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The Old Royal City of L’viv

Zbyszek wanted me to see Lviv because he says it’s like traveling back in time to Krakow as he first encountered it (as an adult) fifteen years ago. Lviv is similar to Krakow in size and layout, but just a little more crumbly, a little more shabbily elegant, a little more chaotic and, dare I say, a lot more charming.

L’viv, or Lviv, or Lwów, or Lvov, or properly, Львів

We arrived on a gorgeous day, which turned out to be our only gorgeous day in Lviv. I’m thankful the weather was so sunny and pleasant because I think first impressions can really affect a traveler’s overall estimation of a new place. Lviv has infrastructure for getting around the city, but you kind of have to be a local or think like a local to find your way. Luckily Zbyszek remembered the somewhat convoluted walk from the airport to the bus stop from a previous trip. We asked an English-speaking Ukrainian woman if the bus ran on any sort of schedule. She laughed, “Not in Lviv!” So, we waited patiently in the sun and eventually a bus did come to bring us into the city.

This was not the bus. This is a little tourist train in the main square.
How we walked around much of the rainy trip. A good look.

The thing that really captures your heart about Lviv is the feeling of “handmade.” There are innumerable small shops and restaurants that are perfectly decorated, each one unique and selling scrumptious food or adorable crafts.

Struedels – yum
We happened to walk by a tiny shop window and saw a woman embroidering, so we bought not one, but two of these beautiful shirts!
At the candy shop with Zbyszek’s cousin Magdalena (Magda) who joined us for a few days
A view from the top of the “Gas Lamp” restaurant, a whopping four-story restaurant complete with a spiral staircase so narrow you have to wait for the green light to tell you it’s clear to go up or down.
Lviv Chocolate – my primary reason for wanting to go back. This heavenly place also has four mouth-watering levels of cafes, chocolate displays, cozy nooks, and shops.
Favorite old-world cafe experience at “Shtuka”
At the more modern, impeccable “Granny’s Cafe”
Not even Lviv can resist some commercialism. “Jabko” = Apple

We also wandered our way through several markets, one of which was an unofficial “market” that consisted of dozens of men and women lining the sidewalk of a main thoroughfare with their produce spread out on the ground in front of them. There was the man with three bottles of milk and a hunk of homemade cheese, the woman with a dozen eggs, another with a couple baskets of raspberries, and – my favorite – the precious old ladies selling bunches of flowers. Zbyszek bought me a beautiful purple and white bouquet which adorned our AirBnB for the weekend. 🙂

Haggling. Not really – food is, comparative to US and even Poland prices, incredibly cheap.
From the market through the woods and back to the city
Enjoying our spoils from the street market
Trying on jeans in his “dressing room” at the market 🙂
My flowers and the view from our window

My impression of Ukrainians, just from this trip, is that they love to dance, they have an extremely polite culture, and they are attuned to beauty. Not only is the architecture glorious, but there are signs of thoughtful creativity all around, even in unexpected places.

Polish Roman Catholic Cathedral
The main square
Russian cemetery at the outskirts of the city
Polish military cemetery
Natural architecture
Lviv Polytechnic
Train station where we saw cousin Magda off
I love happening upon weddings. See the intricate bread and cloth on the right?
Perfect, moody roses at the local coffee shop
The Armenian Cathedral has lots of what writers call “atmosphere.”

We got to go to a concert at the Philharmonic…

…and to the opera!

It was lovely, and we got the last two seats. Box seats!

I would be remiss if I did not mention the exciting trip to the Ice Age Museum to see the real woolly mammoth skeleton!

This 300,000 – 500,000 year old woolly was preserved so well in a mine that you can see his fur in the display behind! Before they realized what exactly they had dug up, the discoverers used some of the hide/fur for shoes and clothes, thinking it was from cattle. They later gave the pieces back. Oops.

And one more gem from Zbyszek’s camera. When I looked through his hundred or so pictures from Lviv they were mostly of me, food, and vehicles. A simple man.

Cool, old-school truck

Overall, a marvelous trip to Ukraine. Дякую, Lviv!

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