On July 21st, 2007, after three days of little sleep during our frantic packing and moving of the house into storage and a long day of traveling on planes, we landed in
Renting an apartment in
So Monday, July 30th, we got up relatively early and took two Metro trains, one RER/”normal” train, and one airport shuttle train to reach the terminal at Charles de Gaulle. In the airport we heard French with a smattering of other languages. As soon as we got on the first plane to
Maya and her brother, Dobromir, met us at the airport in Sophia and helped us get the correct taxis to the hostel where we had reservations. The “wrong” taxis, by the way, would have cost us as much as 50 times as much as the normal taxis! Basically, if people see tourists from
In Sophia, we stayed in a hostel called the Art Hostel for two nights waiting for another American friend. It was a truly amazing place. Mostly, it was a place for young travelers to pay per bed per night, but since we filled up a room with the five of us, we were allowed to have a key to the room so we could leave all of our stuff there while we explored. The place was also called We Usually Spend Our Time in the Garden, and aptly so, for the owner and many of the hostellers were usually behind the building in the garden area. We stayed up late each night, sharing music and stories with the other travelers. One morning, an accordion player from
After two days in
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Wednesday, August 1st, 2007
We're in
Tuesday, August 7th, 2007
We rented a couple of small cars, piled everybody in, and drove to the Rhodopes mountains a few days ago for a Bulgarian folk festival in
Over the next couple of days, we explored the area before heading back to the plains. We toured a deep cave with amazing stalagmites and stalactites and then another cave that was used as a prehistoric dwelling. Then we hiked around this amazing natural bridge area with several stone archways a couple of hundred feet high - beautiful, but nerve-wracking with the younger children!
Last night we were driving home and stopped for gas, and completely by surprise, met the son of Maya's first cousin. So their whole family came to the gas station to say hello and they ended up inviting us to their apartment. The family was very nice, but it was a challenge to be there because of their constant cigarette smoking (even the 17 year old was smoking!). We pulled out some food since we had not had anything to eat for dinner, and then they shared the cookies that Maya had bought as gifts for them at the gas station. An enormous storm came up during our visit with flash flooding everywhere and a pretty long power outage. We lit some lanterns and watched the storm for awhile (amazing lightening and thunder). We ended up crashing at their place (nothing like 10 surprise guests!) and leaving at 6 a.m. in order to make the deadline for returning the cars this morning.
Everybody is pretty wiped out today, so we'll regroup for the next adventure tomorrow. Isa's birthday is Thursday (he will be three). At some point we will go to the little village where Maya grew up (I think for Isa's birthday at least), and we still plan to go to the
I am finally learning a few words of Bulgarian. Today I learned how to count to 10, and I was having Isa teach me a few words. It was hilarious, because he would tell me a word in Bulgarian, and then as if a little language switch had been flipped, he would start babbling to me in Bulgarian. I would crack up and remind him to speak English. He was really thinking about the translations - it was so amazing to see him thinking about it and then successfully translating (with some re-translations by Kina!).
The day we drove to the mountains, we arrived pretty late in the evening, and we could not find a place to stay. We were pretty tired, after a full day of driving with 5 active kids! Maya was asking about hotels at a general grocery store in a little village called Stoikite, and by chance a guy was there who had a villa up the hill and offered to give us three rooms with six beds for 40 levs/night (that translates into about $35/night). We were so relieved and grateful! We ended up staying three nights, and one day, when we had left some beans to soak for soup, we came back to find our soup magically prepared by the grandmother in the family! Wonderfully spiced and very Bulgarian! Just a taste of Bulgarian hospitality . . .
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After returning to our base at Maya’s father’s apartment in Sliven for a couple of days, we went to Maya's village (about 25 minutes west of Sliven, in the foothills), where we spent 2 days at her uncle Dimitir’s place. Despite our lack of ability in Bulgarian, we could at least claim one child, Dimitri, with a Slavic name, and we also met another Dimitir while there. In honor of Isa's birthday (and of us, I think), they slaughtered a lamb for the event. It was actually happening just as we arrived - a little taste of living close to the earth . . . I did not draw the kids' attention to it until after the lamb was no longer struggling, but then I asked if they wanted to watch the process of skinning the animal and all the rest of the things that have to happen when you butcher an animal. I was fascinated, of course, and Dimitri wanted to watch. Tristan was grossed out and did not want to see much of it. It was so interesting and very satisfying to me that they did not let anything go to waste. Meat, brain, heart, kidneys, intestines - all would be used. The skin would be sold later to the gypsies, who cure it and sell it to someone else. They baked the entire lamb in a stone oven. First they built a fire, and when it was quite hot, they pushed the coals to the side, slid the lamb in on a big tray, and then sealed the moon-shaped opening with a stone door and clay. They left it to slowly cook for about 5 hours. We had quite the feast! And the rakia (a very strong home-made grape liquor) flowed. I did not drink much, but it does not take much to feel it . . . Probably having to get the kids to bed was my saving grace! One of the most delightful things about their house was that there are grape vines covering the outside garden and patio area where all of the eating took place. Enormous clusters of green and purple grapes were hanging from the arbor. We would pick several huge bunches at a time and pig out. They also had really good peaches and plums and everything was ripe or close to being ripe! They also had sheep and goats that went out to pasture every day and came home in the evenings, and some pigs and dogs and a cat. We all would have been happy to stay longer, but we needed to come back to get ready to go to the
We ended up staying in
On Sunday, August 12 we were to meet Maya and her kids at the bus station to catch a bus to the
On August 15th, Rhonda and Tom left early in the morning for
After dumping our luggage at the hotel, we walked around the city for awhile, stretching our legs and catching a few last sights. We walked to the amazing Aleksandûr Nevski Cathedral, which was quite spectacular lit up at night. The kids were exhausted and earned piggyback rides for the last hour of our walk. We settled down for our last night in the relatively comfort of the Hotel Iskûr, happy to have a toilet that worked and plenty of toilet paper.
The next morning we made a mad dash to a local store that sold folk costumes and rugs. We pondered for awhile, and finally bought a couple of beautiful Bulgarian rugs, one antique and one new. Our precious new purchases under our arms, we dashed back to the hotel just in time to catch a taxi to the airport.
The transition from
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Saturday, August 25th, 2007
Now, after a rather stressful week, we have finally found and settled on an apartment. It is owned by an English man and his Pakastani wife - lovely people. The apartment was a bachelor's pad for him before they got married. It is tiny (maybe 550 sq. ft.), on the 5th floor with no elevator, but with a big balcony, lots of light, and partial views of the
It has been rainy and drizzly here a lot so far - I'm hoping the sun comes out after we are settled!
Next week we will have to get on the ball about getting the kids scheduled for going to school. Hopefully it won't be too difficult getting them enrolled. The school where we think that Tristan will go is just half a block away. We have not figured out where Dimitri will go yet . . .
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We were given the keys to the apartment on August 25th, after making a deposit of $3200 (2300 Euros). Rhonda and I came over and started cleaning. We soon discovered how grimy things really were. Each shelf in the kitchen had a distinct layer of grey grime that took 5-6 wipings with various products before coming clean. There were a few dead cockroaches, but I did not think much about it since the owner mentioned that the building had been sprayed (I assumed recently). But soon we discovered that there were indeed some very healthy ones scampering about! When inquiring about the issue to the neighbor on the same floor, she seemed to think it was quite normal and informed us that we simply had to set out traps every two weeks or so to keep things under control.
The first night in the apartment, I was very aware of the noise on the street and was uncomfortable on the pull-out couch. Surely I would get used to the noise, and I knew I could make the bed more comfortable by putting the mattress on the floor and putting some camping pads under it.
The second night (Monday), just as I was getting into a deep sleep, I heard a tremendous commotion outside. Lots of voices yelling. The volume kept going up and then I heard a gunshot. There was more yelling and then two more shots rang into the night. Tim had jumped up and was on the balcony watching. He saw about 50 men right outside the Pigalle metro preparing to battle - breaking bottles for weapons and posturing at each other. Both Tim and Rhonda saw some guys attacking a car with crowbars. Tim thought he saw a couple of policemen appear, and by the time I got up to look, most of the people had run off, but there were still a few men jumping around at the intersection. I heard someone yell, “cours, cours” (run, run) and they all ran west along rue de
Tuesday, Tim and the kids were going down the stairs and heard a domestic dispute with a lot of scuffling and yelling on the third floor. That night, after I had been asleep for awhile, I was awakened by a horrific screaming. It was almost inhuman. I leaped up to find the apartment empty. After I oriented myself to being upright, I found Tim and Rhonda listening on the landing. By that time, the screaming had subsided and we heard a woman sobbing. A neighbor was calming her down and calling her mother or a friend for her. We heard enough to figure out that her boyfriend (or husband) had left her. We think it all was happening on the same floor as the domestic dispute, so we were thinking “good riddance” about the man….
The rest of the week was busy with preparing the enrollment documentation and visiting the Mayor’s office and the schools themselves. We also took some time to look at a couple other apartments, and we agreed to lease a different apartment starting September 15th. We had realized that the small size of the apartment, the poor insulation, and the cockroach issues were all of concern. The events of the previous week probably influenced our decision somewhat, but there were other things too. The apartment we will move to is at least twice as big, better furnished, in a little quieter location, and even has a piano. It is more expensive, and yet it seems so important to be comfortable this year.
In spite of the desire to move, we already have a sense that this apartment is home, and there is a feeling of grief over leaving it. However, when a cockroach marched across Tristan’s breakfast plate, and when another dropped out of my travel dictionary, the need to be somewhere else was affirmed.
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September 4th, 2007
Yesterday was the first day of school for the boys. Dimitri was enrolled in a kindergarten that is a 20 minute walk away (on rue de Goutte d’Or), and Tristan started in an elementary school half a block away. Dimitri was supposed to go to a school close by (on rue d’Orsel), but it was full, and the director of that school, Monsieur Cure, was decidedly unpleasant when we inquired about being on a waiting list. So I made the 40-minute round trip walk four times yesterday to rue de Goutte d’Or. Both the teacher (Audrey Martin) and the director (Madame Novarro) of the school at rue de Goutte d’Or were very pleasant and kind. Today, however, Monsieur Cure called out of the blue to tell us that a place had opened up after all at rue d’Orsel. All we needed was a “certificate de radiation” from the old school. I walked over to rue de Goutte d’Or one last time and tearfully told the director the situation. I had already grown quite fond of her and Dimitri’s teacher, and was exhausted from the whole process. When I told her that the director at rue d’Orsel was not very patient, and was rather “méchant,” she burst out laughing and then reminded me that Dimitri would be with the teacher, not Monsieur Cure. I suspect that Monsieur Cure has a bit of a reputation for being short with people. Anyway, I took the certificate de radiation over to him, and he, much to his credit, was congenial enough, and promptly took us up to Dimitri’s new classroom. Michelle is his new teacher, and she seems quite nice.
It will be difficult for the kids for awhile, to be sure, but after two days, Dimitri is already repeating French words and short phrases to himself. Tristan is resisting more, but I think after a couple of weeks, they will both feel much more comfortable, and will be able to start communicating bit by bit with their classmates.