First time in Poznan, Poland
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- Опубліковано 16 жов 2022
- We arrived in Poznań Monday afternoon and spent the remaining time unpacking and settling in our Airbnb. When we planned the trip, a few of our friends suggested picking other cities in Poland instead of Poznań, but since the city was on its way to Warsaw, we decided to give it a shot. Every single one of us end up loving the city and what it has to offer, even though most of the downtown was under construction and archeological excavations, which are scheduled to be completed in 2024. The culmination of our trip was a visit to a local, Natalia welcomed us to her home and shared with us homemade Polish food.
It was a beautiful city. I was very disappointed that the entire old own square and most of the surrounding area was completely tore up for construction. I am not sure if it was possible but it would have been nice if they did it in sections at a time.
Its done 😀
@@muminium Good to hear!
After the works on the market square are completed, the city will look even better. We can't wait to see it!
Hi when will the work be completed on the square ?
@@jonathanholmes7922 The information shows that until the fall of 2023.
@@WM78 thank you so much. Maybe visit next year 😉
It's not just a regular constraction , it's more like a archeological site actually
Thank you for this detail!
Welkome in Poland.
Yah! Poznan is a cool city! once visited it
Pierogi are the best, sauerkraut with mushroom ones are also very good.
Lángos is pronounced originally in Hungarian like langosh.
A very nice vlog episode. I just miss some summary: did the travellers like Poznan,what things were interesting for them,and what disappointed them? Would they recommend visiting Poznan to other travellers?
Thank you for the feedback! :) I have updated the description with a short summary. In future videos, I will try not to forget to record a short summary of our stay. We recommend visiting Poznan, although I would suggest waiting until 2024 when the construction that can be seen in the video is scheduled to be completed.
@@imperfecttravels Thank you. Also, I noticed on your vlog that the streets in the centre of Poznan were being rebuilt. I have never been to Poznan, but looking at your vlog I liked Krakow and Wroclaw better.
@@marcinkania3183 Construction is expected to go much slower then originally planned ,because under the ground was discover something of historical value ,so it go slow and nobody knows what else can be find there
@@monicaanowa7307 This is a very good thing. It is better to carry out construction work for longer than to destroy historical artefacts.
@@marcinkania3183 I was just in Poznan a week ago, it is tore up in the center but the town as a whole is absolutely terrific. It was my second time there and I hope to return soon!
Where do you come from?
USA, Ukraine, India. We all live in California at this moment
pyrolandia:)
"Pierogi ruskie" dumplings (with potatoes/cheese/onions) are not Russian (or Ukrainian). They are Ruthenian.
Ruthenia is western Ukraine
No, pierogi ruskie in fact, they are Polish, and their current name is due to historical turmoil and border changes. Formerly very popular among Poles living in the territories of Ruthenia (the Ruthenian province of the Crown of the Polish Kingdom, then in the Republic of Poland). In Ukraine, these dumplings are sometimes called "Polish" dumplings.
@@erj3397 "Ruskie pierogi" does not mean "Russian pierogi". The word "Ruskie" in this case is an adjective made from the word "Ruś" / “the Red Ruthenia region” - which is a historical name for a land located basically where modern-day Ukraine is and a part of Poland => a historically land in north-western Ukraine and south-eastern Poland - this whole land was once part of Poland.
So "Ruś" is not synonymous with Russia - which back then was and still is a different place.
"Ruskie pierogi" does not mean "Russian pierogi". The word "Ruskie" in this case is an adjective made from the word "Ruś" / “the Red Ruthenia region” - which is a historical name for a land located basically where modern-day Ukraine is and a part of Poland => a historically land in north-western Ukraine and south-eastern Poland - this whole land was once part of Poland.
So "Ruś" is not synonymous with Russia - which back then was and still is a different place.
@@Rene_Moor3095 co ty nie powiesz. Jeszcze masz jakieś oczywiste oczywistości do zakomunikowania?
First time in Poland. tell me, do you feel safe here? Nobody hurt you? He didn't even insult you?