Podkarpackie landscape Live Cam
Located in the picturesque surroundings, at the meeting point of Przemyśl Foothills with the Sanocko-Turczańskie Mountains
Hosted by:
- HOTEL ARŁAMÓW S.A.
- Arłamów 1
- 38-700 Ustrzyki Dolne - Poland
- +48 13 443 10 00
- [email protected]
- https://www.arlamow.pl/
Hills and valleys cover the pristine Carpathian Wilderness
Recreation Center "Arłamów" belongs to the group of hotel plants. It is a year-round object. It has two hotel buildings with a total service capacity of 128 beds in 49 rooms.
The times when the only accommodation one could expect in Poland was a bed in a hostel or the traditional hospitality of a night in a farmer’s barn have thankfully passed. Poland now has a wide network of places of stay, with more opening up all the time.
Poland has several thousand hotels. Tourists can choose among hotels belonging to international or Polish chains or opt for somewhere with history and character: an ancient chivalric castle, palace or even a former factory. “Boutique” hotels are becoming increasingly fashionable – cosy and with character, designed by well-known interior architects, these are places where guests can truly feel at home.
There are also increasing numbers of cosy guest-houses and small family-run hotels. Most of these are situated in the larger towns and tourist destinations, although some can also be found in the beautiful wilderness, like the Jaczno Inn near Suwalki and the Dworek nad Lakami in Kiermusy (Podlasie).
Rural holiday accommodation (“agroturystyka”) is another fast-developing sector. This sometimes means rooms on an upper floor while the owner’s family lives below sharing a bathroom, but more often now, it means specially adapted houses containing rooms with their own bathrooms. Thanks to such places, you can now find somewhere to stay where once it would have been a problem: in the countryside and in small villages.
In the mountains, hikers can make use of regularly spaced mountain hostels; by taking advantage of their hospitality, you can travel on foot across whole mountain ranges – the Bieszczady, Beskids, Tatras, Gorce and Sudeten mountains. Regardless of the standard (and this varies widely, from spartan to luxury), one rule always operates in the mountain hostels: hospitality is never refused to anyone who arrives on his own feet, particularly in the evening. If there are no spare beds in the rooms, hikers are allowed to sleep on the floor.