All I can say is that we will be in serious trouble if we ever get a place that we have to furnish from scratch.
On our priority list for the apartment were dishes and curtains. Curtains because we didn't want Saphira and Thaddaeus waking us with the sun and dishes - well - you've got to eat.
The most frustrating thing about the dishes is that here in Ukraine they have glass dishes by Luminarc that you buy by the piece or in a set - but the sets don't normally come with breakfast bowls or you have fine China. Luminarc are supposed to be the unbreakable glass - like corell - but they scratch and the patterns aren't always nice and you still pay a lot of money for something you (ok Alister and I) aren't really happy with. No ceramic, no stoneware, no everyday china even. It literally goes from Luminarc to fine china with gold trim that you can't put in the microwave and why do you really want to pay $20 a plate for that? So we ended up going with Ikea again. We had gotten some Ikea plate when we first got married (Thanks Mr & Mrs B.!) but all the bowls and half of the plates had broken (they were glass and so we were already a bit prejudiced against the glass luminarc). So this time we got a set of ceramic Dinera imported over the border at 60% mark-ups (and that still makes it cheaper than some of the Luminarc sets even!) The most frustrating thing is that I can go onto Target's website and find 20 dinnerware sets that I like and at least there will surely be 6 of those that Alister would agree on too.
It's an open market people- someone please come sell inexpensive and pretty ceramic dishes in the former USSR!!!
Our next quest was curtains. Every fabric I liked, Alister thought was ugly and cheap and I likewise thought that his choices fell into the cheap and ugly category as well. We finally found one we agreed on for our bedroom, a two sided fabric - that again I liked the side that we designated as the "back" and he liked the side we designated as the "front" best. Alister compromised on the fabric and I compromised on the side. In the end, hanging up in our window. He is really happy with it. I like it too - so in the end I suppose we came out with a win-win. The drapes for the kid's room/office were much less important to me - it is Alister's work space after all - and the key is just to block the light so Saphira won't start yelling: "momma, papa - Me awake!" We chose deep blue almost blackout drapes. The room is light pink with a red and gold couch bed - so we needed a masculine color to pacify Thaddaeus and Alister :-) It also ended up looking nicer than expected. I think the key is that hanging, you see the fabric from a distance - but in the shop you see it close up on a card. It makes a difference.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Up or Down?
To move up or down – that was the question.
Our 14th story has come to a technical, if not a literal, end. We gave up our flat last December to move
(temporarily) back to Northern Ireland. Early September, we finally returned home to Kiev. A strange feeling, coming home but being homeless. The flat was such a safe, happy place and we
had some good times there – but a one bedroom apartment is small for parents with
two children and wanting to host people in their home. We knew when we left that we would need to
give it up.
We could have chosen anywhere in the city, and a good many
people wanted us to move north or west, but we wanted to stay put; in part
because the region is incredibly convenient.
Supermarkets, markets, electronic markets – we could find almost
everything we needed without having to veer too far out of our way. But the
main reason we chose to stay is that we’ve made friends here in the region.
We didn't have too many choices owing to the new visa regulations that require some paperwork from the landlords: no one wanted crazy foreigners about! In the end, it was down to the place we choose and a 4 room on the 8th floor. The four room was closer to the location that we wanted to be but was $200 more per month. It was, in my opinion – not Alister’s – nicely decorated, maybe too nice. She was willing to let us have the cat – but we worried just how much a scratch would cost to repair on a wall or something else. While the 4 room gave Alister a definite office – the living room was small and didn’t feel like a great place for gathering and socializing. We finally found a 2 bedroom apartment on the 19th
floor.
We went with the 3 room because even though it is a room or
a balcony short (I’m sure Alister will be constantly a bit frustrated with us
interfering in his space as his office is also the kid's bedroom) it had this big room that can just be used for any
and every type of gathering. And while
it is furnished, it is only furnished to a point and the landlord is willing to
let us make our own mark on it. Now it
will be up to Alister and I to see if we can decide on a mark.
Monday, April 23, 2012
Big City vs. Small Town
Despite the bad rap - For toddlers, there are distinct advantages to raising a child in the city - or at least in the Kiev Micro Region where we lived. Number one advantage - was that I didn't really need to look for a way to entertain her (except of cold and rainy days) I just had to walk out of my apartment to one of the many playgrounds around our building and there would be at least 1 but sometimes as many as 20 other small children her age, all running around and stealing each other's toys. on the way to or from the park, I did grocery shopping and got her back in time for lunch and a nap.
We have been in a Alister's home town in Northern Ireland since February. It was nice to miss the cold weather they had in Kiev - but some days it is pretty hard to find something to do. In small towns where people are car dependent and where the weather is cool and rainy - you don't find people with small children flocking to the play parks. True - There are playgroups - on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday we make our way to the specified location and sit for two hours as the children play and get a snack - all for a pound! Well worth it if the weather is rainy! Sunday is Church and Family day and so that leaves Monday, Tuesday, and Saturday (and holidays when play group doesn't operate) to find something to occupy Saphira.
We walk a lot - and it is a good thing Saphira is a good walker and that our town has more to offer than the one I grew up in. Often our walk looks like this: Over to the post office to either put cards in the mailbox or say "hello" to it and then down the street to window shop in the two chemists and the Thrift store. I then browse the short dated aisle of the grocery store and we continue walking down to the Animal Auction. Monday is Sheep day and Tuesday is Cow day. There is a public restroom there, and for some reason Saphira always likes to stop there for a potty break (once out of necessity - but after that she always says she has to go potty whenever we pass it - so we stop and she goes). We watch the animals unload, listen to the impregnable chatter of the auctioneer (Saphira has started shouting out numbers - but so far the auctioneer hasn't taken her up on her bids) and sometimes if we are lucky we get to pet an animal. Saphira REALLY likes visiting the auction house and brings up our animal encounters ferquently.
If the weather is dry, we go to a playground in the morning or afternoon, and normally we visit her grandparents in the afternoon after her nap as well.
We have been in a Alister's home town in Northern Ireland since February. It was nice to miss the cold weather they had in Kiev - but some days it is pretty hard to find something to do. In small towns where people are car dependent and where the weather is cool and rainy - you don't find people with small children flocking to the play parks. True - There are playgroups - on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday we make our way to the specified location and sit for two hours as the children play and get a snack - all for a pound! Well worth it if the weather is rainy! Sunday is Church and Family day and so that leaves Monday, Tuesday, and Saturday (and holidays when play group doesn't operate) to find something to occupy Saphira.
We walk a lot - and it is a good thing Saphira is a good walker and that our town has more to offer than the one I grew up in. Often our walk looks like this: Over to the post office to either put cards in the mailbox or say "hello" to it and then down the street to window shop in the two chemists and the Thrift store. I then browse the short dated aisle of the grocery store and we continue walking down to the Animal Auction. Monday is Sheep day and Tuesday is Cow day. There is a public restroom there, and for some reason Saphira always likes to stop there for a potty break (once out of necessity - but after that she always says she has to go potty whenever we pass it - so we stop and she goes). We watch the animals unload, listen to the impregnable chatter of the auctioneer (Saphira has started shouting out numbers - but so far the auctioneer hasn't taken her up on her bids) and sometimes if we are lucky we get to pet an animal. Saphira REALLY likes visiting the auction house and brings up our animal encounters ferquently.
If the weather is dry, we go to a playground in the morning or afternoon, and normally we visit her grandparents in the afternoon after her nap as well.
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Dentists
Dentists in the former Soviet Union don't have a positive reputation. From purchased diplomas to procedures designed to make you have to have more procedures - the general advice is that it is better to stay away from them if possible. You just are never quite sure who you can trust. So when my doctor at Dobrobut said I "had" to go to the Dentist to get a certificate saying that I had healthy teeth - I was wary. But I also figured - how much harm can a dentist do if you just go in for a cleaning?
I had also recently joined Groupon UA and they were advertising Ultrasonic Airflow cleaning. When one came up at a dentist in my area I decided to kill two birds with one stone.
Conclusion? I don't think that they can do damage with a cleaning, but I don't have enough dental vocabulary - WOW is that an area where I am REALLY lost. I did get that the dentist thinks I have a cavity - but as it is UNDER a place that was sealed by my dentist to prevent cavities - I'm skeptical and have decided that I'll wait and go to the UK dentist or my trusty US Dentist to have my sealants replaced and the cavity investigated. She also told me they were having a "sale" on fillings. That really confirmed the wait factor :-)
it was also the first time I had had an Ultrasonic airflow cleaning. I did NOT like the cleaning stuff used as it doesn't taste pleasant and burns a bit - but my teeth are clean, sparkly white - more sparkly than the last few cleanings I had (those were in the UK) and I was in and out in 15 minutes with that super clean feeling - so pretty impressive. Also impressive was the groupon price - 145 UAH or 18 dollars - of course this was a sale as it should have been 500 uah (62 usd) In the UK, my last cleanings were 25 gbp - or 32 USD. I think my last US cleaning - was around $80, but that was in 2007, so not to sure on how prices compare there anymore and how much this type of technological cleaning would cost.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
china-lish
Sorry about the bad quality - but we use the box to store the train and I'm not ready to destroy it just to get it to fit on the scanner.
Friday, October 28, 2011
The perfect toasted sandwich
If I was a photographer foody, there would be a delectable picture here of a sandwich: brown and crispy, the cheese melting and spilling out of the sides, the plate lightly sprinkled with crumbs or maybe the nut and seed mix lining the crust. I am not a foody - nor a photographer - so you will have to trust me that fall and this cold pre-wintery weather is perfect for a toasted cheese sandwich with chutney.
Chutney was made for toasted cheese sandwiches. If you're using a super wonderful fragrant cheese, like stilton or blue - of course, you may want to pass on the chutney. but for anything blander - a mild chedder, american, gouda. Chutney makes that plain-jane sandwich pop. It makes an ordinary snack into a savory treat. I know all this because I had the great fortune of smearing a piece of toast with chutney while in the UK and eating it with cheese. Soon after this, I melted the cheese. The rest was WOW and I can't really ever go back to the way a toasted cheese sandwich tasted before - that crunch of oil, salt, and gooey cheese is just . . . .. flat.
Today is a cold day and I am sitting with a bowl of soup and a toasted sandwich - bemoaning the fact that I barely had the time to make applesauce this year, let alone chutney. Maybe in 2 or 4 years, I'll find the time to pursue "hobbies" again. Until then I will dream of chutney and enjoy it on our stints out of Ukraine.
If you do want to make your own chutney - an excellent recipe one can be found here. But even in the US, you can find chutney in a supermarket.
Saturday, August 13, 2011
Diaper bags
I've been looking at diaper bags on-line recently. The price and style ranges are mind numbing - and for exactly that reason I am loath to buy anything without seeing it in person and really pawing through all the pockets. Video reviews are helpful . . . . but still. I've also decided that the absolute perfect diaper bag has yet to be manufactured for me. I'm hoping that maybe a company when doing product research will randomly stumble upon my post and design my bag - and of course give it to me for free :-) But this is crazy talk. Still, I'm going to link like mad in the random hope it might happen.
My bag would be lightweight like the Fluerville re-run Hanna. It would also be similarly sized to the Hana as well as the Skip Hop Studio and sadly discontinued City Chic. After much measuring and estimating - my ideal bag would be 16 x 10-12 x 6. This sized bag is wide enough to access everything, not too deep to lose everything, and not longer than the bars of my stroller. It would not be overly bulky, but would allow me to carry the essentials for lets say 2 kids and myself with the stroller basket having kid toys in it.
My perfect bag doesn't have insulated compartments. I don't reheat things for Saphira, and fortunately we didn't have to bother with bottles, but frankly I don't want the weight.
In appearance, I also like the Hana in that it is nondescript. It doesn't look too much like a bag, or too much like a fancy purse. Still, I love the idea of the purse bag - the going out to dinner and having a nice bag that is your diaper bag and purse - just like the well organized and super heavy Amymichelle bags.
My bag would come with stroller clips/ties, have good organization pockets, and have a wee clip that could be fastened to your belt loop, or an Ergo strap, to keep it anchored, but not have to switch to a backpack mode as that just looks stupid. If I wanted a backpack, I'd get a backpack. This clip is vital. If you have a bag on your shoulder and you bend forward, the bag flies forward. It doesn't matter the size of the bag, small or large gravity pulls it forward. And if you happen to have a small child in the path of the flying bag . . . . . . Well lets just say I can't imagine why such a clip hasn't been invented yet.
My bag would cost $30, $40 max and would still be quality enough to hold up to sand, crumbs, water, and being banged around. One reason I don't want to buy a bag online is that despite what seem to be very positive designs of the Hana and Studio bags - there also seem to be a goodly number of reviewers who had problem with quality - and well, I can't really return it can I? The cheaper bags, the k-mart, wal-mart variety may work - my ideal may even be out there - but they don't really have reviewers and video bag tours do they? This would be my only bag. I've never liked switching things from bag to bag - the only time I might want something else is when we fly - and then I will just want something Big (cram that 10k in!) - so it would need to be functional and sturdy for everyday use.
I thought about a messenger style bag - it would be handy for Alister to be willing to carry a bag, but when I thought realistically about how often he would need to carry the bag, and if the bag was small and compact, he wouldn't need to carry it anyway. I'm also unconvinced about the organization of the messenger bag. I think I'd really like to see it. Plus, I just want to feel a bit more feminine so an elegant bag is more up my line.
So for now, I found a really cheap bag at the rinok and am making some hack changes to see if I can make it do some of the things I want. Granted, it is a bit smaller than my ideal, but I only have one kid and think I can make it work. Trial run this Sunday - which is the ultimate test since I have to be prepared for a 9:30 - 3pm absence from the house and from any amenities. We'll see.
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