peacetraveler22: (Default)
peacetraveler22 ([personal profile] peacetraveler22) wrote2015-03-02 09:09 am

назад в СССР!

FullSizeRender (14)

I'll never know or experience life during Soviet times, but during some of my visits to Russia I feel like I'm transported back to that era, or even another century. The road trip is coming to an end, with the final stop today in Yaroslavl. Along the way, I explored many small towns and spent an entire day and night in a village, talking to the locals in their homes, eating freshly prepared meals, and sleeping alone in an old house in the forest! But that will be the topic of another post. Yesterday in Soligalich, I entered a small meat shop and discovered this woman. I don't know for certain, but this blue uniform looks very Soviet, especially the hat. However, the most interesting thing in the provincial shops was...can you guess from the photo? :)

The object below! I became so confused when the shop owner started moving the balls, and thought she was offering to play some type of game. Then, my Russian travel companion informed me this is the shop's "calculator" or cash register, to add up the total cost of your purchase. How does it work? I still don't understand, but I was always bad at math. :)

FullSizeRender (15)

The woman in the cheese shop next store was wearing this same blue outfit, but she is progressive! She had a normal adding machine, and even modern day scales to weigh the cheese.

FullSizeRender (12)

I think it's always good to preserve your culture, including some old customs. But, yes, I was shocked to enter many small shops in Russian provinces and see no cash register, but this wooden contraption to calculate sales. Not just one or two shops, but a lot. Is it normal for a "modern" country? I think not. But maybe older people are so tied to tradition that they don't even want to purchase a basic calculator, which I assume is inexpensive in Russia. Progress in thought, technology, infrastructure...all signs of a healthy nation and culture in my view.

So many other things to write about, but I have no time on the road. :( On this trip, I've  met a lot of friendly Russians, and experienced no hostility based on the fact that I'm American. I'm very happy about both of these things! More to come soon...


[identity profile] kremlin-curant.livejournal.com 2015-03-03 08:30 am (UTC)(link)
Sure. If you want to be sick person at age of 35, you can eat everything.

[identity profile] qi-tronic.livejournal.com 2015-03-03 10:01 am (UTC)(link)
I'm 43 and healthy :))

I do not eat "everything", I eat what my body asks for.

For example I normally do not eat hamburgers, french fries, ketchup, mustard, margarine ...
Basically I do not eat any cheap American food, not because of any recommendations but because I feel sick instantly.
I almost do not drink coffee, especially evil is cheap filtered coffee of American type.

Only higher priced American food like steaks are good to me.

But I do eat natural meat, chicken, milk, butter, cheese, and also rice, pasta, vegetables, lots of olive oil and gallons of tea wich helps digest all that.

But NO diets at all, only healthy Soviet food as described by Father Stalin is that famous book :))