Friday, June 22, 2007

Small world after all

A trite saying . . . A tacky ride at Disneyland . . . Something you flippantly say when you are about to move to a new place far, far away for a long period of time . . . and perhaps an undeniably true maxim for our ever-shrinking globe.

Case in point:

I spent the last three days in The Netherlands visiting a friend from graduate school who is doing an internship with an organization in The Hague. (Off the topic of this specific story, I can tell you that I really enjoyed my visit to Holland and thought Amsterdam was one of the most beautiful places I have been. I also saw some amazing art in person with my own eyes: van Gogh, Vermeer, Rembrandt!).


On the last evening that I was there, Pasha and I headed to Delft, a town just outside of The Hague and within walking distance from the place where Pasha is living. You can see a picture of the lovely village as it was painted by Vermeer on the right (I saw this painting myself in The Hague the following day). It's a smaller version of other cities I visited in the Netherlands and has beautiful churches, lovely cobblestone streets, and canals snaking through it. If the funny-sounding name of Delft does not roll off your tongue familiarly, you may recognize it visually in its blue-and-white Dutch porcelain, Delft Blue or Royal Delft. We stopped for some dinner on the square and enjoyed a charming evening in this historic and attractive place. Of the many topics of our dinner conversation was an encounter that Pasha had previously in Delft when wearing a small town Minnesota baseball team t-shirt, the town being a rather small farming town and far, far away from the Netherlands, to say the least. A man rushed up to him, excited to see such a display of hometown pride as he was from that very place. A small world.

The small world only began to reveal itself when we left the outdoor terrace of the restaurant in search of a glass of some good Dutch beer. On our way home, we saw an open door to a pub next to a church (I have often wondered why it is that pubs in Europe are always next to churches...). We walked in and Pasha inquired at the bar about the kind of beers they had on tap. The man wearing a vest on the other side smiled and informed us that he had only good, cold beer. At this moment, a man approaches us and says, "I don't know you, and I don't know you either. Who are you?" It was clear that the pub we entered was in fact something private, and we began to awkwardly reorient ourselves as a few people gathered around us, awaiting our answers.

At that moment, I noticed the large man who had inquired was proudly sporting a yellow t-shirt on which was a monogram of a bucking cowboy and the name of the most magical and wonderful state, Wyoming. Instead of answering the inquiry, I turned and asked him where he got such a t-shirt. Long story turned short, the man was from Casper, Wyoming, about two and a half hours south of my hometown, and he was a doctoral students studying mining in Delft. The pub we turned into was the local mining fraternity. After exchanging a few stories about rural Wyoming and the like, we chuckled and parted. A very small world after all.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

A dreamy midsummer's night

I almost feel like Puck in a Midsummer Night's Dream wandering amidst fairies and confused lovers roaming around the night in these crazy days when darkness hardly descends upon us and everything takes on a rosy, blushed and confused hue of this early month of summer. Bees, beetles, mosquitoes, and other bugs fly fantastically and without aim through the sunny breeze, and we humans do much the same in slower fashion beneath their harried watch.

I know a bank where the wild thyme blows,
Where oxlips and the nodding violet grows,
Quite over-canopied with luscious woodbine,
With sweet musk-roses and with eglantine.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Act ii. Scene.1

With the seeming magic of Mendellssohn's poetic piece floating through the midsummer night sky, we hover continuously between lightness and the cusp of darkness in Estonia, as if stuck in a strange twilight trance waiting for the onset of darkness. Length of visible light at the moment in Tartu is 20 hours, 51 minutes, with small increases until midsummer, locally known as Jaanipäev, next weekend.

After surviving the rather dark and gray winter, everyone feels a bit giddy in this dreamy light. I am reminded of Garrison Keillor's News from Lake Woebegon on last week's show of A Prairie Home Companion in which he warned Minnesotans of the infectious feelings floating around in the month of June. I admit to have not heeded his advice to stay indoors and away from windows; instead, I have embraced the dizziness of this wonderful, dreamy midsummer time. After all, it only comes about one time a year!

... and, in the great writer's words, this brings me to "the true beginning of our end"(A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Act v. Scene.1).

Thursday, June 07, 2007

The cure for fish fever...

In case you haven't heard, being bit while fishing (by fish!) can cause terrible bouts of fish fever, a disease which inspires the infected to incessantly babble and share stories and feelings. The only known cure is rhubarb (for more about this dangerous disease, you can click and listen here).

In an effort to waylay any possibility of this ailment appearing, I used some of the fruit (or is it vegetable?) growing in excess in a friend's country home to make a really tasty American pie. Mmmm. Mmmmm. Good!


Monday, June 04, 2007

Row, row, row your boat

Just so that you don't think that I have been allowing any grass to grow under my feet (or mold under my paddle, as it may be), I thought I would share a photo collage of my return to Estonia last weekend. A combination of four Estonian men, a German computer scientist, and American teacher together with three boats, a gentle river, sunny weather, and several cases of Estonian beer made for a relaxing weekend on water as we paddled down the Pedja river just north of Tartu.

2007-06-02 to 2007-06-03 Canoeing With Eero and Jenn

What is that noise encircling our home?

Screeching around our home, the cicadas that come with the onset of the rainy season sound like an army of broken hard drives droning in fr...