Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Jelenia Gora

On the drive back to Jelenia Gora it started to snow with rain!!! The green fields started getting slightly white!



Being home is great! I was able to finally wash my clothes, go food shopping with Ciocia and start organising the package I want to send home.


Put straight to work

After dinner, Ciocia put the pot of soup outside on the balcony (because there’s not enough room in the fridge) and that way she could just defrost it tomorrow. Outside is a fridge for half an hour and a freezer overnight. It’s fantastic!

Anyway, Saturday night Mariola and I went to her friend’s house when I tried tartar. I’m not sure how it’s actually spelt in Polish but it’s raw mince meat mixed with garlic and spices, an egg cracked on top and chopped up gherkin and onion on top of that. It was actually really tasty but I couldn’t stop thinking about the fact that I was eating raw meat! I did not finish it. 

My shop

The next day we went to the Sunday markets, Mariola’s friend’s place for lunch and my cousin Violeta’s for afternoon tea. Honestly, everyone in Poland is so inviting and welcoming. There is tea and cake everywhere you go and people are always inviting you to come over again soon. I think I find it different to Australia because we sit outside with beer or wine, and cheese and crackers and that’s how we socialise. Whereas here, it’s all about the tea and cake and sitting inside. Maybe it’s different in summer, when it’s warmer here but there’s just a different vibe in Australia. Australia has always been my norm but now I think I can truly say that we are definitely very casual, easy going and laid back when it comes to socialising with our friends and family. I like our casual, don’t need to talk about anything in particular way better but it’s interesting to see how it’s taken more seriously here.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Gdansk - Poland's Port City

After going to Malbork Castle, we went to Szymbark. Szymbark is another summer place that has lots of wooden houses and the longest plank of wood in the world (Guinness book records). There’s also a world war two guerrilla bunker but, most importantly and the reason we came here, is because there’s an upside down house! Everything inside is upside down and you walk around and go upstairs etc.

  

We went on a cold and rainy night so my photos weren’t great but I have some photos my Auntie took when she went there in the summer. Also, the tour is normally four hours but, because of the cold, ours was no more than half an hour. Note: only one of these photos has been doctored!




My last day in Gdansk, we went to Sopot which is a street next to the sea with hotels and restaurants and all that sort of thing, so like Hilary’s but bigger, or Freo but only one long street. Here is a picture of the crooked house on the main street.


Arty - Main Street

Saturday, January 08, 2011

Gdansk - The Top Of Poland


Neptune

The next day we set off to Gdansk, which is the city on the Baltic Sea at the top of Poland. On the way I met some more Aunties from my Dad’s side who were very, very friendly and gave me chocolates and told me stories of Mum in college!


Where we had lunch on the way to Gdansk
In Gdansk we stayed with my Dad’s sister and her family. They were the first family we had stayed at that had a house! Poland is all about apartments in the city, which I like because I’ve already lived in a house in Australia, but it was an exciting change! And they had a dog! His name is Rudy and he likes polish sausage and barking to say hello.

In Gdansk we went to the old city and the port. Gdansk is the Fremantle of Poland and is a little older, but same sort of set up with the nice waterfront restaurants and that sort of thing. Definitely a summer place.
 
    

1. A bombed building from WWII - memorial kind of to never forget how the city looked
2. (Crazy) people kayaking in freezing cold weather
The next day we went to Marlbork, which is a really old castle built in 1274. It’s a medieval castle where knights and kings and servants and horses lived. It’s close to the border so it used to belong to the Germans but Poland got it after the second world war.
It was cool to see except it was really cold and the guide had a lot to say and the usually two hour tour turned into three hours and so all I remember is being cold and hungry. But it was still a very big, old and interesting castle!


Unrestored part of the wall
 
The ceilings were really beautiful
 
What the knights wore in the day
 
A cannon


   
 
Courtyard inside the castle walls



Thursday, January 06, 2011

Warszawa, Part Two



The second day in Warszawa we went to the museum dedicated to the Warsaw Uprising. I learnt a lot about World War Two and I knew about the Warsaw Uprising but I don’t remember ever going into so much detail. When the Nazi’s invaded Poland, they had a difficult time taking Warsaw. Soldier’s fought to keep the city and the civilians helped them with medicine and food etc.


Memorial to the children who fought in the Warsaw Uprising


Memorial where the Warsaw Ghetto used to be

My grandfather fought in the Warsaw Uprising before he was taken prisoner. Nothing to worry about, he jumped out of the train on the way to the POW camp.
At another museum, I got some pictures of the food stamps that were used while Poland was under communist rule by the Soviets. This stuff I found really interesting because Mum and Dad have talked about it and I understand how life was back then, but I got to actually see the cards!



Mieso (meat) and maslo (butter)

MLEKO = Milk

Chopin’s Tomb is also in Warszawa and the benches have buttons and play Chopin’s music. Very nice touch.  


We also went to a memorial that showed all the places/POW camps Polish soldiers were taken during the war.




I also got to have lunch with my Auntie’s family where there was lots of alcohol and Polish food and raw mince meat with stuff in it which I did not know was traditional Polish food. I did not try some.

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

Warszawa - Poland's Capital City

In Warszawa we stayed with an Auntie from Dad’s side. Her name was also Anna! It was really great because she knew absolutely everything there was to know about Warszawa!
Warszawa was really interesting because it was practically completely destroyed during the war, so there are reminders of war everywhere. I mean this by memorials, but also by the buildings that are pre war and the buildings that are post war.
The old city, rebuilt and restored after the war.

We went to the old city, which is where the main city used to be. A castle was built next to it with a big wall that went all the way around to protect it. This castle is literally in the middle of the city.
 




There was also a Subway built into an old building and I thought this looked interesting in a commercial-food-company-with-neon-sides-in-a-nice-old-building way. A lot of Poland looks like this.


  
Old looking city with a brand new modern looking stadium in the background. Well done Poland.
The new city is where the President’s Palace is.



Close by is the Lone Soldiers’ Grave which is a memorial to all the Polish Soldiers who have died on foreign grounds. It was a really cold day and these soldiers barely moved an inch, even when we were taking pictures.