About this route
Route overview
Ojcow National Park is the smallest national park in Poland (21.5 km²), set on the Krakow-Czestochowa Upland and known for unique limestone rock formations — the Pradnik Valley with 21 caves, tors and cliffs of Jurassic limestone (150 million years old). The Hercules Club is the most famous tor in Poland — a 25-metre limestone rock shaped like a club, an icon of the Jura, featured in legends and on postage stamps. Pieskowa Skala Castle is a Renaissance residence of the 16th-17th centuries with an arcaded courtyard in the Wawel style (architect Santi Gucci), today a branch of the National Museum in Krakow with European art from the Middle Ages to the 19th century (tapestries, furniture, paintings). The Lokietek Cave — a legend tells of King Wladyslaw Lokietek hiding in the cave in 1300 from the troops of the Bohemian king Wenceslaus II, open to visitors. The Pradnik Valley offers hiking trails through lush greenery, red limestone cliffs and the village of Ojcow with wooden 19th-century spa houses. 75 km via the A4 motorway to Krakow, then DK94 and local roads to Ojcow, 1 h 15 min - 1 h 30 min off-peak. The service runs 24/7. A standard plan: 9:00 hotel pickup in Katowice, 10:30 Pieskowa Skala Castle (2 h tour), 12:30 Hercules Club (photo session, 30 min), 13:00 lunch at Karczma na Wojtostwie (Jura cuisine), 14:30 Pradnik Valley and Lokietek Cave (2 h walk), 17:00 return to Katowice. From EUR 520 in a Mercedes E-Class for 1-3 passengers, EUR 620 in a V-Class for 4-6.