Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Accidental sunsets.

So, yesterday we missed our first train.

It was dumb, really.  My aunt Teresa had come to visit for a few days, and after spending time together in the Jiu Valley she was on her way to Sighișoara, a lovely historic city about 6 hours northeast of Lupeni, where she was intending to visit the internship program for the college where she works.  We had intended to drive her to Deva, the county seat (notorious in our lives for being the city where we have to go for our visas... but that's a story for another post), and then get her on a train heading to Copşa Mică, a tiny town just outside Sighișoara, where she would be picked up by her next host.  But... that didn't happen.

We got to Deva an hour early and decided to eat lunch at a restaurant relatively close to the train station.  The food took quite a while to come, so eventually Teresa and I left to make sure we'd catch her train, leaving Jack behind to take the food to go.  We speed-walked back to the station, rushing so as not to miss it, hoping Jack would also show up before she pulled away.  There was a train waiting on line 1, but we had been told hers would be on line 4, so we sat down to wait.  Just to be sure, I asked a few people on the train if they were heading towards Sighișoara.  They all said no.

The train left, and another train came, this one clearly marked and not heading in our direction.  Jack showed up with our sandwiches, and we sat on the platform and waited for another 45 minutes, feeding crumbs to the pigeons and chatting.  Finally I went and asked the ticket lady if the train was coming soon.  "It left," she said, looking at me askance.  "I saw you walk by and assumed you were getting on it.  It's already gone."  I was a bit astonished, and said we hadn't seen a train on track 4, and the people I'd asked on the first train had said it wasn't going to Sighișoara.  "It moved to track 1," she said.  And then I realized that the train doesn't go on to Sighișoara anyway -- it detours around it, which is why Teresa was getting picked up in a tiny village outside the city.  I felt really dumb.  I thanked the lady and walked back to Teresa and Jack, who were waiting expectantly on the platform.  "We missed it," I admitted.

It's another three hours by car from Deva to Copşa Mică, but we couldn't think of an alternative, so we decided to just drive there.  We were a bit worried about the FNO van, which is beloved but really old and clunky, but it did fine.  In fact, we arrived in Copşa Mică right on time, beating the train Teresa would have ridden, enjoying the gorgeous scenery of Transylvania along the way.  But then it was 6:30, and Jack and I still had to drive home.  We looked at the map and decided to change our route, taking what looked like the most direct path: west through Blaj and Alba Iulia, then straight south from Sebeş, turning west again into the Jiu Valley when we got close to Petroşani.  Simple, right?  Wrong.

As it turns out, the road that goes straight south from Sebeş is the Transalpina.  I've wanted to drive the Transalpina since I was first in Romania three years ago -- it's a famous, beautiful, winding road through the mountains, known throughout Europe as a "must-see" scenic drive.  But we didn't exactly mean to drive the Transalpina in the clunky old FNO van, at the end of what had become a 10-hour drive, in the dark.  Whoops.

That said, it was gorgeous.  Absolutely gorgeous.  There's a huge lake called Oașa partway through the road, and we somehow managed to get there around sunset.  It was breathtaking.  There were low, misty clouds curling their way among the pine-covered mountains; the road twisted and turned below towering stone cliffs; small waterfalls tumbled down out of thickly forested hills.  It was lovely -- a perfect picture of Transylvania.  The road itself was less lovely -- pristine, well-maintained highway for a while, then suddenly punctuated every 800 meters with a 30-meter-long stretch of unpaved, pothole-ridden gravel.  The last 25 kilometers from the Transalpina to Petroşani were a nightmare of potholes and boulders, and took us at least an hour of jolting and shifting and praying and bouncing.  But we made it.  We got home a bit before midnight and collapsed into bed, exhausted... and now we have some beautiful pictures to share. 

Enjoy.
One of the enormous dams along the Transalpina.

Sometimes, when the mountains were lower, there would be farms perched halfway up the slope.

 Lake Oașa

An accidental sunset.


Monday, June 17, 2013

Cows.

So.  The other day I wrote a brief post about the animals we live with here (I omitted the mosquitoes, by the way, but they're also here in force... more on that some other time).  But today, another post about animals, because today they rebelled.

Jack and I were walking home from work, around 6pm, when suddenly we heard the clanging of bells and the bellowing of cows.  From the area around the apartment bloc we live in came a herd of about 8 cows, walking speedily and bellowing fiercely, glowering at we pesky humans walking down the sidewalk.  They crossed onto the road next, and proceeded to strut down it like they owned the place, causing cars and maxi taxis to honk and swerve wildly to avoid them... 'cause these cows were NOT moving.

We watched and laughed until they were out of sight, their bells ringing in the distance.  I have no idea whose cows they were, but they were definitely not being herded.  I kept waiting for some old man to leap up from a nap in the shade and go racing after them, but it didn't happen.  Instead, the cows just strutted off into the sunset.

Oh, Romania.  How I love thee.

Friday, June 14, 2013

Wildlife.

The other evening, Jack and I were walking back home at about 10:30pm from meeting with some new European volunteers (and talking animatedly about Berlusconi and Italian politics, Spanish unemployment and corruption, and the American Congress and President Obama -- it was quite the evening.)  Anyway.  As we were walking back along the main street, we heard the street dogs start to bark.  We looked over at the source of the commotion and saw, to our great astonishment, about 10 unbridled horses, walking slowly out of the dark and mist along the train tracks, grazing on the grass along the city streets.  The horses seemed unfazed by the street dogs, who quickly gave up barking at this strange sight and returned to their slumber on shop stoops and under dumpsters.  But Jack and I stood there in awe, watching these ghostly horses just wander around Lupeni's main street, nibbling delicately at the grass that grows in the cracked sidewalk.  Strange.  So strange.  We have no idea where they came from, whose they are, and where they went.  We had never seen them before, and haven't seen them since.  Strange.

But that's not the only mildly-amusing wildlife we see here in Lupeni.  Our five-minute walk to work from our apartment brings us past a small pasture where there are usually at least 3 or 4 cows (this is in the middle of town, I might remind you), and about twice a week we also pass an elderly man who is tending his flock of goats, which are grazing on the grass behind the flower shop and next to the bridge.  Daily we hear the jingle-and-clap of a horse-drawn cart making its way down the main street, loaded with farmers and their products, cars and trucks weaving around it.  And when we go running, we often have to stop to make way for a flock of sheep which are trundling their way noisily down the road or path, guided by a shepherd, baaing and mewing loudly.  The other day while running we scared a pig wandering down the road, which snorted and sprinted back into its fence when it saw us.  And of course, there are the street dogs.  Enough said.

In other words... we love living here.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

The view.

This weekend, to celebrate our first anniversary (!!) Jack and I went to Parâng, just outside of Petroșani, to do some hiking and spend a day away.  It was lovely.  We live in a lovely place.  So here are a few of the pictures... because Romania is absolutely, jaw-droppingly beautiful.


I think Romanian farms are just idyllic.

Like I said... idyllic.

 Farms, again.  Doesn't this make you want to live here?

 Down in the valley, off in the distance, you can see Lupeni, where we live.

You can't see it well, but that mountain has a flock of sheep grazing on it...




Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Apă.

So.  Today we are working from home, sitting at our kitchen table with our laptops and books and papers, accompanied by a chorus of drills and pounding and cigarette smoke and dust.  Why, you might ask?  Well, that's a long story.

Our first week in Lupeni, there was no water in the FNO office.  No water to flush with, none to make coffee with, none to wash dirty dishes with.  The water gets turned off occasionally here, so the staff was prepared, with big gallons of water stored in jugs in the bathroom for all of those purposes.  But this time the water outage lasted a week, and we soon found out that the reason was because, according to the water company, "No one in the building pays their water bills."  FNO does pay the water bill, though, and has records to prove it.  But for some reason, our water got shut off too -- and apparently, the only solution was to install new pipes that went only to our office, so that the water company could keep track of our water usage independently.  So on our third day of work, the drilling and pounding began, disrupting the entire office and covering the bathroom and various other rooms with a thin layer of dust.  But it worked, and the water is back on in the office again, and we have our own pipes.  It seems wildly inefficient to me (and even the Romanians in our office thought it was a weird situation), and it caused a really unnecessary expense for FNO to have to put in new pipes because of the water company's disorganization or mismanagement or corruption (no one is really sure what the cause is).  But we thought it was over, and that was that.

Wrong.

Over the past three weeks, our bloc administrator has been knocking on our door periodically to come and read our water meters.  Ordinarily we report our water usage at the end of each month so he can bill the apartments in the building appropriately for their part of the building's total consumption.  But the numbers weren't adding up, and he wasn't sure what the problem was -- so he was going from apartment to apartment, reading meters to check that they were working and that no one was spinning them backwards, trying to get to the source of the problem.  Last week he told us something about a leak they'd discovered in the basement, and a day later there were men down there fixing something -- so we thought it had been fixed and the questions would be over.  But we were wrong again.

On Friday we found out that someone in our building has accused us (FNO, Americans, our apartment and all its past occupants, I'm not sure who exactly) of stealing water, cheating so as to make our consumption look lower.  So today we're at home all day, hanging out while two repairmen install new pipes that go only to our apartment.  They have to drill new holes in the walls, run new pipes all the way up from the basement (we live on the top floor), and then run them all the way from the bathroom to the kitchen (which are on opposite sides of the apartment).  It's a mess.  It smells.  It looks tacky, with all these extra pipes running along near our ceiling.  And it makes me sad... and to be honest, a little mad.

I know that under Communism, people in Romania learned not to trust their neighbors.  I know that problems of the commons like this often result in someone getting scapegoated.  I know that this apartment hasn't been permanently occupied for many years, usually only hosting semester students for a couple months in the fall and then sitting empty all spring.  I know that we're foreigners, and involved in the work of an NGO that still confuses many people in this community.  I know all this, so I'm trying not to take it too personally.  But I'm mad that there's no, well, justice, no chance for us to stick up for ourselves, no chance for us to talk with our neighbors all together and figure out what's really going on.  I'm irritated to have to pay the 544 lei to install new pipes when it's not our fault, that we're "guilty until proven innocent," that our apartment is now in shambles and covered in dust and plaster and we have to clean it all up.  I'm sad that the drilling and noise has probably annoyed and inconvenienced our neighbors all day, our neighbors who apparently don't trust us even though we really want to develop good relationships with them... or at least be respectful, cordial acquaintances.

And I (Jack now) am most sad that this accusation happened in such a secretive, roundabout way.  It's like when there's graffiti on the bathroom stall and the whole class gets a slight punishment for it, and then afterwards someone (you don't know who, it could be a few people, it could just be one classmate with a grudge from last year) tells the teacher that you did it. Or maybe not even the teacher. Maybe he told the janitor, and it somehow got over to you eventually that you're considered guilty, but you don't know who else thinks you are, because nobody's going to tell you... it sucks.
Now's our chance to see how grace covers a multitude of sins.

But hey.  (This is Kelly again.)  At least we got the chance to make coffee for the guys who came to install our pipes and chat with them about America.  And the pipes don't look so bad after all, though the styrofoam stuffing in the holes isn't the most beautiful thing I've ever seen.  And we got a day to munch on snacks and work from home, so I'll be thankful for that.  And I know that we don't have it bad -- at all -- so I'll stop complaining about this very small injustice, put it back in perspective, and keep smiling at our neighbors and hope and pray that slowly, slowly, we'll win them with love.