This and That
Every village, town or city has a patron saint. Nobody can explain why certain saints are linked to a particular village but on that saint’s day, the citizens get the day off work, with pay. The day off is determined by the date the Orthodox Church has determined is that saint’s day. If you are from Causeni and work daily in Chisinau, you get the day off with pay. June 12 is St. Pavel Day, the patron saint of Causeni. I wandered through town in the morning and all the retail stores were open, staffed by locals, so wasn’t
sure that I might be early. Portable rides had been unloaded from the back of trucks then in the afternoon the rides began to move; roller coasters, bumper cars, and such and a large food court in the sports center, pony rides, horse drawn carriage rides and the like. Lots of kids with painted faces and henna tattoos. About 7PM, every politician showed up on stage for a monologue (I’m assuming about how good a job they are doing but it was all in Romanian or Russian) and then there is a major band on the stage for music and dancing until 1AM. I left at the start of the politicians’ spiel. The next day was very slow in town.
I saw the first European toads hopping through the town center in April on my return. When the weather warmed up more, there were 2 inch toads all over but I never heard any boys advertising by croaking such as we hear in Washington. However, there were quiet goings on as about the first of June, large numbers of 1/2 inch ?toadlets appeared all over. Apparently the toads protect themselves with bufotoxin which is absorbed through mucous membranes as a form of digitalis overdose - stings the mouth, excess salivation, cardiac problems, and goodbye. The feral cats and dogs ignore these toads so I believe their only enemy is the Michelin tire as the toads fearlessly hop down the middle of the streets in 2 jump bursts.
I have also seen the odd lizard in the grass bordering flower gardens. Green and maybe 6 inches in length.
I would have thought that with all the feral cats and dogs around we would be up to our elbows in puppies and kittens. I have only seen 3 kittens and 1 puppy so far. There is a lady in an apartment above me who throws enough chicken feet out the window to feed at least 6 dogs daily. I have not seen the cats being fed yet. The garbage dumpsters across the central playground are well scavenged by dogs, cats and people.
The apartments are 5 stories high and there are no elevators. I have been told that the apartments are more expensive the higher you go. The way I see it, you are paying more for the privilege of carting yourself and the groceries up and down these stairs daily. With the temperature in the 90’s, the top part of the stairwell is very hot so I would assume the apartments are a similar temperature. Go figure.
Just on the fringe of the bazaar, there is a line of elderly men and women sitting on the curb of the sidewalk and selling vegetables and fruits, potted flowers and hanging baskets from their gardens. The peaches are small sized this year and they are only charging 6 lei per kilogram or 50 cents for 2 pounds. I make my order in sign language and flashing 2 fingers and they flash back how much with their fingers. It always causes a burst of Russian amongst them but I haven’t any idea of what they are discussing. I do not know how this is worth their while but they are there day after day for 10 hours in the sun. The road into Chisinau is lined with walnut trees, the kids at the side of the highway are holding up plastic bags filled with shelled green walnuts, about 2 kilos, for 50 lei. I have been told the are there all day and they buy ice cream with the proceeds. There are also individual tables along the route of the elderly selling squash, honey, wine, and dressed rabbits. Lots of cars stop to shop. Then there are the herds of goats or sheep right up against the highway grazing on the grass. There is usually someone, mostly children, watching that they do not cross the road into traffic. At the end of the day the goat are milked by the family caring for the goats that day and that is their share for a month or so.
Most of the kids in town seem to go to summer camp for 2 weeks. Apparently, in the Soviet past, each kid got a free week at the beach for their health and this habit has continued. Some of the camps are themed such as song and dance instruction but others are just ‘wander around the woods’. I have been told that the fees are very low if the parent belongs to a union as the dues pay for the camp. So the kids come and go from the English classes depending on their schedules. Several families leave for the beaches in Bulgaria because accommodation is so cheap.
We have had several volunteers cycle through. The first was a 28 year old banker from Dubai who has an Indian mother and Iranian father but spoke only English. She is seriously considering switching careers to become a language instructor. The next was a Peoples Republic of China Mandarin instructor who works for a Spanish company teaching languages, Mandarin and Spanish. She works from anywhere on her computer so is just traveling around. She was promptly put to good use giving daily Mandarin lessons for the month she is here and the local TV station interviewed her for her 15 minutes of glory.
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