Monday, August 17, 2009

Tatra 2009 Survive

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On the 22th of July, finally we put everything together to make our "into the wild" journey just real ! Our goal was: being in the Tatra for about 3days, 2nights under the open air, without being punished for x-1000 euros by the "TANAP" forces, TANAP means TAtry National Park.

Our equipment was about (per person):

-1 sleeping bag,
-1-2 iso foil,
-dry clothes,
-bandage, lint, betadine
-calcium + magnesium tablets
-food + drinks (only kremlin vodka), (we have the cleanest water just have to climb for it..)
-tooth washer + tooth paste.
We also had collectively:
  • 1 documentary adventure book (180kilometres from the southern pole, originally written by Ernest Shackleton)
  • 1 oil burner - as a cooking set (altered from a standard garden-torch which you can get from tesco for example)
  • 1 tent-cloth (for 2 people) without any wire-frame stiffener sticks and other..
Our experiences :

  1. Sleeping under the open-air on ~2000 meters above the water level, means that you should get wet morning welcomes by the nature, cause the clouds may passing exactly through you, caused by their decreased altitude, thanks to the air pressure changes at dawn, when overall temperature gets enough cold.
  2. Hiking in the Tatra is quite breathtaking and valuable source of experiments, and really worth to do that, you can make a relatively cheap charging with all the nice details which the nature can offer you.


    by detecting hills that demands some climbing


    master of lighting effects
    quality check




final respect to the nature, at the end of TATRA SURVIVE 2009.

almost all photos by: Ervin B. Nagy aka Erwino Binotti

Next survive trip maybe - Nepal 2010.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Mátrabérc 56

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tour details: " Mátrabérc 56 " (2009.04.25 Saturday)

Distance walked : 55.4 km
Stage Time : 11hour 44min
Start : 06:14am
Finish 17:58pm

Sleep time before hiking : 3hour 30min, Sirok-castle catacombs


energy input during the whole hiking

I.R.O.N dude

washing feet into the brook is fun like orgasm" (after 42 kilometres)

This was an excellent conditioning hiking for me! We specialised on up-hill rushes. So, we performed speed-climbs by overtaking many people towards the top, and on the "hill"-tops we just let ourselves wasting the time by laying down, chill. After that, the rush started again with the next hill to lift up. This is one of the highest altitude tours that i know in Hungary. The overall altitude is 2734 meters. Unfortunately our highest hill in Hungary is only 1014m high (it's included in this tour of course), so the solution is to add some lowhills together, climb them from each to the other and then get the desired idea, that we climbed a great hill in the alps (for example). That's what this great tour about.

my GPS altitude results

this is from the website of this tour

my altitude paper

my checkpoint-stamp collector paper

Friday, March 20, 2009

iwan - Brussels #3 faces of Brussels

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Different faces of Brussels presented by different models of the " Volvo - evolution ".

Thursday, March 12, 2009

iwan - Brussels #2 doubt

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Palais de Expositions (1935)

The grimace calls against the building behind me, - the Art Deco Palais de Expositions (Grand Palais) in Brussels - which i titulated as "nazi styled". I wasn't sure of myself, so i read about it on wikipedia later, i realized, that nazi architecture used some art deco motifs and style-elements on numerous buildings. Despite this, i like this kind of design !


But in this picture the soviet pavilon (on the right..) seems much more art deco (to me) than the nazi eagle podium (the left). The nazi podium is more classicist i quess. Otherway, both of nazis and soviet dealed with Neoclassicism and Art Deco so it's hard to keep it clean. I guess, i am confused.. Architect experts, please.., help me out! %)

any similarity ?

I put the Brussels expo next to the soviet pavilon, and it seems, that my supposal was inproper, and i should say: Palais de Expositions has built in soviet style in that context. Amen.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

iwan - Brussels #1 - alternative energy

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20090307 14:41 taking off, gears in. Budapest >>> Brussels
Every time, i fly over Budapest, the first thing, i think is: "Yeah, this is our great capitol!" Over the years it had been savaged by many enemies: the invading Mongols (tatars), the Turks (Ottoman Empire), Germans, Soviets and so on. But it still stands* !


*: (for how long, i really don't know)


After 15-20 minutes -as the airplane fly over Austria- wind turbines and solar cell farms are showing up. The second thing turns into my mind immediately: Practically, we don't have wind turbines and solar cells in Hungary. Belgium is a 3 times smaller country than Hungary and they even have 10x more wind power capacity. Don't even mention Germany %) - we are not the same division.. but they have 1076 X more then us. I'm sad because it shows: Hungary is not at the top rate in alternative energy source management..

(in number of megawatts)

The wind power statistics a gathered from Show.Mappingworlds.com