The Józef Piłsudski Main Carpathian Trail was a
hiking trail, approximately 830 km long, that connected the
Silesian Beskids with the during the
interwar period
In the history of the 20th century, the interwar period lasted from 11 November 1918 to 1 September 1939 (20 years, 9 months, 21 days), the end of the World War I, First World War to the beginning of the World War II, Second World War. The in ...
. Marked in red, this path was not only the longest continuous trail in
Poland at the time but also in
Europe, running along the entire stretch of the Polish
Carpathians.
The western fragment of this trail remains today as the
Main Beskid Trail
The Kazmierz Sosnowski Main Beskid Trail (Polish ''Główny Szlak Beskidzki imienia Kazmierza Sosnowskiego'', ''"GSB"'') is a long-distance trail marked in red that leads from Ustroń in the Silesian Beskids to Wołosate in the Bieszczady Mountain ...
, which partially overlaps with the original route and ends in
Wołosate
Wołosate ( uk, Волосате, ''Volosate'') is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lutowiska, within Bieszczady County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Ukraine. It lies approximately ...
, near the
Polish-Ukrainian border.
The route of the Main Carpathian Trail on the border section running through the
Low Beskids and is now followed by the
Rzeszów–
Grybów trail (known as the "Carpathian Trail") and the Slovak East Carpathian Magistrale. In the eastern part, segments of the former main trail coincide with the Ukrainian and trails.
History
Main Western Beskid Trail
The idea of connecting the summit trails of various
Western Beskid ranges into a single main trail was first presented in the summer of 1923 in an article by
Kazimierz Sosnowski
Kazimierz Sosnowski (1875–1954) was a Polish geographer.
1875 births
1954 deaths
Polish geographers
{{Poland-bio-stub ...
, published in ''
Przegląd Sportowy''.
This idea was soon presented to the , which, through the decisions of the Commission for Mountain Works and the Main Board, set out to implement it.
The main aim was to popularize Polish hiking tourism by creating a main trail (supplemented by side and connecting trails) and a network of
mountain huts spaced about a day's walk apart.
At the same time, it aimed to limit the influence of the active German ''
Beskidenverein'' organization in the
Silesian Silesian as an adjective can mean anything from or related to Silesia. As a noun, it refers to an article, item, or person of or from Silesia.
Silesian may also refer to:
People and languages
* Silesians, inhabitants of Silesia, either a West S ...
and
Żywiec Beskids.
According to Sosnowski's original idea, the main Western Beskid trail was about 200 km long
and stretched from
Ustroń in the Silesian Beskids in the west to
Krynica in the
Beskid Sądecki in the east.
The marking and signing of the trail were entrusted to various Polish Tatra Society branches, which meant the work proceeded at an uneven pace and by filling in successive gaps in the route. Numerous minor corrections were made to the trail, often due to the destruction of the path or signs, and sometimes due to deliberate removal.
Work initiated in 1924 progressed rapidly, although initially, there were almost no white-and-red-white markings along the planned trail route (earlier trails were mainly marked with one or two colored stripes). Exceptions were the sections from
Czantoria
or Wielka Czantoria ( cs, Velká Čantoryje) is a mountain on the border of Poland and the Czech Republic, in the Silesian Beskids mountain range. It reaches a height of . Parts of the mountain on both sides are designated a protected area.
Geo ...
to
Stożek (in the Silesian Beskids), from
Żabnica through
Pilsko to the (in the Żywiec Beskids), and from to
Rytro
Rytro ( uk, Ритро, ''Rytro'') is a village in Nowy Sącz County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Rytro. It lies approximately south of Nowy Sącz and sout ...
(in the Beskid Sądecki).
As part of coordinated Polish Tatra Society actions, sections in the Sądecki and Żywiecki Beskids were marked first.
By 1927, after completing the segment from
Rabka to Krynica, the Polish Tatra Society reported the completion of the entire Main Western Beskid trail.
However, this announcement was premature as significant additions to the trail were still made in 1928 – between Stożek and
Barania Góra
Barania Góra (Polish for "Ram Mountain") (; ) is a mountain in southern Poland. At a height of 1,220 metres (4003 feet), it is the second highest mountain in the Silesian Beskids, and the highest in the Polish part of Upper Silesia.
The sou ...
in the Silesian Beskids and between and in the
Gorce Mountains.
Despite completing these works, between 10 and 12 km of trail still needed marking,
which was filled in near Czantoria the following year.
Even then, the trail had a gap of over 20 km in the middle, as the western segment ended in
Osielec
Osielec is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Jordanów, within Sucha County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It lies approximately west of Jordanów, south-east of Sucha Beskidzka, and south of the regional capita ...
village after leaving the , while the eastern segment started only in Rabka.
Initially, connecting these segments was not planned, and Sosnowski recommended traveling this section by train.
In 1929, the Polish Tatra Society branch in Rabka marked a connecting trail between Rabka and the ridge of
Polica above the village of
Bystra. Summarizing the work in 1930, the Polish Tatra Society indicated that the creation of the trail ''can be considered complete in its general outline''.
The formal unification of the two longer segments took place in 1930 when the main trail was rerouted onto the newly marked connector, bypassing Osielec.
According to Sosnowski's recommendations in the ''Guide to the Western Beskids'' from 1926, traversing the route from Ustroń to Krynica should take from 9 to 12 days. However, the author included in this time the opportunity to explore the
Babia Góra area, traverse the optional
Pieniny trail, and omitted some sections of the main trail.
Main Eastern Beskid Trail
As the trail marking work in the Western Beskids neared completion, , a promoter of tourism in the Eastern Beskids, proposed the idea of establishing a similar trail in the eastern part. His plan, presented to the Inter-District Eastern Carpathian Commission of the Polish Tatra Society in 1926 or 1927, quickly gained approval.
In 1928, it was endorsed by the Society's Delegates' Congress.
Over the next few years, the exact route of the trail was determined.
In May 1930, the Eastern Beskid Commission of the Polish Tatra Society divided the territory among the various units of the organization and established the precise trail route east of
Sianky, assigning the task of marking its sections to the appropriate branches and clubs.
Trail planning and marking began in 1931
and continued until 1934. , in his 1933 ''Guide to the Eastern Beskids'', indicated that traversing the Sianky–Stóg section would take from 17 to 18 days, although his proposed itinerary included 3 days of rest and occasionally diverged from the main trail, omitting some sections.
Similar to the Western section, the work on the main trail in the Eastern Beskids extended beyond mere tourism. The active efforts of the Polish Tatra Society also served ideological purposes, even if these were not explicitly stated by the organization's units. By organizing Polish tourism in the Eastern Beskids, there was an effort to firmly integrate these areas with the Republic of Poland and counteract local Ukrainian movements.
Further work
Historically, the
Central Beskids
The Low Beskids ( sk, Nízke Beskydy) or Central Beskids ( pl, Beskidy Środkowe; cs, Centrální Beskydy; uk, Центральні Бескиди) are a mountain range in southeastern Poland and northeastern Slovakia. They constitute a middle ...
region – comprising the
Low Beskids and – garnered the least interest among the tourist community. These ranges were perceived as the least attractive and thus were poorly developed for tourism.
The decision to extend the main trail eastward from Krynica was only made after the primary efforts in the west were completed, in May 1932.
Work on the central section began either in the same year or early the next (with a short section from Krynica to
Wysowa). However, due to the organizational weaknesses of the newly established Polish Tatra Society branches in
Jasło,
Krosno, and
Sanok, progress was slow. Only when the task was assigned to the branches in
Gorlice and
Lviv was it possible to connect the two main sections of the trail.
An additional challenge was the catastrophic
flood in July 1934.
In 1933, the Gorlice Branch of the Polish Tatra Society extended the trail from Wysowa to the vicinity of
Dukla.
Further east, the establishment of the main trail in the Central Beskids was more of an attempt to create a transit route, the shortest connection between the Beskid Sądecki and the Eastern Bieszczady.
The decision was made to route the trail almost entirely along the state-maintained border road.
Following the death of
Józef Piłsudski, the Polish Tatra Society passed a resolution on 23 June 1935, naming the trail connecting the easternmost and westernmost mountain ranges in the country after the late
Chief of State (the resolution referred to the trail as the ''Main Carpathian Trail of the Polish Tatra Society named after Józef Piłsudski'').
This symbolic unification of the Polish mountains emphasized the Polish state's dominion over this section of the Carpathians.
However, the trail was not yet completed at this time, particularly the segment intended to run through the Low Beskids east of the
Dukla Pass. The section from the Dukla Pass to the
Łupków Pass was marked in September 1935, and the entire 75-kilometer segment to the peak of
Halicz was marked by the Lviv Branch of the Polish Tatra Society before 31 March 1936,
likely before the end of 1935.
After the border changes in 1945, when the entire Eastern Carpathian section was lost to the
Soviet Union, and due to the trail's destruction during
World War II, its route through the Low Beskids and Western Bieszczady had to be reestablished.
The trail, later officially named the Main Beskid Trail, was re-marked between 1952 and 1953. However, its route differed from that of the 1930s because, on the depopulated terrain of the Low Beskids and Bieszczady (due to the
resettlement of Ukrainian and Russian populations during
Operation Vistula), the trail was shifted away from the border line for political reasons.
Route
Western section
After the completion of trail marking, the main trail began in the
Silesian Beskids at the , from where it ascended to Czantoria.
It then followed the ridge towards the south to Stożek (with the ) and further to . On this last peak, it changed direction to the east.
It continued through towards
Barania Góra
Barania Góra (Polish for "Ram Mountain") (; ) is a mountain in southern Poland. At a height of 1,220 metres (4003 feet), it is the second highest mountain in the Silesian Beskids, and the highest in the Polish part of Upper Silesia.
The sou ...
, passing the along the way. Next, it descended into the
Soła
The Soła () is a river in southern Poland, a right tributary of the Vistula.
Soła originates in the Western Beskids mountain range near the border with Slovakia. It is made up of the confluence of several small creeks at the village of Rajcza. ...
valley, reaching
Węgierska Górka
Węgierska Górka (Literally Polish for "Hungarian Hill") is a village in Żywiec County, Silesian Voivodeship, in the historic province of Lesser Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Węgierska Górka. It l ...
.
After crossing the river, it began its route in the
Żywiec Beskids. It led through to , where it reached the state border. It then climbed to
Pilsko (; ),
leaving the summit on the
Czechoslovak side,
and then descended to the with a variant path towards the . It then continuously followed the border through the and . From the , the trail descended into the river valley and, crossing through Czechoslovakia, emerged at the , thus bypassing . From there, it led to the , then to the and the main summit of Babia Góra – the highest peak of the Western Beskids. From there, through the ridge of Polica, the trail descended about 1,200 m to the (villages Bystra,
Jordanów, Rabka).
In Rabka, the trail entered the
Gorce Mountains. It climbed to the highest peak in the range,
Turbacz
Turbacz is the highest peak of the Gorce Mountains, a mountain range located in southern Lesser Poland. It lies in the middle of the range, and according to most sources, it is 1310 meters high. The peak itself is surrounded by dense pine forest, ...
, via . It led through the southwestern ridge of – through , , , and – then descended to
Krościenko.
Upon entering the
Beskid Sądecki, the trail led to
and the highest peak of the range, . It crossed the
Poprad valley in
Rytro
Rytro ( uk, Ритро, ''Rytro'') is a village in Nowy Sącz County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Rytro. It lies approximately south of Nowy Sącz and sout ...
and climbed over 750 m again, passing , , and ,
to reach and . From there, it descended to
Krynica ().
Middle section
In Krynica, the main trail entered the
Low Beskids. This section also served as a connecting segment between the two main parts: the Western and Eastern Beskids. From the health resort, the trail headed towards the state border, where it ascended the highest peak in the Polish part of this range, . In the village of Wysowa, it turned northeast,
reaching the ridge of , bypassing its highest elevation, then passing through the peak of and the village of
Chyrowa. South of
Dukla, the trail reached the road leading through the villages of
Tylawa and
Barwinek to the
Dukla Pass. From there, the trail ran along the Polish-Czechoslovak border, with a slight deviation near the village of
Czeremcha
Czeremcha ( uk, Черемха, ''Cheremkha'') is a village in Hajnówka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Czeremcha. It lies app ...
.
It continued through (bypassing the summit from the south), , , , , and finally to Łupków Pass.
After crossing the pass, the trail began its journey through the . It proceeded through , , descended near
Solinka, and then traversed through , , and , from where it descended to the .
Continuing along the border watershed ridge, it passed through , , , , , , and , reaching . Here, it turned northwest, leaving the Polish-Czechoslovak border. The trail crossed the ridge with the culmination at
Mała Rawka
Mała Rawka is a peak in the western Bieszczady Mountains, near Ustrzyki Górne, in southern Poland. Its height is 1,272 metres.
To the north-east, a ridge runs from it, through Wyżniańska Przełęcz, running towards Połonina Caryńska. ...
, and after passing the village of
Wetlina, ascended and in the range. It then descended to
Berehy Górne and ascended again to
Połonina Caryńska
Połonina Caryńska, () also known as Połonina Berehowska, is a polonyna in the Bieszczady Mountains laying between valleys of the Dwernik and Wołosaty rivers, which contain the settlements of Brzegi Górne and Ustrzyki Górne. It has four maj ...
, culminating at . From
Ustrzyki Górne
Ustrzyki Górne (; uk, Устрики Горішні, ''Ustryky Horišni'') is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lutowiska, within Bieszczady County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Uk ...
, the trail led to the highest peak of the Western Bieszczady,
Tarnica
Tarnica is a peak in the Bieszczady Mountains in southern Poland. Its height is 1,346 metres. It is one of the Polish Crown Peaks.
The summit towers 500 metres above the Wołosatka Valley. It can be easily told apart from its neighbo ...
, and then
Halicz and , where it returned to the state border. Finally, it passed through , ,
, and , reaching
Uzhok Pass
Uzhok Pass ( ua, Ужоцький перевал, hu, Uzsoki-hágó) is a mountain pass in the north-eastern Carpathian Mountains in Ukraine through the Vodorazdel'nyy backbone. It located on a ridge at high.
It is located on the border of Str ...
near
Sianky.
Eastern section
In Sianky, near the railway station, began the section of the trail originally called the Eastern Beskid Trail. This section led through the to the village of
Karpatske, then onward to , Chresty, , , , and , reaching the highest peak of the –
Pikui
Mount Pikui ( uk, Піку́й) at , is the highest mountain in Lviv Oblast, Ukraine and part of the Carpathian Mountains, Stryi-San Highland spine.
Located on the border of Lviv
Lviv ( uk, Львів) is the largest city in western Ukrai ...
. From Pikui, the trail followed the border ridge, initially heading northeast and east (passing through Wielki Menczył), then turning south and southeast, bypassing
Veretskyi Pass
Veretskyi Pass or Verecke Pass ( uk, Вере́цький перевал, translit=Veretskyi pereval, more formally: uk, перевал Середньоверецький, translit=pereval Serednoveretskyi, label=none, also known as: uk, В ...
. Near the village of
Verkhniachka, it turned east again, leading through to . There, it left the state border, turning north and then northeast
towards the village of
Lavochne. The trail then ascended
Trostian
Trostian ( uk, Тростя́н) – mountain peak in an array of the Skole Beskids (Eastern Beskids), peak spine Stryiska-Sanskoyi Verhoviny Стрийсько-Сянська Верховина and limited by valleys Opir River and Holovchank ...
, where there was the , and from there it descended to
Slavske
Slavske ( uk, Славське; pl, Sławsko) is an urban-type settlement in Stryi Raion, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine. It's located above sea level close to the city of Skole, southwest of Lviv. Slavske is an urban village and a popular ski resort in ...
via Przysłup. The red-marked trail then led to
and , continuing along the state border to , which separates the
Bieszczady from the
Gorgany mountains.
From Toruńska Pass (then called Wyszkowska), the trail led through Załom to and Jaworowa Kiczera, then descended to the river valley (with a mountain hut). It continued under , through , to , and bypassing the peak of , it descended to the stream valley. From there, the Main Eastern Beskid Trail ascended the slope of to , and then through Płyśce, , and to . From Wielka Popadia, the marked trail led through the Petros stream valley to the . It continued through and to the highest peak of the range – . Then, descending through Ruszczyna, the trail traversed and ,
leading along the Sałatruczel and streams to . After passing the village, the white-red-white trail followed the Doużyniec stream valley
through to and the nearby mountain hut. From there, it ascended , through Mały Gorgan, , and to the valley. The trail then led along the road to
Yablunytsia, where it entered the
Chornohora
Chornohora (literally: "Black Mountain"; uk, Чорногора, romanized: ''Chornohora'') is the highest mountain range in Western Ukraine. It is within the Polonynian Beskids, a subgroup of the mountain group of Eastern Beskids, which in turn ...
range.
From there, through the Mikulinki ridge, the trail led to
Vorokhta, then through Kiczera to .
Next, it passed through Foreszczenka to the . From there, the trail ascended back to the main watershed ridge – to
Hoverla
Mount Hoverla (Ukrainian and rue, Говерла, Hoverla), at , is the highest mountain in Ukraine and part of the Carpathian Mountains (Ukrainian Carpathians). The mountain is located in the Eastern Beskids, in the Chornohora region. The slope ...
(the highest peak of the Polish
Eastern Carpathians and the entire trail)
– and continued through
Breskul
Breskul ( uk, Брескул) is a peak located in the Chornohora (Чорногора) mountain range of Carpathian Mountains in west Ukraine. It is situated on the border of Ivano-Frankivsk and Zakarpattia Oblasts, between the mountains Hoverl ...
, , ,
Turkul
Turkul ( uk, Туркул) is a peak located in the Chornohora (Чорногора) mountain range of Carpathian Mountains in west Ukraine. It is situated between the Dancer (1850 m) in the north and Rebra (2001 m) in the southeast. The wester ...
,
Rebra
Rebra ( hu, Nagyrebra) is a commune in Bistrița-Năsăud County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of a single village, Rebra. The river Rebra (river), Rebra passes through the commune.
References
Communes in Bistrița-Năsăud Count ...
,
Menchul, and
Dzembronia to the last peak in the range,
Pip Ivan. According to the plans adopted in 1930, the trail was to follow the state border through Waskul and to , where the endpoint of the trail from Sianky was designated at the tripoint of the Polish, Czechoslovak, and
Romanian borders.
Endpoints
Ustroń
The original starting point of the Main Western Beskid Trail was the . From there, it led through the village southwards to the mouth of the stream valley, where it turned southwest. This valley trail followed the white-blue-white ''
Beskidenverein'' markers to
Czantoria
or Wielka Czantoria ( cs, Velká Čantoryje) is a mountain on the border of Poland and the Czech Republic, in the Silesian Beskids mountain range. It reaches a height of . Parts of the mountain on both sides are designated a protected area.
Geo ...
. In 1930, shortly after the opening of the new Ustroń Polana railway station, the Polish Tatra Society marked a new trail to Czantoria from the vicinity of this station, passing through . At that time, the starting point of the main trail was moved to .
Three years later, another new trail from Polana to Czantoria was marked, running along the southern slopes of the stream valley, which then received the red markings of the main trail.
During the same period, there were also trails leading from the center of Ustroń to (green and red), and from there to Polana (red-white). However, this loop – unlike the modern Main Beskid Trail
– was not considered part of the main trail. Furthermore, according to the marking guidelines adopted at the end of 1930 (which reserved the color red almost exclusively for the main trail and excluded marking with this color for trails that shared points with it),
the marking of the Polana–Równica trail was changed to blue, aligning it with the existing Równica– trail.
Hutsul Beskids
While the western end of the Main West Beskid Trail in
Ustroń generally raises no doubts, precisely determining the endpoint in the southeast currently presents significant difficulties. According to the plan adopted in 1930 by the East Beskid Commission of the Polish Tatra Society, the trail was to end at Stóg, descending from Pip Ivan to reach it.
This same route was mentioned in memoirs published in 1988 by , who managed the
observatory on Pip Ivan from 1938 to 1939.
However, it remains uncertain if and when the Main Carpathian Trail was extended to Stóg and whether this peak indeed served as its endpoint.
In the 1933 report by the Polish Tatra Society Commission for Mountain Works, it was indicated that the trail was marked in red as an ''extension to the east of the main trail'' on the section ''Turkul—
Pip Ivan——'',
thus bypassing Stóg from the north. Additionally, the 1935 annual ''Wierchy'' reported that the trail runs ''from Cieszyn to the vicinity of Burkut''.
At the same time, various sources suggest that the original Polish Tatra Society plan envisioned a future extension of the trail in the beyond Stóg, to the southernmost point of Poland – known as ''Rozrogi'', located beyond .
From there, the trail was supposed to descend to .
These plans included the construction of small mountain huts on Kopilasz, in the Popadyniec stream valley, and on Bałtagul. This plan was abandoned by 1936 at the latest when the Minister of Communications decided to create a so-called tourist reserve (an area free of tourist infrastructure) in the Hnatasia region.
The revised project, following this decision, aimed to route the main trail along the border ridge of the Czywczyn Mountains from Stóg to Popadia Czywczynska. From there, the trail was to descend northward through the Popadyniec valley to the confluence of this stream with the river. After crossing the river, the trail would ascend to in the . Passing the Polish Tatra Society mountain hut on Masny Prysłup, (the highest peak of the range), Hala Lukavytsia, Ludova, and the Polish Tatra Society mountain hut on , the trail, through Zhmiensky and Krety, was supposed to reach its endpoint in
Verkhovyna.
In the 1937 guide by , it is mentioned that by that time the trail had not been marked ''south of Pip Ivan,
in the Czywczyn Mountains''. Nevertheless, the attached map seems to confirm the trail's extension to Stóg – it marks a trail leading from Pip Ivan towards Stóg, described as ''marked in the terrain / red''.
At the same time, the Polish Tatra Society Management report up to March 1937 indicates that the main trail ends in Zhabie. According to the June 1939 publication by , the trail also ends in Zhabie, although the attached schematic map at a scale of 1:600,000 suggests that it led from Pip Ivan to Stóg, and then possibly through further peaks of Kopilasz and Kiernichny, descending to Burkut and following the Black Cheremosh river towards Zhabie.
Despite these circumstances, the endpoint of the trail in the east was still debated during the 1938 Polish Tatra Society members' congress. In December of that year, a few months before the outbreak of
World War II, the Polish Tatra Society extended the officially recognized length of the main trail, stipulating that it would lead ''not to Burkut, but to Hnitesa''.
Trans-Olza
At the same time, following the occupation of
Trans-Olza
Trans-Olza ( pl, Zaolzie, ; cs, Záolží, ''Záolší''; german: Olsa-Gebiet; Cieszyn Silesian dialect, Cieszyn Silesian: ''Zaolzi''), also known as Trans-Olza Silesia (Polish language, Polish: ''Śląsk Zaolziański''), is a territory in the ...
in the autumn of 1938, a decision was made by the Polish Tatra Society authorities in May 1939 to adjust the course of the Main Carpathian Trail to encompass the entirety of the Carpathian Mountains remaining within the new borders of Poland. Instead of turning north towards Czantoria and Ustroń from Kiczory near Stożek, as originally planned, the trail coming from Barania Góra was redesigned along the route of the Czechoslovak red trail (known as the ''Bezručova stezka'') in a southwest direction.
The path first descended 550 m to the
Olza valley at
Písek, then ascended back to
Girova. Further, around
Mosty u Jablunkova (
Jablunkov Pass), the trail entered what is now the
Moravian-Silesian Beskids. After crossing the stream, it ascended to and , where it turned north. It passed through the highest peak in the ridge, , then led to .
The trail ended in the vicinity of the village of
Komorní Lhotka
Komorní Lhotka ( pl, , german: Kameral Ellgoth) is a municipality and village in Frýdek-Místek District in the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 1,500 inhabitants. The municipality has a significant Polish minority. ...
.
The newly annexed section of the trail passed by several mountain huts previously belonging to the , ''
Beskidenverein'', and private individuals (the former were transferred to Polish organizations, mainly the Polish Tatra Society). These mountain huts included those at
Girova (Polish Tatra Society), Skalka (''Beskidenverein''), under along with
Dolní Lomná (Polish Tatra Society), (private, ''Beskidenverein''), (Polish Tatra Society), under
Lipí (private), and at (Polish Tatra Society).
Variant trails
Although according to the concept, the Main Carpathian Trail (previously ''Western Beskid Trail'') was supposed to lead through the most important and interesting places in the Polish mountains, sometimes it was impossible to logically connect all sections into one main trail. Therefore, the concept of supplementing the trail's route with variant sections marked with white-blue-white signs appeared quite early.
These include the circular in the Żywiec Beskids (from Barania Gora through
Zwardoń, , to Pilsko – bypassing Wegierska Gorka; 1928–1929),
the
Podhale trail (from Polica through to Stare Wierchy in the Gorce Mountains – bypassing Jordanów and Rabka; 1930–1932),
and the Pieniny Trail (bypassing Krościenko and Przehyba, 1926–1928).
In 1938, a variant trail was established in the Low Beskids near
Rymanów
Rymanów (; la, Rimanovia or ; uk, Рима́нів) is a town located in the Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in the southeastern tip of Poland, with 3,585 inhabitants. It is a capital of a separate commune within Krosno County. Rymanów is situated ...
and
Iwonicz
Iwonicz is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Iwonicz-Zdrój, within Krosno County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately north of Iwonicz-Zdrój, south-east of Krosno, and south of the regio ...
. Additionally, in the Eastern Bieszczady Mountains, a variant trail was marked along the border ridge between Jawornik Wielki and Czarna Repa (bypassing Sławsko).
Similar bypasses were planned in the Gorgany Mountains in the and in the .
Notes
References
Bibliography
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{{coord missing, Poland
Hiking trails in Poland
Carpathians
Czechoslovakia–Poland relations
Mountain ranges of Poland