Poles wade through Baltic 'like herrings' to commune with the sea

KUZNICA, Poland (Reuters) - Once a year, Poles head to the Hel Peninsula on the northern coast near Gdynia to "become herrings" and wade up to a metre deep for five hours along a 10-km (six-mile) sand bank through the Baltic Sea.

The "Herring March" was set up by Radoslaw Tyslewicza in 2002 to raise environmental awareness and understanding of the sea.

"Anyone in Poland - in Warsaw or Krakow - washing the dishes or flushing the toilet - that water goes here to the Baltic (Sea) and affects our ecosystem," Tyslewicza said.

The march is named after the herring that swim in the shallow waters of the Baltic, and the nickname by which locals of Gdynia are known.

(Reporting by Rita Plantera, Ayat Basma and Matej Leskovsek, Editing by Joanna Plucinska and Alexandra Hudson)