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Posts by HelenaWojtczak  

Joined: 5 Aug 2008 / Female ♀
Last Post: 10 Aug 2015
Threads: Total: 28 / Live: 8 / Archived: 20
Posts: Total: 177 / Live: 43 / Archived: 134
From: Hastings UK
Speaks Polish?: a little/kilka slow

Displayed posts: 51 / page 1 of 2
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HelenaWojtczak   
9 Aug 2008
Language / Polish sayings [236]

"Gdy wleziesz między wrony, musisz krakać jak i one.
English equivalent: When in Rome do as the Romans do."

I think it literally means "when you are amongst crows you sing like them"?

If wrona is a crow?
HelenaWojtczak   
13 Aug 2008
Travel / Jetski in Poland? Mazuria lakes. [2]

I was surprised to find a Youtube video of jetskiing in Mazuria, it's called "River Raid Poland Zegrze - Mikołajki Water Jet".

Is this a private thing, a special event, or can anyone hire a jetski in Mazuria? I will ask my Gizycko friends, but they probably won't know what can and cannot be hired down in Mikolajki or Ostroda.
HelenaWojtczak   
14 Aug 2008
Travel / Looking for Accommodation in Hel and Sopot [14]

I've been searching these locations, too, and also searched all the hotels, hostels, B&Bs, everything, in Gdansk and all around it.

In the end I've booked into Villa Akme.

Akme Gdansk akme.gda.pl
HelenaWojtczak   
14 Aug 2008
Life / I'm British in Poland and I think that it's time to go back to the UK! [240]

Reading this thread it strikes me that surely the best position to be in is to marry or live with a native Pole. Then that person can liaise with all the officials, thus circumventing the anti-foreigner attitude that you have encountered.
HelenaWojtczak   
15 Aug 2008
News / What is wrong with Poland that Poles emigrate? [167]

i asked a simple question and its been responded with, sarcasm and negative remarks to me personally

NOT TRUE. You said this, too:

"sorry mate can't get on the dole, its all been paid to the poles."

The Poles don't come here to go on the dole but to work. Ignoramus.
HelenaWojtczak   
1 Oct 2008
Travel / Sleeper train Poland to Holland, the Jan Kiepura [13]

Because I hate being herded around like cattle when flying, I travelled on this 24 Sept 2008, joining the train at Poznan at 2105. In Poznan station underpass between platforms there is an internet cafe, a Ruch kiosk that sells paracetamol etc and places to buy food. Also a poster advertising a trip on the "retro train" Piekna Helena, running on Helenas' name day, so that thrilled me as I am a Helena, and an ex-railwayworker, and the author of a book on railwaywomen.

The station controller at Poznan is a woman (as is her assistant) and she kindly let me leave my case in her office for a few minutes while I went shopping in the underpass.

When the train rolled in each sleeping car attendant got out and stood to attention on the platform, ready to meet, greet and help his "guests" (it's called a "train-hotel"). He takes your ticket and shows you to your sleeping compartment.

The compartment was an absolute delight: really well laid-out, and with all kinds of clever fixtures and fittings. There is a socket for a laptop, which I used to recharge the batteries in my videocamera.The lights are controllable from any of the three berths, and the attendant showed me how to adjust the heating. In the little cupboard was a "Seven Day Croissant" (no thanks!) a bottle of water and plastic cup, and a little plastic sealed package containing a "Wars" flannel and a piece of "Wars" soap. There is a wardrobe with three hangers and a worktop that lifts to reveal a washbasin. There's also a fold-down, upholstered chair. There's enough space for one person's luggage and it was a mystery where the luggage of two other people would be accommodated.

I'm a person who habitually sleeps in a cool room with the window wide open and as such was dismayed to find that the window only opens about two inches (5cm). I had caught a cold virus in Poland and it made me feel over-hot all the time, so more than ever I needed cool fresh air. The compartment was way too hot for me so I switched off the heating and opened the window the 5cm maximum. It was about 30 degrees in there, and the walls and cupboard doors and handles were actually hot, where they had absorbed the heat. It was also stuffy.

There are two blinds: one for privacy and another on top which is a blackout blind. But if you drop the blinds you are covering the window and thus shutting off the air coming in. So I rolled the blinds back up to get the air.

The bedding was immaculately white and crisp, but the one pillow looked woefully inadequate. Being off season I expected to have the whole compartment to myself so decided to use the other pillows too.

A tiny, white-haired old lady appeared, told me to close the window and proceeded to turn the heating up to its highest setting, remarking that she liked to be as warm as possible. She told me she was having the bottom bunk, relegating me to climbing the ladder!

I went immediately to the attendant and told him about this incompatibility. Luckily he found me a compartment in the next wagon, and carried my case there.

So far, excellent service, and a great privilege to have my own compartment! Window open, blinds up, heating off, I got undressed and washed, used three pillows and settled in my bed for the night. It was 9.45pm and I looked forward to a great night's sleep as I had a busy day ahead.

By midnight we were in Berlin and I was still awake. I had tried every conceivable way to lay, but it was so uncomfortable sleep was totally impossible. On examination the "mattress" was just a thin piece of foam. The train repeatedly braked very sharply while stopping at lights and at the series of Berlin stations, almost throwing me out of bed, then was very jerky on restarting, so I felt I had to hold myself tense all the time not to fall out.

Years ago I recall sleeping like a log on a couchette. The mattress was made from the actual thick, comfortable vinyl-covered, sprung seating. These modern sleepers were made so thinly that my shoulders, back, hips, neck and ribs hurt me too much to allow me to sleep, even though I was drugged up on paracetamol for my cold symptoms!

I got up, switched on the light and unmade my bed. Then I pulled the bed up to convert it back into seating, almost putting my back out from having to tug so hard at the mechanics of it all. Then I made the bed up again, it was a little bit more comfy on the cushions compared to the so-called mattress, and I put the quilt underneath me as well, to help a bit more.

After much more tossing and turning I eventually dozed off about 1pm out of sheer exhaustion.

At 1.30pm we screeched to an emergency stop and I was almost thrown to the floor. As I used to be a guard (conductor, train manager) I knew a variety of reasons for this (signal might have changed to red in front of us, for example) and was not unduly worried at first. After ten or so minutes I was absolutely desperate to look outside. It went totally against my 20 years of railway experience not to find out what was happening, but all I could see outside was total pitch black darkness. I went to the end of the corridor but found there was no window that would open at all. I asked the attendant what was happening and he rudely told me to go back to sleep. I returned to my compartment and laid down, but we were on a fierce bend and the train was so banked up that it was like a crazy house and I slid down the bed until my feet were flat on the window glass and I had to keep them straight to prevent myself sliding down to that end completely. My water bottle just slid time and again along the worktop and onto the floor, such was the gradient at which the train sat.

Once we'd been there an hour and a half I asked the attendant to find out what was happening. It went against all my guard's instincts, training and experience not to be able to see outside. Maybe the locomotive had become detached, or the train was divided and only my wagon was there, perhaps the rest of the train was hundreds of metres up the line? Perhaps someone had pulled the cord, or there was a fire, or some obstruction on the line. I was quite cross that the attendant didn't think a fare-paying passenger had any right to know what was going on. I asked him again and again to find the conductor and let me know. Eventually he did and returned with just two words to snap at me: "Lokomotyw zepsuty" (the engine has broken down).

Every other passenger (there were few) seemed to be sleeping soundly; at least, nobody else came out of their compartments. I tried again to lay down, but continually sliding down the seat towards the window was most uncomfortable so I sat up and wrapped the duvet about me and tried to sleep like that. We were in Germany, and I comforted myself that, as the German railways are so efficient and the staff so well trained, and this was such an important express train, we'd soon be moving off again.

We were there for four hours. Well, that's not quite true: after three and a half hours a loco went past and presumably was attached to us, as I could feel the attaching movement. Then it pushed us backwards ("wrong road") to the station, then about 20 minutes later we moved off in the right direction at last.

It was 5.30am by this time, and as I had the blinds up to get some air in, I could see Germans waiting for their commuter trains. Our four-hour delay became shorter as the driver made up time wherever he could and we ran into Utrecht only 1 hr 45 late. I tried repeatedly to get back to sleep, but it was fruitless. I got off at Utrecht a total wreck!

The last time I made this trip by train was 1987. One good and slightly unbelievable thing was no border controls etc, I didn't show my passport once from the time I arrived in Poland on 14th September until the time I left Amsterdam airport on 27th. Previously we'd be disturbed on the Polish/German border, then at East Berlin, then West Berlin, then entering East Germany, then entering West Germany, it just went on and on and on, the train being searched with German Shepherd dogs, the guards shining a torch in your face to check it against the passport photo; East German transit visas, Polish entry visas, currency checks, customs, ticket checks -- I tell you, a couchette compartment was like Picaddilly Circus!
HelenaWojtczak   
2 Oct 2008
Travel / Sleeper train Poland to Holland, the Jan Kiepura [13]

Thanks Osiol. A hard mattress may be better for the back, indeed, I have quite a firm bed at home. It wasn't about the hardness or softness, but the thin-ness of the mattress. And telling yourself that hard mattresses are good for you cannot make you sleep when you are in pain all over!

A wonderful compartment spoiled by lack of attention to the most important issue: actually sleeping.

I'd never do it again, which is a shame, since I am railway-mad!
HelenaWojtczak   
6 Jan 2009
Travel / Sleeper train Poland to Holland, the Jan Kiepura [13]

[Moved from]: Sleeping car train Jan Kiepura Poland to Holland

Hi guys

After much delay I have at long last uploaded four videos numbered one to four, filmed on the sleeping car Jan Kiepura.

Here's the first, you can find the rest from this one...

Helena
HelenaWojtczak   
7 Jun 2012
Genealogy / Baderska, Mikstat, Klosowski. Are there Polish online resources I don't know about? [4]

Hello

I am in the UK and currently writing a book about a Polish serial killer Seweryn Kłosowski, who died in London in 1903.

I would like to find out everything, anything at all, that I possibly can, about Kłosowski's family in Koło and Krasienin and his wife's family also. Her name was Baderska and she was from Mikstat.

There seems to be a lot online for Jewish Poles, but unfortunately mine were both Roman Catholics. Pity!

I have exhausted every possible avenue of research that I can carry out online, at ancestry.co.uk and by googling every possible permutation that I can think of, to no avail. In a whole year, I have found nothing.

Are there any resources that I cannot access because I am in the UK? Are there any Polish ancestry websites that I don't know about? Are there such things as Polish c19th street directories or anything else online (such as we have in England).

Any tips, advice, gratefully received.

Helena
HelenaWojtczak   
25 Jul 2012
Genealogy / THE MEANING AND RESEARCH OF MY POLISH LAST NAME, SURNAME? [4501]

Can anyone help me please with teh surname ZAGOWSKI?

This is in connection with a true crime book I am writing. One of the British court witnesses (who was a Polish Jew) claimed to know a man called ZAGOWSKI. Because it is reported in the UK if there are any diacritical marks needed then I dont know what they are.

I have searched the net and Ancestry and moikrewni websites and found nothing. According to moikrewni the name does not even exist. Maybe I need to add a dot over something or other mark?

If anyone can please tell me anything about this surname, like, is it a misspelling, does it exist, is it a Jewish name, anything at all, I'd be so grateful.

Helena
HelenaWojtczak   
25 Jul 2012
Genealogy / THE MEANING AND RESEARCH OF MY POLISH LAST NAME, SURNAME? [4501]

According to a 1990s census there were 2 people named Żagowski, both in the Gdańsk area. Moikrewni says there aren't any at present.,

Hi Polonius how did you get access to that census?

For a literary character why not selected something without diacritics

I'm thinking now that you don't know what true crime means :-)

I can't just change facts because the name given is causing me problems... :-)

MyHeritage Family Trees, has several records with Zagowski last name, all of them born in late 1800s, some in Poland, some in Russia.

Thank you so much boletus. I will take a look at the link.

The court witness said the man's name was Ludwik Zagowski. As this was spoken testimony which was written down by an English clerk in 1902, no way to tell if there was a dot over the Z. Or indeed if the clerk misheard the name Żakowski. Other clues are, the man was a barber from Warsaw who spoke Polish and some Yiddish. He had a wife and two dependent children, so he must have been between 25 and 40. That he spoke "SOME" Yiddish makes me think he probably wasn't a Jew, or he'd be fluent.
HelenaWojtczak   
15 Aug 2013
Travel / Jastarnia Wczasy - no trains? [19]

Hi friends

I have just booked a pokoje goscinne on the Hel Peninsular and the owner says it is near to Jastarnia Wczasy railway station.

So I went to PKP timetable to find my train there from Gdansk on 14th September. For some reason, it gives a bus from Reda.

I cannot understand why, as there is a railway station.

Can anyone help me please?

Helena
HelenaWojtczak   
15 Aug 2013
Travel / Jastarnia Wczasy - no trains? [19]

Hi Shawn

As I said, I went to PKP timetable to find my train there from Gdansk on 14th September. For some reason, it gives a bus from Reda.

You just sent a link to that same timetable.

I want to go by train, I don't like buses.
HelenaWojtczak   
15 Aug 2013
Travel / Jastarnia Wczasy - no trains? [19]

Nope. I just looked on the timetable and it's just the same -- From Gdynia it's BUS from Reda.

So I tried HEL to JASTARNIA and it told me it does not recognise HEL as a station.

So I tried Kuznica to Jastarnia and it told me to "Walk"!!!!

Is the whole line from Reda to Hel closed?
HelenaWojtczak   
15 Aug 2013
Travel / Jastarnia Wczasy - no trains? [19]

Just checked, you're right

That is what I worked out, by looking at the train timetable, there are trains till 2nd Sept, then from mid October.

Thank you for confirming my suspicions. I understand a little bit of Polish, and sometimes that is dangerous, because I "think" I understand something when I don't!

I guess we will have to go by bus: -(

Not very keen on that!

I wonder if maybe the bus journey will be more or less pretty than the train journey.

What do you think?

Isn't there a ferry to Hel?
HelenaWojtczak   
15 Aug 2013
Travel / Jastarnia Wczasy - no trains? [19]

Oh no!

The idea of a ferry sounds wonderful!

But it seems there is no way to get onto the peninsula except by ..... bus!
HelenaWojtczak   
15 Aug 2013
Travel / Jastarnia Wczasy - no trains? [19]

Hi Warszawski

We aren't travelling there from the airport. We are arriving late and will be staying at a guest house near the airport.

I wonder if you could help me please with another query?

The guest house is on Kartuska Street, near a bus stop. Where can I find out the times and destinations of the buses that pass Kartuska?
HelenaWojtczak   
16 Aug 2013
Travel / Jastarnia Wczasy - no trains? [19]

milawi

Thank you for that.

I am finding it very difficult to understand though!

For example, I looked at Route 142. It states "Trasa w obu kier.: Targ Sienny/Targ Rakowy - Nowe Ogrody - Kartuska - Nowolipie - Rakoczego - Potokowa - Słowackiego - Dmowskiego - Wrzeszcz PKP "

But on the list of stops underneath, there is no Kartusa! What does it all mean?

ztm.gda.pl/rozklady/linia-142.html
HelenaWojtczak   
16 Aug 2013
Travel / Jastarnia Wczasy - no trains? [19]

Hi thank you so much Milawi, I understand now. I must find out the name of the stop!
HelenaWojtczak   
16 Aug 2013
Travel / Jastarnia Wczasy - no trains? [19]

Thank you very much. I will ask the guest house which stop it is. Cheers Helena x

The bus stop on Kartuska is called

Fabryczna (Kokoszki)

This was useful
HelenaWojtczak   
1 Oct 2013
Travel / Lodz to Poznan (trains?) [7]

Merged: WHERE DO TRAINS GO TO FROM LODZ?

I've spent ages on the PKP website trying to find out where trains go to from Lodz.

I shall be staying there for a week and would like to (a) take some days out by train to interesting or picturesque places, or through nice scenery, and (b) go home via a different route than we arrived (we shall arrive by air).

Where can I find a timetable that shows me all the stations on a route, or a list of towns served by train from Lodz, please?

Ha. I finally worked it out! You have to choose "map" then tick all the boxes down the side THEN click on the town and choose "departures". It's not perfect but its a start!
HelenaWojtczak   
31 Jan 2015
Life / Advice on Moving to Zakopane [37]

Wow I am astonished that after Dominic gave such a lot of time and effort in giving such excellent, down to earth, realistic advice, his friendly concerns for another person's welfare should be dismissed as merely "negative"!

I've made some huge mistakes in my life, and I wish I'd had someone like Dominic to point out the pitfalls, and warn me about the Realities of Life.

All I had around me were people who said "Dare to do it!" and "Go for it!" and as a result I did and it all went horribly wrong.

And no, those "positive people" weren't there to pick up the pieces!!!
HelenaWojtczak   
31 Jan 2015
Genealogy / THE MEANING AND RESEARCH OF MY POLISH LAST NAME, SURNAME? [4501]

Thank you for that, (Czarkowski)

Merged: Naj and Czyz

My grandfather's name was Tomasz Naj.

This looks weird to me! Is it a very rare surname?

My other grandad was Czyż

Can anyone tell me what these two surnames mean, please?
HelenaWojtczak   
31 Jan 2015
Life / Advice on Moving to Zakopane [37]

When we announce that we are going to do something big or risky, and we ask others for their opinions/thoughts, we are going to get two kinds of replies ~ those who say "do it" and those that say "don't do it". This is good, for it gives both sides.

It is then up to the person who asked the question to read BOTH SIDES of the argument and weigh it up for themselves.

Why would you want to stop that person hearing both sides?

Why would you want to remove half of the crucial information the person needs to make such a serious decision?

And why should you expect Dominic to pick up the pieces, when he's the one who warned the person against doing it?

If I want any information about Poland, I'd definitely want to hear what Dominic had to say. I wish I had his email address!

Helena
HelenaWojtczak   
31 Jan 2015
Genealogy / Poland Genealogy Resources [130]

Merged: Polish births/deaths/marriage records?

I'm curious to know when my two aunties died. They probably died in the 1990s. In the UK we can look this kind of thing up online. Is there an equivalent for Polish deaths?

If not, is it possible for me to email a registrar or something in their home towns (Radomsko and Lublin) and obtain this information?

Thanks

Helena