Friday, May 30, 2014

Easter 2014…a Weekend in Kraków

Easter weekend....we decided to take another short road trip.  It was our second for the year, but this time we stayed in Poland. 
We drove for 5+ hours to Kraków, a city we have visited a few times before....but always previously we traveled by train.
There were a few activities we had wanted to do in Kraków prior to us leaving Poland.  One was to place an engraved padlock on the "lock" bridge...
Another was to go up in the tethered balloon. I had ridden in the balloon last summer when my sister, niece and I visited Kraków....,and I thought it would be fun activity to do with Mark.
 Unfortunately, it was quite a windy weekend....and though we had seen the balloon aloft when we drove into Kraków, it was down by the time we walked over to it, and stayed down the rest of our stay because of strong winds. Too bad for us.
 Just a short walk from the tethered balloon was the pedestrian bridge that we were looking for....the Bernatek Bridge.
This bridge was completed almost 4 years ago as a pedestrian and cyclist bridge...spanning one section of the Vistula River. 

Since it has opened, it has become filled with padlocks, or "love locks", attached to the fence on the bridge.
The idea is two people who love each other, attach a lock engraved with their names to the bridge....and then throw away the keys, symbolizing that their love will last forever.

There were hundreds, perhaps thousands, of locks attached to the fence and other parts of the bridge.

And there were also areas where the "love" didn't last too long....as the fence had been cut so that locks could be removed.

Since we have seen bridges with similar locks in other European cities, we're not sure when or where this tradition started....

....and before leaving Europe we had wanted to leave our own lock on a bridge somewhere.
We had engraved our first names and our wedding date....this year we will have been married for 34 years!
Here Mark throws his key in the river.  There must be hundreds, or thousands of keys at the bottom of the Vistula River under the bridge!
Creating this little memory was fun....leaving a part of us in Poland

We ate dinner at a little outdoor restaurant on the Rynek....it was Easter weekend so an Easter Market had been set up.  Polish Easter palms were seen in abundance....
These are the tall decorated poles with dried flowers and ribbons around them.
Since Poland doesn't have palms, the people have improvised and built structures like the one above, and called them Easter palms.

There is always something interesting to see in Poland....
....above is a wagon full of long sticks, probably dried willows that can be used in building Easter palms.

Strolling through the market, Mark found some soft gingerbread cookies....
....the kind he likes, made with molasses.  Many gingerbread products in Poland aren't made with molasses, but that's the kind Mark likes....

and he liked these gingerbread bunnies so much that he returned to buy some for his co-workers.

I found a beautiful Polish ceramic vase....I hadn't intended on purchasing anything....
....but when I saw this simple and pretty vase, I knew I would enjoy having it in our home.

The Polish Easter palms were seen throughout the market area. These very decorative palms are an important part of the Polish Easter celebrations.
Even though this trip was my 6th and Mark's 5th trip to Kraków....we still found things to enjoy about this beautiful city. 

The main reason for coming to Kraków was so that Mark could go on a tour of Auschwitz. I had been to the Auschwitz memorial camps 4 times, once by myself and 3 times with visitors from the U.S.  
But Mark had conflicts on each of those previous visits, so this was his first visit.  We joined a tour and had a good learning experience.

I have learned that with each visit, there is something new to see or understand a little bit better.  On this visit, although it was nice to see spring arriving, with green grass and trees....
 ....we learned that  there was no grass in the camp during the time that people were incarcerated here....there were simply so many people walking on the grounds that grass could not grow. 

Below are some of the thousands of suitcases taken from the prisoners after they arrived.

Auschwitz is opened almost every day of the year, but not on Easter Sunday.  So there were many people visiting the camp this day before Easter....though the pictures don't show the crowds. 
The areas that were not so crowded gave us space to stand still and reflect on what we were learning.

These are the tracks that would bring the trains filled with people into the camps.
Though our friend Aleks had been to the camp before, she had wanted to come again....and we were more than happy to bring her with us.
Standing near the train car in Birkenau.

I'm glad Mark and I could come here together. 

Upon returning to Kraków, we went to one of our favorite restaurants ...
....Resto Illuminati.
We enjoyed treating our special friends....the Jensens, a senior missionary couple that used to live and serve in Warsaw. 
The other missionaries in Kraków were also invited to our Easter Eve dinner. 
Here are a few of them.
Mark enjoys walking almost each morning...and so early Easter morning, he walked over to the Rynek, and watched an Easter morning procession around one of the churches on the grounds.
On Easter Sunday a special church service is held in every Catholic church in Poland. At this mass, a procession of priests, altar boys and the congregation circle the church three times. 
The church bells peal and the organ is played for the first time since being silenced on Good Friday. 

We attended church at the Kraków Branch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.  After church the Jensens had invited us to their apartment for an Easter dinner. 
They also invited two wonderful young ladies from church....Aleks and Katia.
It was so kind of the Jensens to invite into their home on this Easter Sunday....we enjoyed the delicious food and wonderful company. 
Mark and I left Kraków in the morning on Easter Monday.  Our hope was to avoid the traffic returning to Warsaw by leaving early, and it worked....we arrived back in Warsaw in 4 hours!

Before arriving home, we stopped for gas along the way....
....and encountered a lot filled with large traditional Polish carvings.
There were no signs....
....only an area filled with these large figures, all at different stages of being carved.

Our Easter weekend in Kraków was both enlightening and refreshing.  We were glad we decided to make the quick trip....
....and to see the Polish countryside in the springtime was a bonus!

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Spring Days to be Remembered…2014

I have come to the conclusion that my most favorite season in Warsaw is "wiosna" (Spring)... the days of Spring have been so beautiful!
I especially want to remember this Spring….as it will most likely be our last in Poland.
This year we hardly had winter, and yet when the spring days started….they were still warm, colorful, and welcoming.
An old proverb says, "No matter how long the winter, spring is sure to follow".   The weekly changes have been enjoyable and renewing….and I want to forever capture this beautiful time of year in my mind.

 A brilliantly yellow bush on the property of the American Ambassador's home.  One day I said to Mark, "Why haven't we ever noticed this brilliant yellow bush before?" 
In a blink of an eye….it was green once again.
Across the street from the Ambassador's home were these hot pink trees.
I pass these trees practically every day....and was so surprised when I looked up and "wow" they were filled with color!

 White blossoms bloomed from the trees in the neighborhood….so beautiful!
 Though white, the blossoms reminded me of the beautiful cherry tree blossoms in Washington D.C. during the springtime.
Walking in and around our neighborhood was a daily treat!
 Since we did not have much snow this year, it was especially fun to see the trees bathed in white against so much green.

Large pink and white blossoms popped out on this tree….

....caught while looking out the window of the Family History Center.

Walking through another park on the way for a hair appointment, I saw rows of these beautiful spring trees!

I did not grow up in an area where springtime became so brilliant and beautiful….

....truly Warsaw has been treated with a beautiful spring this year! I feel so thankful that we were here to enjoy it.

Springtime activities….

Polish soup
My Polish teacher Ula taught me how to cook Zurek soup.  She was so kind to invite me to her home while she showed me the steps in making this very popular Polish soup.
It was a good tasting soup….maybe because I learned something new and enjoyed being taught by my wonderful friend and teacher.  
This traditional soup is common all year round, but also is a traditional dish to be eaten on Easter in Poland.

Gardening
 As the days started to get warmer I decided to do my own spring planting....pulling out used pots and creating a bit of springtime on my front porch!
I love my little container of "Forget-Me-Nots"….


Goodbyes
Springtime also means saying "goodbye" to special people I have come to know and enjoy.

My dear friend Malgosia became a grandmother for the second time. We attended her church branch's service one Sunday to see the baby's blessing. It was a sweet day.  
Malgosia will soon leave for the U.S. for three months to help another daughter with grandbaby #3!  I will miss Malgosia.

Elise was an intern at the U.S. Embassy in Warsaw. Mark and I met her one day early in January while eating at the Brooklyn Burger restaurant in Old Town. She had only been in Warsaw for 3 or 4 days, and just happened to sit next to us, and we started up a conversation.  During the course of the conversation, we found out that Elise is a member of our church and was planning to go to the same church congregation as us the next day.
  Elise was a delight to get to know. We treated her to dinner on her last night here in Warsaw. Elise will be missed…but returning to school in the U.S. will be good for her also.

Wendy has lived with her husband in Poland for almost two years. They have also been members of our church family here in Warsaw and she has been active in the same international women's group that I am a part of.   
A few friends gathered on a holiday weekend to say our "goodbyes" to Wendy….Stefany, Wendy, me, and Liz…. American church friends in Poland.
More of the friends that gathered for a goodbye lunch for Wendy.
She and her husband returned to the U.S. in May.

Out and about
Springtime also brought a 4-day weekend on the first weekend in May.  We enjoyed our long weekend together, whether there were blue skies and warm days…or cool, rainy days….. 

Bike riding in the spring….
 May 1st is Labor Day in Poland….and all stores were closed.  The weather was perfect on this first day of the 4-day weekend, and we decided to take advantage of it.…
....by going on an early 2-hour bike ride from our home up to Old Town....the same route we took together once before last summer.
 Once in Old Town, it was nice to ride on this street where only taxi cabs and busses are allowed to drive.

Approaching the Royal Castle, we immediately noticed a Polish flag atop the famous Sygmunt column monument….how did it ever get to be held in the hands of King Sigismund?
 I loved that we were able to be in Old Town on this beautiful spring day before the streets were filled with walkers and bike riders like us.

Coming home, we rode through our neighborhood Park Arkadia.
We love this park in any season…walking or riding a bike through it is absolutely lovely!

Speaking of riding a bike through the park, the pond above is the one that Mark rode his bike on when it was frozen during the winter....that was in a previous blog post.

Typical of Spring in Warsaw, the weather changed the next day and we were in hats, gloves, and scarves….no blue skies but we still enjoyed our spring walk.
 Cold but still brilliantly green....we treasure our daily walks in the park!

Just above the ponds but still in the park was another path that we had rarely walked….
....the trees provided a green canopy above us.
How lucky that we still have six more weeks of Spring!  We are hoping that we are still here to enjoy the entire season.