Wednesday, March 10, 2010

A Day in Old Town

We had a wonderful morning in Old Town walking around on the cobblestone streets and gazing at the incredible buildings. Oh, if walls could talk I am sure they would tell us some fabulous stories! I can only imagine what the area must be like in the spring and summer because there are many hanging planter boxes just waiting to be filled and vendors waiting to come out and sell their merchandise. Hopefully, soon!








After a full day of being a tourist, we found this excellent restaurant called Lee's Spaghetti House. Aggie just LOVED it!

5 comments:

Lee and Martha said...

Hello Everyone! I just wanted to tell you thank you for the wonderful comments. They are great! Lee and I do not have internet access and every other day I walk over to the land lords house and ask their little girl (who speaks English) to use the internet. I allow my self 30 minutes which is hardly enough time to even connect with my family!! All is well, I just wanted you to know that your comments brighten and encourage me when I read them. We are far away from home, but feel connected through your cheers! Thank you!

Anonymous said...

Your posts and pictures brighten my day to!!! I just can not wait to fully understand all the excitement you are going through right now. I'm so happy that you have a nice land lord and a little girl to communicate with.

Flo said...

Hi, you don't know me but I stumbled across your blog a few months ago and have been checking it often and following in your journey to parenthood. Your kids are adorable and I'm very happy for you both. I hope to adopt from Poland someday and it's very inspiring to see your posts, they brighten my day too! Thank you and enjoy your time with your children in Poland. I was not adopted but I emigrated to America at a young age from Argentina and I encourage you to use Polish language teachers with your children so they preserve their native language and so you can learn as well. It will be an asset to them in the future and more importantly, an important link to their culture, which hopefully they can pass on to their own kids. It will take a lot of commitment from you to follow through, and they will prefer to speak English (and will do so perfectly), but it would be amazing if they preserved their first language as well. Trust me, they will thank you for it someday.

kelly said...

Wonderful pictures, they bring back so many memories :-) It's great to see all of the smiles!

Tom and Kara said...

You look like pretty good parents already, with your kids all bundled up! I hate seeing cold babies and toddlers :) Thank you for any and all posts and sharing your journey, your happiness is mine!! Keep enjoying your time there, though I know you will!!