A national park in Poland’s southern Tatra mountains has completed testing of an electric bus that could replace horse-drawn carriages carrying tourists to Morskie Oko, a famous lake nestled between the mountains.
The programme was run as part of an agreement between coachmen and animal rights groups following a widely publicised recent incident of a horse collapsing along the route.
The bus was leased for two weeks by Tatra National Park (TPN). The test period established that it performed well in mountainous terrain but its electric engine was too quiet, meaning it could be a threat to the hikers who walked the same route.
“Hikers walking along the trail cannot hear the car coming from behind. You have to be very careful not to hit someone,” said the driver, Stanislaw Gasienica-Kotelnicki.
“Because this is a national park, we do not use the horn here,” he added. “Sometimes, you had to shout out of an open window for tourists to get out of the way.”
“The vehicle has performed quite well when it comes to the battery,” added Zbigniew Kowalski of TPN.
It was able to make six trips on a fully charged battery. However, the fact that it has space for only one wheelchair user is problematic, says Kowalski.
The park management said in a Facebook post that a key consideration in deciding whether to purchase such buses would be how the vehicles performed in winter.
“It is, therefore, still too early to declare on what terms and when it will transport passengers. We would certainly like to make transport available for people with disabilities first,” TPN said.
TPN also noted that, due to its high price, the purchase of such a vehicle would have to be preceded by fundraising and a tender. Other vehicles will also be tested in the coming months.
The park’s director, Szymon Ziobrowski, told broadcaster TVN that another problem was that local authorities might not give approval for a permanent bus line to run there.
The tests are one of the terms of a 12-point agreement between carriage drivers and animal rights groups reached last month after a video showed a horse collapsing and then being hit by a coachman. The Climate Ministry, which pledged to investigate the incident, was also involved in the negotiations.
In addition to bus tests, it was agreed that, from June 1, the limit of people who could be on the horse-drawn carriages would be reduced by two adults and two children, and the horses would have a 60-minute rest when they reached Wlosienica, about 1.5 kilometres from Morskie Oko.
The use of horse-drawn carts at Morskie Oko has long aroused criticism from animal rights groups. A number of cases of horses collapsing have been reported, with some documented on film. In 2020, two cart drivers were convicted of animal abuse in the first case of its kind.
In 2021, in a bid to improve animal welfare, Tatra National Park started testing a hybrid horse cart that used a self-charging electric battery to assist the animals during tough uphill climbs. (Notes from Poland)