Wielkopolska | Greater Poland

Day Trips from Poznań

02 Jun 2026

One of Poznań’s greatest strengths is how quickly the city gives way to forests, lakes, medieval strongholds and wonderfully obscure attractions once you leave the ring roads behind.

Lake Goreckie in Greater Poland, featuring the mystical Castle Island. Photo by Piotr Łysakowski.
In less than an hour, tramlines and traffic can become kayaking trails through protected woodland, reconstructed fortresses filled with catapults and glacial lakes lined with beaches and pine forest. Rather than racing between major landmarks, the best day trips around Poznań are often about combining smaller experiences into a full day outdoors. Whether you’re chasing history, nature or simply a change of scenery, Greater Poland offers no shortage of rewarding escapes.
AKWEN Tropicana in Owińska is a great low-key alternative to the big man-made bathing spots in Poznań. Photo by Adam-Ciereszko / visitpoznan.pl.

POBIEDZISKA

Miniature Kingdoms and Medieval Mayhem!
Lying roughly halfway between Poznań and Gniezno, Pobiedziska makes for one of the easiest and most varied escapes from the regional capital. The town’s biggest draw is the Pobiedziska Miniature Open Air Museum, an open-air exhibition featuring 37 miniature recreations of landmarks associated with the Piast dynasty and the earliest days of Poland. Tiny versions of Gniezno Cathedral, Poznań’s Old Market Square and Rogalin Palace are joined by a curious collection of sculptures depicting figures from Slavic mythology.

Pobiedziska Miniature Open Air Museum | Featuring recreatings of key landmarks from the surrounding region!

Just down the road, Pobiedziska Fort takes a far more energetic approach to history. This reconstructed medieval stronghold encourages visitors to fire miniature catapults, throw axes and javelins, test out siege machinery and engage in foam-sword combat under the watchful eye of enthusiastic reenactors. Part open-air museum and part medieval adventure playground, it’s one of those places where children leave covered in mud and adults suddenly become very competitive.

Pobiedziska Fort | Hands-on fun for learning Medieval History!
For something calmer, nearby Lake Biezdruchowskie offers beaches, kayaking routes and wakeboarding facilities surrounded by forested shoreline and easy-going summer atmosphere. Before heading back towards Poznań, consider stopping at the Museum of Nature and Hunting in Uzarzewo, a Neo-Renaissance palace museum combining natural history, exotic wildlife displays and landscaped park grounds filled with monumental trees.

GREATER POLAND NATIONAL PARK

Lakes, Forests & Glacial Landscapes
Just south of Poznań, Greater Poland National Park offers the easiest possible escape from the city without sacrificing much in the way of scenery. Shaped by retreating glaciers thousands of years ago, the park’s landscape is a rolling patchwork of pine forest, hidden wetlands and long ribbon-like lakes connected by well-marked walking and cycling trails.
Autumn vibes in the Greater Poland National Park near Poznań.
A good starting point is the Natural History Museum in Jeziory, where exhibitions on local wildlife, Ice Age geology and forest ecosystems provide useful context before heading outdoors. Aquariums filled with native fish, bird migration displays and detailed dioramas make it far more engaging than the average natural history museum, while the building itself carries an unexpectedly dark footnote, having once served as the residence of wartime governor Arthur Greiser.
The phenomenally-located Natural History Museum in Jeziory, Greater Poland.

From Jeziory, one of the park’s most rewarding routes follows the red trail around Lake Góreckie, a scenic glacial lake surrounded by dense woodland and gentle ridges. Along the shoreline, glimpses of Wyspa Zamkowa (ENG: Castle Island) occasionally appear through the trees: a tiny Neo-Gothic castle built on an island in the early 19th century that looks suspiciously like something borrowed from a fairytale. Elsewhere in the park, quieter spots like Lake Kociołek and the wetlands surrounding Trzcielińskie Swamp reward those willing to slow down a little, with birdwatching towers, peaceful forest paths and enough birdsong to drown out any lingering thoughts of city traffic.
Wyspa Zamkowa | The castle island in the middle of Lake Góreckie in Greater Poland.
Those looking to stretch their legs further can head towards Osowa Góra, the park’s highest point at a towering-by-Greater-Poland-standards 131 metres above sea level. While hardly alpine, the forested hill and surrounding trails offer a pleasantly varied landscape and a reminder that Wielkopolska’s famously flat terrain occasionally still finds room for a proper uphill walk.

AROUND THE NATIONAL PARK

Rural Traditions and Eccentric Detours
The forests and lakes surrounding Greater Poland National Park hide no shortage of worthwhile diversions, particularly for families looking to balance long walks with something a little more interactive. One of the most rewarding is the National Museum of Agriculture in Szreniawa, a sprawling open-air complex dedicated to rural life, farming traditions and food production. Alongside historic machinery and exhibitions on countryside culture, the museum regularly hosts bread baking, butter churning and vintage farming demonstrations that make the whole experience feel refreshingly hands-on rather than overly academic.
DELI Park Natura near Greater Poland National Park is a great option for the kids!
Nearby, DELI Park Natura in Trzebaw offers a more modern take on outdoor entertainment. Spread across extensive greenery on the edge of the national park, this nature-focused adventure park combines playgrounds, animals and educational workshops with plenty of space for children to climb, run and generally exhaust themselves away from screens and shopping centres. Just around the corner, ARA Papugarnia provides a rather more tropical interruption to the Greater Poland landscape, with colourful bird-life - macaws, cockatoos, and many more - roaming freely enough to occasionally land on unsuspecting visitors.
Plenty of feathery friends to make at ARA Papugarnia in Greater Poland.
Perhaps the area’s most memorable attraction, however, is the Arkady Fiedler Literary Museum and Workshop in Puszczykowo. Dedicated to the celebrated Polish traveller and writer, the museum feels less like a conventional institution and more like the wonderfully cluttered headquarters of somebody who never quite stopped exploring. Exotic artefacts, travel souvenirs and global curiosities fill the family villa, while outside stands a full-scale replica of Christopher Columbus’ Santa Maria alongside Easter Island-inspired sculptures and even a replica Hurricane aircraft commemorating Polish Battle of Britain pilots. Enthusiastically eccentric and impossible to mistake for anywhere else, it’s the sort of place that perfectly rewards a spontaneous detour.
Just a sample of the wealth of exotic collection of paraphernalia at the Arkady Fiedler Literary Museum and Workshop.

PUSZCZA ZIELONKA

Forest Adventures, Kayaking, and Wooden Churches
North-east of Poznań, Puszcza Zielonka Landscape Park offers a more rugged and quietly adventurous side of Greater Poland, where dense forests, hidden lakes and small villages create an ideal backdrop for active day trips. The area works particularly well for travellers who prefer combining nature with a bit of local history and outdoor recreation rather than simply following marked hiking trails from point A to B.

One of the livelier stops is Dzieje Park in Murowana Goślina, where Polish history is brought to life through outdoor performances filled with horseback stunts, music and theatrical reenactments. Between shows, visitors can try archery, tackle forest games or watch falconry demonstrations featuring birds of prey impressive enough to command everyone’s attention for at least a few minutes.
Plenty of medieval pageantry and sword-play antics to be had at Dzieje Park in Greater Poland.
Nearby, Nadrzewna Osada adds a medieval twist to the standard rope park formula. Suspended obstacles, wooden fortifications and rope slides hidden amongst the trees create something resembling a lightweight siege-training course, albeit one with considerably fewer actual casualties. The surrounding forests continue at the Forest Arboretum, an expansive botanical collection spread across 86 hectares and home to hundreds of species of trees, shrubs and flowering plants from around the world.
Nadrzewna Osada Line Park | Adrenaline pumping obstacle courses high above the tree line in Greater Poland!
For a slower-paced alternative, the Wooden Churches Trail winds through villages and quiet country roads surrounding the landscape park, linking a dozen beautifully preserved wooden churches filled with historic polychromes, folk details and centuries of local history. Those looking to get out on the water can also tackle the Six Lakes Kayak Trail around the Potrzanowskie Lakes, a gentle 12km paddle connecting forest-lined lakes and narrow canal sections through some of the park’s most peaceful scenery. Altogether, Puszcza Zielonka feels less like a single attraction and more like a collection of small discoveries hidden amongst the trees.
Taking on the Six Lakes Kayak Trail around the Potrzanowskie Lakes. Photo by Karolina Stefaniak.

OWIŃSKA

Beaches, Wakeboards, and Riverside Escapes
Barely 20 minutes north of Poznań, Owińska has quietly evolved into one of the region’s easiest warm-weather escapes, combining riverside cycling routes, lakeside recreation and enough outdoor attractions to fill an entire afternoon without trying too hard. At the centre of it all is the Owińska Bicycle and Pedestrian Footbridge, a sleek modern crossing built on the site of a historic ferry route dating back to the Middle Ages. Stretching across the Warta River, the bridge links nearby cycling trails and woodland paths, while its elevated viewing tower offers broad panoramas over the river valley and surrounding forests. Just nearby, AKWEN Tropicana brings distinctly holiday-like energy to the Greater Poland countryside with sandy beaches, palm trees and a surprisingly convincing lakeside resort atmosphere. In summer, visitors arrive armed with paddleboards, kayaks and inflatable flamingos, while others simply settle into deckchairs and pretend, briefly, that the Baltic coast has somehow relocated inland. Next door, WakeSpot Owińska adds a faster-paced alternative, with wakeboarding lifts, beginner-friendly lessons and enough spectacular wipeouts to entertain even those safely observing from the shore.
Wet and wild at WakeSpot Owińska. Photo by Adam Ciereszko / visitpoznan.pl
Families with younger children can continue the adventure at the nearby Green Labyrinth, a seasonal hedge maze hidden behind the beach complex where solving clues and getting pleasantly lost forms part of the attraction. For something altogether calmer, Traperska Osada in nearby Bolechówko swaps adrenaline for campfires, horses and slow-paced outdoor experiences surrounded by forest. Altogether, Owińska perfectly captures the relaxed, outdoors-first character that makes escaping Poznań feel so effortless.
Horse-riding at Traperska Osada in Greater Poland.

Day Trips from Poznań

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