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priyank.com travel feature

Ha Carmel Market
Shuk HaCarmel is the largest market in Tel Aviv, Israel, and this particular street gets really busy on Fridays just prior to Shabbat, the Jewish day of rest. You can get fresh produce, baked goodies, housewares and simply pop in to the adjacent Nahalat Binyamin Street which is converted to an Artisit\' street exhibition.
Israel: Photo gallery | Israel travel stories

Sochi port and Romance on the road

This post is part of a series of travelogues narrating my trip to Russia. Here are the other posts!
« Previous post: Finding a place to stay in Sochi | Next post: When you run out of money »

Sochi sea terminal

Petr Pervyi (I don’t know who he is) Petr Pervyi (I don’t know who he is)

Sochi’s water front is elegant and tacky at the same time. Modern structures hug around older Soviet constructions giving the place a strange feel. Wide squares and tree lined promenades dot the coast, which even has a small stony beach which I saw but never went to. The gentle see breeze made me Mumbai-sick and I walked around watching the sunset and ducking crowds at fancy restaurants oozing with booze and food.

Viewing gallery Viewing gallery

Boats travel to Trabzon, Turkey and neighboring Georgia (which was closed since the latest Russo-Georgian war had just ended) from here and I fancied a Istanbul-Trans Siberia-Beijing trip as I saw several people lining up at the immigration office before boarding their ship.

Cranes at the port. Cranes at the port. One can take a ship to Georgia, Turkey etc. from here.

Hooking up

You often meet random interesting people while traveling and sometimes you hit it off together – the circumstances are perfect: no strings attached, traveling in an alien land and everyone is looking for some entertainment anyway. I have this theory that locals are always interested in foreigners because foreigners are like rare commodities. A traveler on the other hand has multiple options. Sometimes you are consciously looking for something, at other times you are definitely not and this story is one from the later case.

6332 Ship

foodAfter I found accommodation in Sochi, I dropped my backpack and went out to to see if I could have a quick snack. There was a little roadside shack manned (or should I say womanned) by an old lady (called Babushka – they keep Russia functioning) who was making Chicken Kievskaya, pieces of chicken (and cheese) stuffed in bread and deep fried, about which I had heard but never tried. At RUR 30 (1.5 USD), it was cheap and just the thing I was looking for. A twenty-five’ish girl came up to me and asked something to which I replied, “Sorry, I speak only a little Russian.” She was delighted and stopped there to speak English with me. I LOVE chatting with strangers and gosh, she spoke English! I was on the way to my room and I don’t know where she was off to, so we walked to a park nearby and sat on a bench in front of a Lenin statue (he watches us from everywhere) to eat. She spoke good English but she was talking very randomly and asking me every 2 minutes, “Hi, my name is Sofia, what is your name?”, while the molten cheese was dropping all over her face and hands.
She was beyond drunk.

Exhausted from the train journey and dying to crash on a stationary bed, I quickly finished my snack and proceeded to leave, but she insisted on going along with me. “What’s that ring on your finger, are you married? You have a girlfriend?” she kept on asking. “Ugh.. something like that..” “Buy me a beer, I will come with you, you are a nice guy.” I giggled in my head with sympathy… oh honey… and told her that I must go for I can’t do what she expects of me. But her grip on my hand was quite firm, making me wonder if she was the legacy of one of those steroid-fed Soviet power women.

I dragged her to a bus stop and the scene turned somewhat ugly. She wouldn’t let go of me and even started shouting, “Don’t you like me?”. I was yelling firmly “Я хочу уйти сейчас!” (“I want to leave right now!”) And people looked at us. And I looked away, slightly worried of police (who are everywhere) intervention since I had not registered my travel visa. And she walked behind me. “Do you really want me to go? What kind of a guy are you?” I said, “Dasvidanya, seeyou..” “See you? really? when?” Oh damn, why did I say ’seeyou’.., I thought (some phrases come out of your mouth as a reflex, pravda?)

Anyway, finally I got rid of her, much to the amusement of onlookers and to my embarrassment. This whole incident reminded me of Cusco, Peru, 2008, where in a somewhat similar incident in the hostel common room, a girl ended up puking on my back, on my shirt that said ‘I love Machu Picchu‘ which I had purchased only few hours earlier. Damn!

Traveling is fun, isn’t it? Go ahead, lemme hear you laugh… ;-) :) :D

Sunset at Sochi dock, on the Black Sea Sunset at Sochi dock, on the Black Sea

[Image: Киевские котлетки (Kievskie kotletki) is the nearest picture I found. Check out the recipe!]
This post is part of a series of travelogues narrating my trip to Russia. Here are the other posts!
« Previous post: Finding a place to stay in Sochi | Next post: When you run out of money »

Related posts

  • Wow, I am in Moscow! (17)
  • When you run out of money… (25)
  • Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (19)
  • The Kremlin at Suzdal (7)
  • The Charming Onion Domes (15)

¶ Blogged by Priyank Thatte | Tags: Russia

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Reader's Comments

  1. Mridula on August 26th, 2009 said:

    Ha ha ha! :D :D :D Had to laugh. But only 12? That is rather a tender age.

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on August 26th, 2009 said:

      Hi Mridula.. oh no, not 12! She was atleast 25!

      Reply to this comment ↵
  2. Anil on August 26th, 2009 said:

    I literally did laugh out loud. I’ve heard lots of stories about crazy Russian women, I’ll have to tell you some time!

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on August 28th, 2009 said:

      Yes yes I am all ears! :)

      Reply to this comment ↵
  3. odzer on August 26th, 2009 said:

    He he he, You poor thing! You should have puked on the Russian hussy though. Learn from your past leh!

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on August 28th, 2009 said:

      Hmm perhaps I should have. :D

      Reply to this comment ↵
  4. Neelima on August 26th, 2009 said:

    Oh I did laugh out loud!! really! :D
    Now that’s some Russian Experience u will never forget! ha ha

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on August 28th, 2009 said:

      Hi Neelima, welcome to my blog. I’m glad it made you laugh!

      Reply to this comment ↵
  5. Linguist-in-Waiting on August 27th, 2009 said:

    Romance? That’s some interesting concept of romance indeed, at least from the Russians! It reminded me of the prostitute character from the movie Breaking and Entering. Basically the same, very pushy.

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on August 28th, 2009 said:

      Well, I was trying to use ‘romance’ in a sarcastic way but didn’t communicate it well. :) hehehe!

      Reply to this comment ↵
  6. Sid on August 27th, 2009 said:

    Wow, that is a really interesting encounter. Surely, it must be hard to say ‘Dasvidaniya’, especially if you have seen the movie!

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on August 28th, 2009 said:

      Hi Sid, Thanks for your comment and welcome to my blog!
      I haven’t seen the movie Dasvidanya… anything special?

      Reply to this comment ↵
      • Sid on August 29th, 2009 said:

        Well, in the movie the lead also gets propositioned by a Russian lady who he turns down. Later she ends up saving him from jumping into the river and falls in love with him. A decent watch in my opinion.

        Reply to this comment ↵
        • Priyank on August 29th, 2009 said:

          Interesting! The movie’s release coincided with my trip last year, I haven’t seen it. Maybe I should.

          Reply to this comment ↵
  7. snow on August 28th, 2009 said:

    hahahaha :lol: that was funny till I saw the breath-taking Sunset pic and now i’m all “awww WOW” :)

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on August 28th, 2009 said:

      HAHAHA,.. Thanks thanks! :)

      Reply to this comment ↵
  8. Bob on August 29th, 2009 said:

    Lol, gee what a meanee, didn’t you like her,lol, too funny, love your blog, great stories and pics, great combo.

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on August 29th, 2009 said:

      LOL Bob… her mouth was smeared with cheese and sauce and she was forgetting my name every minute… no thanks ! :D

      Reply to this comment ↵
  9. When you run out of money… » Final Transit : Travel Blog on August 29th, 2009 said:

    [...] ← Sochi port and Romance on the road : Older post Newer post [...]

    Reply to this comment ↵
  10. Vamsee on August 30th, 2009 said:

    ha ha …that was funny. They way you built it up in the beginning, I thought you met somebody interesting and had a great intellectual conversation.

    You sure have a lot of interesting stories to tell.

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on August 30th, 2009 said:

      Intellectual. :D Such experiences are fun!

      Reply to this comment ↵
  11. Zhu on August 30th, 2009 said:

    The light is just amazing. It does look romantic!

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on September 7th, 2009 said:

      Hi Zhu,
      yes it was very nice and there is also a boat cruise that goes into the Black sea for an hour to watch the sunset. Unfortunately that day they didnt have sufficient people, so the cruise was canceled.

      Reply to this comment ↵
  12. Celine on October 1st, 2009 said:

    My sympathy too to that steroid-fed powerful dame..hahaha!

    Reply to this comment ↵
    • Priyank on October 2nd, 2009 said:

      :D I agree with the steroid part. Her grip was strong!

      Reply to this comment ↵

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