Saturday, June 27, 2009

Russian Life - Mule’n Food

June 27, 2009




Early this morning while brushing my teeth, I hear from the kitchen “Potrick, Potrick we have no food!!! What can we eat?”

“Yes dear, I’ll be right there to see what we might have for breakfast.” Another day, another crisis, I’m sure there has to be something we can have.” Opening the refrigerator with ease and scavenging around I saw no milk (so the kasha option is out), no yogurt, no cottage cheese, no bread, no fruit, no pirogue, a little remaining Italian sausage. “Yeah there isn’t much here Irina.” Then I spied the eggs, we won’t starve or have to eat sausage, ginger root, beets, buckwheats, carrots, cucumbers, or hotdogs and ketchup this morning!!! “Irina how about a cheese omelet?” I yelled.

“That would be ok”

So I opened the refrigerator with ease and started gathering the makings for the omelet.

I digress but you might wonder why “I opened the refrigerator with ease”. Well 2 years ago when we returned to Russia we were told about “the accident”. Somehow the handle that opens the refrigerator got knocked off the door. I knew when be bought this “top-of-the-line German production single compressor refrigerator” that the weak link was the handle design. And my fears were realized; all that remained of the handle was an inch broken plastic detruding from the door. One could still open the door by pulling on this plastic stub. But if the door was shut just before you again attempted to open it the sealing system that sucks the door closed required some real leveraging to get the door back open. For two years we called and searched everywhere trying to get the problem fixed. However it seemed the service people for this refrigerator had all left Russia and returned to Germany. But then before returning to Russia this time Vicky, who also got tired of trying to open the door when she was over visiting Mamula, found the parts supplier and ordered the handle. A quick three months later we received the parts and I got it installed, not bad for Russia. Of course they cheated us and said we had to buy both handles, the one for the frig which was broken and the one for the freezer which was OK. So I guess we just have a back handle in readiness for the next accident. But now it truly is a small pleasure to open the refrigerator door with one finger and peruse around for something to eat.

Back to the breakfast crisis; hidden back on the top shelf I found tortillas, we had a little cheese and some hot peppers so it was going to be a “South Texas Breakfast Burrito” morning. For just scrounging around for anything to eat it was delicious. We enjoyed a rare treat and discussed what we were going to do about solving our real food crisis.

(Irina’s comment: all Pat writes is so much exaggerated, it is all just for fun and interesting reading but not the exact reality of life of course)

“Potrick, Mamula got this letter about a food package for veterans. Maybe we will go see what it is and get it.”

Sounded like some kind of Russian meals-on-wheels without the wheels, but what the heck, it’s free lets check it out. “OK, lets go see what they have. By the way, what is this for some kind of monthly giveaway they just started?” I asked.

“No, they are just doing it to celebrate the start of the Great Patriotic War. Probably some politician’s trick.”

“That’s weird,” I thought. Generally they celebrate the end of the war and victory, not the starting of wars. “Irina lets see there was the 1st war with Germany, the war with the Japanese, probably 10 wars with the Turkish, the Napoleonic war, Peter the Great’s war with Sweden, somekind of little war with the Finns. If we get food packages for the start of every war we could get a package every month or more, that could really cut down our food expenses!!!” Unfortunately Irina didn’t think that the politicians would go that far. Oh well lets get what we can and we got ready to go.

I was waiting at the door with my shoes on ready to go (since slippers are the only acceptable foot wear worn in the apartment the last thing before leaving is to dawn one’s shoes at the door), “Irina, are we going or what?” I yelled.

“Potrick, I can’t find Mamula’s passport! I’ve looked everywhere. Maybe it was stolen!”

A couple of nanny’s ago we had one that stole Mamula’s “workbook”, that is we think she stole because it has been missing ever since. A person’s “workbook” is one step above or one step below one’s passport, depending upon what you need at the time. The workbook is an old Soviet record of every place and length of time you worked. In Soviet days and up until it was recently replaced with computer records it was very, very important because your pension was calculated from its entries. Its loss was not so terrible since Mamula wasn’t going to add any more work time in the book and her pension was already on the pay records. But whoever took it might also be able to somehow claim benefits under Mamula’s pension. Her passport was much more important to us now since any time you have to interface with the bureaucracy the passport must be presented.

Mentally rounding up the usual list of suspects, Irina first text messages Vicky who is vacationing again in Greece. Luckily she was close to her phone and quickly replied that she didn’t have it. Next suspect: “Ahhhh, Sasha, (our last nanny) I’ll call her” Irina said. I didn’t understand the conversation but noticed that Irina headed for the drawers where we keep important stuff, opened the door and then quickly pulled out the missing passport from the same place she carefully searched 6 minutes prior. Another mystery solved, another crisis avoided, ready to go, I’ll go put my shoes back on.

We kinda knew where the pickup location was so we decided to walk, not far maybe a mile or two. And for about the first time in a month the sun was trying to come out. The weather was looking nice so a little walking without jackets and mud would be pleasant. We walked past the flower sellers, stopped, looked, noted prices and continued. People were all out in their summer outfits, a fresh smell in the air of all things blooming - Ahhhh…..it was a great day in Russia!

OK, where is this place? We arrived at the expected location. Only one other lost guy in the waiting room trying to find out some kind of information from the hundreds of type written pages pasted to the walls everywhere. Looks bad. Checked the office doors, all locked. We knew where we wanted to go; we knew this was the local government office; but we didn’t know if this was right government office since there was no number on the building. Our other lost Russian was not looking for the War Fever Food Distribution, no help there.

So back to the street. Irina heads for the traditional Russian reservoir of local knowledge, the old babushkas. They were out there just sitting on a bench next to the lovely small flower garden surrounded by the dilapidating government building, the new restaurant/gambling casino’s flashing neon signs and the 4 lane highway/tramline. Such babuskas life is to watch everyone and know everything about the their little local neighborhood. If something was happening they would know. Meanwhile I sought an answer that didn’t require using my pitiful communication skills; just walked over to the next building looking for an address number. We both enjoy simultaneous success! It’s the next building over.

Approaching the building I knew were on the right track. Old veteran looking people were trundling out the door with a big full plastic bag in each hand. We entered what looked like some kind of large typical Soviet style revolutionary rally and/or lonely-hearts dance hall. A large, sterile room with gray walls, gray floors, dirty grey-whitish ceiling, dirty windows allowing only a gray-brownish light in. The only color came from two 10 foot high piles of War Fever Food Distribution bags (one bright orange the other black), the 40 dark, dark violet, blue couches. The big room was otherwise empty except for two gray-blackish tables from which the young girls in their high heels and colorful Italian like mini skirts ran the operation.

And so begins the normal “dealing with Russian bureaucratic agencies” ritual. Looking around, Irina asks loudly “sto poslledniy” (who is last in line) and falls in behind the person raising their hand. In the mean time I relaxed on one of couches sitting along the walls; or tried to relax. These were the most uncomfortable couches I had ever sat on; they were more like high-backed, padded punishment pews from a 1650 Puritan church. Designed to ensure that the comrades stayed awake and would jump out of their seat with pleasure to clap and yell their approval of any commissar’s political blather. Or, when converted to the dance hall any boy would prefer dancing with the ugliest girl in the town rather than sit on these horrid couches for long. Luckily I didn’t have to sit for long. The line was short, the documents all in order and quickly reviewed, the Halloween like War Fever Food Distribution gift bags handed out and we were on our way.

“What is in these bags? They must weigh 25 pounds apiece.” I thought.

“I don’t know. Lets look.” Irina excitedly replied as she undid the knot and started pulling stuff out. “Russian macaroni! Oh in Soviet times Mamula loved this with butter and sugar. Oh here is a bag of sugar! Is this a bag of flour, looks like it is so old the printing has faded? What do you have Potrick?”

“Our favorite, two bottles of sunflower oil. We can do lots of healthy, fried stuff now. A bunch of cans in here: peas and somekind of fish. All looks good to me Dear! But it’s kinda heavy, I hope the bags don’t break.” And so Potrick “the mule” who carries the heavy load and Irina start for home.

“But wait! Irina lets make a quick run to the store to get those things I need to finish up the wiring project.” We were only a 10-minute walk from our favorite Russian type “Home Depot” store and had been wanting to get there for the last couple of weeks.

Just a quick detour, in and out. But as we exit the store I noticed Russian summer arrived. “Whoa the sun has finally come out. Irina, I think I will be too hot. I will take off my winter shirt and put it into the food bag.” Standing in the smoking area outside the Russian Home Depot I start shedding some of the excess clothes I had put on when we left our cool apartment. This food hauling his heavy work I feel like a mule!

Actually it is normal for Russian workers to change clothes. Workers arrive at our apartment in their nice street clothes, dig into their tool bags to pull out these really stinky, dirty things, and change into them while they are working. After a hard day sweating on the job they switch back and head home. Of course when standing next to a worker heading home on the metro you don’t know if its’ him, or her, that stinks or the clothes in the bag they are carrying. Makes no difference the impact is the same. So I am sure no one was offended by my changing clothes outside the store.

Approaching the street to catch the trolley home we sadly see our #55 pulling out. “Oh no, it will be another 20 minutes before the next number 55 arrives! My arms are already starting to feel like they are about 5 inches longer. We must take the trolley or my knuckles will be dragging on the ground by the time we walk all the way back home.”

We wait a few minutes and only the ubiquitous #100 trolley, which is not exactly good for us, approaches. “Lets take this one Potrick. We can get off at Engelsa and Ecenina and then catch a bus. That will be quicker than waiting, beside I am getting hungry for lunch, it’s already 2:00.”

“OK, I agree.” So we board the trolley with our 40 pounds of War Fever Food Distribution food and the 8-foot thin, bendy, plastic sticks things for the project. Thank goodness there weren’t many people on it. Well weren’t many people when we started; but we stopped and took on a big load of riders. Of course the old lady conductor comes running up to collect their money and stumbles over my bright orange bag which stuck only slightly out into the aisle. Immediately I am loudly chastised and probably threatened with expulsion from the trolley. I was not in a happy mood and just snarled back “Yeah, yeah, ladna”. I am sure she had no-idea what I said, what language it was, or whether I was just some idiot not to be messed with; she just moved on and took her money.

It’s a quick trip to our stop and as we exit the trolley Irina notices that the big #13 Electric bus, which is the one we wanted, was just leaving. “Irina, now we need to wait or try a mini-bus”. Rumbling up the avenue came a small, rusting, smoking, dented, dirty mini-bus. I could see it was pretty full, but Irina waves it down anyways, pulls on the broken handle, opens the sliding door, disregarding the normal smell of fresh body odor, she looks in and decides there is enough room to squeeze in 2 more people with all their stuff. She was right, but didn’t consider the comfort factor. “Oh well, it’s a short ride. Just don’t poke out anyone’s eye with those sticks you are holding”. I told her

She starts pushing and squeezing between people heading for the back seat that looked open. Once there she discovers the seat is broken, no seat for her and her building equipment. Fortunately I ended up in the last seat by the entrance door and could set my two 40 pound bags of food on the floor of the mini-bus. “Got money honey?” I asked so we could pay the guy to haul us about a quarter of a mile.

“I can’t get at it with all this stuff, here take my purse” Irina said from her half crouched, half standing position standing in the tiny aisle of the crowed mini bus holding on to the greasy seat back for dear life. I hate paying these guys because I have to put on my glasses to figure out what money to give them. I start fumbling around looking for 52 Roubles. The 50 is easy it difficult finding the little 1 Ruble coins. Irina tells me to hurry we are all most there. “Yes dear, I am looking!” Simultaneously I give the driver his money and Irina yells at him to stop so we can get off. We all lurch forward as he hits the breaks. We exit alive, survived another mini-bus ride.

“Well the # 55 trolley would have been more comfortable, but we are almost home” I said. Another block or so and our first mission of the day is accomplished.

Once in the apartment we rip open the War Fever Food Distribution bags, grab the can of peas, open them up. Accompanying our caned peas the cook will today be serving warm leftover buckwheats, which fortunately were 2nd choice for breakfast or the lunch peas would be unaccompanied. “Presto” lunch is served.

Enjoying our relaxed lunch and flexing my sore arms Irina reminds me “we still have no food, we must go to the store!” Yes shes’ right we can’t live long on War Fever Food Distribution food.

“We need so many things, we must go to Okey, they have everything. But Potrick you must help me, it’s so hard to carry those heavy bags.”

“Yes, dear I’ll go but you know I hate that store” I dutifully replied.

Okey does have a much better selection of food than our local stores and it is cheaper, so much for the good news. But it is too far to walk and once inside its’ like the LA Freeway at rush hour. Thousands, at least it seems like thousands, of Russians pushing their shopping carts the same way they drive their cars, fast, rudely, forcing their way into places too small to go, and with lots of crashes. Long lines, people stacked up four or five deep at every vegetable bin fighting over the best beets, workers pushing crates loaded with food ready to run down any unsuspecting shopper in their way, self-help food charge labels machines which never seem to work, and tooooo many choices, we always overbuy there.

Regardless whether the food charge labels machines work or not, don’t even think of trying to check out without weighing your produce and sticking a charge label on the plastic bag. That is the best way to be loudly and publicly humiliated by the a checkout clerk while she takes your unlabeled bag of the most carefully selected, best tomatoes in the bin and slams them on her counter behind her cash register. You’ll never see them again. “Next item please, and hurry, there are others in line waiting to check out.”

Shortly after our recent arrival in Russia we stopped here to pickup a few items. Irina, still suffering from jet lag had not made the transition from shopping in the HEB and shopping in Russia. She forgot to weigh and label her veggies. Eyes drooping, half awake she placed her plastic bag of tomatoes on the counter. “What is this” the checkout babuska screamed “No price label, stupid”.

Irina apologized and told her how she just returned from America and how it is done there America. She was tired and just forgot. The checkout babuska thought she was making up this impossible fantasy; she just couldn’t grasp such a foreign concept where she would have to weigh the veggies at the checkout. How could something like that work? And reminded Irina that she was now back in Russia, as if Irina couldn’t tell the difference.

It was back on the trolley heading for Okey. Looked at my watch, 4:12. “This is going to fun, just in time for the after-work rush hour. At least we have a list and might get out of there without doddeling.”

As we walked in I could see it was just another normal day at the Okey supermarket: a feeding frenzy of somekind going on over by the fruit bins, don’t head that way. First try at getting the weight and charge label machine to work fails of course, didn’t seem to recognize the sale price and charges me double. What to do a long line is waiting behind me; “I’ll try again later” and move on. Pushing my cart back out into the traffic zone I’m too slow, before checking the right lane my cart gets bashed in the side by some speeding shopper. Major traffic jams on the soups aisle detour required. Another sideswipe of my cart by shopper talking on cell phone while driving shopping cart, fortunately no eggs in our cart. Irina gets lost, have to call her on the cell to find a rendezvous point. Find Irina at the yogurt section reading the labels trying to decide which of the 15-20 different types available meet our country-of-origin, fat content, acceptable ingredient content, expiration date, and price requirements.

“Irina, the fish looks good, lets get some. After all it is even healthy!” Looking over the big pile of supposedly Norwegian trout laying on a wooden table in ice they seemed to be fresh. But then I have never bought whole fish before too messy to deal with. I seemed to remember that clear eyes, red gills and no stink were some items to check. These seemed to pass the test.

“Potrick you stand here, I will get in line and when it is my turn I will tell the lady to go to the table and you will show her which fish we want. Understand?”

“Of course dear, but why can’t you walk back and point out your favorite fish?” Too much trouble I guess, so I stood there waiting as I watched Irina move closer to the babuska taking orders.

Standing there dodging the crates of food coming out of the storage area another lady moved over to the adjacent salmon fillet section. I noticed out of the side of my eye that it looked like she was bending down getting her nose right up to the fish. When she noticed I was watching her she jumped back up and I smiling asked “eta horasho?” (are they good?). Wondering who is this old guy with such a strange accent, she replied “da ya tak duma” (yes, I think so). I didn’t have the heart or the vocabulary to tell her that we have reliable reports from good sources that the fillets are always made from the old fish which weren’t bought before their eyes glazed over, their gills dried out and their bodies became stiff as a log. Vicky told us to never buy a fish without a head. Easy for her to say, she knows how to easily clean fish, I don’t.

“Opps its’ Irina turn to order, quick find a good looking trout!” I’m franticly checking as best I can without touching the fish and then smelling fishy all the way home when I hear Irina shouting something. I look up and notice that the service babushka has walked over to some container behind the counter, pulled out some who knows how old of a fish, slips into to 3 plastic bags (to prevent the smell from getting out I presume) and slaps it down on the counter. I guess its’ not up to me to pick a good one.

When I get back to Irina she was upset, but what to do. The service babushka wouldn’t even let her look at the fish. Just said if you don’t like it give it back. Well from what I could tell peering through 3 plastic bags it’s eyes seemed OK, we’ll just keep it.

“OK I think we have spent enough time in Okey, dear. And the bags are going to be heavy. That’s almost everything on our list that we need from here. Lets go, I’m getting tired.” And we head for the check out counter. “Wonder-of-wonders, we find a clerk with no line!! She must just have come on duty, quick.” I am thinking things are going OK. Then a green pepper shows up in a plastic bag with no charge label. A little chastisement from the checker, guess she just started and wasn’t up to speed yet. “Opps how many packeets (Russian plastic bags for carrying your food) do we need, better be only two since I have only two arms to carry them in”. And we throw two bags in with the food since one must buy their grocery bags, unless you remember to bring your old ones from home, which we didn’t of course. I load the bags, and Irina fumbles with the money to pay, providing the exact small change always speeds things along and is about the only thing that might make the checkout girl smile.

So Potrick the mule is loaded down again with pounds and pounds of food headed for the public transportation back to the apartment. One more gauntlet to run: the street venders around the mini-bus loading zone. It’s hard for Irina to walk past without looking, touching and maybe buying something from them. “Potrick, maybe we need some strawberries? These look so good!“

“Irina, is it strawberry season, we don’t want to buy stuff that has been stored in the gas warehouses for 6 months, they look awfully red and large, maybe too much fertilizer or growth hormones.”

“NO, the strawberry season is beginning, these might be OK. And these guys say they have Azerbaijani tomatoes. Lets buy!” How could she resist such Southern, as in Azerbaijani, charm?

“OK, dear. Pile some more into my bags”.

Irina orders a half-kilo (that’s only another pound, nothing for a food mule) and the lady starts digging into her strawberries piled behind the table not the fresh, beautiful, sweet smelling ones on her display table. “Stop!!” Irina exclaims, “let me see the bag. I don’t want these” as she starts picking out the rotten ones slipped in and starts filling her bag with the beautiful strawberries from the display table. The lady frowns at this, but weighs, calculates the price and Irina pays.

As we leave Irina just shrugs her shoulders and tells me “Southerners will always cheat you a little, it’s their nature”. Her father grew up in Baku, he knew their character, he taught his daughter well.

Getting off the minibus at our stop we head for the next food supply facility, the barnyard. Not really a barnyard any more, used to kinda be when I first came. But now its’ just a few of the remaining proprietors working out of a small store; even less than a store, for some it’s only a door with a service window in front of what would be called a “walk-in closet” in most places and small display of the veggies in the windows beside the door. Another Southerner operation of course.

Here we buy the heavy stuff like potatoes, carrots, onions, red beets all by the kilo. My first visit was a major blunder. I stupidly bought only 3 onions, just enough for our evening needs. Upon returning I was severely chastised for not buying at least a kilo or two. “We always need onions” rang in my ears ever since.

Irina purchases another 4 or 5 kilos of veggies, piles them onto mule Potrick, we take a couple of steps and then turns to me with a curious expression on her face. “We were cheated!” She exclaimed! “There is no way that those potatoes and all cost 150 Rubles.”

“Quick! Lets go back and straighten it out.” I said

“No, it won’t do now. I had to tell him before we left the window. Just another Southerner, they always cheat you. But I don’t mind so much that is their national character, my father told me so. They are a kind of ‘cheerful cheaters’. I go to our stores for everything left on the list.” And Irina headed towards Oasis and possibly on to Petarichka (the 5 Store), our smaller, local grocery stores.

In the mean time I am lugging the heavy stuff to the apartment door. Only a 100 or so meters to go, I think can make it. But the 2 flights of stairs could be a problem. I make it and the unloading begins. About the time I finish putting stuff away, Irina arrives with the last of the groceries. Potrick is not the only one that Mule’n food; it is an equal opportunity, family entertainment activity.

7:30 pm as I relax my tired body with a cool refreshment, I thought. “Sometimes it would be nice to have a car, no more mule’n food, might not spend all day going to grocery stores, huummm.” Snapping back to reality “Nope, not here. Mule’n food is good exercise and what would I do with that extra time?”

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Russian Life - Good Advice

From the Archives - Circa Spring 2006


On Monday I was reminded of some sage old advise that I believe my friend Lynn's father gave to him and Lynn passed on to me some time ago: "the less you pay for your alcohol, the more you pay in the morning".

Sunday was Easter II, Russian Easter is always 2 weeks after Western Easter. So we were doing the normal things that people here do: hardboiled a lot of eggs and colored them; made a traditional egg & cottage cheese dish; got some cakes that had eggs in them; and then ate eggs all during Easter day. Of course we had a few other things like ham & beans, fish salads; lots to eat. And of course we had a little wine to drink.

Wine is becoming something of an international problem. Russia of course doesn't produce any wine now that the southern part of the old USSR has gone its own way. So all the wine is imported from somewhere, we think. French, Spanish, Italian, Chilean, South African, Australian, Moldavian, Georgian labels are what you see on the shelves. But wait! Recently on the internet Vicky finds information alluding to the fact that lots of the wine is not really wine at all, just powder mixed with water and alcohol. And there is no shortage of empty wine bottles to put such a vile mixture in.

Bottle recycling is big around here, big that is for alcoholics. There are hundreds of dingy, back-ally type recycling operations where you will always see a line of old pensioners and alcoholics who are there to trade a bag full of beer and wine bottles they collect during their brief period of sobriety for a few rubles. Then of course they buy more alcohol and the recycle process starts anew.

Mostly one sees beer bottles being recycled. That’s the easy trade since on any given morning looking out the kitchen window during breakfast one can always spy people walking with a couple of cold ones in there hand. I’ve always wondered “are they heading home from the night shift and getting ready to settle into a few TV soap operas, or heading to work for the day shift and getting ready for dealing with the boss lady?”

So, again, I wondered could these recycled wine bottles be used for Russian bathtub wine? Sounded reasonable, after all this is Russia. We started scrutinizing the wine bottles loooking for anything suspicious.

Inspector Irina quickly noticed that the back labels were missing from some wine bottles. Strange, this is where the winery promotes their product. But wait, there is some kind of Russian label on the back telling “who knows what”. OK, Irina surmises “if the bottle has an original back label it is less likely to counterfeit, we will buy. No label or Russian label – no buy”. Then when we closely looked at the front labels we realized that some of them looked very "amateurish", probably printed on someone's ink jet printer in the back office, and again only a Russian generic label on the back. It is becoming more and more difficult to find wine bottles meeting our strict label criteria.

Then it happened; official confirmation of foul play in the wine biz came a few weeks later. Last year I developed a real liking for the Georgian and Moldavian semi-sweet wines. Suddenly they were nowhere to be found. The mystery was soon solved. The info babes on the 6:00 news, by the way Russian info babes are definitely the most beautiful in the world, are showing swat teams in full combat gear rampaging through unsuspecting grocery stores rounding up all the “Southern wine production”. Horrified owners tried to find an explanation and shoppers just moved to another aisle where it was a little less crowded.

The info babes looking very serious continued talking so fast it was hard for Irina to catch what was going on. The jest of the story turns out to be, that following an "official inspection" it was discovered that wines from these evil “Southern Countries” didn't meet Russia's Adult Beverage Bureau’s high quality standards. The unofficial speculation is that there is some problem going on between the Putin government and Georgia and Moldavia. Kinda like cutting off the gas to the Ukraine last January, the coldest winter in the last 30 years, because of a pricing dispute.

Anyways the wine from those countries all but disappeared, except from some of the small “hole-in-the-wall” purveyors who themselves were “Southerners and had a “leetle” stock left. Their wine was the best we had found but the supply was drying up quickly. It was getting serious because Georgia and Moldavia had been major exporters to Russia. The whining continued for a while and then the Georgian President on TV (that’s Georiga the country’s TV, not Russian TV, we watched on the internet) tells the Russians. "Yes, some of the wine exported to Russian may have been lower quality, but what does it matter? Russians would drink red water with s..t in it if they thought it was alcoholic". I have cleaned up the quote to make this suitable for family reading. Following that tactful diplomatic statement I don't bother looking for Georgian wine in Russia anymore.

So needless to say on our Easter II table was a supposedly Estate bottled, 2004, Chilean merlot. It carried only a generic Russian back label, as nothing else was on the shelves in our local store. I enjoyed my first glass. “Not bad for red water with alcohol and sundry other contents,” I thought.

Soon thereafter Vicky and Igor arrived and what should they have with them but "Kagor" - church wine. They got it from the church where the priest personally blessed the bottle as you handed him the Rubles. It was Easter II so I thought Kagor to be more appropriate than suspect Russkie-Chilean merlot. Only problem Kagor came in a plastic 1 liter bottle, an unsealed twist top and absolutely no labels front or back.

Considering all the recent flap over wine quality and high production standards I should have been more cautious. But I remembered that last year Igor had brought similarly packaged wine from Moldavia and it had been very good. No one else really liked the sweet “Kagor” wine; they were all drinking my Beefeater & tonics, vodka, or Cizano all of which had proper labels on the bottles. So I remember having about 4 glasses during the evening of this unidentified elixir, which really tasted very good, not like "s..t" at all.

After the grand celebration we all got the remaining eggs and once again did the final Easter egg tradition. We cracked the eggs against the other’s eggs and said “Christ has risen” and the other person replies, “He has risen indeed”. Being out of eggs, out of adult beverages, out of food the afternoon winded down. Vicky, Igor and their friends headed off for bowling, leaving Tolick with us; babysitting - our normal duty.

While tidying up and waiting for them to retrieve little Tolick I started having a lot of heart burn. Not being able to spell "relief" with Rolaids I settled for the Russian substitute - 4 black coal pills. Irina had previously revealed to me the magic like quality of coal pills some months earlier. They are actually black coal which when chewed up turn your mouth and tongue a really ugly black; kinda like eating a charcoal bricket. Just make real sure you rinse your mouth after use and before going out in public. But they can virtually absorb or neutralize all kinds of bad things in your stomach. Irina said that the KGB's legendary drinking prowess over their CIA cohorts was built on these little pills. Took the pills, they helped, the parents returned, and we all headed to bed. It had been a good celebration.

Next morning we were up early, 9:00 or so, I took Chico on his morning walk and returned for a breakfast of yogurt, musli, fruits, cheese, black bread covered with homemade baby strawberry jam and black coffee. Finished, took care of the normal morning chores and then that nasty heart burn returned. Took more black coal. Irina headed to Vicky's to help with the baby. Fortunately I stayed home because stomach cramps soon set in. I laid down bed for a bit until I decided it was time for a SIB (Self-Induced-Barf).

Felt a little better but it was not to last. Had this terrible taste of rotten eggs and about 15 minutes later, right in the middle of phoning Irina, I rushed to the toilet for another round. Well this went on for the next couple of hours and I was thinking "what a really weird hangover - but why this terrible rotten egg taste".

Irina returns from babysitting duty and says "what is this terrible smell? Rotten eggs!" Then she gets to the room where I was lying and discovers the source. "Disgusting smell!!"

I told her "I think I am having some kind of reaction to all those Easter Eggs we ate yesterday". My system has always been a little sensitive to eggs.

She exits the room thinking "Yeah - Hangover".

While laying in the fetal position trying to figure out what is going on I’m thinking "rotten eggs & sulfur - a bad mixture. Wait remember? Wine always has in tiny, little print on the back label ‘Caution contains sulfites’. What are sulfites? like hydrogen sulfide. Did we make them in high school chemistry class, or was that sulfates or sulfurics or let's see is that 2 hydrogen atoms and one sulfur atom, or - oho time to head for the toilet

I never knew what sulfites were or what they do. Of course the wine I was drinking didn't have any labels at all, who knows how many sulfites it might have had or what was in it. Anyways, maybe the two combinations of sulfur from the eggs and wine's sulfites are creating one of the many sulfur acids I last experimented with in high school chemistry. Sure smelled that way.

Irina returns and as in all situations like this has the answer "lets go to the hospital". First, I didn't think I could make it. Can't walk that far today and if we caught a little bus packed with people there would sure be a lot of mad Russians if I turned it into a stinking "vomit comet". Second, I wasn't to the point where I wanted to go into a Russian hospital and have them do anything that might require me to be put under - like maybe pump my stomach. I would have settled for some Pepto Bismo, but Russia doesn't have any.

Desperately I though how to respond and then I remembered "Isn't that medicine we got when Chico (our dog) was poisoned still around?” It was, and she brewed me up a batch. "Ummm, not too disgusting. Tastes like undercooked rice in water." Twenty minutes later, time for another toilet run.

By the end of the day my system was virtually empty, except for Chico's poison mix which I kept taking. But then I felt like I was running a little fever. So out came the old-faithful, Industrial strength Soviet, under-the-arm thermometer. "Yupp, 37.8 - IRINA. What is normal again?"

Irina calls Vicky relating my condition and their immediate diagnosis - "FEVER, HE HAS BIRD FLUE!!!" It was everywhere on TV at the time, another wonderful import from China.

I tell them "No way - bird flue is a respiratory problem, not stomach". But I started thinking maybe it could have mutated into some kind of stomach virus. Oh yeah by the way, we have almost quit eating chicken because of all the chemicals they feed them to ward off the bird flue. And there is a real concern about eggs being contaminated also. And by-the-way meat, of course, is out because of Mad Cow. Oh and don't dare eat anything from the Ukraine or Belarus because of the leftovers from the Chernobyl disaster can still be found.

Anyways it was getting late and I was in bed. Irina was forced to sleep on the sofa because she couldn't stand the smell.

The next morning had to get up early because the remodeler boys were coming over to replace the linoleum in the kitchen. So we all got up, including me. Actually I didn't feel too bad, just a very sore stomach and weak from all the vomiting. Made it through the day and finished reading my book so it wasn't a total loss. Still had a sore stomach but by the evening it is almost normal, what ever that is in Russia.

At the end of the day, I agree with Lynn's father's advise. Actually always have, just stray a bit from time to time. But if this was all the result of a hangover I am never, never going to drink any wine again; well at least not from an unlabled plastic bottle when overdosing on hard boiled eggs. However, will never know about the wine because nurse Irina poured all the remaining Kogar down the drain. I was disappointed, I thought I might take to the Russian Poison Center and have it evaluated. But I will just be satisfied with feeling better and surviving another day in old Russia.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Russian Business – The Great Toilet Paper Holder Saga

May 11, 2009

“Potrick, Potrick!! I am tired of this old toilet paper holder. It’s soooo old. We need new.” Were the sounds coming from the toilet room about 10 days ago.

“YES dear, you are right as always; probably.” And so began the great toilet paper holder saga.

Irina had a point, the home-made Soviet Standard toilet paper holder was old, was kinda ugly, and had an aged yellowed look detracted from the toilet room’s recently installed royal reddish wall paper. Definitely a decorator conflict!

More importantly it had one design characteristic that I also particularly didn’t like; you could call it a environmental design flaw. It was an “L” shaped kinda thing with the short part of the “L” mounted to the wall. The other open-ended part stuck out towards the door so you could just slide the roll on and there the paper sat ready for use. However, the way it worked in real life after you finished with the paperwork and headed out of the little room, your leg generally knocked the paper roll of the holder and paper ended up rolling down the corridor. This was especially a pain when the cat was around, a small problem quickly could turn into a major mess as the cat found a new toy; but with the recent demise of the cat that nuisance is no longer an issue. Other than this small design flaw it was perfectly serviceable, it fit into the toilet easily without taking up too much room and it had no working parts that were likely to fail. These are always important points to consider when contemplating a new project in Russia. But Irina was insistent and the search for a new paper holder commenced.

A few days later, while heading to a mega home stuff store we came upon a small hardware/building stuff store. “Irichka, lets go see what kind of toilet paper rollers they may have.” Up the stairs we went to this dingy, cluttered “Mom & Pop” store that had little bits of everything scattered all over. Actually, like many Russian stores, there generally are a number of vendors operating under the same roof, each selling their own specialty items. So if you asked a sales person where to look for something and that something wasn’t what they sold the answer is always “I don’t know”. After sifting through tons of stuff we didn’t need, we found what we did need – two different paper holders. Plus they were the standard American style with a spring-loaded dowel to hold the paper roll! “Heey these don’t look too bad, what do’ya think Irichka?”

Irina wasn’t too excited, I could tell. They were obviously Russian Production and I didn’t particularly want to carry it for the next 3-4 hours. “Ummm, their OoK, but we will keep looking.” Our outing continued and took us to a number of our favorite home supply stores; Doma Homa (my translation of “Domovoy” the actual name) was the first large mega store. Irina looked at lighting fixtures and I looked at toilet roll holders.

I didn’t know how to explain “toilet paper holder” in Russian so I just wandered around the plumbing supply area. Finally, way back in the corner I found their bathroom fixtures. There seemed to be like 10 choices of everything except toilet paper holders. The options were model A or model B, both categorically rejected for their faulty design. These had the same flaw as the one we wanted to replace, plus they were expensive. European, of course. Looking further I finally spied what I was looking for. Then the price hit me like a hammer. “Yikes!! 2,200 Rubles for a standard chrome plated toilet paper holder!!! That’s over $60!! Must be Italian, specially priced just for Russians. Not something an American pensioner would be interested in.”

I returned found Irina still staring at the ceiling looking at all the hanging lamps. “Do you have a crick in your neck from looking at all the lamps, dear?”

“No, there is nothing here Potrick. AND I CANT BELIEVE. All of the lamps only use these tiny little energy saving bulbs. They won’t give us any light!

“Irina, what are you saying here is one with standard size bulbs.”

“Potrick, look! That is Russian production! Ugly!! I want European and they only use the tiny bulbs now, which probably won’t make much light. Terrible, what to do??” It appeared as if our shopping day was getting off to a bad start.

“OK, maybe it is just here at Doma Homa. Lets go to the other store by the Grand Canyon.” The Grand Canyon, in St Petersburg is not a canyon, it is a high-end shopping mall with a “Home Depot like” store attached. Again it was the double whammy, no acceptable toilet paper holders, no ceiling lamps, at least not the type we were looking for. “Irina, we may just have to lower our standards if we are going to get anything at all.” And so we decided, Irina bought a lamp with the tiny bulbs and I bought the toilet paper holder from mom and pop. We got home and the first thing was, of course, hang the new ceiling light for Irina. Always beauty over utility for a woman.

Hanging a light fixture would be a snap I had lots of prior electrical experience. Back before my Kirby Salesman days, my summer job title had been “Non-Union Electrician’s Helper”. In those days, even before the global warming crisis, summers in Austin, Texas were hot and working in a “Non-Union” outfit most of our jobs were residential electrical remodeling. One of the primary duties in the job description of a “Non-Union Electrician’s Helper” was “fishing wire”. I liked fishing, so the job didn’t sound too bad and besides it would be cool down by the lake. Driving up to our first job, looked around, saw no lake, no river. Not wanting to sound too stupid I kept my mouth shut and thought “Well maybe we just won’t be doing any fishing today”.

After we unloaded the truck, got set up, and lined out the work to do my “Non-Union Master Electrician” splained fishing to me. “Here bowa, take this drill, this fishing whar, git up thar into the attic, crawl over to this here wall, dreill you a hole tween these here walls. AND BOWA DON’T screw up and drill into the room!!! Thein you drop your fishing whar down to me were I’ll be a waitin, I tie on yor whar and you pull er up. Thein carry the end of the whar to this here wall and dreill you a nother hole tween these here walls. AND BOWA DON’T screw up and drill into the room!!! Jest drop that whar down to me and thein you come on down. Oh yhea, don’t fergit to staple down the whars up thar fore you come on down.”

“Uh, This is not exactly the fishing trip I had expected.” I thought while climbing up into the attic. As my head poked into the attic space I could see lots of fiberglass insulation and a ceiling so low I would be forced to climb on my hands and knees. Oh yes the temperature was probably 120 or 130 degrees. Got all my gear up and started the crawl to our wall. He didn’t mention anything about falling through the ceiling into the room, but I bet that would not be appreciated any more than drilling into the room. Found the wall, drilled the hole and dropped my fishing line down to my “Non-Union Master Electrician”. He was down there waiting in air-conditioned comfort, flirting with the lady of the house who was still in her morning robe, and takes his time tying the wire onto my fishing line.

Finally yells “Take her up bowa” and gets back to his flirting.

I drag the wire to the next wall, drill the hole and drop it down. Again interrupting my “Non-Union Master Electrician’s” flirting with work I yell, “the wires should be down there, I am heading back down!!” Grabbing all my gear, carefully trying not to fall through the ceiling, I drag my self back to the ladder. The closer I get the cooler it becomes, as my legs start down the ladder it feels like I was descending into an ice box with a soaking wet tee shirt on. “Man, 100 degrees never felt so cool” I told my “Non-Union Master Electrician”.

“Well bowa you did good, git yourself a little water hear” he said. “We’a needing to git going on to the next job.”

Still in her morning bath robe the lady of the house smiled, revealingly waved good-bye, and shouted “I’ll give ya a call if I have any problems!”

My “Non-Union Master Electrician” got a big grin on his face. “Yeees Maame, anytime day or night!!!” And we headed for the next job.

Had our lunch under a tree and I drank a lot of water; didn’t expect the next job to be by the river or lake. Arrived at an older house, looked around just in case there was a lake or something. “Nope, no lake and it’s a lot hotter this afternoon, I wonder what the first signs of heat stoke are?” I pondered thinking about another fishing trip to the attic.

My “Non-Union Master Electrician” tells me to get all the fishing gear out and that this would be a lot easier. After I had everything that I thought I needed he yells to me back at the pickup truck “Bowa, git that there hoa in the back there.”

“Hoe? What do I need a hoe for?

My “Non-Union Master Electrician” enlightens me. “Bowa, see this here house has a crawl space under the floor. It’s a lot easier to run yor whar under the house, and a lot cooler. That’s why we’re a doing it in the heat of the day. I always try to look after ma hepers. The only thing, ya need to keep a keen eye out fer oil them little critters that also like the cool. If ya see a snake jest use the hoe to shu it off, or kell it. Oh yeh, watch out for them black widder spiders. Let git a going.”

We walked up to the door and my “Non-Union Master Electrician” rings the bell. We waited, no answer, rang again, and waited; finally hear “I’ma coming, hold yer horses”. The lady of the house opens the door dressed in her itsy-bitsy-teeny-weenie bikini, she apparently was out back sunning herself. We checked the layout and I then headed for the underground. My “Non-Union Master Electrician” headed to the back yard to further discuss the installation.

I never liked caves, or spiders, or especially snakes. “Why didn’t I just go to summer school this summer” I was thinking while dragging all my electrical equipment, my flash light and hoe as I belly crawled to the fishing location. “YIKES!! WHAT’S THAT MOVING OVER THERE??” Grabbing my hoe and assuming some kind of defensive position laying on my stomach, I peared into the darkness straining to see what it was that was moving. What ever it was, apparently it had slithered away. “Maybe just a lizard” I hopefully thought. Swatting the spider webs out of my face I proceeded to the fishing location.

As I finally got to my fishing location. “Boss I’m here, I’m gona drill my hole “ I yelled laying on my back with the drill set to start the penetraton.

“Ok, Ok, I’ll be rawit there, just a minute.” He breaks off his discussion in the back yard and heads into the house. “OK, dreill you a hole tween these here walls. AND BOWA DON’T screw up and drill into the floor!!! Thein push up the fishen whar to me, I’ll tie on the whar and you pull er down. Thein carry the end of the whar to the side of the house out by the back yard, I’ll wait fer ya thar.”

I am lying on my back on the ground ready to drill. Check the location looks OK. All right pull the trigger to start the drilling. Immediately I levitate off the ground, my hands grip the drill, I can’t let go, I am just shaking. Finally after what seemed like a lifetime the drill falls from my hand, I fall back to the ground and the shaking stops. “What the hell is going on here!!! A big shock. Whoa that was scarry.” This of course was back in the days when every plug only had two barbs, no ground wire. I was the ground and was lucky I didn’t get killed. “BOSS, boss” I yelled “I just got a big shock down here from the drill!!”

“BOWA YOU OK?” He yelled down.

“Yeah”

“Ok bowa, come on out of there”

“Great he’s gona go down under there and drill the hole, I can get the heck outa here.” I thought. Wrong!

As I returned to sunlight he just told me “Yeah bowa, you gotta be reeel careful under them houses with electricity. Git back to the pickup and git one on those 2x10’s. Lay on et and yeh oughta be fine. Oh, and try to find a dry spot to dreil from.”

“Sho nuff, Boss knows.” I drill my hole, pull my wire, carry my flashlight and hoe to side of the house where the outside electrical panel was located. As I got closer I could hear voices and laughing in the back yard. I yelled to my “Non-Union Master Electrician” that I was ready to give him the wire.

“Ok, Ok, bowa, lea me jest finish rubbing this here sun tan oil on the Misses back”. So a few minutes later I hand him the wires and start hauling all my stuff from under the house. After loading all my gear I head to the back yard to see how he was doing. He was doing just fine on all points, electrical business wrapping up and monkey business wrapping up.

Still in her itsy-bitsy-teeny-weenie bikini, albeit a bit more on the pinkish side than earlier, the lady of the house smiled, revealingly waved good bye, and shouted “I’ll give ya a call if I have any problems!”

My “Non-Union Master Electrician” got his by now usual big grin on his face. “Yeees Maame, anytime day or night!!!” And we headed for shop – closing time.

Actually fishing wire wasn’t the only thing I ended up doing for the next two and a half summers, we did all kinds of residential work. So I generally feel pretty good about working with household electricity. But the point of this story is that what we have here in Russia is not exactly the same, not even close. While here I don’t have to deal with heat stroke and the most dangerous critter I might encounter is a “dust bunny” not snakes, spiders and the such there are other challenging problems.

As we were putting the light up I noticed that all the electrical wiring here appears to be aluminum, which we did use a little back in 1964 before it was banned in America. Too dangerous, causes fires. My only thought was “well this building is concrete, the wiring is all encased in concrete, so what kind of fire could it cause, not gonna worry about it. The lights work, no sparks jumping and blowing of circuit breakers, normal for Russia production.” I suspect even my old “Non-Union Master Electrician” boss would be proud of the work I did.

Coming down from the ladder to admire the new fixture, however I didn’t notice an expression of joy on Irina’s face. “What do you think Irichka?”

“I don’t know Potrick, it looks a little big for this room and the 5 bulbs put out sooo much light. Maybe we could try it in the living room and replace that very, very old lamp there.” So much for our concern about those little light bulbs, the room was as bright as a tanning booth!

So, dutifully I climb back up the ladder, remove the fixture in the bedroom, then do the same with the very, very old fixture in the living room and re-install the new light in the living room. Again, “Potrick, I don’t know, it looks so small here in the living room, we will see.”

While Irnia was evaluating whether the new light fixture was OK, I finally got to return to the original problem we were trying to solve. Do you remember? The simple task of replacing the toilet paper holder.

I had hoped that I would be able to use the holes that were there for the old Soviet Standard holder, but New Russia in rejecting its past and moving into the capitalist world rejected the old standards of yesterday and the holes needed for our New Russian toilet paper holder didn’t even come close. Best I could do is hope to cover them up with the base of the new toilet paper holder. I unpacked the new toilet paper holder looking for the installation instructions and a template to tell me where to drill the holes. The only thing that fell out of the package were 4 big, long screws, wall anchors, and the attachment hardware. “Ummm, I suppose I will just have to eye-ball it, no template, no instructions”.

Actually I didn’t expect to find any instructions, any Russian would be embarrassed for life if he was caught looking at the instructions on how to put something together. They all know better than the instructions could ever explain. I have actually witnessed two adult Russians struggling for hours trying to assemble a baby bed. And when I suggested looking at the instructions for a little help was at first rudely ignored and when I persisted, was told they knew what they were doing. Maybe there was a breakdown in the translations, but in any event it got late and Irina and I had to wish them “good luck” as we left. We said “we will be looking forward to seeing how the crib looks when it is assembled”. How long they continued we do not know. Maybe after we left they snuck a look at the instructions since there was no there who would actually see them using instructions.

So on with step one. Drill the first hole for the attachment hardware. I could hardly wait! I finally would get a chance to use my new tool! The perforator! “What is a perforator”, you may ask, I did the first time I heard about them. Well it looks just like any other normal looking drill, the general shape is the same, but then you notice how big this drill is; it’s big, real big, it looks like a normal drill on steroids! After all we’re not drilling wood or sheetrock here, we’re drilling concrete! Every wall, every floor, every ceiling in old Soviet Standard Russian apartments is concrete. A man needs a big drill with guts! And the guts of the perforator comes from not just turning the bit, but turning and banging the bit into the concrete, it’s actually a miniature jack hammer.

So I look into my perforator case for the bit. “Umm, the bit I need is only a normal drill bit, not a perforator bit. Dang! Oh well I’ll try it.” Fifteen minutes later I had a hole that was less than ½ an inch deep and I needed 4 holes about 1 1/2 inches deep. “This is just not going to work, will take too long. These screws are so big! My visa will expire before I get these holes drilled.” And I put my new toy, the perforator down.

Suddenly it strikes me. “How big are these screws anyway? How thick is the wall?” Got my centimeter measuring tape out and measured, “Hummm, the screws are 4 centimeters long, how wide is this concreted wall?” Got the kitchen chair, stood on it and measured the thickness of the wall (we have a hole at the top of the toilet rooms wall for venting). Bad news the Soviet Standard toilet wall was only 4 centimeters wide and the screws are 4 centimeters long! “How could these guys sell a Russian Toilet holder with screws that would go through the Soviet Standard Toilet wall? Typical Russian production! Irina! Irina! I need new stuff to finish the toilet paper holder job, we will need to go to the store tomorrow.” Tools put away, mess cleaned up thought I might have a vodka, the work day was over.

In the mean time while I was working on the toilet paper holder installation Irina was pondering the new light fixture. “Potrick, I don’t like, it’s just too small for the living room. We must take it back.”

“OK, dear. I agree, and the old one is quite interesting even if it is 25 years old, I like it better. We’ll look some more for the bedroom. OH, by the way, I need more stuff to finish the toilet roll holder.”

One of the pieces of the New Russian capitalist retail system that has been slow to come is the “no-hassle return” concept. It is never easy and only a few places offer to take returns. But Irina said we could do it. So I carefully repack everything, tape up the box and we trundle off to the store. The store of course is about a long, long walk so we wait on the trolley, which after standing in the cold blowing wind finally arrives. As we get to the store and walk in we are immediately ushered to Security. We are third in line so I’m thinking this won’t take long – wrong. The security guy has to check off each item being returned against the receipt, mark it, and do other stuff that I didn’t understand. Of course the guy in front of us looked like he was returning his whole project, his cart was full of items to be returned. I could see it was going to be a morning spent at the security checker. So I told Irina I would go ahead and see if I could find what I needed. At some point, finally, without even having to take his gun out of its holster, his job was done and he allowed Irina to enter the store and proceed to the return counter.

I headed to the screw section in search for a simple “flat head” screw shorter than the width of our wall. And it didn’t need to meet the old “CCCP – Nuclear Bomb Survival Rating”. One thing that I have noticed in Russia is that so many things appear to be “over built”. Maybe everything was bigger and stronger than it needed to be for a purpose. Maybe Russians had some secret system where they rated everything on its ability to continue working in the event those rascally Americans nuked them. No doubt a working toilet paper holder would be on the top of the list of things one would want to survive “the big one”. So it better stay attached to the wall at all costs.

Where an American might use a ¼ inch bolt the Russians use a 1 inch bolt to hold something. Like our sleeper couch with a 1 inch bolt for the mechanism to pull out the bed; that bolt would never break. But of course they forgot to engineer in a way to keep the nut on the bolt. So after a while the nut falls of it’s 1 inch bold, system fails, sleeper couch no longer works. Normalnie!

Once I got to the screw section, I found hundreds of thick, big, long, oversized ones. But a simple little flathead was not in their inventory. Dejected, I headed back to the return counter to see how Irina was progressing. I found her at the end of another line.

“Potrick, Potrick! We have a problem.”

“Oh, no.” I thought, “They probably won’t accept the light back because we opened the box.” I had a sinking feeling that the tanning booth like light was going to be a permanent fixture in our bedroom. “Oh, well in winters we will be able to easily see everything and a little tan wouldn’t be bad.”

“Potrick, I don’t have my passport!” Irina cried in despair.

“Always, I mean Always, carry your documents!” I thought. “One never knows when one will need to produce them.” I could already see another trip to the store, the security line, the long return line: it was spoiling my mood. But then the unexpected happened. The older guy in front of Irina, took pity. He said she could put her return on his passport. I was getting a little confused with all these rules and ways to get around them, but I hoped it worked. I had no interest in returning to the store to return the light again. But it worked out and the guy restored my faith in Russians. We got our money and headed for the next store to look for a simple little flat head screw.

Walking home I remembered the “Mom & Pop” store had some kind of homemade display boards with hundreds of screws glued to them. You just pointed to the screw you wanted, get your little order paper, walk over to the Kassa (the pay booth), wait in line, pay, get a receipt, bring the receipt back to the counter where you saw the item, wait for the clerk to finish what ever she is now doing, give her the receipt and she cheerfully gives you what you wanted to buy 20 minutes earlier. One of the guys there even spoke English. “We’ll stop there, I am sure they will have what I want” I told Irina. Irina was tired and cold, but reluctantly agreed.

Unfortunately “flat head” screws were not to be found on the display boards. They had every kind and size of wood screw, which the lady tried to convince me would work. “Yeah I thought it would work just as well as the 1 inch bolt holding the couch together.” I thought. “Thank you, no we won’t buy.” And left for home, no toiler paper holder today, it was getting too late.

Another day another hike to another store in search of the holy grail of screws – the “flathead”. We leave early, about noon, hoping this will be the day. Get to the door and pull the handle – nothing happens. We look at each other a little confused. Try the other door, same result. “What’s going on here? They are closed.” My first thought is that they are going out of business because of the crisis. Another Russian tries the doors, probably thinking I didn’t know how to open a door. Same result, but she goes on to the door around the corner. Again same result, all doors are locked and she just stalks off grumbling something untranslatable. Then I ask “ Irina, isn’t this Victory Week, they are probably closed for the holiday”. Now our project is on hold for the next 3 days. I am kinda getting used to pulling the toilet paper off of the roller as it sits halfway down the mop handle, maybe we don’t need this new one.

Four days later, all the holidays are over for a few weeks, the store is open. Proceeding directly to the screw aisle I see “flat head” screws. “YES, Russians do know what a “flat head” screw is!! OK where is the size I want? Nope too long, no too short, too thick, oh no! I don’t see the size I need, I can’t believe this, every size but the one I want! Someone is punishing us for wanting to replace that old Soviet Standard toilet paper holder.” I collect my senses, “get a grip, settle down, lets see if something will work.” I start analyzing the alternatives and finally select a smaller screw than what I had really wanted. As I walked home I started thinking “what if the head is too small and I need some kind of washers to make it work, where will I find them? Maybe it’s too thin and the toilet paper holder will fall off the wall, or worse yet what if a large guest’s leg hits the holder while leaving the toilet room and knocks the holder off the wall!!! STOP! It’s OK, relax its Russia, it will work, I’ll just make it work one way or another.”

“OK, Lets get this job done!” Insert my new perforator drill bit, fire up the perforator and WhamO the hole is done in about 3 seconds. As the old “Non-Union Master Electrician” used to say “Boa, yeh gotta have the rite tools!”. Don’t have no template, don’t need no template just guess and go. 10 minutes later the job is finished and our shiny new chrome plated Russian Production spring loaded toilet paper roll holder is operational! “Irina, Irina come look!”

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Russian Culture – The Dog Society

From the Archives – Spring 2006

As I was lying in bed with the Grip II Chico was concerned; but he was more concerned about who was going to take him on his 3 walks a day in the freezing cold. Well of course Mamula wasn’t going to, so the job fell to Irina. A problem of sorts. Irina by nature is not a morning person (and in Russia neither is Patrick) and Chico, to the contrary, needs his morning piddle and poop. So was the beginning of a new adventure for all.

One thing in Russia is very noticeable to me – there is no diversity! Diversity that is, as defined by our last X-Presidents wife. Virtually everyone has the same color skin and round eyes. In our neighborhood, which probably has 10-20,000 people living within 4 or 5 blocks I have seen only 2 black Africans, maybe 5 Orientals, no Hispanics, no Latin Americans, no Puerto Ricans, no Jamaicans, no Eskimos, no aborigines, no Arabs, no Indians (American or Eastern). Except for the “Southerners” which are people from the southern countries like Georgia, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan and other “stan” countries which have a rather swarthy look and speak with an accent noticeable only to Russians, everyone is Slavic or Nordic descent. So there are no real societal lines by race as there is in the USA which serve to break down into societal lines.

Under the Communist system everyone got thrown into the same big pot. In our neighborhood you have people from all different ages, different economic levels, educational levels, ect living in the same buildings. We all shop in the same grocery store, the kids all play in the same park and go to the same school, we all ride the same metro and little buses and never say anything to anybody except possibly to a neighbor living in our entrance. We all cautiously walk up to the steel entrance door, enter our secret code to enter, making sure there is no one around that could see our code or walk in with us. Quickly enter and close the door, check for shadows, which could be all kinds of unspeakable bad things. Then walk up to the second floor press the buzzer three times, the secret buzzer code, and have Mamula unlock the inner door, peer through the peep hole and make sure it is friend, not foe, and then unlock both locks on the outer steel door,.

People are by nature more social and as such seek out others that have similar interests. Then they form little groups where they feel comfortable and can discuss common interests. Irina found such a group when she started walking the dog – The Dog Society. Every day at least twice a day the Dog Society meets in the playground behind the school. The dogs play and the people discuss matters of high importance “Your dog has diarrhea what to do?…..” Of course we had a celebrity dog: Chico - the Mexican/English Spaniel from America! He was cute, but sure was dumb! Well maybe not dumb, but certainly naïve to all the aspects of surviving in the harsh Russian environment. We had already found out the hard way about all the poisons lying around everywhere, and at least Chico now always goes out with his muzzle to prevent a reoccurrence. But what about all those unknown dangers?

After Irina’s first morning with the society she just couldn’t wait for me to wake up. She shakes me out of my fevered stupor to tell me all about meeting all these wonderful interesting people and their wonderful dogs. “And Chico played so well with all the other dogs, I even took him off the leash and let him run.”

“Good, I am glad you and Chico had fun” I said. “Now I think I would like some more aspirin and go back to sleep”.

Some time later, I can’t remember when since I was delirious with a high fever, Irina comes in shakes my bed and wakes me. “Chico can eat kasha! Everyone says that they feed their dogs’ kasha so Chico can have it at breakfast with us. Oh, they also feed their dogs vegetables, fruit, and of course meat, cheese, bread, eggs, sausage….. And we must change the dog food we are using…. And this vet is excellent… And there is some disease the comes from dog poop that can kill a dog in an hour if he touches it…..And this lady has such a cute little Charpe puppy (actually a very, very ugly dogs with wrinkly skin) that they want to give away…”

That shocked me into my senses enough to say, “NO WAY – we can hardly handle the dog we have much less another one. I hope you didn’t do anything crazy”. Visions of the Internet page we saw after getting cute little Chico that said “one of the most difficult dogs is a Spaniel….” were dancing in my delirious head.

“No – of course I wouldn’t do anything without asking you first” Irina said. “But they are soooo cute and then Chico would have a playmate”.

“NET!!!!” my reply, and then asked to be left alone.

But now Irina had new comrades. She was out every day learning and learning and learning about having a dog in Russia. And Chico was getting some good exercise running in the snow playing with the dogs. Then all of a sudden, a cry goes out “call your dog!!!” Irina doesn’t know exactly what is going on and of course stupid Chico is oblivious and certainly not trained to come when called. Unfortunately Chico had a doctor’s excuse for his last training secession back in Corpus, he was being neutered, missed the last classes and didn’t seem to respond to “Chico come” very well after that.

“What is it” Irina asks.

As Chico was running toward the trees with his little tail just a wagging, one of the Dog Society answers “over there by the trees – DANGER, DANGER, a rotwiler, no leash, call your dog”. Of course all the well behaved and trained dogs return to their masters when called; but no, not the Mexican/English Spaniel from America. “A rotwiler killed another dog recently, the owner didn’t have it on a leash and was drunk, the dog attacked and just mauled the other small dog for no reason”. Irina was panicking and started to run and get defenseless, little Chico; remember he is muzzled to protect him from the dangers of poison. The Dog Society lady screams “Stop! Don’t even try to rescue your dog, a wild rotwiler can kill you also!!!”

Chico was on his own! They started the ritual sniffing. Seems like every dog in Russia is a male (I don’t know where they all come from without any females), and males don’t generally get along – so the odds were looking bad for little Chico. Irina could only look on from a safe distance and from time to time uselessly call “Chico come”. But of course Mexican/English Spaniels from America never seem to respond to voice commands. Wait! Seems the Russian rotwiler didn’t have a taste for Mexican food today, he is just moseying on. And little Chico heads back to his new Dog Society friends.

With all the dogs back in the fold and happily playing the Dog Society starts educating Irina about the dangers of different dogs and how one must be always vigilant. Especially rotwilers and pit bulls pose serious treats and should always be avoided. Then the Dog Society knew which dogs played together well and would raise the return alarm if an unwelcome dog is spotted.

BC, that is “Before Chico”, I never noticed how may dogs there were here in our village neighborhood. Now with Chico we are constantly checking the area while walking him. There are dogs everywhere: homeless dogs which you can always recognize and which are generally harmless, dogs on the leash, dogs off the leash, dogs pooping, dogs piddling, big dogs, little dogs. While it was cold, cold winter one never noticed the poop on the ground; magic, it snowed at night and was gone. But then spring, no snow; just melting snow and guess what started reappearing – dog poop! It was everywhere; surveying the usual dog walking areas I estimated that there was not one square meter anywhere without dog poop. So after a morning dog walk I suggested to Irina “do you think it would be possible for the Russians to carry a little plastic bag and pick up their dog poop like in America?”

Twenty minutes later after Irina quit laughing she said “first: you know of course rules in Russia are only made to be broken. Second: don’t you remember each time we go to the grocery store, unlike HEB, we have to buy plastic bags. Who would use such a valuable item to put dog poop in it?”

“Well I guess it was a dumb idea. Chico and I will head out for our walk and see if we can find a clean place to walk and poop” I dejectedly replied. It was a bright sunny Saturday morning and the snow was melting everywhere revealing its hidden treasures. I was concentrating on trying to walk and avoid stepping in half thawed dog poop and Chico had his nose to the ground sniffing desperately to find a place to relieve himself. We were busy and not maintaining our normal diligent lookout. Then it happened, I look up and see a big pit bull about 30 meters away, headed in our direction, pulling his master at the end of his leash. His master, this tall, thin, “string bean” type of guy, was weaving and wavering as if blown by a strong wind – obviously drunk at 10:00 am. I could see the slobber in this 90 pound pit bulls mouth, as he spots Chico and starts snarling. Chico, through his muzzle, starts barking back and the hair on his back stands up. The hair on my back was standing up also by now, as I quickly checked for exit routes and was pulling Chico away; its amazing how strong little Chico is when digging in all four paws. “OK- the kids slide is about 30 meters we, I, can climb out of the pit bulls reach and hopefully pull Chico up with me”. We quickly head to the slide sloshing through the soft snow and soft dog poop – no time to check where I am stepping now. String Bean, the pit bull’s master is yelling at his dog while staggering around, half tripping while his drinking companion struggles to hold him up. My vision is this pit bull pulling his leash free from String Bean and treeing little Chico and I at the top of the slide. Of course since there is no real Law and Order in Russia so we would have sat there until String Bean sobered up and took the dog home or the pit bull found another victim to chase. Fortunately String Bean with his drunken assistant was able to control his dog and went on their way. Another close call in Old Russia.

As the “mud season”, that is when the snow melts and there is nothing but mud, a little brown snow and bogs remaining, the dog society broke up. Walking the dog became a real chore and the goal was get out and get in as quickly as possible. Otherwise, you were dealing with disgustingly, dirty dog in a small apartment with no place to clean them except the bathtub. So Chico and I got into the routine: suit up, go out piddle and poop, return, get the tub filled with water, undress the dog, wash the paws, wash the dog jacket, dry the paws, dump the tub into the toilet, unleash the dog, and he is done until the next trip outside. From the day or our arrival Irina had this mantra: “Chico needs shoes”. But every time we looked in our local pet store they, of course, had none in his size. Now I was taking up the mantra also and we searched all the stores around for pet shoes. Finally in this upscale petstore in a new glamour mall, to our surprise we found some shoes. So now we were ready for “mud season”, added the shoes to his suit up and headed out. Chico walked kind of tentatively with his new equipment but didn’t complain. About 4 minutes into the walk he looses the first shoe and then I notice the others are just about ready to fall off. So we spend the walk adjusting the equipment until we get it right. What a difference that made! Cut the clean up to almost nothing.

Russian Life - The Big Deepfreeze

From the Archives - January 2006



During the last 200 years a few hapless foreigners have ventured to Russian during the winter. Each was unlucky enough to be there for the worst weather in the last 75 years. Napoleon in 1812 visited Moscow and lost his Grand Army of France, German General Fritz Floyd in 1942 visited Stalingrad and lost the Second World War; and Patrick Chrisco in 2006 went to St Petersburg and almost lost his mind.

The first day in Russia we get up around 10:00 and notice that the apartment is a bit on the cool side. I have never experienced “cold feet” from jet lag so I suspected that the weather hadn’t warmed up since last night. Sure enough, even with the sun up and shining brightly outside thermometer is still hovering around –25C, no solar heating here. But it was clear blue skies with no wind and a few hardy souls were out walking, exactly where I will be as soon as I get the dog dressed and ready for the morning poop & piddle run. First I have to get Chico into his South Texas custom-made fleece; Irena’s handiwork – a purple piece of fleece from Michales, with a couple of holes cut out for the legs and Velcro strips sewed to the two pieces as they joined on the top of his back. It didn’t look that great, in fact I think he was a bit embarrassed, but hopefully it would keep him a bit warmer. Next I suit up; underwear, sweater, boots, jacket, gloves, scarf, thermal skull-cap. “Yup think that’s it, lets go.” Chico runs out the door and heads for the snow, finds some white stuff and immediately turns it yellows. Then he starts realizing he is not in South Texas and begins romping around in the snow. Lots of new smells, I guess dogs can smell frozen things, and trees to check out. It is fun for about 3 minutes and then Chico’s paws start freezing up, another thing that doesn’t happen in South Texas. So we head back to the house for our big breakfast, Chico running on 3 legs alternating paws in the air to thaw out.

Mamula, Irena’s mother was already up and had the auxiliary home heating system running – every burner on the kitchen stove top was going full blast. Since natural gas is free here, unlike in the Ukraine where there currently is some kind of pricing issue in progress which I hope doesn’t lead to a war, this seems like a normal answer. I was just a bit concerned about the fire hazard, but no one else seemed worried so what the heck I’ll try it. We started the day with the standard Russian winter “Super KKKK” breakfast: Kasha, Klabassa, Kleb, and Koffe (oatmeal, bread, sausage and coffee); warming and tasty. The kitchen was the coziest room in the apartment!

The biggest problem was the cold air pouring in through the double-pain Soviet Standard windows. Irena says “we must tape the windows TODAY!” So our day’s works was set – go to the stores and get the supplies we needed to tape the window joints. We bundled up and braved the cold around noon the warmest time of the day. Trundling along the road looking for the wide masking tape we needed to hold out the cold. Found it after going to the third store and headed back for lunch, about 3:00pm. Got the windows taped, not a real attractive fix but immediately felt the temperature in the apartment go up “what maybe ½ degree”. Oh well we had Vicky and Igor coming over for dinner so it would be another warm group of family all together.

Once again the kitchen becomes the center of life as we get the dinner ready for Vicky and Igor; all the burners going full blast. They arrive and we share a vodka toast to all. Irena thinking that baby clothes and things are unavailable in Russia, brought one large suitcase filled with baby stuff. So we opened gifts and enjoyed the evening. Shortly after they left we were left in the dark as the lights in the building went out! There had been warnings on the TV about shortages of electricity and sure enough it hits our building. Looking across the courtyard we could see the lights of the other buildings still burning brightly.

Candles are not as popular in Russia as in the USA and Irena only had 4 or 5 to light the apartment; one for each room. Just cozy and romantic. It was late and since we couldn’t read or really do anything we headed to bed.

Before getting into bed I checked the light switches to make sure they were off just in case the power came back on. Crawled into bed and it was warm. I in my long sleeve tee and fleece pants and ma in her flannel PJs had just settled in for a long winter’s nap. Quickly to sleep everyone fell; until out in the living room I heard such a clatter I asked Irina what was the matter. The TV was blaring with screams and gun shot while every light in the house was shining white hot! From my warm bed I reluctantly climb and to my amazement what do I find – “Wait a minute Christmas has past and this sounds too familiar”. In the good old U.S. of A all light switches work with “up” being “on” and “down” being “off”. NOT SO in Russia it is just the opposite. In fact as I thought about it later while trying to get back to sleep, lots of little things work just the opposite here. Like whatever turns clockwise in the US, using a key to lock your door or turn on your car, works just the opposite here. Maybe it is that way all over Europe and not just Russia – don’t know, will have to see. Turn everything off, back to bed and sleep now.

It’s nine o’clock, no light outside, no sunshine, no point in getting out of bed. What is that whining I hear from the other end of the room – Chico! I have to climb out of my warm cocoon, get dressed in the dark, and quietly get Chico out of his kennel and ready for the morning walk. It will be a quick one, just checked the outside temp – 27C. Out we trundle, I don’t think Chico likes it any more than I do. He quickly piddles, I actually thought it might freeze before hitting the ground, and poops and we head back. People are starting to wake and get into the day, we had lots to do.

Survival shopping was our first agenda. Made our list and checked it twice: candles, food, flashlights, a warmer jacket for Chico. That’s enough for one shopping trip I thought. “Wrong” – food and a jacket for Chico were easy, but finding candles and flashlights required venturing further from home. That would have to be an “after lunch trip”, we needed to head back and warm up a bit. Finally after 3 stores we find the rest of our supplies and head home. Just in time. The day is over 4:00 pm, the sun is going down, Chico needs to go out and the electricity will probably go out any time now.

Sure enough Friday night about 6:00 pm out go the lights. This time we are more prepared. Light all the candles, cook some pemonie (something like little raviolis) and enjoy candle light dining. Then what to do? Not enough light to do much and without the auxiliary electric heaters the temperature starts dropping. My solution is head for the shower. Still lots of hot water and after about 10 minutes the little bathroom warms up nicely. I think I know why all the Russians liked the banyas (steam baths), they were probably the only warm place in the winter. That done its off to bed.

This morning the lights didn’t come back on. Listening to the old Soviet public radio station, which strangely works with out electricity or batteries, we get the word that electricity will probably be off all weekend. That is bad! The electric heaters are the difference between a cool-comfortable and cold room. OH WELL, at least the hot water and heating was still operating, in some places the pipes were freezing and people were losing all heating. Inside temp was running around 60F, just sat around with lots of warm clothes on during the day. We saw some apartments that had lost heating and they looked like ice caves. Ice completely over the windows and flowing down the outside walls.

Get breakfast and discover that we are running out of matches. There is our task for the day, find matches. Without them we can’t light the stove or the candles. So we gear up and head out searching for matches. In this miserable cold we end up walking to three or four stores before finding some. There is an old Russian proverb – “you will never find two things you need in one Russian store”. So the catch is which store will have what you are looking for, you never really know that important fact when setting out on a shopping adventure with the temperature hovering around - 25. So I take special delight whenever at day’s end I can proudly say “I am in Russia and I have accomplished two tasks today!”

Ah but today’s task, and a vital one it is, find matches. I thought a little Bic propane lighter might work, but “No, you can’t light the oven with a lighter” I was told. So wanting to keep peace in the family I wandered around in –25C weather looking for “spitkizies”. When finally finding them and returning home we noticed that they were so cheap that they didn’t light half the time. It was then that I showed how a piece of paper could be tightly rolled up, lit on fire and used to light the oven. Everyone was convinced that a lighter might work. So back I went to look for a Bic lighter, which turned out to be much easier to find than spitkizies. I accomplished my task for the day. Bring on the night!! By the end of the weekend we were getting into a groove dealing with no electricity and then the lights came back on – “welcome to the 20th century”.

After living in Colorado for over 27 years I learned certain rules about cold weather. One was when it was at 0 F discretionary outdoor activity ceases – let the crazy tourists from Texas go skiing and enjoy that type of weather. I was quite surprised when I took Chico out at night, which was mandatory, that parents would be outside with their little toddler children playing on the steel playground equipment. Some kind of early childhood cold weather survival training I guess. Another rule “if you don’t have it you can’t wear it”. Always take your gloves, hat, and layered clothes when you venture outside. I practiced this one religiously and after about a week or two actually figured out how to tie my scarf so it kept the bottom of my face covered from the cold. Then in the sophisticated city center what do you see, stylish young girls lightly dressed and walking around with their midriff uncovered. Star graduates of early childhood cold weather survival training I guess. One of the most painful lessons is failure to abide by the rule that lotion is mandatory. I always try to obey this rule but get skin cracks anyways. The heal and finger cracks are the worse and I often end up with band aids on 3 out of 5 of my fingers. Oh yeah and then my nose dries out and starts bleeding when I forget to put a little Vaseline in it. After 5 years in sunny South Texas I had forgotten all these little rules, who needs them. But some things like riding a bike always come back even if you haven’t done it for years.

Russian Life – Trip to Russia (with the dog)

From the Archives - 0940, January 16, 2006

Welcome to Europe

First leg of our winter trek to Mother Russia is complete; the three of us arrived in Frankfurt, Germany! We know all three of us arrived because we saw Chico’s pet cage going down the baggage loader. But I guess we can’t confirm that we all arrived alive yet, didn’t actually see Chico. Will have to wait till Russia.

Our arrival to Frankfurt was running late because of snow. As we taxied in it was coming down pretty good and then I thought about my jacket in the checked baggage – hope it arrives in Russia. For some reason this, the biggest airport in Germany, can’t ever seem to be able to park it’s planes at jet ways. So we faced the blowing snow in our face walking to the waiting bus. Now I knew winter in Europe is not the same as sunny south Texas.

With four hours to wait Irina’s first move was to the Duty Free shops for a “lettlee shooping”. After 8 hours of flying at the very, very end of the bus (we had the last seats on the plane, always the roughest ride and don’t totally recline). I was less than excited about wandering through all these high priced discount stores, but I dutifully followed. Finally she tired and I convinced her that we ought to set down a bit and get a little food and water. OK so luckily a guy was leaving his table just as we were walking up to “Goethe’s Bar” and snagged seats at a table. A lovely German girl, using perfect English, gave us a menu and we started perusing through it. I stated losing my appetite and thirst the deeper we got into the menu. “Lets see a small bottle of water – 7 Euros, a cup of coffee – 6 Euros, spaghetti – 12 Euros; YIKES!! WAIT, a large beer only 4 Euros, and even better yet a bratwurst for only 6 Euros.” That sounded great to me, a beer and hotdog for about $13, Irena can splurge and get the cup of coffee for another $8. I think we can get out of here for less than $25.” I didn’t really want a beer that early in the morning but my budget couldn’t afford the water.

As we were sitting enjoying our little lunch, Irena says “there’s a Russian”. Then a few minutes later the same thing “there’s a Russian”. After a while I am also able to pick them out and then I realize we were looking at the escalator right above gate 59, our gate to catch the plane to St Petersburg. But it is a little strange that these people that I am going to be living with for the next 6 months are so easy to pick out in a crowd. Is it their face, or their clothes, or their attitude, or the way they walk; no actually it is their big jackets. Just “Follow the Furs” to the Russian departure gate. So we soon head down to gate 59 looking strangely underdressed. I only had my little fleece on and every body else had full length, heavy, heavy looking jackets, mufflers, fur hats, boots. “UH OH – I sure hope the bag with my new Corpus Christi Burlington Discount Coat Factory jacket arrives. Otherwise I am going to be in deep trouble.”

Tooo late to worry, its time to board. Once again no jetway, just another cold bus ride to the waiting plane. “Oh well – at least we are not in the last row in the plane and the seats recline a bit. ON TO Russia.”



Touchdown 18:15, January 16, 2006
Welcome to Russia

From the window I can see the lights of St Petersburg and it looks like snow on the ground. Duh – its January and we are only stones throw below the Artic Circle. Good news/bad news:
Bad news first - Captain comes on and says we will be landing soon and the outside temperature is –27.
Good news – That’s only something like 8 below zero Farenheit, I think.
“My bag with my brand new, never before tested, Burlington Coat Factory Discount Store jacket sure as hell better show up or I am in deep, deep trouble.”

As we taxi in there is no snow falling – more good news. St Petersburg Airport hasn’t changed. In the summer it has a cold, old, sterile ambiance look. In the winter it is just cold, cold, cold – you are walking so fast to get your luggage and get the heck out of there you don’t have time to notice any other amenities. So we scramble as fast as we can to get to the front of the passport control line. Just as in HEB you pick the shortest line and as the saying goes “the first will be last, and the last will be first”. I pick the shortest line and end up waiting like 20 minutes as the guy in front of me gets grilled and then rejected.

So as he is standing back outside the “green line” I ask him what is the problem. “My passport picture doesn’t look like me” he says. “I have been here 5 times in the last year and this always happens”.

“UH OH” I think. That has happened to me too, but I was never sent back and told to wait. They always seemed to figure out that I really am the person on my passport even though I was about 15 pounds heaver, no mustache, no little goatee.

The cute young immigration girl in the next line over jokingly says “Elvis” as the guy she was checking had an Elvis Presley looking haircut and she sends him right on through.

“Just my luck” I thought “I not only get the slowest line I also get the line with the “Inspector from Hell” and I don’t even have my new Burlington Coat Factory Discount Store jacket with me”. So with trepidation I walk up to the window, look up and sure enough – this gal is one tough looking inspector, no smile, just serious business. A holdover from the cold war I suspect. But surprise. I get quickly approved and we are on the way to the baggage claim.

Unknown to me Igor, the son-in-law had already corrupted the baggage handlers for us. As we wheeled up our two baggage carriers to handle the 4 checked bags at about 55-60 pounds each, plus dog cage, plus the dog door blocker, plus 4 carry on bags, these guys in orange overalls come from baggage area with our dog cage and one of our bags, not the bag with my Burlington Coat Factory Discount Store jacket however. Irena rushes up and sure enough Chico is in the dog cage and is alive! She immediately lets him out and Chico immediately starts jumping and peeing all over the baggage area. A little jump here and a little pee here, another jump and another pee, another jump and another pee. Things were getting a little saturated, but then he had been in his dog cage from 1530 the day before and not wanting to spoil his house hadn’t relieved himself. Everything settles down, Chico is happy, Irena is happy and I am cautiously happy waiting for my jacket. In a few minutes the old babushka looking cleaning ladies show up and move into action with their mops, brooms, scoopers, look over at us and scowl.

So finally Chico settles down and we realize none of the other luggage has showed up. In fact no luggage has showed up and we had been there a good 20 minutes. Our corrupted baggage handlers show back up and tell us there “is a small problem – not too worry. The luggage is here, but the container is frozen shut and we can’t get it open.” I am thinking “OK, here we are not too far south of the North Pole, middle of winter, and they have a problem opening baggage containers, wouldn’t you expect this type of problem and be prepared if you lived here?” But no, all of the people start getting a bit agitated, once again you can tell the Russians, because they are the most vocal about their agitation. Since we knew what was happening I thought it would be and easy thing to just make an announcement about the delay. Irena went over to some women that seemed to have some kind of official function with the airport and asked them if they could tell everyone what was going on. The answer of course was “NET”. Something like that would take an order from the “top” and they weren’t about to do anything without instructions. Just sit and wait, at least we knew the problem.

About an hour after landing our luggage is all finally in our hands!! I open the bag with my new Burlington Coat Factory Discount Store jacket, put it on and walk confidently, bravely out the door to meet Igor and his father Valodia. Soon as I pass the threshold I get blasted with the cold air and the wind. Even though I didn’t have my handy REI zipper attachable mini-thermometer with the Windchill calculator on the back, I knew it was probably about –40. My face and hands immediately went to the frostbite mode!! Quickly we loaded the bags and got into the cars.

I decided to ride with Valodia since he had Chico and I thought Chico might need some friendly voice from the front. Valodia, Igors father is a big, burly rough looking Ukrainen who speaks no English, but since we spent the weekend at his datcha last summer we got along OK. We were a little slow getting the car turned around and when we got to the exit gate there seemed to be a bit of a problem with paying and raising the gate. I didn’t know what was going on, but it appeared that Valodia didn’t have his ticket and they wanted more money than he had. I offered my $20 American, but he waved his hands and said “Net”. So finally he digs into this secret compartment of his billfold and comes up with the cash. Of course everyone behind us was getting upset and honking. But he just casually climbs back into the car and we start heading home.

Normally it takes about an hour from the airport to Irena’s apartment, but this was rush hour so I knew it would take longer. Chico and I just settled back and relaxed. Well after about 10 minutes in bumper to bumper traffic I notice that the head lights don’t seem to be on. I of course don’t know the Russian word for “light” so I start thinking up and saying words like “Net lumina” – no that must be latin; “Net lictha” – no that is German. Couldn’t think of any other words, tried a little sing language with no success so just sat there, enduring the dark and increasing cold . I am starting to get colder and colder. Then I realize “The heater in the car doesn’t work!!!” Twenty minutes later he figures out that the lights weren’t on as we headed down a dark street and switches them on. But doesn’t seem to notice that the heater isn’t working. Maybe it is working and that is as warm as it gets.

Valodia prouldly bought his new Russian Lada last summer. Igor had pleaded with him to buy some other foreign car, but Valodia was a patriotic Russian-Ukrainian and only a home grown Russian car would be good enough for him. A Lada, the car of choice for every old Soviet party lower-level boss, was of course his choice also. But the Russkie bosses all got the big tanksize Lada’s and we were in this little match box weaving in and out of rush hour traffic. That is when we were actually moving faster than 2 kpm because of traffic jams. It was a cold, long, 2 hour ride, on top of which I really needed to make a head call during the last hour, but finally I recognized some old neighborhood landmarks and knew we would be there soon. Sure enough we pull up to Irena’s apartment and realized that I don’t remember how to get in. It’s dark outside I punch a couple of numbers on the security pad but nothing works. I yell, but no one hears. Valodia uses his cell phone and calls, Igor shows up. Of course they immediately get into a minor disagreement about the parking fee and I, wanting to get into a little warmth, carry my bags and Chico up to the apartment.

Just like “Old Home Days”; Vicky, Mamula, Irena are all in the dining room with a big spread of Russian food laid out. We eat, talk, laugh and finally every one leaves and I assume a horizontal position on the bed and am immediately asleep. It was a long trip, but we made it.