshes. The nearest churches were at Służewo (the predecessor of the Dominican Abbey, Służew, where Moni sings) and Raszyniec (today's Raszyn).
 Many thanks to KG for sending me links to Warsaw's map archives (click here for whole lot). I have been poring over these in great detail. Many thanks also to the guys at Trasbus for scanning and uploading this phenomenal wealth of Varsoviana. From all the maps archived, I've selected a some showing how Jeziorki has developed and changed over the years. Above: The first map of Warsaw to extend as far south as Jeziorki. Note - this map, like the map below, is oriented with north the left. Ul. Sarabandy was called ul. Ogrodowa back then. A narrow gauge railway line runs the length of ul. Puławska (more on this in a future post).
 Above: The rendition of Jeziorki on the map from 1962 is identical to the 1961 edition (not shown). Ul. Ogrodowa has been renamed Sarabandy (General Ogrodov having fallen out of favour with the Politburo). Ul. Trombity and ul. Baletowa have both been given a name, but note no station at Dawidy yet on the railway line to Radom. Also note name St. (stacja/station) Jeziorki Warszawskie.
 Above: 1970 and the narrow gauge railway terminates at W-wa Dąbrówka (wąsk), no longer running up Puławska as far as the Dworzec Południowy (where the Wilanowska bus terminus is). Meanwhile, Dawidy's acquired a station, and Dawidy Poduchowne has been moved across the track. Note too ul. Żmijewska, branching off ul. Karczunkowska, rather than running east-west from ul. Pozytywki (as it does today). All railway stations within Warsaw's boundaries are now prefixed "W-wa", so St. Jeziorki Warszawskie becomes W-wa Jeziorki.
Above: 1978 and Dawidy Poduchowne has moved right into Jeziorki. Dąbrówka has been shunted across to the other side of ul. Puławska. Indeed, there's no such place as Jeziorki on this map. The narrow gauge railway has gone, being replaced by the no. 51 trolleybus (Wilanowska to Piaseczno). Note the new development between Dawidowska and Karczunkowska - streets branching off ul. Nawłocka. Not particularly well mapped, but then Warsaw's cartographers did not have access to NASA satellite imaging.
Above: The last map from the communist era - 1989. Only eight years before the Dembinski family would turn up in this part of Warsaw. Again, no sign of Jeziorki - the area is clearly marked Dawidy Poduchowne. Notice also in all five maps the size of the lake at Jeziorki - I don't know when drainage of this area was effected, but it's never been that size in the 11 years we've lived in the area.
Across the tracks in Zgorzała, just off ul. Dawidowska (which I reported a few weeks ago as being widened and re-tarmacked), I spot a road sign. There has never been an ul. Sikorki here; this is something entirely new. This dirt track has always been the extension of ul. Kórnicka, across a level crossing. This has been long closed to vehicles, but is there's still an informal footpath crossing here(appropriately signed as such for train drivers). This section of Kórnicka across the tracks formed the border between Warsaw (to the right) and Lesznowola municipality (to the left).
 According to this map (found on http://www.emiasto.org/), the road is still called ul. Kórnicka. Click on map to see full size. I've marked this part of Kórnicka in yellow. (Note the rampa is still there, with all its tracks, bottom centre). And according to the minutes of the Lesznowola council (rada gminy), on 25 April 2007, the council passed a motion to approve new street names, one of which was ul. Sikorki. I can't find any other mention of what's intended to happen here. Anyone know? Developments around ul. Dawidowska suggest that the Puławska Bis S7 highway is indeed still a long time coming, as was mentioned on the Polish pages of Skyscrapercity.com, we can wait until 2013-2015 for a meaningful alternative to the awfully congested Puławska.
 Ul. Trombity: That would be Zgorzała nad Jeziorem?
But now the City Hall is imposing order on place names. Streets that were once in Pyry (posh before the war, says my mother-in-law) are now in Dąbrówka (not so posh). Jeziorki Polskie is now Jeziorki Północne (that's everything between ul. Baletowa and the Metro's umbilical cord), while Nowe Jeziorki is now Jeziorki Południowe (that's us, south of Baletowa, down to Warsaw's city limits). Old place names are disappearing, remembered only by the original locals, a dwindling minority around here, and historians of local topography. But the upside is, surely, that in a few years time, when I get into a taxi the chap will know what I'm referring to when I say: "Jadziem Panie Jeziorki!" . This time last year: On the Road to Białystok Eddie and famous Polish 3rd December birthdays Where the place, upon the heath... Before the double deckers and the FLIRTS - the Radom line The most widely Googled page of my blog, ever.