Thursday, March 25, 2010

These eyes...



These eyes... cry every night for you.
These arms... long to hold you again.
The hurtin’s on me yeaah,
But I will never be free no my baby, no no...
You gave a promise to me yeaaaah and you broke it, you broke it. Oooh, no....


These eyes...
Ha ha these are known as 'the eyes of Sibiu'. They follow you throughout the entire city. Ah very cool. Ha ha But very creeepy...

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Father Time Resides In Sibiu...




These photos were taken last weekend in the charming old city of Sibiu. We travelled two hours by bus each way, to spend the day there. Sibiu received the European Capital of Culture around in 2007, and is ranked as Europes 8th most idyllic place to live. It's stunningly beautiful....
and very unique in the sense that it's colors and demeanor as a whole are rather reminiscent of an old sea port village... resting in the middle of Transylvania.

The Black and White Chronicles






There’s something about people in photographs that’s deeply captivating to me. Photos of landscape or buildings without, appear cold and empty... But to catch a shadow, to capture a human soul unknown to you in time, is incredibly haunting and mysterious. An entire life compiled of infinite moments and stories held within their being, affecting the world at large in ways you could never imagine, frozen before you… it takes my breath away.

Oooh look! A BALOOOON...






A Balloon is a very funny thing… such a simple, spell bounding, universal symbol of happiness, and joy.

Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue...




First Photo. Something Old and Something New... I didn't even realize what I had captured here until going through my photos a few days later...

Second Photo. Willy Loman. Death of a Salesman. Oh. My. Goodness. Have you ever read a novel, and found yourself years later, face to face with a character just as you had created them, stitch for stitch and inch for inch, in your mind? It’s a feeling that kind of alters your universe for a split second... completely mind splitting, like déjà vu or serendipity. As such this is ‘Something Borrowed’, because the universe, or so it seems, borrowed the blueprint I created for Willy Loman when I was 15.

Third Photo. Something Blue. For the simple reason that this man, and the building behind him, are in MINT condition. Ah ha, ha.


Bagels on a String!



Ok. This little guy being pushed along next to his father swinging bagels on a string was priceless. My eyes practically popped out of my head... I desperately wanted bagels on a string, to swing...

Note: They are giant pretzels. But I just couldn’t stop myself from wanting to call them bagels on a string (they are as big as bagels and these ones lack the distinctive pretzel heart shape.) After I sighted this, I started to see people everywhere swinging, tying, sharing, packing, spinning, twirling... their strings of bagels. I was the only person who thought this was the greatest thing ever... ha ha

Another Note: Pretzels pretty much grow on trees here. Small pretzels, large pretzels, salted pretzels, chocolate pretzels. sesame pretzels, poppy seed pretzels....

I bought freshly stringed pretzels later on for dinner. I am thankful they were indeed airy and light... like a pretzel... because stomaching 3 bagels would have been a feat.



That's Amore


Early last week just as I was setting off from the Office, I was advised to head back to my apartment in a direction opposite of my usual route. I was told to take a ‘short cut’ that climbs up a single steady and steep incline, instead of my slightly longer path that wraps around the hill I live on.

Well, the sun was shining and the birds were singing, so with a sense of amore and ambition in the air, I took heed went. I had just come around a bend to discover a park, and my friends / co volunteers Dan (hailing from Maine, U.S.A.) and Dagmar (from Holland) walking towards me. They too were relinquishing in a spirited fresh air stroll along the hillside, so I invited them to join me on my adventure short cut. (All of the volunteers live with host families in different areas of the city. I am fortunate to live in a n old odd hilly area with views that sneak up on you and a solid daily climb to fend off croissants and cheese.)

We were barely half way to my block, when after turning around to take a few pictures of Dan and Dagmar… I found Tessa. Not only ready with camera in hand but most importantly with friends whom I was able to express my delight and excitement to. I can only imagine having met Tessa all by lonesome and looking around to find no one to share the moment with....

‘When the sun hits your scrawl, of I Love You on the wall…. that’s Ammooorrre.” It was perfect.

P.S. I added a photo taken by the park fountain, of a little boy struck by the spring Amore…

Friday, March 12, 2010

The Pumpkin Colored Popcorn Man





So, there is an old fountain square in the Center of Brasov, and while there yesterday I noted a rather orange and neat looking man with a little popcorn vendor where the square meets the busy market/shopping street. I had just snapped a shot of some little guys chasing pigeons nearby (please note the lone white dove in that one!) and then to my delight as I was leaving, the orange colored popcorn man came out from the vendor and tossed a tray of his kernels... I almost wanted to run for my life (imagine the terrifying scene from Home Alone when the pigeons flock to the bandits covered in bird seed in the park)... but snapped a photo instead. No big deal, haha good thing I'm a weirdo who likes pigeons.

I tip my hat to you.




I have developed two love infatuations so far... stumbling upon scrawls of 'Tesa' AND the awesome Romanian FUR HATS that I just can't get enough of here. I want to take a picture every time I see one, young and old both sport them... but that would be a bit excessive. Pictured here is an older woman (walking up the hill I walk daily to the bus loop) in the basic style. A little boy continuously running ahead of his grandfather in the park, sporting the 'dog ear flap' version of the hat. And a local man sporting the trimmed black style, whilst giving directions to a young man who looked like he was on the Motorcycle Diaries (bonus there's an older woman in the left corner, also sporting the same style.)

Turkish Coffee and In Search of Tessa

You have not lived until you have had Turkish Coffee.
The grounds are boiled in a pot on the stove, often with sugar, and are left to sink to the bottom of the coffee boiled brew pot... so when you receive a mug the grounds are then transported to your cup as well and THEN sink to the bottom of your mug... leaving you with a glorious 'coffee mud' at the bottom. Because the grounds are left, the coffee is incredibly rich and delicious. You just have to be careful, not to... well... drink the 'mud'. Ha ha. (This is how you are served coffee here, and it comes as a bit of a shock to the unknowing sipper to say the least).
Tesa, Tesa, oh Where could you be?
On my very first day in Brasov, I was on a tour of the routes to take between my apartment block and the Projects abroad office. As we were strolling along, a yellow cement wall caught my eye with the scrawled graffiti message 'I love you Tesa'. I am too much of a hopeless romantic for my own good (I absolutely adored the sight of this, and felt as though I was walking the streets of the original west side story, the Brasov version). It isn't out of the norm to find professions of love in graffiti... but for some reason, this one stood apart.
As the week went on, and I strolled many streets to and fro, I came across another wall, simply marked 'Tesa'. To date, I have come across three walls marked with 'Tesa' in different areas, and in different writing, along my route. HOWEVER, I CAN'T FIND the original wall that read 'I love you Tesa'. I don't know why, but I sort of made a game out of searching for the infamous original message and discovering the hidden 'Tesa's' along the way. Ha ha so pictured above, is my search for Tesa...

Viva Romania

I was asked by my organization to write a little piece on how I felt my first week here... and thought it would help to share a bit of my insight with my family and friends as well. BUT My blog posts to come will be a little more situated around the most recent (as I can manage) photo's and events! I'm going to be a blogging fiend today as I have had a few things I haven't had time to put up yet! Bounds and bundles of love to everyone at home.


p.s. I saw a single tiny butterfly float above my head last night... I swore to my new friends here it was a messenger for spring... and in turn, the weather today is loooveeely...


BUCOLIC- of, pertaining to, or suggesting an idyllic rural life.

VERDANT- of the color green.


Like many others before me, my initial impression of a little country sewn rich in Western altered myth and tucked away on the eastern edge of Europe, laid at the forefront of my short journey from Bucharest to Brasov.


Before I departed from North America, I recycled in my mind, a number of general 'first impressions' of Romania that other students from abroad had written after arriving here. They spoke of high end cars whizzing past horse drawn carriages, technology gleaming against the grain of tradition. They wrote of old buildings once full of character and charm, now sandwiched next to communist era blocks like flowers nestled in thorn.


I curled up in the back seat of a shiny silver Volkswagen as it embarked on the 3 hour commute from Bucharest to Brasov,

and I began to witness the recycled descriptions stored in my mind, coming to life before me. I struggled to keep my eyes from drifting shut, I nodded in and out of a sleepy daze, taking in my new surroundings and all the while thinking to myself...


I dreamt of Romania. I envisioned dark forest floor blanketed in arms of fog, hiding tiny creatures and fairies along moss covered dewy branches. In my dream I held my breath at the sight of a great wolf looming from a bluff above, and in the distance, a mother bear keeping watch as her cubs cooled in a stream.

I imagined horses at plow in hilly pastures, women dawning floral scarves steadily pinning clothes to a line in the breeze, while children played and ran about beneath.

I saw men in fur caps discussing the crops and the weather, and heard a flute playing from a shepherd in the foothills.


Here now, I find myself tripping daily over cobblestone as I weave in and out of narrow winding roads on foot. I browse along streets lined with colorful and radiant 18th century homes, along embankments of scattered gravestones and rod iron gates. I strain my eyes to better see the vast areas of grey in between, marked with scrawls of 'I love you Tesa'. I put my hand out to the lonely haunting canines on my block. I pack an apple for the begging children on the daily transit. Yet, I hold onto this enchanted description from my dream that sounds almost ignorant and surreal, coming from a traveling foreigner. But within the crumbling city blocks and bustling third-world european epicenter that is largely part of the Romania I've been introduced to, I do believe in my dream that lays beyond the concrete borders of Brasov.


I dreamt of a Romania in context, that existed before my time, created by images lifted out of books and films. Moreover, I somehow managed to neglect the overwhelming reality in existence now, after the shattering aftermath of a fallen Communist regime on my beloved timeless vision. Somehow I pushed aside the effects of the Post Communist industrialization and Western influence, that drove my imagined community away from their beautiful farmsteads, and into what is now a meshed balkan cosmopolitan frenzy.


Before I left home, In the back of my mind (very naive to the culture, history and the people of Romania) I had assumed Romanians belonged to a melting pot of heritages comprised primarily of it's neighboring and bordering cultures.

However, as this past week began, I was surprised to learn of the dominant Latin influence and roots in Romanian culture. And, to my delight I hear salsa in the streets. I often walk past blocks radiating latin rhythms, or past candle lit restaurants embracing latin with accent and decor. This makes me smile. Romanians it turned out, encompass this absolutely unique and marvelous Latin/ European/Balkan combination in mannerism and character. I personally see it as the best of traditional Balkan sprinkled with a dust of what I would like to call 'viva Romania'.


Romanians may be intimidating to the foreign passerby.

It's as thought every face tells a story, holds a secret, bares a map; told with a furrowed brow, a distracted gaze, or lines engraved like a chiseled stone.

But with each Romanian I am fortunate to meet, I only find; Behind a story, in the heart of a secret, at the attention of the onlooker and on route from one chiseled line to the next, there is only to be discovered a persevering pride, warmth, love and sincerity like no other.


In this light, I'm almost certain Romania stems from ROMANCE... it's the land beyond the forest, encompassed in fairy tale and enchantment, whispering a language that's a beautiful melody of french and spanish intertwined... a culture derived of latin roots... and so the dark and dreary legend (the Western altered myth) that haunts the region of Transylvania bares no significance to me yet.


Tuesday, March 9, 2010

I managed to capture these 5 photos on my walk home from work today... I love them all immensely. Especially the gorgeous pup, she hangs out with the strays on my block, and I meet her on my way home every afternoon, I've nicknamed her Closcea (clo-shcah) because it's the name of my street. There are strays all over Brasov, I also live next door to Lady and the Tramp. Lady is enclosed in a yard, and her devoted Tramp visits her at the fence regularly (if you click on the first photo to view it large, Tramp is up on the far right! ha the picture is taken just in front of my building, to the right of Tramp). Also, as you can see it's very much still winter here. It was green when I arrived, but winter returned on the weekend.




Monday, March 8, 2010

Week One- March 1st- 8th

Golden Departures


"Isn't it nice to know that the lining is silver, Isn't it nice to know that we're GOLDEN, WOA OH! "


As I sit and filter out the important details and events from this past week, I have to begin with -

Canada cleaning house at the Olympics was the ultimate sendoff the night before my departure. To share a giant glowing heart and an unsurpassed amount of pride between all of my friends, family, and entire country was like nothing I could have ever imagined. OH CANADA. You can rest assured I was set on gathering as much Olympic merchandise from Edmonton that morning as I could...


My father and sister saw me off shortly before I flew out of Edmonton International at Noon last Monday, and to my surprise, after I lowered myself into my seat and closed my eyes, instead of stomaching twisted bundles of butterflies in a nervous disarray...

I felt an overwhelming sense of peace and calm. I can only describe the feeling as something strangely opposite of an epiphany... instead of a sudden realization, I felt that I already knew deep down that at that moment I was exactly where I was supposed to be.


Silly Canuck lesson number One:


The best way to endure a three hour lay over in the Minneapolis terminal? "Pull up a seat and order some appetizers and a cold one" - says Dad.

So after wandering around aimlessly to work up an appetite, I stroll up to a bistro/bar and order the first thing that comes to mind...

"A Gin Caesar please"

The Waitress tilts her head, looks at me with a confused squint (I assume squinting helps to register vocabulary in some way) and asks,

"What? A CHICKEN Caesar?"

I am dumbfounded at this, and without a doubt, tilt MY head, squint MY eyes and say "What? No, uh a GIN Caesar?"

Suddenly the waitress has her own epiphany ( I'm making this the word of this weeks blog entry) and exclaims,

"OH you mean a Bloody Mary, but with Gin." At which point I have an epiphany and the 'oh no Americans don't HAVE Caesars' light comes on.

For a moment I think of what an American 'bloody Mary with gin' might actually taste like in comparison to my beloved, delicious, Canadian Gin Caesar, and hesitate, but always being too curious for my own good, I tell the waitress "Yes... that's what I would like."


Blique-Bleck-Blaque... ten dollars for the most god awful mock of a Caesar I have ever tasted. Three things resulted from my Caesar ordering incident.

1. My Canadian pride actually grew in spite of it's already over inflated Olympic Medal Laden self.

2. I felt truly sorry for Americans.

3. An interesting business opportunity came to light... I could bring Caesars to the U.S.A... I could be the Canadian Jack Daniel's... BUT maybe Sky Caesar's... and go down in history... ha ha I'm onto something, right? Why hasn't this been done?


HA So, I didn't mean to make this introductory entry so very long - please forgive my rambles...

ROMANIAN CONTENT COMING VERY SOON


p.s. VIVA ROMANIA! Romania is Oh-SO-Latino... who knew!


Love SKY :D