CAMP66
Camp66, all year round campsite made especially for people who enjoy an active lifestyle, share a love for the
mountains, nature and good food.
While building Camp 66, we wanted to create a place far from the hustle and bustle of modern civilization and chase everything ... you can fire off with us. The campsite is located near the border with the Czech Republic and Germany, in the middle of Europe, in Lower Silesia - a cultural culture. We want it to be a meeting place for different people, their ideas for life and the exchange of positive energy. Here you can laze in a hammock, watch Śnieżka or spend time actively participating in numerous workshops .
http://www.camp66.pl
+48 792566569
biuro@camp66.pl
Lower Silesian Voivodeship, Poland
Check out nearby Places of Interest.
"Śnieżka" mountain
Formerly called "Giant Mountain" for centuries attracts the attention of
tourists with its silhouette and very often changing weather conditions.
"Samotnia" - mountain shelter
Samotnia is one of the oldest shelters in Poland. It is famous for its cozy
atmosphere of wooden interiors and home cooking. It is open all year. It is located in the
Karkonosze National Park, so you can reach it only on foot (car recommended to leave at one of the
guarded car parks in Karpacz Górny, eg in the Hotel Sadyba - cost for 1 night 10-15 PLN). The
hostel is located roughly halfway from Karpacz to Śnieżka.
"Chojnik" castle
The ruins of Chojnik Castle are undoubtedly the most famous and the most
beautiful in Lower Silesia. To this day, preserved in the preserved (in the 1960s) form of the wall
of the high castle with a cylindrical tower, as well as two rings perimeter walls with a
Renaissance attic, shells of residential buildings and relics of engineering and defense devices.
Fortunately, from the present point of view, the stronghold was abandoned rather early, which saved
her fashionable later baroque and neo-Gothic embellishments, thanks to which the current appearance
of the ruins largely coincides with the state of the seventeenth-century.