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Posts by bossie  

Joined: 11 Jun 2006 / Female ♀
Last Post: 18 Jul 2007
Threads: Total: 1 / Live: 0 / Archived: 1
Posts: Total: 123 / Live: 19 / Archived: 104
From: Poland
Interests: traveling, languages

Displayed posts: 19
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bossie   
11 Jun 2006
Life / How Safe Are the Polish Cities? [179]

I don't see why you are fighting over statistics. It has little to do with street safety.

The quoted article must be old - it's been 17 years of democracy now, mafia has been handled (at least the 'civilian' divisions, I don't know about industrial/political influence). The police has increased in numbers, a new generation of officers has been recruited. If there are no wardens walking or driving around, they are likely to come quicly once alarmed by phone. There are some general rules to follow though.

My opinion? Stick to the west half of the country, preferably cities. Stick to the city centres where there are some foreigners, excluding railway stations, where homeless go. Stay away from outskirts and concrete jungle as well as places known for hostility towards foreigners (e.g. notorious Nowa Huta or Lodz). Say hello to your neighbours so that you're seen as one of them, not the 'stranger'.

About wrong times and wrong places? Avoid anyone who may have been drinking (in all humans alcohol increases agression, nevermind the nationality). Careful at weekend nights and stay away from football fans (no hair, scarves, singing loud) and army recruits (no hair, triangular painted 'coats', singing loud). Avoid those who spend their time hanging around doorways, parks ect. Move around quickly and proud, sneaking through places only makes you look like a potential victim. If in doubt, run towards people - with witnesses you are less likely to get mugged.

About thefts? Just be reasonable - don't show off with your mobile, don't carry too much cash or documents with you, watch pockets in lose clothing (e.g. jacket) and back trouser pockets. I have lived in Poland for years and haven't been mugged or robbed once.

Play it safe.
bossie   
19 Jun 2006
Genealogy / Polish Gypsy Roots & Roma ancestors in their families [206]

You can find many Gypsies claiming to be Polish or having Polish citizenship. But you are not likely to find a single Polish who calls himself a Gypsy. In general these two genres live separately with single exceptions (I only know of one or two villages somwhere far where Poles and Gypsies actually mix). Polish fing Gypsies inferior (thieves, beggars, women enslaving), and the latter don't do much to ever change it.

Answering your question in brief - hardly any or none.
bossie   
29 Jun 2006
Food / Polish polskie pierogi recipe (prepared at home) [72]

I haven't ever cooked bigos, but if I may have a piece of advice, include all the kinds of meat you can think of, from sausage and bacon to beef. Small pieces, but make all the difference. Apart from that you need loads of sour cabbage and cumin. That's all I know.

Family story? One of my grandmothers includes bigos in the Christmas Eve meal. Every year the same story then... :)
bossie   
9 Jul 2006
Language / Polish Swear Words [1242]

My mother's parents were Polish/Slovak and she said they often said a polish swear word that sounds like "fee-gu" - sh*t. Is this a real swear word or no?

Ahh, you mean "figa"

No, not a swear word, just something that means you didn't succeed doing something. It means "fig", the fruit.

Menadia chooch

No idea about the start, but 'chooch' seems to be "czuc". So whatever the first thing is, the phrase means "I/you can smell ...", "smells like ...".

heard a few choice words spo often that they must be swear words! Can anypne tell me what "yezza sova" means? How about "Mosco Bosco"?

It seems to me that it comes together : Matko Boska Jezusowa - Jesus' Mother of God

"cohamptshire" or "cohampton"

1. Kocham cie - I love you
2. Kocham to - I love it - whatever you were doing :)
bossie   
2 Aug 2006
Language / Polish Swear Words [1242]

Hmm, gues I'll finally start learning Dutch! :)
bossie   
3 Aug 2006
Polonia / Polonia in Uruguay [30]

Optsie, why are you interested in Polonia in Uruguay, is it about the notorious Radio Maryja's sponsor who lives there? You're in the States after all, so I don't suppose you want to move down there...
bossie   
4 Aug 2006
Polonia / Polonia in Uruguay [30]

You're not chatting but making serious life choices here...

I lived in Peru, was rather cheap. I'm afraid I don't know much about Uruguay anyway. In Peru you can apply for some kind of residence even if you don't get married to a local.

I have just moved four months ago so you'd have to wait a while. And no promises, lo siento.
bossie   
11 Aug 2006
Food / Pierogi recipe and filling from my grandmother [179]

I know "farmers cheese" as "cottage cheese", if that's any help. It's similar to mozarella but probably most Poles will disagree it's the same. Mozarella is more dense, has a less intensive flavour and a different consistence. But I suppose for pierogi is should do as just one of many ingredients and not the one that gives the flavour.
bossie   
11 Aug 2006
Polonia / Polonia in Uruguay [30]

For one thing, I got married and pregnant in Peru. Two things, actually...

I enjoyed some things there, delicious food, low prices, hot summer. But there are other things you don't normally read about in the guides - terrible poverty, culture of pessimism, high crime rate, dirt, lack of safety on public transport (one of the things that shocked me most was the common presence of window glass fitted into mini buses instead of safe car glass). The list is endless...
bossie   
12 Aug 2006
Polonia / Polonia in Uruguay [30]

Now, that was brief! So much for serious life choices, er? :)
bossie   
14 Aug 2006
Life / Poles are not racist [873]

I too have been a target of verbal abuse from some black people. Apart from racist remarks, there were just rude ones too, usually spelt out by teenage girls, with typical loud pronunciation.

I agree, ignore stupidity and go on.
bossie   
22 Sep 2006
Travel / Just back from Krakow [120]

All peoples get drunk sometimes. Some do it in a calm way, some are noisy ans cause trouble, and that goes for all nations. The next day the quiet ones are ashamed for the rest.

And about smiles in Krakow - you must know that it's a kind of a decadent city, famous for its attitude, different from e.g. Warsaw.
bossie   
6 Jan 2007
History / Norman Davies - the Brit who loves Poland and becomes one of Us [250]

He wrote more than Microcosm, the history of Wroclaw. He also wrote History of Poland in three parts (God's Playground), Europe at War (the contents is obvoius, WWII), , Europe: A History, The Isles: A History, Rising'44. Oxford graduate. Friend of opposition leaders in Poland and Czechoslovakia in the communist era.

My husband is a great fan. There are few historians who are objective and don't write 'for the glory of the nation'. He's one.
bossie   
17 Feb 2007
Life / Poland's Environment, recycling [79]

Where my parents live there are four bins outdoors, one for paper, one for plastic (always full), one for glass and a big one for general rubbish. The council did what it could (cans get pcked up by local scrap collectors anyway) and the rest is up to people. You can recycle, or you can throw everything into the general rubbish container.

But, as you say, it takes time for people to get used to things. When I still lived with my paents, I had to fight for them to start sparating cans and plastics (newspapers and magaznes were stord separately anyway). Now they're pretty happy with it, every time they go out they take a small bag f rubbish, e.g. plastics, and don't have to worry about the general rubbish so much.

And a word about England. When I lived there, we had problems with the guys who used to pick up rubbish, they appeared to dislike the papers most. Everytime we left magazines and flattened cornflake boxes they left them in the green "ëco" box, then they got wet with rain, started smelling bad, and in the end we were forced to pack them away along with regular rubbish. Not very efficient, is it?

An automted system for glass is a grat idea. In Poland only some supermarkets accept beer bottles, local shops do it only with a rceipt and still unwillingly (after all if you don't return the bottles it's as if they sold them to you).

Milk and cream bottles are a distant memory from my childhood...
bossie   
17 Feb 2007
Law / Tax in Poland? [57]

Be careful with employers deducting your taxes monthly. What happens is that the normally deduce 19% of income tax and all the rest but if your salary is high you may be obliged to pay more than 19%, up to 40% (!). It once happened to my mom, she had to pay extra tax at the end of the year. Nasty surprise.
bossie   
18 Jul 2007
Work / Any TEFL teachers in Poland out there? [28]

I guess many people have the old notes, price tags on books, bus tickets ect. After the Italian currency (the lira) it was probably worth least...