The morning came and with it the anticipated view of my surroundings. All around me beautiful

green rolling hills dotted with little glades of forest. It gave me such a good feeling to know these very hills were the ones that my grandmother and grandfather saw when they lived here.
Arriving for breakfast at 8:00, Maria treated us to one of many a delicious feast - hot tea, cheeses, meats, and bread (very traditional)! It is their way that when you serve guests, that the family eats in the kitchen while the guests eat in the dining room. With such voracious appetites and good food, as well as we longed to be with this family, we gobbled down our food. However, it wasn't long before we realized that there was never a chance we'd starve at Maria and Stanik's. By the time we left they almost had to roll us out the door. Kasia and Basia were at school and Gosia was "sick" so she did not go back to school that late in the afternoon.

After breakfast we suited up in warm clothes and went outside to

check out their wonderful little farm… They had several outbuildings which housed their tools to cultivate the garden which grew many plants - fruits, vegetables and landscaping plants which Stanik takes to market. I drooled over a vintage wagon which contained hay for their livestock - 3 goats and 3 horses which were tethered out in the fields beyond their home. Nick showed me the sleigh in which he had a wild ride in several winters back when he was visiting.
We walked up past their yard to the fields first to milk the goats - not an easy task I soon realized. In Nick's 6 years of living in Poland, Maria and Stanik have been like another family to him and he visits them at least once a year. So his skills at goat-milking were much more honed. Since I could get no milk when trying my hand, I thought to help out by getting the goat to relax more by give it a shoulder massage : )
After the milking, we headed a distance of a few fields to another pasture where Stanik had staked out their three polish bred Konik horses - one mare, her foal and the father, newly gelded. This is traditional polish breed is characterized by is dun color, small size and dorsal stripe and is considered semi-wild and descends of the Tarpans. The pasture where they graze is not fenced. Stanik tethers only the mare while the foal and gelding run free. But they stay by the mare; the foal for nursing and the male because he is the alpha to protect them. Scoobie, one of the dogs, loves to tease the horses.
Stanik (via Nick and Maria's translation) asks if I would like to ride the horses later. I am shy and hesistant. At one time in my younger days I was a fearless and capable horse woman. But experiencing the mortality of a broken foot and knees gone bad a couple years back, I've come be more cautious. Declining this generous invitation was very hard, but not necessary as I later found more courage and another chance due to Stanik's polish persistance : )
We were walking by the back yard area and I asked how they kept the grass so short… Maria said that sometimes they bring the animals down to graze on it, but then Stanik grabs a scythe which was laying up against the side of the barn and starts a rhythmic swinging across the blades of grass. He made it look so easy… Nick and Paul tried and could not get it to cut as easy. There was also an old outhouse there which was used when they were first building their home.
We admired the home that Stanik and Maria had built, the yard they had cultivated with it’s gardens, animals and pond with fish. After getting back to the house, Maria said that that morning they wanted to take us to her sister’s sister-in-law’s husband’s home. They were in the process of building a new home from logs in the traditional Polish log home fashion, with

insulation between the logs known as “
Wełnionka”. Having a log structure anywhere in Poland is rare… they are either very old, or the person who having it built is well-to-do. The woodshavings are twisted and bound together, inserted between the log beams as insulation. It ends up looking like beautiful beads of trim between row of logs. This labor-intensive touch of artistry was just a portion of the lovely architecture of this home. But Maria and Stanik’s home was just as beautiful to me if not more because of the caring wonderful souls that live there. Their's is a life of good simple living, not the stress and hussle we experience in the States. I want this.

When we got back we had more tea (our choice of lacing or not), and Nick offered to take us exploring in the woods beyond the fields behind their home.
But before we headed out, we say goodbye to Gosia who has been convolescencing through

out the morning and was needing to go back to her boarding school later that afternoon. I was disappointed to see her go, knowing this is the last I will see of her (until I return to Poland someday or they come to visit us ; ). She mentioned that her and Kasia are going on tour to Canada with their traditional highland group later in the year. I had hoped it would be the Vancouver area, but find out it is Toronto : (
Later that morning we went up for a walk beyond the fields into the forest with just Nick while Kristofer continued to sleep off his jet lag. Part of the way up the h

ill we saw the a shrine to Mary. The hills of southern Poland are expansive rolling hills dotted with forests. It gives me a peaceful feeling just looking at them, but being in the forest itself felt magical.
We sa

w many different types of mushrooms while we walked around, wishing we knew which ones to pick that weren’t so magic.
It started to give us a misty rain, but we didn't care : ) 
After a couple hours of highland hiking, we returned back to the house pleasingly worked and with a voracious polish appetite. We were treated to yet another feast (lunch) - Kotlet schabowy: traditional breaded pork cutlet, mashed potatoes and home made canned cherry juice - double yum. Maria is an excellent cook!
By now Kasia and Basia had returned from school and Kristofer was awake. We rallied Basia for a game of cards... Maria joined us as well and we played gin rummy and looked at picture books of their family when the girls were little ones. Kasia joined us later (after she finished her homework) and her and Kris jammed on their guitars.
Later that evening we set out for the town of Rabka on the edge of town (which is pretty small town anyway) to a local restaurant “Siwy Dym” (pronounced “shivy jim”). Basia was sad that she couldn’t go with us. Nick had to run back into the house for something he forgot and she was sitting by the window with her head in her hands crying. When Nick consoled her saying that he would promise a surprise for her tomorrow, she immediately looked up with dryer eyes then he’d expected and with a look of jubilation on her face.
It was a large rather rustic hall constructed artfully from logs. The women servers were dressed in traditional highland dresses. The owner of the log cabin we visited earlier in the day was there with his band (he on violin, another on stand-up bass and another on accordion). They were a traditional polish band singing the old time favorites. They were very good and enjoyable to listen to while we drank our warm beer and enjoyed cold cuts of meats, cheeses and breads. Warm beer (or it could be perceived as hot) is a traditional drink in Poland. And since it was entering the colder months, it was a welcome new experience.

Maria had spoken with the violin player, the owner of the log cabin, to see if he would have Kristofer come up for a few songs. He said yes, so after their first set, Kris did a few songs. It was a week night, so there weren’t very many people in the restaurant… Maria was so proud of Kristofer and was quite miffed when some of the people just kept talking when Kristofer was singing : )
We made one sad mistake that night… somethings do get lost in the translation or lack of it and we didn’t know that Stanik and Maria had taken us out as “their treat”; Paul grabbed the check before they could when it came, and it seemed as if Maria was even more disappointed then. I felt very bad and so did Paul but Nick helped us patch it over and they paid for the next round of appetizers and drinks after Maria had driven home early to be with the kids.
That night Paul and me had a wonderful sleep in Gosia’s room. Maria had fresh new sheets on the bed. It was such a privilege and joy to stay at their home. Around the room hanging from the sides of book shelves, etc. were sketchings that Gosia had done. The personality of an artist is so evident in the talent of their work. They were strong and full of a gentle emotion. I think she is a talented musician as well : )