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Posts by InWroclaw  

Joined: 10 Mar 2012 / Male ♂
Last Post: 28 May 2015
Threads: 89
Posts: 1,910
From: Wroclaw
Speaks Polish?: No

Displayed posts: 1999 / page 64 of 67
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InWroclaw   
22 May 2012
Food / Where to buy British mature Cheddar Cheese and salted butter in Poland? [289]

from the Alma in Bielany Wrocławskie, several times. You gotta ask the chick in the paper hat to cut it for you.

The one near Jula/Elektro World? They had the mature stuff? Only had the mild last time, and it was a massive wrapped block, approx 50zl a kilo anyway unless my memory is playing tricks.

At one branch of an upmarket deli supermarket, my Polish friend asked on my behalf and as they replied to say no, they looked at us with incredulity, like we'd asked for crack cocaine or a JCB digger.
InWroclaw   
21 May 2012
Food / Where to buy British mature Cheddar Cheese and salted butter in Poland? [289]

Mod has made this thread live again, many thanks.

Anyone please let me know: am looking for mature cheddar (pref vegetarian with non animal rennet) at no more than 40zl a kilo. There is some ordinary and not very good cheddar at supermarkets here in Wrocław, but not mature cheddar which has a strong and tart flavour, and is crumbly, usually.

I know expensive 200g packs are for sale in some shops, but the price hike is 40% compared to last month, as they switched brands. As a regular cheese muncher, I'd like to keep the price down.

I like gouda too, don't get me wrong, I know Polish gouda is great, but I also want my ration of mature cheddar.

Any tip offs rather than rip offs, welcome... Thanks.
InWroclaw   
21 May 2012
UK, Ireland / Sooo many Polski Sklep in the UK, LOL [64]

Unfortuantely some Polish food still contains more additives that British food, particularly flavour enhancer E621 monosodium glutamate. That can account for things tasting "better". I think that several household brand names of sauce and stock for Polish households contains it - in that respect Poland is behind the UK where E621 is far less incorporated into foods these days.

youtube.com/watch?v=txiVDY-prk4
InWroclaw   
21 May 2012
News / Poland's Economy Is Booming! The EU's Success Story? [711]

then the GBP can be devalued to stimulte growth should it be needed

The GBP has already been devalued over several years. Any more devaluing causes rampant inflation, pension values plummet further etc. Too many Brits do not understand this.
InWroclaw   
20 May 2012
News / Poland's Economy Is Booming! The EU's Success Story? [711]

It's weird how investors have spent this month pulling out of Poland faster than they are getting out of the eurozone. Poland could be in some deep do-do.

By this, do you mean the weakening of the zloty against the pound etc?
I ask because where I am, things are buzzing and busy. At least superficially it looks that way. I could be wrong. The electrical shops are usually fairly empty, if that means anything,
InWroclaw   
20 May 2012
Real Estate / Renting in Poland - tenants' rights? [51]

in practice there's often no way of legally evicting them.

I see, but I guess they send "The Boys" in if they want to get someone out.

All I'm looking for is a decent normal landlord who appreciates a good tenant with references. Made some enquiries at the cheaper end including the Daft site's ads - but everything is let (rented out already) so am having no luck. Seems pretty buoyant for realistic price landlords now.

Thanks Jon, all the ads I replied to mentioned the cztnsz as additional, although perhaps they would collect that and the rent together.

I'm still searching - they do definitely exist in my price range - but go quickly.
InWroclaw   
20 May 2012
Travel / Wroclaw Euro 2012 - how much zloty I should be taking with me? [16]

Already it's about 20% less than a few months ago!

It's back to where it was briefly in January, but the pound is much weaker against the zloty than it was a few years ago. You could get over 6zl to the £1. And before that 7zl.
InWroclaw   
19 May 2012
Travel / Wroclaw Euro 2012 - how much zloty I should be taking with me? [16]

Best to change your money at any number of local bureaux de change which are called "Kantor" - for example at the moment you will get 5.26zl per £1. The city centre has a few, but they are also inside many supermarkets. You can even try to negotiate more if changing over £100 at a time. I used to. For example, in the past some would give you 5.28 or 5.30 or even more on £100+ changed, instead of 5.26. Ask around, negotiate, politely but persistently.
InWroclaw   
19 May 2012
Real Estate / Poland's flat rental agents and the anger they brew in me.... [60]

In my experience Gumtree is now more agents than direct. It used to be mostly direct. You can filter out agents of course but you lose more than 50% of the open flats doing so.

It's all changing then :o(

You could also try daft.

Thanks, I didn't know Daft had bought a Polish portal - will check it out.
InWroclaw   
19 May 2012
Real Estate / Renting in Poland - tenants' rights? [51]

InWroclaw, Polish law for rental contracts is very ambiguous

Not got any problems, yet, just want to know where I stand. Thank you for that useful tip on the advice evenings!

@InKrakow, many thanks. Seems much is similar to English & Welsh law except that landlords generally need to give 2 months notice in E&W if a rolling contract, known as a statutory periodic tenancy. Also, seems Polish law requires an "evict to" address, which surprisingly E&W law does not. There's an example of Polish law being far more civilised, unless I am misunderstanding it.

Only thing I don't understand is how my landlord pays me for the monthly admin - by crediting it to my rent?

I've no intention of being a bad tenant and have very much A1 references from my UK letting agents going back 8 years, but I just wanted to know what's what so that I can determine whether any new Poland landlord I encounter is legitimate or a chancer.

InKrakow, Warszawski - again many thanks.
InWroclaw   
19 May 2012
Real Estate / Renting in Poland - tenants' rights? [51]

Have done a search of the archive. The below is a summary of what I found, perhaps it needs to be verified as I don't know how accurate it is and contracts may vary.

The questions I have are about renting a property in Poland:-

1. Does a landlord have a right of entry to a paying tenant's accommodation?

2. Can a tenant change the lock for security reasons?

3. Who is financially responsible for repairs to fixtures and fittings that fail, for example a window that does not close, failing oven or failing WC?

4. If a tenant fails to pay the rent, at what point can a landlord enter and gain possession?

5. What documents does a landlord generally require from a Briton or other EU resident pre-contract and/or post-contract?

6. What notice does a landlord need to give under normal circumstances, to a paying tenant?

7. What if a paying tenant cannot leave on the agreed last day of a tenancy for whatever reason?

8. Who does a tenant pay the monthly service charge/admin charge to?

The info I found in the archive:

Contracts should contain a notice period clause, termed as "okres wypowiedzl".

Most rental contracts are 6 months fixed then the tenant needs to give one month's notice. Presumably this is the day before a rent due date plus one month.

Landlords can usually give just 1 month's notice to a tenant if the tenant misbehaves in some way, eg damage or illegal activity.

(above subject to verification and may be inaccurate or vary from contract to contracts)

Anybody who can answer some or all of the questions above, or add some knowledge, or correct the above etc etc - please respond.
InWroclaw   
19 May 2012
Real Estate / Poland's apartment prices continue to fall [1844]

Just came across this post from the middle of last year - someone was asking about buying. I think it's true to say prices have dropped but unfortunately not by enough yet, not in my opinion. So either the wages have to rise or prices fall or if Poles abroad are supporting prices then those Poles' purchases or market support need to be lowered.

I have a friend who bought few apartments in 2007 in Wroclaw, and now he is desperately trying to sell them now in 2009 but: even if he cutted the prices already by 40% loss, and still NOBODY is buying. He says that all statistics in newspapers are LIES, because the market will go down another minus 50% before somebody actually starts buying apartments in Poland

https://polishforums.com/real-estate/thinking-buying-offplan-luxury-property-wroclaw-20037/
InWroclaw   
17 May 2012
Real Estate / Poland's apartment prices continue to fall [1844]

Sky Tower Wroclaw and still be on the market in 2015.

There's a McDonald's being opened at the foot of the Sky Tower - or so it seems from the signage. And a fast food chicken shop. Class! Not.

Spoke to a female architect on the plane when I was travelling here - she told me the Sky Tower is awful and doesn't fit its surroundings. While that criticism might be a bit harsh, I can't say it's terribly attractive. It depends, aesthetically, very heavily on the rest of Wrocław modernising its architecture. Something that would, in some cases, be a shame and loss of heritage.

As for the property prices here - I see drops but not enough to tempt me when all things are considered. Will continue to rent.

Much like I said earlier. Any major city like London, Paris, NYC, Vancouver etc etc have areas that no matter how bad the economy is the prices will still remain high.

Nope.

I lived on the borders of Hampstead [posh London area, zip code was NW3] in the 1990s.

Let me assure you, in that crash the better streets' properties also dropped, some by 25%. Downmarket a little, and the prices were south by neary a third.
InWroclaw   
15 May 2012
Life / What's wrong with you, Polish people - is it an inferiority complex? [123]

@Pawian

country with bad economic situation

News says Poland's growth forecast at 2.7% (in English)

seems that they make an effort to be inefficient and unproductive

Yet in the UK, Polish workers are known for hard work and industriousness, you can ask almost any employer there.

When I travel around Polish cities like this one, the impression I get is of busy bees rushing around. I don't really get that vibe in the UK except perhaps lunchtimes in the City of London areas.
InWroclaw   
15 May 2012
Real Estate / Poland's apartment prices continue to fall [1844]

Just had a quick look on Oferty - hmm it seems a lot of these new estate flats are being offered as rentals - so perhaps the buyers are landlords not ordinary workers? I am just guessing, small sample of research online today, I could be totally wrong.

We have a flats land-grab problem in the UK - people worried about their pensions and currency devaluing became landlords and bought flats that they could let to tenants - this priced many first time buyers out. Of course in the UK the yield is better in many towns than generally here in Poland. (By yield I mean return on the money "invested" in the flat by way of receiving rental income.) Not 100% sure but am seeing rents looking a bit more competitive here in Wrocław than last year. Still quite a few expensive ones, however.
InWroclaw   
14 May 2012
Real Estate / Poland's apartment prices continue to fall [1844]

what always amazes me is the obsession with inner city property

Witam WB
The properties I referred to above are on the outskirts - near Partynice, beyond Krzyki, Klecina etc. Come in to town and near Arkady and around there, quite a few brown field sites and they are building on those now, probably even more pricey. But you are of course correct, you can get a whole detached house with integral garage some miles out of Wroc for 299 tyk according to a poster I saw last week.
InWroclaw   
14 May 2012
Real Estate / Poland's apartment prices continue to fall [1844]

@Milky
Thank you for that interesting post. I am beginning to think of no other reason than what you suggested. If the Polish banks are not giving mortgages out easily, then yours must be the correct conclusion.
InWroclaw   
13 May 2012
Real Estate / Poland's apartment prices continue to fall [1844]

Is the influx of people into cities (eg Wrocław) so large that so many flats have been built and seem to be occupied?

I've been touring quite new estates around this city over the past few days. Locals will not be surprised when I report that I see block after block that seem to be fairly new, already occupied. Street after street after street, or estate after estate after estate, all of which must have been green fields just a couple of years ago. Three-storey blocks, two-storey blocks, hundreds of homes here, hundreds there, within short distances. Drive across a main road, you come to another massive estate of what looks like homes that are less than a couple of years old.

Almost all appear to be occupied, either a tenant or owner.

It seems amazing that so many, and I do mean SO many flats have all found buyers or tenants. You just lose count, it just seems a sea of flats.

Where has the money come from to buy? High multiple mortgages? Family? Overseas money (Poles abroad buying)? Everyone in fabulous well paid jobs in Wroclaw - so many new jobs and good salaries that make affordable the flats at about GBP60K or 300K PLN a time for a 2-room?

So many people moving from rural Poland to cities that these flats have been filled?

I can get a 1 bed flat (ie 2 room flat) in many parts of Essex or Kent (UK) for not much more than that price, where the salaries are double or quadruple. It just does not make sense.

Sure there's big computer firms here in Wroclaw, LG, etc etc - but still...? They're not paying Essex salaries to most people.

Having had a chat with the new build buyers in Wroclaw, most seem to have negotiated 5% off, some 10%, a few got more than that off the price. That is still a lot of money for a flat considering the wages.

Frankly am amazed - amazed at the prices - amazed that so many new flats (thousands and thousands) all found occupants here or even landlords considering the quite low yield.
InWroclaw   
9 May 2012
Life / You've been in Poland a while if .... [49]

Wow, was my Grandad Polish then? I did not know that :) Maybe Bonny Prince Charliski had it away with a great great great great gran of mine during the '45 :)

Prince Charles was thinking of buying somewhere in Poland, if I recall.

Roads wouldn't look complete without Reklami

You've been in Poland a while if - you drop Polish words into your English sentences repeatedly

.

when you ask a store worker "do you speak English?" they will say 9 times out of 10 "of course" with a smile.

Not sure that statistic holds true for here, even some of the younger ones here don't speak it. I would say more like a 50:50 chance on my shopping trips.
InWroclaw   
8 May 2012
Real Estate / Thinking of buying an offplan Luxury Property Wroclaw [79]

Since 2004, that should be impossible.

I'm pretty sure they were newer than 2004 but I could be wrong. Much appreciate the info on the building regs - it sounds as if you build with pride in the job, probably a lot of smaller developers do of course. But I have heard of big builders who just get the one flat tested and that's it - the others don't get sound checked and wouldn't pass if they did as mortar or debris have made a "sound bridge" between walls and etc. How some other builders skip the test I don't know - but that is what I have been led to believe and that is why the coughing and other sounds are all too audible in those developments, because nobody really checked every flat with meters etc, just the one.

But taking your advice, I will look more closely at the year of build and other factors you detailed if/when I buy in the UK - thanks again for the tips. Will also of course be buying here in Polska although probably going to keep renting for the time being.