Nieznajomy
5 Jul 2010
Life / Small change in shops in Poland!? [95]
The exact change thing is a bit of a pain that takes getting used to after living in the US and Canada and Japan, but it's really not that bad. I basically just make sure I keep a float myself. I keep a small bowl of change on my bedside table and make sure I have a small handful of grosze and a couple of 1 and 2 zł. coins, and make sure I keep tens and twenties in my wallet at all times.
A little courtesy goes a long way. I usually ask if someone can break a hundred or a fifty when I buy something and then keep the resulting small bills as long as I can. The kiosks in front of my building that sell tram and train tickets always have a ton of change, and don't mind changing 100s. It's pretty well become an automatic process at this point.
My girlfriend, who doesn't speak much Polish, just does what the old ladies do, and sticks out her hand full of small coins and lets the cashiers pluck out the change they need. :)
The exact change thing is a bit of a pain that takes getting used to after living in the US and Canada and Japan, but it's really not that bad. I basically just make sure I keep a float myself. I keep a small bowl of change on my bedside table and make sure I have a small handful of grosze and a couple of 1 and 2 zł. coins, and make sure I keep tens and twenties in my wallet at all times.
A little courtesy goes a long way. I usually ask if someone can break a hundred or a fifty when I buy something and then keep the resulting small bills as long as I can. The kiosks in front of my building that sell tram and train tickets always have a ton of change, and don't mind changing 100s. It's pretty well become an automatic process at this point.
My girlfriend, who doesn't speak much Polish, just does what the old ladies do, and sticks out her hand full of small coins and lets the cashiers pluck out the change they need. :)