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What are your 10 fave things about Poland? And 10 least favourite?


krysia 23 | 3,058  
16 Nov 2006 /  #31
Good things:
1. The food. Breads, cakes, desserts. Polish people are excellent cooks.
2. Scenery. Beautiful countryside, but too populated.
3. Good transit systems.
4. Flower shops everywhere.
5. Architecture. Castles and churches full of history.
OP Arrgghh!!  
16 Nov 2006 /  #32
Beautiful countryside, but too populated.

Not any more... they've all moved to Britain.

Anway, besides that there is a strong drift to the big cities, experienced in more developed countries back in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

There's fewer young being born, and they all want to leave the farms.

So, give it a few decades and Polska wieś will be empty.
krysia 23 | 3,058  
16 Nov 2006 /  #33
I've noticed some puste homes when driving around the wieś, all the młodzi moved to town. And everybody has a płot around their yard. ( Maybe so the kury don't go and lay jajka at the neighbor's dom)
Bartolome 2 | 1,085  
17 Nov 2006 /  #34
Good sides ? OK
1. My house at the river;
2. Town 20 mins away by car;
3. See above posts.

Disadvantages:
1. Unemployment;
2. Poor quality of politics, that's discouraging people from staying in their country and changing it.
iwona 12 | 542  
17 Nov 2006 /  #35
I don't mind constructive criticism about Poland but some of things are radiculous.

Bad in Poland is:
1.unemployment
2. Too many people who try too much intrude in your life, give you advices....

Church? I don't know I am Catholic and I don't see anything wrong about it.

I don't like abortion, eutanasia, starving old people in hospitals and pensioners homes( what happens in UK).... What is wrong about it.

I used before word "lefty"- I meant views of UK goverment and yes I don't like it at all.

Arrgghh!!

I think that you compare so many things from your country to Poland-it doesn't work. I did it when I moved to Uk and in the beginning I really hated living here.

But I learn tolerance and it is ok now.

Poland has his own culture, history and I think that everything is changing there maybe to slowly I don't know.

You say about smell.... When I was last time in London it was awful there dirty, smelly full bins on the pavement - and it was relatively area....

Flats... in UK they start to build more and more of them as there is no enough space.
wozzy 8 | 206  
17 Nov 2006 /  #36
This is a big plus ...never happend anywhere else...........A taxi driver who lets you off on the small change......It happend to me twice in Krakow.
krysia 23 | 3,058  
17 Nov 2006 /  #37
Sorry wozzy, but I don't get it. Must be the blonde streak I have.
wozzy 8 | 206  
17 Nov 2006 /  #38
Sorry wozzy, but I don't get it.

Fare= 3.58 zl

give driver 5.00 zl

driver gives 2.00 change because he didn't have the small coin.

cabies elswere would hang out for a tip not there....... pehaps I look as though I need the money.
Matyjasz 2 | 1,544  
18 Nov 2006 /  #39
Let's just face it, over 90% most of Poland's towns and especially the villages are drop-dead ugly. Plain and simple fact.

90% you say? How come you didn't notice it when you were buying your house then? :)
Shame on you. :)

If they didn't charge for using the tiolets, maybe they wouldn't piss so much all over!

"Pecunia non olet", krysia. We take example from the best. :)
nauczyciel  
18 Nov 2006 /  #40
heres my list-

Raves-
1- beautiful women that take care of themselves

2- women wearing tight jeans to just below the knee, then boots to meet the jeans. :)

3- A wide selection of beer.

4- Zubrowka and apple juice

5- the people i work with and teach that have included my in thier social circles.

6- loads of different foods to try

7- cheap chocolate and plenty of selection :)

8- you can pretty much find what you are looking for on every block.

Rants-
1- noisy people in the building i live in. they walk with heavy feet on the floor, and i hear their thud thud of every footstep. even as i type this. I've talked with them about it, and they don't give a shiz.

2- at 630-7am someone has to take their empty cans and bottles to the garbage room on each floor and has to drop 3-4 of them and they bounce down 2 flights of stairs making one heck of a racket. i'm moving out of here in 40 days. thank god.

3- the fight for seats among the old ladies on the tram. too funny.

4- people standing in "your space" in lineups. Look, food lines ended a long time ago, give some space.

5- barking dogs tied up outside of the Berti. they bark once every second or 2 seconds while their owners are inside for shopping. So 10 mintes later they come out, and it stops. The noise echos amongst all the flats. :)

6- taxi drivers that rip me off, by charging too much. its amazing how 4 different cab rides from exactly the same place to exactly the same place can vary in price from 10PLN to 18PLN. I have been informed by my friend that i can make a complaint, and will start doing so now. When you don't have a command of the language, it's kind of hard to argue with the driver.

7- dog crap just left on the sidewalk. I've seen countless people (old ppl the worst offenders) watch their dog take a crap on the sidewalk and just walk away.

8- lack of recycling. the garbage cans are filled with all types of plastic bottles and glass containers. PL needs to start getting on the recycling porgram. there are however, large collection bins located in housing areas. Paper in not recycled, just all thrown into the bin.

9- cigarette smoke everywhere. being a non smoker really sucks.

10- bus/tram frequency drops from 10am-1pm. and non existant to my area after 22:30.
Bartolome 2 | 1,085  
18 Nov 2006 /  #41
lack of recycling

It depends on part of Poland where you live in. I come from a village in South-West, and we have full recycling service in that matter (plastics, paper, scrap metal, glass).

Prices of CDs are f*n high - I'm asking, why the hell an album can cost £5 in the UK, and the same CD is ZLP60 in Poland (to make things worse, you don't see many promotions) :( ???
Syrena_04 2 | 88  
18 Nov 2006 /  #42
Let's fire up them brains cells and think of some good things about Poland!

No. I'd rather leave you feeling miserable :)
modacone 1 | 16  
18 Nov 2006 /  #43
well u guys arent being to encouraging about the different aspects of poland i guess i cant really say cuz ive only just visited but for an eastern european country u guys got it good trust me.. u ever been to bosnia? even turkey is one fu*ked up place man we drove U.N trucks w medical eqipment through sergovia in the nineties n it wuz lame

i am actually seriously moving to poland for to marry me the hottest girl ive ever met but im thinkin the way u make it sound i might just try to talk her into movin to america
miranda  
18 Nov 2006 /  #44
i am actually seriously moving to poland for to marry me the hottest girl ive ever met but im thinkin the way u make it sound i might just try to talk her into movin to america

Perhaps she could provide you with some feedback, since she(as I understand) is from Poland:)
Good luck in your marriage.
nauczyciel  
19 Nov 2006 /  #45
you better meet her in person before getting married. i thought i had met "the one" a hot PL babe, and after living together for 1 month in PL, there were many clashes. Many cultural differences. Needless to say, it ended about 2 weeks after i got back home. I'm from Van BC and living here (PL) now.

but good luck, you never know what will happen.
Syrena_04 2 | 88  
19 Nov 2006 /  #46
Best for me:

in Warsaw-

the Muzeum Ziemi (Earth Science Museum) on Na Skarpie;

the stone terrace a few steps away, surrounded by ancient urns, where I sat to eat my sandwich one day (does anyone know the name of that park? in the area of ul. Rozbrat between Ksiazeca and Prusa);

the Polonia Palace;

Wedel's on Szpitalna;

the roses and lace curtains everywhere;

the quietness;

the low-rise buildings that allow the sky and the sun to be seen in the city;

the light colour of the buildings (white, yellow);

the chestnuts that fall from the trees in October;

the ceramic tiles;

the outdoor observation decks at the airport;

the chandeliers in one of the shops on Jerozolimskie;

elsewhere -

the Baltic;

the space between the trees in the forest that allows you to walk easily in it (unlike most Canadian forests that are unbelievably bushy compared to that);

the castles, elegant but not overdone;

the width of the aleja and ulica;

the Polish men who remind me of my father.
Matyjasz 2 | 1,544  
19 Nov 2006 /  #47
OK, here is my list:

1. The quality of food: There’s no division into organic and “normal” food as everything here is organic. The veggies and fruits don’t always have the perfect size and shape, but that’s the way nature wanted it to be. Their taste is incomparably better to the taste of their pumped with chemicals perfectly shaped counterparts. Poland is probably one of the few places in Europe where tomatoes taste really like tomatoes. It’s a huge plus.

2. Polish cuisine! Still to be discovered by the westerners, something that will leave you with a lot of good memories. There’s a tendency now for the cooks to discover regional dishes which is very good news. Also when I’m saying polish cuisine I don’t think only about the dishes but also abot the unique polish products such as: smoked hames, large variety of sausages, kasznka, buczanka, wątrubki, salcesony, lots of polish cheeses, maślanki, kefiry, polish bread, deserts, pickled cucumbers (“po warszawsku”, “kiszone”, “po żydowsku”, itp), pickled mushrooms, surówki, polish quality beverages ( beer, vodka, nalewka and mead), etc… Some of this products you can find also outside of Poland, but never with the same taste.

3. Very interesting and tragic history which you can almost smell in the air walking the streets of Kraków, Gdańsk, £ódź, Wrocław, Szczecin, Kazimierz, Zamość, Przemyśl, etc… Beautiful castles in Książ (ment to be Hitler’s headquarters in Poland, with underground tunels, etc), Moszna, Bolkowo, £ańcut, Malbork, Kwidzyń, and the so called “orle gniazda” (Eagles nests) which basically means ruins of castles like Ogrodzieniec (my favourite place in Poland :) ), fortresses Boyen, or fortress in Kłodzko, The Międzyrzecz Fortification Region (Built in 1934-1938, it was the most technologically advanced fortification system of Nazi Germany and remains one of the largest and the most interesting systems of this type in the world), etc…. Many great characters like: Mieszko I, Bolesław Chrobry, Władysław Jagiełło, Stefan Batory, Jan III Sobieski, Koścuszko, Kazimierz Wielki, hetman Żółkiweski, Chodkiewicz, Zamoyski, Czarniecki, etc…To many to even to name.

4. Sarmatian culture of polish nobles, with all the unique customs, clothes, dances(like polonais, which was later very popular in Western Europe) and their residences called “dworki” spread all over the country.

5. Folklore of the common people! That includes clothes, dances( if someone will have the chance to see the “Mazowsze” or “Śląsk” group perform, don’t hesitate and go for it!), beliefs, customs, hospitality (“Guest in the house means God in the house”:) and demonology. Vampires, werewolves, strzygi, devils, etc… Very fascinating!

6. Very strong family ties and the whole atmosphere of holidays spend “the Polish way”! Absolutely love it!

7. Literature! Sienkiewicz, Lem, Sapkowski, Szymborska, Tetmajer, Bursa, Mickiewicz, etc…

8. Countryside! Don’t have to have the biggest mountains and the deepest lakes to enjoy a countryside. Baltic looses with “Mediterranean Sea” but still walking on the “Molo” during a storm is a great experience for me. :)

9. Weather! Beautiful sun in the summer, snow in the winter, melancholic autumn and my favorite season, spring, where everything comes back to life! What else could one possibly need? Ok, maybe the winter could end in January, but you can’t have it all, right? :)

10. Great audience! Poles react very lively during rock, hip hop, reggae, etc concerts! Just thinking about last U2 concert gives me goose bumps.

There’s so many beautiful and stunning things about Poland that I wanted to share with the members of this forum, but instead I was wasting my time arguing about polish immigrants, commie block’s and Polish miserable faces. It’s really frustrating and I really fell tired. Sure Poland isn’t perfect, but it also isn’t all bad. It has it’s brighter side about some people seem to forget. It’s sad really.

Arrrggghhhh, you lied at the beginning of this thread when you said that you are still trying to figure out if “the glass is half full or half empty”. We all know that the answer for you is half empty. For me it’s half full. You also said that by heavy critic you are trying to help polish people open their eyes and do something constructive to improve their life. I don’t think that by taking some polish disadvantages and blowing them out of proportion you will achieve yur goal. You would help as more if you would go back from where you came from. I think that it would be better both, for us, and for you. And remember, “Co złego, to nie my!”.

Pozdrawiam. :)
Syrena_04 2 | 88  
19 Nov 2006 /  #48
I wish I had said that. Matyjasz, you're the best.

With oratory skills like this and your intellect, I foresee a very impressive future for you.

Syrena
iwona 12 | 542  
19 Nov 2006 /  #49
Matyjasz....very good post.

There is one thing about us Slavs.... we have spirit , we are romantic, family orientated,warm people- even can be sometimes loud and argumentative

Problem with native people from UK is that lots ( not all) of them are "cold as a fish" - as they don't understand us they attack us. They think that their world is perfect with getting rid of old unwanted people ( eutanasia or living them in "homes" and sending card once a year), getting rid of unwanted children (abortion) , no religion -for what? Just enjoy your life to max and have as many pleasures as possible giving back as little as possible.

This is shallow, consumer Society.

Even I admire their history, literature, their sense of humour , sarcasm....
Amathyst 19 | 2,702  
19 Nov 2006 /  #50
This is shallow, consumer Society.

Yep, people dont have time for family these days, too busy making money and spending it...sad but true, but some English value family and I suppose it comes down to what you have been brought up with

"cold as a fish"

We like to call it being reserved, again its all down to how you are brought up and what you know and are used to.

As things I liked about Poland, everything apart from poor service, but hey you cant have everything can you??
Lakelandhiker 1 | 42  
19 Nov 2006 /  #51
Problem with native people from UK is that lots ( not all) of them are "cold as a fish" - as they don't understand us they attack us. They think that their world is perfect with getting rid of old unwanted people ( eutanasia or living them in "homes" and sending card once a year), getting rid of unwanted children (abortion) , no religion -for what? Just enjoy your life to max and have as many pleasures as possible giving back as little as possible.

This is shallow, consumer Society.

I am from the UK Iwona, and unfortunatly I have to agree with your comments. People here have more money now and easier lives than they have ever had. However dispite this they are not as happy as they used to be. I think Britain is top if the "teenage mothers" league, and top of the "divorce" league. Sad really.

I hope your country can keep all the values that matyjasz listed in his post.
Syrena_04 2 | 88  
19 Nov 2006 /  #52
I hope your country can keep all the values that matyjasz listed in his post.

That's part of what I liked about Poland. It felt to me as life did 40 years ago: no-nonsense, wholesome, down-to-earth. I would be sad to see it disappear and be replaced by today's mad rush and superficial lifestyle.
lef 11 | 477  
19 Nov 2006 /  #53
Matyjasz.

I liked your post.. thats the ideal and it is hoped all polish people could appreciate all this...unfortunately we live in the real world and nothing will ever be perfect, we need to work on it....making critical comments about poland doesn't mean you are anti poland, it could be that love poland and you want things changed for the better!.

Its a pity that the 800,000 odd poles who have left poland to work overseas haven't appreciated poland and have sought greener pastures?
kryzs  
19 Nov 2006 /  #54
I been to poland only as a kid , never as an adult .S o I will tell you what I remember was my favorit till this day..

Polish Castles That was cool ..

Feeling safe and running wild at night as a 12 year old could........

My moms sisters Farm , all those chickens . Waliking a cow...

Cutting the end tips of the tails ,off the wild kittens in my uncles barn. then they would put this purple stuff on the end of there tails that was funny. All theses kittines with the end of there tail tip all purple........

My cousins Pigions....

All the coka cola I could drink , Or i mean Oranzada. all i could drink..

This big giant polish church building in the midlde of tyczyn. I would hide there.......lol

The bus rides in to rzeszof........

Polish Ice cream . I wonder if thats still the same.. taste...

going on Hey rides .............

The polish bike they purchased for me to keep me busy..........it was a Yubilat ..
( Is thats spelled write) It was a fold up bike.........

Oh yes and all the pierogi, and kolachki cherry flavored..

Going mushroom hunting with my uncle on the back of his mottoguzi in pouring rain......
lef 11 | 477  
19 Nov 2006 /  #55
OK, here is my list:

I'm surprised that you haven't made any reference to the church and the catholic faith which has been handed down over a thousand year period. hmmmmmmmmm

Seems poles are showing less and less interest in their faith....poles will become poorer for this...
Maati 1 | 178  
20 Nov 2006 /  #56
"Seems poles are showing less and less interest in their faith....poles will become poorer for this..."

Poorer? Maybe they become more educated and less manipulated by the church and pseudocatholic nazi politicians?
Arien  
20 Nov 2006 /  #57
very dutch point of vieuw that. :)

I do agree that a total lack of moral supervision from the church or any other institute for that matter makes a society poorer in a few ways though.

teenage pregnancies, drug abuse, egocentric, offensive and agressive behaviour. it's sad, but some people do seem to need some guidance nowadays. - or maybe I sound like an old man? :) -

so I'm not being totally anti-religious, just looking at the positive things to learn from both worlds. :)
Bartolome 2 | 1,085  
20 Nov 2006 /  #58
I wonder why nobody from the Polish ppl gathered here hasn't mentioned ZUS yet... It's DEFINITELY one of the worst things in Poland... This Moloch consumes half of your salaries for your 'pension', but in fact that money goes to total waste (i.e. feeding an army of rude biurwas and raising up more and more marble office buildings). And none of the governements elected after '89 has shown enough balls to reform that leech that bleeds our nation of its hard earned wonga and is one of the major factors that supresses development in Poland.
FISZ 24 | 2,116  
20 Nov 2006 /  #59
Cutting the end tips of the tails ,off the wild kittens in my uncles barn

That is so f*cking cruel. Why would you do that?
krysia 23 | 3,058  
20 Nov 2006 /  #60
Yeah, that's sick.
My friend's dad in Poland did the same thing. And they drown unwanted kittens and puppies . They put them in a sack and throw them in the river.

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