Saturday, December 30, 2006

On our way to Green Lake

I'm sending this last blog message before we enter the wilds of Ontario where there are no phones, certainly no computers and no running water. (Maybe this is a cry for help instead of a normal blog entry.)

The kids managed to get in 2 days of skiing here in Collingwood, albeit on one run. Orest and I meanwhile, couldn't be bothered to fork over 25 bucks to do the same run over and over and over again. I guess that highlights the difference between the children and us - they don't have such a high-falutin' idea of value for money that we do, they just want to get out there and do stuff. That's not to say we didn't do anything, there was still some quality coffee-drinking, newspaper perusing and napping to be had amongst the older set, and we enjoyed ourselves immensely.

We also had the ooportunity to catch up with the Dzulynsky clan...we still have trouble figuring out the family relationship to the Hrabowyches (our children are either 3rd cousins or ours are aunts to theirs or some variant of that). But the children are growing up quickly and it was nice to see them have fun together, especially with big Adia (Ostap and Motria's). Stefa and Larysa love hanging with her, Stefa especially, cuz she loves having a "big sister" instead of being one once in awhile.

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

C'mon, snow already!

No Snow? How is that possible? Here we are in Collingwood, the land of Blue Mountain and its over 30 ski runs, and all they can manage is a faint sprinkling of dust over the landscape.

We were worried when we arrived in Toronto on the 21st and it seemed that we had brought the typical English winter weather with us (that's rainy and gloomy), but thought it wouldn't last. After spending a lovely Christmas Eve and Day with my brother and his partner without snow, we thought, it's got to get better than this. Boxing Day shopping and Orest's hockey game, still nothing.

Finally, it's D-Day, the 27th, the day we were meant to drive up to Collingwood to do some skiing. and we wake up to a mixture of rain and snow, but with nothing staying on the ground. So, no skiing. At least the hotel now has an indoor/outdoor swimming area with slides next door which we've already taken advantage of.

There is hope though, as we were on our way to dinner with Motria, Ostap and family, we could hear (and feel) the snow-making machines working full-blast as it had finally gotten as close to zero as it's going to get. By tonight, they should be on their way to having a few runs open.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Last-minute Christmas fondling

Stefa, Larysa and I were out last night finishing up their shopping for gifts for their school friends. There we were at Brent Cross at a shop called Fun Learning. As we moved through the shop, me looking at one side of the aisle and the girls looking on the opposite side of the aisle, I felt someone brush up against me. Thinking it was Stefanie trying to playfully get my attention, I deliberately pushed back, trying to give her a hip-check. When I felt no resistance, I turned to see what had happened only to see that I had been sidling up to a complete stranger!
The woman was obviously confused as to why I was trying to bump and grind her, and despite my profuse apologies, probably assumed I was some sort of lunatic intent on feeling up as many fellow shoppers as possible.
It wasn't until Stefanie appeared back and she was able to overhear me telling Stefanie what had happened, that I could see her look of horror change to laughter.
We all had a good laugh, in fact...I feel like we could be close friends now, seeing as the introductory touching has already taken place.

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Am I a lousy parent, or what?

I promised myself that this Christmas would be different after the disaster that was last year's Christmas play. Little Adia was in Reception and they were the youngest group participating for the whole show. Thus I was flabbergasted when the decision was made to make them sing their little song from the floor rather than from the stage. Picture it, 60 parents all trying to catch a glimpse or photograph their child behind several rows of other parents. All my photos had bright spots of peoples' hair or shoulders in the foreground, with Adriana this fuzzy little blob in behind it. Poor little Adia was getting upset as well because she couldn't see me either. I frantically tried to stand in the aisle, but Mrs. Morrissey (our head) was quite adamant that we keep the aisles clear for fire and safety reasons. I just couldn't understand why they wasted so much time pratising something that we couldn't even see! I just thanked God that I didn't force Orest to take off work to come and not see Adia, cuz he would have been pissed!

So I wasn't expecting much from this year's performance (even though I made my frustrations quite clear last year) and I vowed to chill out and enjoy it. Through a series of misadventures with dead camera batteries and Adriana's unwillingness to thrust herself forward, I have very little to show for it on the video or still camera. There's a 30 second clip of her dancing and waving a scarf on the stage (what that has to do with the Nativity is anyone's guess) and I have a few photos of her standing in the back row on the floor for the duration of the play(see right). I tried to coax her into the front row, just so I could get a photo of her that looked like I meant to get one of her and not everyone else's children, but either she didn't want to or she couldn't understand what I wanted from her. (I think it's the latter since she inexplicably began singing very loudly.) As I joked with her teacher after the play: "I didn't see her, but I could definitely hear her!"

The following Saturday was St. Nicholas day at Ukrainian school with its requisite performance. All three girls had learned their verses and songs and I was ready at the still camera while Orest was with the video. So Adriana's class gets up to sing a song, and again, she's in the back row with this big kid directly in front of her with a busby on his head, no less! (What this has to do with St. Nicholas, is again, anybody's guess.) Here I am jostling with the other parents in the aisle, frantically whispering to her to move into an open space so I could get a good shot of her, but she's turned in the other direction, facing Orest and the video camera. (I guess she did learn something from previous expereince, but it was of little use to me.) So I got bupkiss on the camera and incurred the wrath of another parent whose child was undoubtedly in the front row and wanted a photo of them, but got my fat behind instead.
On top of all this, Stefa decided to go completely stroppy on us (I think someone told her to stand somewhere she didn't want to stand) and her performance was marked by an aggressive 'hands on hips' stance, followed by flouncing off the stage when finished. Aaah, the teenage years, ain't they a pip?

So what did I learn this year that I can take with me to next year? I did come to the realization that my children are all different. Where I was used to having Larysa propel herself from the back row to the front for any and all performances, suddenly I find myself with Adriana, who is happy to hide behind children twice her size. I also have a child (or pre-teen) who is no longer willing to smile for the camera and wears her emotions like an shield in front of her. That, and I'll have to learn to use some of the camera features like zoom-in for Adia and filtering for Stefa which perhaps may mitigate their issues with photo-taking.

Or I could just smile and enjoy the moment and forget about any and all photographic momentos...I'm sure the other parents could use one less frantic parent in the aisle to compete with.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

So much to do, so little time

I am in countdown to Christmas mode deluxe-o!

It's gotten to the point where I am dreaming of everything that I need to do and upcoming events so that when I wake up I think they are all supposed to happen immediately. Today I woke up and was convinced that Larysa was going to the V&A museum with her class (it's tomorrow) and that I had to go to the doctor's for my ultrasound (that's next Wednesday). I just need to calm the f*** down and get a grip.
I think what hasn't helped has been my longest running cold in the history of sinuses ever. I got this over 2 weeks ago, thought I'd gotten rid of it, only to have it return this past weekend. I think I have a Miss Snots-a-lot give me loving kisses to thank for the second series. So my sleep patterns have been seriously messed with and I have not been at my healthiest.
Orest, meanwhile, has just been for a throrough physical and had the woman doctor perform two exams that only a proctologist can. Thus he told me: "I got felt up more by a complete stranger than I have you in the past two weeks!"

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Ice Skating on Sunday

Went skating with the Women's Club on Sunday to the Natural History Museum. Every year in London, there are more and more skating rinks opening up. The first year we did it we went to Somerset House (the photo with Stefa and Larysa) and thought, how quaintly English to create this little postage stamp of a rink for people to skate on. The last two years we've been to the rink in the courtyard of the Natural History Museum, only to find the rink equally as small. (The Telescopic photo makes it appear humoungous!)

They claim it's 1000 square meters, but it feels a lot smaller when they let all the people on the ice. As you can see from our family photo below, I am taking the photo and not skating, since I was shopping in the Christmas markets right beside the rink. (Also because I can't skate worth a damn and it causes my flat feet severe pain.) After skating, we went upstairs to the cosy cafe for mince pies, mulled wine and hot chocolate.

Ice skating has been embraced in London as a great winter outdoor activity (something we Canadians clued into long ago!) and they certainly have great historical venues in which to do it. This website shows about ten of the outdoor rinks available in and around London, from the Tower of London (in the moat!) to more natural setting in Hampstead Heath. It's got some great views of the rinks themselves:


http://www.londonnet.co.uk/ln/guide/about/attractions_iceskating.html

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Week from hell for Larysa

I have to hand it to Larysa, she's a trooper.

We've been intensely preparing for her entrance exams for the last 3 months, in fact it's been the only thing consuming my time this fall. When I wasn't helping Larysa by giving her practice exams, I was worrying about silently or talking to my friends about as nauseum. I've been quite boring lately.

Last week, she had three exams to sit, two of them half-days, and one a full day of exams. After all of them, she seemed to come out all bouncy and energized. I'm not sure how to react, since when we went through this with Stefanie, her post-exam behavior was quite the opposite: near tears, exhausted and not happy.

Is it possible Larysa is one of these lunatic children who thrive on tests? Or is she just plain loony?

Unfortunately, we won't find out until March 1st, when the results are posted and the schools are offered.

Monday, November 27, 2006

Tower of London - Ceremony of the Keys

Completely forgot to mention our evening tour of the Tower of London. I guess we've been living here so long, that I forget when we do the touristy stuff.
Anway, we were booked to see the Ceremony of the Keys, which is a ritualized way to close up the joint for the night. Aah, but what would the Tower be without its historical rituals? First we had a tour of the Tower by one of the resident Yoeman warders. There are about 150 (yeomen & their families) living inside the tower walls and get locked in every night. That is why they have their own doctor and pub and chaplain onsite. Although what would you do if you had a case of the munchies round about midnight?
For Ceremony, The Chief Warder, dressed in a Beefeater costume, marches his way to the front gate from the Byward Tower. After he locks the Traitor’s Gate, he makes his way towards the Bloody Archway tower, where he is stopped by a sentry. As part of its tradition, the sentry and Warder hold an exchange:
Sentry: ‘Halt, Who goes there?’
Warder: ‘The Keys!’
Sentry: ‘Whose keys?’
Warder: ‘Queen Elizabeth’s keys.’
Sentry: ‘Pass Queen Elizabeth’s keys – Alls well!’

After the traditional exchange the Chief Warder lifts his hat and proclaims ‘God preserve Queen Elizabeth.’ The clock chimes for 10 o’clock as the other Queen’s guards raise their bonnets and say ‘Amen.’ The entire process takes no more than 7 minutes, but has been going on for the last 700 years. Even during World War II, when German bombs rained down on London, the ceremony still took place with the exception of a direct hit, which delayed the ceremony by one-half hour.
I had heard that if you are really nice to your yeoman guide, he might invite you back to their pub, but unfortunately we had no luck regardless of how many hints we dropped! We ended our evening in a local pub with Zim and Michelle and got home by 11:30 pm.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Honk if you're Indian

The mode of traffic in Mumbai was fabulous to behold...no lanes painted and cars battling with trucks and motorcyclists to squeeze into every available inch of space on the road. And all this accompanied by the constant beeping of horns.
Honking seemed to be just another method of speaking with other people in India. Whole conversations seemed to be occurring from the comfort of your own vehicle in a language only understandable to you.

HONK! "Hey get out of my way!"
HONK! "I was here first!"
HONK! "I'm right beside you, watch out."
HONK! "Would you like to go for a curry later?"

It was all quite amusing, except for Orest who claims that these conversations were going on until 4 am out in front of our hotel and easily heard from our bed, where he lay tossing and turning.

The other interesting thing that happened is a narrow brush with fame. Unbeknownst to us, Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie arrived in Mumbai at the same time as us (but they were in a private helicopter) and proceeded to stay at the same hotel as us as well (but they were in the Palace part of the hotel, we were in the Tower). That evening we were booked to eat at Indigo, but cancelled at the last minute. Good thing too, Brangelina ended up there instead. (Do you think they took our reservation?)
All weekend long, they seemed to follow us around. How annoying! If they'd just stop stalking us and come out in the open, I would have graced them with an autograph!

Saturday, November 18, 2006

More about Mumbai

So since the next day of our stay in Mumbai was Sunday, Orest and I booked a tour guide to take us around the sites of the city. I had read that Mumbai perhaps did not have an abundance of historical sights, but we managed to fill up 5 hours of time seeing the following

1. Our first stop (we only drove by the Victoria Train Terminal, Marine Drive and Chowpatty beach) was a Jain temple up in the Malabar Hills. Our tour guide whisked us through Indian religion fairly quickly, so our understanding of which gods were which was minimal at best. However, it was like entering the local community hall with its vendors in the courtyard selling patties and bread. The rituals involved in worship were very interesting and it was wonderful to be in the centre of it for a few moments.

2. Next were the Hanging Gardens, which were created on top of a reservoir in the Malabar Hills. Although the pruned trees and flowers were pretty, the informative talk from our guide regarding the Parsi (or Zoraostrian) funeral rites was of greater interest. Next to the gardens was the Doonderwadi complex where they would take their dead to one of the Towers of Silence (an open-aired tower) where the vultures were meant to devour the flesh and the sun meant to dry and decompose the rest of the body. (They did this because burying would defile Mother Earth and creamtion would desecrate the fire - all natural elements being sacred.) We took a photo from the hilltop, but it was rather hazy so not much of Marine Drive is visible.

3. The Mahatma Ghandi Museum was next, and here we followed the displays and learned more about the man who spent most of his life fighting for (and winning) the rights of all Indians. Here's a photo looking up at the balcony where he was arrested for his speech incurring civil disobedience.

4. Our last stop was the Prince of Wales Museum where we quickly went through the Indian portion of the displays and spent the rest of the time in the gift shop purchasing lovely prints and cards for literally pennies. It certainly beats the prices at the British Museum's gift shop!

A quick bit of shopping followed and then a lovely evening meal at what seems to be the only funky restaurant outside the hotel; Indigo. Orest and I risked dsysentery by ordering the king prawn starter, but it was too tasty to pass up!

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Introduction to the Third World

This may come as a surprise to some of you, but I was in Bombay India (Or Mumbai, as it is now known) over the weekend. "What kind of idiot flies 9 hours to see a country for only 3 days?" you might ask. 'Tis I, the non-eco-friendly gal!
What an experience it was too...well worth the carbon emissions.
When Orest told me 6 weeks ago that he was going there on a business conference, I knew I had to take my chance and start tagging along to see the world. (I'd passed up several other fine opportunities that I'm kicking myself over now.)
With my shopping excursions laid out for me by my trustworthy advisor Lisa (she'd been there before) and other sound advice, I was still somewhat overwhelmed when we landed in this unreal cacophony of sights and smells.
The hour drive to our hotel gave us plenty of opportunities to see poverty at its lowest level, filth at its most exposed and rudimentary building materials (bamboo support structures and burlap used to keep cement wet) like they used 1000 years ago.
We were staying at the Taj Palace and Tower Hotel - the best Mumbai has to offer(see this link to view what I was lead to expect - http://www.tajhotels.com/Palace/THE%20TAJ%20MAHAL%20PALACE%20&%20TOWER,MUMBAI/Pdf/The-Taj-Mahal-Palace-&-Tower-Mumbai.pdf ), but even that was a letdown on first glance. The lobby, with its low ceiling and somewhat outdated style, reminded me of some of the communist attempt at interior decoration in some of the Warsaw hotels. Our room had a permanent musty smell to it that could only be eradicated by blowing up the entire 30-year old tower and starting over again.
It took the rest of the afternoon sitting by the pool to regain my confidence that I had not made a big mistake in coming to India. Looking back, I realize now that I had passed my comfort level - or even more sad - my comfort level has become narrower from my days of backpacking and youth hostels.
And confidence was definitely needed when Orest and I ventured out in the early evening to find a tailor 7 blocks from the hotel. The moment we stepped outside the hotel, we were targeted by beggars- women carrying babies, little barefoot children, crippled men on carts. At first, I was very nervous, having lived with the Gypsy beggars of Eastern Europe who would rob you blind if you let them. But I have to admit that these were the most polite beggars I'd ever encountered. After a quick no to their request for money, they would thank you and excuse themselves for bothering you. The sidewalk sellers were a little bit more aggressive, but having Orest around was an obstacle many of them couldn't surmount.
The other thing I noticed was the amount of stray dogs laying about in the street. And these weren't the feral strays that you'd encounter in Romania or Ukraina, where the threat of attack was always a possibility. These ones all seemed to be lethargically sprawled all over the sidewalk, with nary a care for the multitudes of people stepping over or around them. I almost felt like stepping on them to see if they would react - but luckily I'm not 6 years old anymore...

More to come in the next blog.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Career opportunities

I was putting Adriana to bed the other night and she announced that when she grows up, she wants to be a princess or a teacher.
I gently tried to break it to her: "Well, since you weren't born a princess, you'll have to marry a prince to become one."

She thought about it for only a moment and said:

"Ok, I'll just be a teacher." (I can't figure out what was less appealing; the marrying bit or the prince bit.)

Just as I was shutting the door to her room, I heard her add:

"Or a Dalmation..."

Aaaahhh, the dreams of childhood...too precious to burst their bubble.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Can I afford to be stupid?

In the last 4 days, I have lost 60 pounds (and I mean currency, not weight - I wish!) in total - and I can put it all down to my own stupidity. The first 40 pounds were lost in the form of a parking ticket. I wish I could say that the traffic control person was being an absolute dick, but the real reason was: just as I was getting out of the car, my mobile rang and I forgot that I needed to purchase a parking sticker for my car. Complete moron can't do two things at once!

The second happened so quickly I still have no ideahow. I'd made some DVD copies for a Mum at school and she handed me the 20 pound note just as I was waving off Adriana and Larysa to school. Somehow between school and my car I realized I was no longer in posession of said note!

The question is: can I afford this? I thought back to the days when Orest and I were first married and still using budgets (well actually Orest did the budgets - he just told me how much I could spend per week) 60 pounds would have been my entire week's supply. It probably doesn't help that I still convert to Canadian dollars every time I shell out for something over here - that's over 120 bucks!!

I'm very lucky that we aren't scrimping and saving as we were 20 years ago, cuz I'm getting stupider every day. (20 years from now I'll probably be losing 120 pounds every day because I can't keep my mind on the moolah.)

I did however feel obligated to try and retrieve at least the 20 I lost at the school by asking the school secretary to post something in the school newsletter to see if anyone would come forward and return it. Call it my social experiment of the month.

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Burn Guy, burn!



Guy Fawkes night....what an interesting celebration. Bonfires with an effigy atop and fireworks to symbolize the gunpowder that could have lit up the Parliament if not stopped. A classic struggle between the Catholics and newly-formed Anglicans all wrapped up in tidy package of fun for all ages.
We had heard that in Chiddingfold, Surrey they have quite the massive parade, fair and bonfire, so we decided to organize and outing there in conjunction with the Ukrainian Scouts. We first arrived at the old folks home to prepare a bit of games and snacks for the kids and then took a walk down to the village once it got dark.
We arrived just in time to watch the procession of torch bearers (about 400 of them) walking down from the local St Mary's school. They all had to gather around the bonfire, which was stacked up in a teepee shape at least 30 feet high, with the hapless effigy of Guy tied to the top. Then the countdown began and they threw their torches into the collected wood in waves. I was amazed that no one was injured with the massive amounts of torches being chucked, but obviously these were experienced fire-throwers.
As the fire was burning the children got a little bored after the flames had completely consumed Guy, so we took a walk around the green and found that they had many stalls selling food as well as a small fair with rides for smaller children. The girls were most interested in the stall selling all things glowing, and of course we had to buy them each a set of fluffy bunny ears that light up. (what rabbits have to do with Bonfire night is anybody's guess...)
An hour later, they began the fireworks display. With the requisite oohs and aahs, we watched while Jessie cowered at our feet from the noise. After a very good lightshow, we trudged back up the hill where we had parked at the old folks home, had some hot chocolate and biscuits and then home. When we drove by the bonfire, it was still burning brightly, and it's been said that it usually stays lit til the following morning. Amazing!

(The photo above is Adia sitting on the shoulders of our friend Stepan - who did a good job of shouldering others in our party as well.)

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Trying to keep Halloween alive!

It's been really weird trying to celebrate Halloween here in England. Over the past four years, the Brits have come along a bit in terms of understanding what it's all about (i.e. there's been a lot more to buy at the local shops), but there's still a lot of confusion around here over what and what not constitutes an All Hallows Eve fun night. So here are some basic tips to help you through the season:

1. You don't have to wear a scary costume! The little ones are already frightened enough as it is, without dressing them up as little Draculas or Elphabas. See my kids: I had SpongeBob, a dalmation and a nerdy geek this year (no, the little green man is not Orest). I still remember Larysa's first year at the school's Halloween disco, dressed as a Dallas Cowboy cheerleader, and having some kid come up to her and say: "I'm not afraid of you, you're not scary!" Yeah, duh! Missing the point.

2. Our neighbours around the corner came trick or treating and told me to send my kids around to them when they returned from their jaunts, only to find their house looking dark and with no pumpkin lit up out in front. We then realized that a lot of people here aren't up on pumpkin etiquette and the girls have missed out on a lot of candy over the years!

3. What is the big deal with jack o' lanterns anyway? I think a lot of people still have a fear of sticking their hands inside of juicy old gourd and ripping out the guts to then carve out a design on the outside. I still remember our first year here, trying to get a jack o' lantern contest going at the school, getting numerous phone calls from people who had never touched a pumpkin in their lives. I can't tell you how many times I had to explain the rudiments of pumpkin carving.

4. The amount of backlash I hear over here that this is an "American holiday, and why do they have to supply these little brats with a year's supply of candy anyway?" is quite astounding. Get a grip Gramps, this is not an American invasion of commercial crassness, it's just an opportunity for the kids to dress up and get a toothache all in one night. Besides, all that scary dressing up will come in handy for those vicar and tart parties of the future, won't it?

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Still sparking

14 days on the Spark diet website and I've lost 5 pounds so far.

I can't really tell you why it works, but I guess the calorie-counting (and I am not exact by any stretch of the imagination) helps see how big a portion you can eat without going over your maximum every day.

The fitness page also helps. Once I figured out how many miles per minute I was walking it was really easy to convert that to calories burned. Because I don't have a pedometer, it was through an intricate calculation off Google Earth and using the beats per minute on the ipod.

I've also been drinking a lot more water than I'm used to, which has done a number on my skin - it feels like the water is pushing out all the imputirities out through my face and it's breaking out all over. But if it's getting the results I want, I can live with a few spots on my face.

Monday, October 23, 2006

Hair Follies

A friend from Adriana's class at school was having her 40th birthday on Saturday, and the invite said "Think Audrey Hepburn" for how to dress for it. After hearing many of my other friends saying they were going to have their hair done up for it, I thought I could try the same.

It wasn't until they saw how short my hair was at the salon that they began to express doubt as to whether putting it up was even a remote option. Luckily, I had a girl who was game for it, and said my hair was a challenge to overcome. (I felt like the Himilayas at that point.) Several pins (48 various hairpins) ranging in size and ouch factor later, my hair was glued into place, so that not even the damp British weather was going to make it fall down.

So the party was great fun; everyone agreed that I clean up nice, and thank god nobody had any magnets on them, cuz I would have gotten stuck to them head first!

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

I'm sparking!

Or maybe barking?

Funny name for a website, but check out www.sparkpeople.com It's a free diet site that allows you to load in your data and help you determine an appropriate weight loss plan which includes nutritional guidance and fitness routines.

(A note of warning to my British friends - this is an American site, so there are lots of meal plans based around stuff that's popular in the U.S. For example, I had to load all the dietary info in myself for Yakult because they've never heard of it there.)

So this is it, I've finally decided that something's got to budge (not bulge) and I've been on it 3 days. My goal is to lose (not love - which I typed out in error - Freudian slip) 30 pounds before my birthday in January. Right now it's been great and I've lost 2.5 pounds already, but Christmas is just around the corner with its endless partying and eating and noshing and nibbling, and so on.
Lord, it doesn't bear thinking about! Is there any way to skip the holiday season altogether?

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Larysa's birthday

For Larysa's 11th birthday, I wasn't sure quite what to do with her. She wanted the Rainforest Cafe - too expensive, then she wanted horseback riding - also too expensive. She'd already been to the bowling alley millions of times for other birthdays, so that was out.
As I trolled the internet for ideas, I came across a sound studio that hosts birthday party where you go in and record a song (everyone gets a copy of the CD) and then you do some dance moves too that gets recorded on a DVD for you as well. Cool! Larysa has always been a pop star diva in the making, so I thought it would be kinda neat to get it on a CD for her.
Once Larysa had settled on her guestlist - it was really important that she have a good mix of kids, I made these cool invites to look like CDs (if I had an extra few hours to spend I would have laminated them too) and then put them in CD cases for Larysa to give out to the invitees.

Well the day came and I drove up the 7 lucky children to the Sound Studio where they spent the first hour recording the song "Reach" by S Club 7. (Larysa had invited to boys, MacKenzie and Luke, it this seemed like the most appropriate song for both sexes to sing. Somehow I couldn't see the boys wanting to sing Avril Lavigne or Pink.)

Everything was going well until everyone piled out of the recording room and I noticed how ill Larysa looked. I guess the heat and lack of something to drink had dehydrated her to the point that she could barely stand up. But in true Ethel Merman-The-show-must-go-on style, she was able to come round and finish the dance moves for the DVD. Listlessly, but she did it. What a trooper!

So right now, it's 1:40 am, and the girls who stayed behind for the sleepover are obviously not sleeping. So it's up to me to keep at them until they finally drop off.

Nighty-night!

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Knife throwing class

Ok, not throwing...But it was still a knife class.
My friend Mary invited a few of us to Divertimenti, which is this lovely cooking school in Marylebone High Street. You had to walk through their kitchen shop to get to where they were doing the class, and I was itching to go shopping. It's one of those types of shops where you can buy mango slicers or something equally as useless, but it's supposed to make life sooooo much easier. I can't resist it somehow - it's having grown up on Ronco commercials on tv. Anything that slices or dices holds a certain fascination for me.

That's probably why I signed up for this course. I've always had the feeling that I've never really understood how to really use a knife properly - that's why I have these cuts all over my hands. Well, we spent 2 hours chopping, mincing, julienning and (not sure if I have this one correctly...) chiffonading, which I think means shredding. (But with a knife of course - which is doubly strange!) In fact, we spent so much time in the preparation, I almost didn't have time to eat the products of your time-consuming work.
I was enticed, however, to purchase a brand-new (read:expensive) knife - after spending two hours with the Global knife, I fell in love with the feel of it. When I got home, I promptly unwrapped it, used it and sliced my finger in no short order.
So I still don't know what I'm doing, but now I'm doing it with an expensive knife and feeling good about the pain I'm inflicting on myself.

Monday, October 09, 2006

Mooncake Festival in Chinatown


This Sunday we took advantage of having nothing to do in the afternoon to go down to Chinatown and have a family lunch.
Unbeknownst to us, it was the Mooncake Festival time, so when we got to the main drag of Chinatown (the only drag, actually) we were greeted by a parade of dragons and paper lanterns to add to the already colourful atmosphere.
The meal was lovely - finally, some decent Chinese food in London! But Adriana was forced to eat nothing by steamed rice and a sliver of bbq pork, since she wouldn't try or eat anything else.
Although we asked our server what the festival was all about, her limited English made it difficult for her to describe in detail what the festival was all about, so we didn't press her.
I've since looked it up on Wikipedia, which describes the 8th month of the lunar calendar was having the brightest moon, and the Chinese having an autumnal festival at the same time to celebrate the end of the harvest. The mooncakes refer to an ancient tale of the Chinese's struggle against the Mongols and using mooncakes to communicate an uprising to rebels on the 15th day of the 8th lunar month.
Interesting....even more interesting was the oriental family sitting across from us, a youngish couple with 2 young boys. They ordered things I had never seen in my life before, but bound to be more authentic than the sweet and sour chicken we ordered. I'd always been jealous of these families that can go to restaurants with young children and manage to be so quiet that you forget the children are there - and oriental families are a prime example of this. With my brood the decibel level seems to increase in public places - it's as if they think that the minute we step outside the house, I've gone deaf and need to be shouted at continuously. Anyways, there's a lull in noise at our end of the restaurant, when all of a sudden, the Chinese Mum yells at one of her small sons who's slipped under the table: "SIT ON YOUR CHAIR, NOW!!" I was so shocked, I looked around at my kids to make sure it wasn't one of mine who'd slipped under their table.
But no, it was definitely hers, as she stood to haul him out from the floor and place him squarely on his chair.
Somehow it made me feel a bit better about my children's behavior until:
"Mama, do all China people have lines for eyes?" (Could she have said it any louder?????????)

Sunday, October 01, 2006

Keeping up appearances

Still along the same vein with Larysa....

She was sitting in the office chair behind me trying to give me a head massage when she announced in a horrified tone:

"Mum you've got lots of grey hair! When are you going to colour it to match the rest of your head?"

I was a bit disappointed, because, after years of colouring my roots to disguise my greys, I thought it time to abandon all pretenses, and go 'au naturel'. This was not a split-moment decision, but carefully thought-out based on: economics (I'd save myself at least 200 pounds a year), truth (it's time I faced the fact that I'm no spring chicken) and health (all those chemicals must be having some sort of effect on me).

I tried to explain as gently as possible how I was thinking of leaving it as is, but this just induced an even more horrified repsonse:
"Mum! You can't show up in the playground at school looking like my grandmother!!"

My God, she's just added about 20 years to my age and has now put me in that dreaded category of "parents who mortify their children". We're ready for our own Jerry Springer episode, complete with half-dressed young girl and her blousy still-more-undressed Mom duking it out on national tv - expletives bleeped out, of course.

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Girl, you'll be a woman soon

Poor Larysa!

At almost 11, she seems to be on the verge of becoming a woman. She's got all the emotional roller coaster feelings associated with budding adolesence, but none of the physical manifestations of it.
Case in point, she managed to work herself into sobbing hysterics in the 7 minute ride to school the other day. Why? Because her face was too fat! She doesn't seem to understand that her face still had the baby fat that would disappear all too soon. She was inconsolable.

I just wish she's get her period, so she'd have an excuse for all this drama!

Walking progress

You're probably all dying to find out how I've been doing with my walking tunes that I told you about on Sept 16th's blog.
Well, the first day, my shins started aching (like the feeling of being on skis for the first day of the season) by Absolutely Everybody and I was more than happy when Gus had his open air cafe open early enough that morning that I was able to use the excuse of making polite conversation with him to have a sit down while he made me a 'happy-cappy'.
A few days in, it was Madonna causing the shooting pains up my shinbones - although I've heard she does that to paraplegics.
I am happy to say that I can now last through Follow the Leader without wanting to karate chop my legs to death. I have had to remove Pump It and Vertigo as I discovered they had completely un-walkable beats. Sorry Black Eyed Peas and U2 - I'll leave you on in the car instead, ok?
I've replaced those two with a few more tunes, so this is what the playlist looks like now:
A Little Less Conversation 3:33 Elvis vs JXL
Love Machine 3:25 Girls Aloud
Aint Got No... I Got Life (REMIX) 3:22 Nina Simone
Please Don't Go (Sunshine Mix) 4:39 K.W.S.
Move This 5:02 Technotronic
Absolutely Everybody 3:43 Vanessa Amorosi
First Time 2:40 Sunblock feat. Robin Beck
24-7 In My 911 3:13 Vengaboys
My time 3:15 Dutch feat. Crystal Waters
Ray Of Light 5:20 Madonna
Cha Cha Slide 3:40 DJ Casper
Follow Da Leader 2:32 Nigel & Marvin
Burning Down The House 3:39 Tom Jones & The Cardigans
The Emperor's New Clothes 5:16 Sinéad O'Connor
All I Wanna Do 4:33 Sheryl Crow

I am a bit ashamed of having something as silly as Vengaboys on there, but hey, whatever gets me moving around the park, covering twice the distance, is fine by me.
I'll let you know how it goes....

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Murphy's Law?

'Everything that can go wrong, will go wrong.' - Murphy's Law

So here I was again, scrambling to get to school to pick up my girls (and Gwen's daughters) on time. I needed the skates for Adia, tennis rackets for Stefa and Larysa snacks and something to drink, and get Jessie in the car for the short trip to the school.
I was losing time because I couldn't find Adriana's skates, only to find out after a quick call to Orest that he had taken all the skates out to be sharpened. Ok, I can deal with that, as long as Adriana doesn't throw a fit that she has to rent a pair at the rink.
Get into the minivan and as I pull out of the drive, I can feel the tha-whump, tha-whump sound of a flat tire. (Why I didn't notice the car leaning over to the front left side, I have no idea.)
So here I go, taking everything (dog included) and moving to the Jeep, hoping that I won't get stopped by the police for having an illegal amount of children in the car.

So was it Murphy's Law or...some more sinister power at work. After all, who took all the ice skates to be sharpened? And who created the bump in the tire when misjudging the width between the other car and the island on the other side of the road on the way to church one Sunday?

Funny how you can be married to a guy for almost 20 years without realizing he's been creating "behind-the-scenes" sabotage, only for it to explode on you at the most inopportune moment.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Adia's gonna be a banker & in my face

The girls have started school and their after-school activities as well. Which leads me to a cute little story of Adriana's lack of trust (probably brought on by her sisters making up stuff to try and get her to do want they want her to do!). I sent Adriana to the tennis court yesterday with a 20 pound note for her to pass along to the coach for Stefa and Larysa's lessons. I told her that she was to bring some change back, as it would on be 15 pounds. Apparently after being handed the 5 pound note for change, she immediately lifted it towards the sky as if she were verifying that it had the appropriate watermark and it wasn't fake. Luckily Kim saw the funny side of this and didn't assume that I didn't trust her not to pass on conterfeit money through my kid.

I had the chance to go to the Sanctuary in Covent Garden the other day with the Australian Lisas x2. (They had birthday vouchers, but I didn't want to feel left out, so I came along too.)After every thing I had heard and the glossy brochure with the picture here, I was expecting to spend a relaxing couple of hours with me mates. But I'll you what I was not expecting: the lady doing my facial to give me the third degree on my beauty regimen.

"Do you cleanse, tone and moisterize twice a day?"
"Uhhh, no." (What I really wanted to say was "I can barely haul my ass out of bed in the mornings, and at night the last thing on my mind would be to have my face feel like a baby's bum!)
"Do you use a masque or exfoliate weekly?"
Same response again...This time I really wanted to say: "Exfoliate my %^&^#%!!"
"Do you have a facial regularly"
At this point I wanted to deck her, but thought that if I did, she might use cement instead of a scrub and then cazy-glue my eyes shut, so again:
"Uhhh, no."

The way she tsk'ed me let me know that I had failed the minimum requirements of being remotely human, but I let her have her way with me and came out looking and feeling years younger. So who am I to complain?

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Pandora's box

It's been awhile since I last blogged, so lot's to catch up on....

You may have noticed that I've changed my template somewhat and added something along the side here called Pandora. It's a website that allows you to create your own radio station by building off one artist or song that you like. My first choice is an R&B type station because I typed in "London Bridge" by Fergie of the Black Eyed Peas, and the second one is more of an acoustic-y, reggae, salsa type of station I got by typing in Lily Allen. You can either listen to my two stations or have fun creating one of your own. (It eliminates having to listen to adverts, at the very least.) I got into it as I've been downloading our entire CD collection onto the computer to have it then downloaded onto our Ipod. So far I've got almost 4 gigs done (2.5 days of listening - which makes being stuck on a desert island with my Ipod a little less boring) and another tower of CDs to go! I don't know if this is another one of those "make-work" projects because somewhere along the way I've forgotten why I was doing it in the first place.
Oh, I know! I was trying to come up with the ultimate "walking playlist". When I walk Jessie every morning, I noticed that I could cover a lot more ground if I could find some up-beat tempos to walk to. After a few days of trial and error, (which included walks where either I was walking as if I were slowly advancing up the wedding aisle or booting it so fast I was getting shin-splints) I finally came up with the ultimate playlist. I even have a built-in pauses in the tempo for those absolutely necessary poo-retrieval moments - which is assuming I can get Jessie to cooperate and do it in the exact same place every morning...

Here's the playlist if anyone's curious to see what gets me moving around the park:

A Little Less Conversation 3:33 Elvis vs JXL
Love Machine 3:25 Girls Aloud
Aint Got No... I Got Life (REMIX) 3:22 Nina Simone
Absolutely Everybody 3:43 Vanessa Amorosi
My time 3:15 Dutch feat. Crystal Waters
Ray Of Light 5:20 Madonna
Cha Cha Slide 3:40 DJ Casper
Follow Da Leader 2:32 Nigel & Marvin
Pump It 3:33 The Black Eyed Peas
Vertigo 3:14 U2
Burning Down The House 3:37 Tom Jones & The Cardigans Huge

Thursday, August 31, 2006

Back home once again

Arrived back home on Monday evening (took the day flight back from Canada for the first time). It's been a laid-back week with the kids exploring their toys after 2 months away from them, and just going out when absolutely necessary.
One of the more necessary items on the agenda was preparing for Adriana's 5th birthday party on Saturday. We had planned for it to take place at home in the back garden, thinking that the weather would cooperate (as it had done last year), and that we would have no problem entertaining 30 - 5 year olds for 3 hours.
God must have been laughing at me hysterically as I chewed on my fingernails listening to the weather report all day Friday and seriously hoping that when the nice weather lady said "showers over most of England, Scotland and Wales for most of Saturday", that she didn't mean to include London as well!
"How I am supposed to keep 30 children occupied for 3 hours while not letting them outdoors at all - at the risk of tracking in mud from the rain and windswept garden???" These thoughts kept me awake most of the night.
The next morning was a frenzy of last-minute re-juggling of the Dora Adventure to be held indoors, with the guest bed being Star Mountain (subbing for the trampoline), Adriana's bunk being the Troll Bridge (subbing for the Little Tykes slide) and the upstairs hall being Crocodile Lake (subbing for the toddler pool outside).
As 1 pm approached there was one light drizzle and only 12 out of the 30 invited showed up. So for the last hour of the party, we threw open the patio doors and released the horde to play outside until their parents came to collect them via the side gate. (We still weren't going to let them track dirt back inside - we're not dummies!)
So next year rather than rely on the obviously inept weather reports or the changeable English weather, I'm having her party at an indoor play area.

No more stress for Mama!

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Ukie Festival



Our last weekend here and we're spending it at the Ukrainian Festival in Toronto. After finishing up our stay at the cottage with George and Andrea and their boys Kristian and Michael, we drove up late last night to get a headstart for the Festival's parade at 11 the next morning. (Even had time to get Adriana's hair cut at Melonheads - great name for a kid's hairdresser - while she sat in the pony chair.) Here's a picture of her in the bonus helicopter ride after ther haircut.

The festival had the requisite rides for the younger kids, the 2 concert stages and lots of booths selling food and souveniers. Let's not forget the beer tent - which I was unable to spend too much time at since I had children with me...

We also came down to Peter and Tom's place to celebrate Adriana's birthday with some cake and presents. Peter's cake (as he had warned me) looked a bit odd because the icing refused to stick to it, so we decided it looked more like a muffin top instead. very tasty, in any case.

Thursday, August 24, 2006

Family history

I had the oppotunity to visit with my Uncle Vasyl and Aunt Bozena the other day at my step-mum Sophia's cottage and finally heard in detail some of my family's wartime history. (I probably should have either listened better to my father while he was alive - but I was young and stupid and he wasn't really interested in dredging up the past either.)
I knew that my father was captured by the Germans at the age of 20 and was shipped off to the occupied territories, but wasn't sure exactly where and was a bit unsure of the details of how he re-joined his family later. It turns out he was shipped to eastern Prussia (which I know know is northern Poland - near Gdansk) and worked in a factory of some sort. Later, the rest of his family (mum, dad, and 4 brothers and sisters) were captured by the Germans and shipped off to the German/Holland border where they were forced to re-build railway lines which had been blown up during the war. My grandmother and grandfather spent back-breaking days gathering up rocks and then re-aligning the tracks upon their supports. 2 years went by and my grandmother took a chance and begged her German commandant to write a letter to his counterpart in Eastern Prussia to bring her son there to rejoin them; promising that he was a diligent worker, like the rest of the family.
When my father was ordered to the commandant of the camp, he was worried he'd done something wrong and was deeply afraid he'd be shot. When it turned out that he was being shipped to meet the rest of his family, he was overjoyed. As my uncle puts it, it was God's will that he was shipped when he was, because apparerently he was on the last train going west before the Russians attacked and rousted the Germans. If he hadn't been on that train, he might never seen his family again and I certainly wouldn't be sitting here writing this blog! Thank God for Babsia taking the chance and getting her son back.

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Holes and ends

I don't know if it's the bug spray, the constant bike riding, or what, but everytime I turn around, Adriana's got another hole in the crotch of her shorts, capris, or underwear! How many times have I seen her lounging on the sofa, absent-mindedly picking at the threads around a gaping hole between her legs? Not sure what to do about it, since everytime I sew it up, it seems to unravel again. At least it's not as bad as the incident that the girls reminded me of when I went to pick up Adriana from school last spring and she met me at the door with a wave. Doesn't sound bad, does it? Well, imagine the wave consisting of Adriana's arm stuck in through the waistband of her trousers and coming out through the yawning gap in the non-existant seam in her crotch. I can remember the sheer goofiness of her pose outweighed my embarassment of her doing it in front of a crowd of mums, so I just had to laugh!

Other than holes everywhere, our summer has been progressing smoothly. Had the requisite trip to Canada's Wonderland, and have been hanging out at the cottage, cutting away decades of tree branches and trimming hedges. Orest leaves tomorrow for London, so he's making the last repairs to the cottage before he leaves. I'll be here next week when I'll have to slowly start packing things up too. God, the summer has flown by!

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Green Lake funnies



We just got back from our visit to the Van Dusen cottage, just want to thank Mike and Mary for hosting us yet again. The girls had a great time catching up with Ciana and Elise, and now Adriana has some summer memories of the cottage to add to her winter ones. Speaking of which, Adriana was the cause of much hilarity at one point that I almost bust a gut! Adriana was eating her lunch one day and asked Mary innocently: "Why does your cat not come to the cottage?" I guess her question was worded a bit confusingly, so Mary parrotted it back to confirm it. "Why doesn't my cat come to the cottage?" Adriana replies with "I don't know!" Classic Abbot and Costello "Who's on First" comes immediately to mind, as Mary tried to repeat the question again to make sure she understood the question. Mike and I just cracked up, me so hard, tears came to my eyes.
Another source of laughter (or frustration for Larysa) appears to have come with apparent inability to row a boat. I took Adriana out in the rowboat, at her request, only to find that whichever way I rowed, we always seemed to head into the shore. After several attempts, with Adriana howling in fear ("Mama gonna crash!!!!"), I managed to get the rowboat back to the dock. At that point, Larysa appeared and said she'd be willing to try the canoe with us, maybe we'd be able to successfully navigate around the lake in that. Within seconds, it became apparent that I had no idea what I was doing, and we ended up in the shore several more times, with Larysa's howls of "Mom, I thought you said you could steer?!?!" adding to that of Adriana's. It took about 10 minutes of backwards and forwarding to finally get the canoe into it's mooring place and I topped the whole misadventure off by doing the classic splits of one leg onboard and one on the dock with me in the water in the end. Oh, the shame!

Friday, August 04, 2006

Busy preparing and enroute to Green Lake

It's amazing how your body gets used to the lethargic days of just lounging around the cottage. It's not until you have to actually DO something that you realize how little you've done. Like the other day where we had to pack our stuff and get out of Toronto early enough on a Friday before the long weekend in order not to get caught in the holiday traffic. We'd decided to spend the day at our cottage before heading off to Mike and Mary's cottage. I, however, could not spend the day at the pool, but had to do a load of laundry in town (that one of my daughters had inadvertantly left at the cottage a few days before), do a load of grocery shopping to take to Mike and Mary's, and buy a swimsuit for one of my daughters (3 guesses as to who forgot both the dirty laundry and the swimsuit - rhymes with Farysa) who felt that packing rocks in her backpack was more important than making sure she had something to swim in.

We left our cottage at 5pm and stopped along the way at a diner that we've always thought we should stop into, every time we drove up to the Van Dusen's cottage. So even though Stefa was desperate to get to see Ciana & Elise as soon as possible, ("Don't they have a drive-through???") we forced her to sit through a meal at Kelly's diner on highway 37, just north of Tweed. Although this place was in the middle of nowhere, they had a good menu and quaint atmosphere. They had liscence plates on the walls from just about every province and a few states as well, so that kept the kids occupied for the entire wait for food trying to figure out which ones were missing. The one disparate piece of the rural decor was a head shot of Natasha Richardson, with her autograph saying: "Thanks for a great party, it was fun! All the best, Natasha." Who knew that in the wilds of rural Ontario lurks a party swank enough for the likes of Natasha and her fellow thespians?

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Shopping and diving

Last week we spent from Wednesday on in the city, catching up on clothes shopping, movies (Over the Hedge, Pirates of the Carribean) and city living. People often ask me why I shop for clothes here in Toronto, when London is much more fashionable. Well, I aint my Mama's baby for nothin'! Even though I resisted the tactics of the 'Queen of the Bargain Hunters' as much of possible, some things have stuck. Like not spending double the cost per item. I picked up a cute tank and shorts set for Stefa at Jacob Jr. that cost me $14. Tell me where I could get the equivalent in England for 7 pounds? Maybe the bottom of a bin in a charity shop, but who's got the time to rummage around for something decent.

Another reason we came back to the city was the influx of people coming to visit. Orest's brother Roman arrived on Wednesday afternoon, and then Orest himself arrived on Friday evening for his 3 week holiday. The males got together for a day of golf at the cottage on Sunday and we've stayed on from then. Good thing, too - there was another heat wave in the city, with tempareatures reaching 37, or 45 degrees with the humidex. We're sitting around the pool with the warm breeze coming off the lake and the water to cool us off with. We both know there's things we should and could be doing around the cottage, but the weather is just too damn nice. At least I can claim I did one job today: I helped Orest turn the grip bars around on the diving board. Apparently, every year, there's a 50/50 chance that these bars get installed correctly. So I guess this year, we're on the wrong 50% this year and we had to take them off and install them back so that they were actually of some use when going up the ladder. I'm surprised the Health and Safety Inspector didn't catch that earlier, but as it's already caused two accidents (including one to Adriana), we knew it should be fixed.
When Adriana fell off the diving board, it was a classic parental moment. First someone else's child slipped, hooked her leg onto the rail and ended up suspended upside down until we could assist her off. As we're trying to assess her injuries, I can see that Adriana is still running on the diving board and call out to her, not once, but twice: "Stop running, can't you see it's slippery and dangerous on that board??" Two seconds later, Adriana slips off herself. (Luckily she landed on her feet, but there was a bit of bump in behind her ear where she touched down on the concrete diving block.) It is just so satisfying to say: "See! Didn't Mama tell you not to run? Are you going to listen to your mother next time?" It's like providing the ultimate justification for my role as mother.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Summer reading

7 16-grid Su Dokus
8 books
4 back episodes of CSI
4 back episodes of Without a Trace

I just wanted to share some of the books I've read. Not all of them have been good, but these 4 I can recommend. Frank McCourt's Teacher Man (if the author sounds familiar, he also wrote Angela's Ashes) is an autobrigraphy concerning his time spent as an English teacher in the NYC school system. It's a must-read for any one in eduction, and for me it's a confirmation that you don't have to be young when you start writing - Frank was 66 when he wrote his first novel. Next, I read Wicked (on which the new musical is based). It's interesting how the author fleshed out an entire world from the shell of the Wizard of Oz. Even the witche's name; Elphaba, is a tribute to Frank L. Baum, the author of of Oz. The novel is quite a dark analysis of the nature of evil, and it's hard for me to imagine it as a Broadway musical. My next recommendation it The Birth of Venus, a story of a woman in 1400's Florence, who becomes Michaelangelo's lover. It would be lovely to see the city to see if anything remains of 15th century Florence. Lastly, I've just finished The Devil wore Prada, which was not as good as I thought it would be. I thought there would be less suffering and more revenge. The heroine seemed to be a glutton for punishemnt and humiliation and it went on for alomost 400 pages. By 200, I was ready to smack her and say: "Why are you putting up with this?? Give the woman what for and get out of there!"
I'm fresh out of reading material and was forced to read the newspaper (yuk!), I'll have to get into town toute suite!

Monday, July 24, 2006

TV-land

I've been watching North American TV in the evenings here at the cottage and I have to say that I am appalled at the of the adverts sposnored by the drug companies. For 30 seconds they try to promote some new drug, but 12 seconds out of the 30 is taken up with warnings of risk and possible side effects. 'Lunestra', a sleeping pill, was the most amusing, with warnings to "be in bed" when taking it. The untold story here is that if you take it standing up - you'll fall over like a ton of bricks a few seconds later. You could be anywhere, doing anything at the time. I could see Orest coming into the kitchen the following morning finding me with my head firmly lodged in the refridgerator, with the rest of me sprawled behind. Pretty strong stuff! Some of the other drug adverts are plain scary. When you hear "possible liver damage" or "anal leakage may occur", would that induce anyone to take these things?
Another major difference in television over here is the timing of the commercials. In London, I'm able to load the dishwasher or make myself a drink during the breaks. Here, I've just gotten up from the sofa and the program's started already.So the dishes have suffered, because the soap keeps caking on before I have a chance to rinse them during the break. I'm sure by the end of the summer, I'll have this licked. Or, worse still, I'll get it so speeded up that I'll have to sit through more advertisement crap in London. Horrors!
The girls have been out of camp for a full week and for one reason or another we've stayed at the cottage the whole time. This has made staying clean a bit more difficult, due to the amount of unwashed clothes around here. Already, I've been forced to do a laundromat run and purchase new knickers at Walmart to save having to launder them all again.
We've had lots of visitors - Marta, Peter (my bro) and Tom. We've also had a chance to reconnect with lots of friends whose kids are at the camp: Zaraskas, Dmytryshyns, Kos's and Dubczaks for example. But it's transient in nature and eventually we all have to go back to the city, for work, or in my case, clean clothes.

Monday, July 17, 2006

Same week - Different Stuff


Just wanted to complete the news of 2 weeks ago with a visit from our cousin Marta. It was nice to have the company, even though the weather was not nice enough for Marta to tan with, and the pool was yet opened (a catastrophe of major proportions!) to hang around at. Hopefully that won't stop her from visiting again.
The weekend came with Orest visiting on his round-the-world ticket. (He'd been in the Far East on business and came North American-way instead of back across Asia.) It was only a 48-hour visit, but he managed to pack in a lot. Visited his parents and trimmed their hedges, went to the cottage and saw his daughters at camp on parent's day, put up the badminton net (bright pink, no less!), fixed various bikes and helped get the pool up and running. I'm hoping for more of the same when he comes at the end of the month for his proper holiday.
The second week was much better - weather-wise and pool-wise. By the end of the week, we were in a full-on heat wave, with the pool helping to cool us down.
Now the girls are out of camp, so I'll have less time to blog and have to spend more time entertaining them. In fact as I sit here, the 3 of them are arguing and causing me 'styd'! Can I return them to camp?????

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Back in the Old Country

I'm sitting here in an internet store in downtown Cobourg (pop. 12,000), trying to update you all in less than 15 minutes, so here goes.

The girls and I arrived in Canada July 1st, and all the flight over, we listened to England get clobbered in the World Cup by pilot updates. It was a bit unnerving to know that the pilot was passing this information to us. "Shouldn't he be flying this plane, or something equally important?", I thought to myself.

The morning after we arrived, the older two were off on the camp bus for two weeks of mosquitoes, dirt and sunburn. They weren't completely on their own however, as Adriana and I joined them up at our cottage, which is next door to the camp.

This was the first time I had to 'open' the cottage on my own, as my in-laws had normally taken care of that before we arrived. What an eye-opener! The mouse droppings were prolific, and the pile of mouse fur and skeleton in the doorway of one of the bedrooms a clear indication that someone, had a great time over the winter and expired after gorging themselves on Saltines (which were hidden in the stove) and sesame snacks (left in the open fridge). Adriana and I were so grossed out by the party left-overs that we huddled together on the only clean sofa in the place and fell into fitful sleep, interrupted only by the racoons coming to the back screen door to see if we had left anything delicious for them.

By Friday, we were ready to pick up Orest from the airport for his whirlwind weekend with us. I'll have to tell you more later as my 15 minutes is up.

Monday, June 26, 2006

World Cup Man!

My friend Daryl found this cool website song for World Cup widows like me. How many times over the past weeks have I had to forgo a CSI or Will and Grace so that we can watch tiny men kick a tiny ball into a gigantic net? (I've even lost a daughter to it - her school sponsored some sort of betting pool - organized gambling at a Catholic school, for shame!)

Check out www.worldcupman.com to hear or download the song.

I've also linked Daryl's website - if you want to find out what's cool in Belgrade.

Thursday, June 22, 2006

I forgot to mention...

I forgot to mention how the trip back from Prague was marred by a couple who accused me of rudeness. I know! Hard to believe, isn't it?

It happened when we got to gate, Orest went with Adriana and Larysa to stand right beside the gate to precipitate boarding, while I fell back with Stefanie because I was searching for something in my bag for her, and wouldn't you know they picked exactly that moment to announce boarding.

I struggled to get through the people who were moving towards the gate, saying "Excuse me, I'd like to rejoin my family.", but at the same time, realized my bag was now gaping open, leaving access to the contents for anyone in the crowd to lift. As my head was turned, trying to zip up said bag, saying "excuse me" all the time, I inadvertantly jostled a woman who said to her partner: "How rude!"
"I did say excuse me," I said to her as I was moving towards the front.
"You did not!" she replies.
"I did!" I respond, although I cannot believe we're engaging in this purile argument, now across 20 feet of people's heads.
At the point Orest joins in, trying to be helpful,
"My wife is just trying to re-join her family, do you mind?"
Then the other husband joins the fray:
"Well, we're just trying to teach your wife some manners!"


Ouch!
Now at this point, normally I would freeze up with confusion at the jibe, then kick myself for hours afterwards thinking of what I should have said, but, having righteous indignation on my side, I had the presence of mind to finish them off with:
"I did say excuse me, but my head may have been turned the other way, so I'm sorry if you didn't hear me!"

Now that should have been the end of it, since we started moving towards the plane, but me being me, I agonized over it the whole plane ride home. If I was guilty of anything, I thought to myself, it was trying to do too many things at once. My whole raison d'etre came into question in that hour and 10 minutes. The worst of it was, the same couple were sitting right behind Orest on the plane, so I had no opportunity to discuss my soul-searching with Orest to gain an objective opinion. (I tend to veer towards paranoia, so it's good to have someone like Orest around to say: Snap out of it, you silly woman!)

So you decide, if you were in a similar situation, what would you say or do?

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Prague Rocks! (not like E.L.P. or Yes)


(Finally I've been able to load photos!!! I was photo-less for a week and it wasn't until I installed Mozilla's Firefox as my internet browser that I cheived success. Down with Microsoft! Big up Mozilla!!)

Another opportunity to catch up with old friends came along this past weekend.

Sue and Tony Cabral celebrated their joint 50th birthdays in Prague and celebrated in style. Their friends had opened up their castle to them and it was just perfect. (Doesn't that sound pretentiously posh? It's not really, if you know Sue and Tony, they are the most down-to-earth folks you can find and they have great friends who take care of them. Plus the fact, that when you live in Central or Eastern Europe it's probably easier to get a venue like that than anywhere else. It reminded me of similar parties at some of the castles in Warsaw when we lived there.)

The Lobkowicz Castle is on the grounds of the Prague Castle, with fabulous views of the Charles Bridge and the centre of Prague. It was confiscated from the Lobkowicz family by the communists, and was finally returned to the family in 2003. This was the first event planned after remodeling and renovating some of the rooms.

We arrived in Prague Friday evening, and even though it was late, we still took the opportunity to walk over to the Charles bridge with the girls before going to bed. We stayed at a lovely place, called the Santini Residence, at the bottom of the Castle, with a newly remodeled apartment/suite for the 5 of us. (Check out www.santiniresidence.com if you're interested in staying there.)

We spent the day on Saturday touring Prague with the children, and their most memorable moment will be getting lost with their mum trying to find Tynske Square. But we found it in the end, saw the famous clock strike 5, and the little pieces move around (See the photo above).

While Adriana was being baby-sat at Sue and Tony's, the rest of us went to their party. The dinner was one lovely creation after another, and the drinks were prolific in number. They had a band playing music, which I thought would interest the girls, but they were fascinated with the long table cloths on the tables which allowed them to create their own "clubhouse" underneath with the other children.

We spent Father's Day back at Sue and Tony's so that Orest could watch a replay of Game 5 of the Stanley Cup playoff. We had to be in news blackout mode up until that time, which wasn't too difficult as everyone here is focused on the World Cup football at the moment. The Oilers won 4-0 against Carolina, so Dad was a happy camper. Last game will be watched on Tuesday afternoon with other Canadians here.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Check it out

I found the coolest website (cool for me, that is... you decide if it's cool or not)

It's called 'A Dress a Day', and it shows exactly that... one dress every day. She's got some vintage taste. It's www.dressaday.com/dressaday.html

Monday, June 12, 2006

Sunday, bloody hot Sunday

Man oh Man!

It's been like an oven here lately, and not the Easy-Bake kind-with-the-stupid-light-bulb-for-heat oven, but the real honest-to-goodness triple edged heatwave!

On a day like that, you just want to push your kids out of the paddling pool and wade in yourself, turning your body on a rotational basis to bathe each bit of skin properly. But no, we decided to go out. First to a Sunday brunch at Mimi and Owen's, where the boys kept cool by watching the World Cup football match on the telly, while I made iced coffees for everyone.

We then had to go get beat at tennis, since I had scheduled a match with another couple from the club as part of their annual club tournament. Orest and I lost 6-0, 6-3, by Savita & her husband. Pretty humiliating, but I always say: "It could have been worse!" It was acually, down in the other court where my friends got slaughtered 6-0, 6-1. We all sat down to some Pimms and lemonade afterwards, and it turned into a lovely social evening, with the alcohol dulling the pain and embarassment of our drubbing.


Now Larysa insisted that I tell a funny story about her since she's seen me do one on this blog about Adriana.

We were sitting down to do a verbal reasoning practise exam (this is preparation for Larysa's secondary school entrance exams next fall) and she does a lot better when I sit next to her, so she can pointlessly ask me for help, while I tell her "Remember, I won't be there with you when you're actually doing the entrance exam!". Personally, I think she just likes to have someone to complain to when she doesn't get the questions right away, and as we all know mums make the best whipping posts!
She was busy working on a section where you had to take one letter from the first word and somehow create a new word from the second; i.e. carp & flit become cap and flirt.
The words were horse and cad, which should be easy enough to see that it should become: hose and card. But, Larysa must have had some sort of brain fart because it took at least 3 minutes for her to figure out that the 'r' should be moved to create card, but then spent another couple of minutes repeating "Ho-say, ho-say. Nope, that's not a real word. Ho-say...."

In the end, to alleviate my teeth grinding into nothing, I advised her that perhaps she had the accent on the wrong syllable, and instead of calling out for some Mexican boy named Jose, she should try making the e silent.

I just hope to God she can figure these out on her own by November, otherwise no school will have her!

Saturday, June 10, 2006

Out at night

Summer is here full force, with hot days and warm evenings.

Last week was busy socially (I know, doesn't happen often here in London), so I didn't have a chance to post this then. We were out on Tuesday night with ex-Warsaw friends, Meredith & Jean-Louis playing bridge and catching up, as they are on their way to Miami. It's the first time I'd actually seen their flat in daylight, which just goes to show you how long it's been since we've seen one another. (In the short daylight hours of winter, we'd always get to their place when it's already turned dark.) We were complaining about just that; that it's easier sometimes to see people who live farther away, than the ones just down the road. You keep thinking to yourself; "Oh, I can see them anytime, they're just down the road..." And next thing you know, they're moving!
Oh well, perhaps we'll see more of them in Miami.

Wednesday, we were at the Kensington Roof Gardens, a lovely secluded green space, 6 floors up, which had been converted into a massive party venue. Since we were there for a business function it was all very boring for me, but I know that Orest got quite a bit out of it, so I was happy to be there with him. The lobster tails were an added bonus.

Thursday was my one night in, as Orest flew to Stolkhom for the night for business. Apparently he missed his brush with greatness that evening as his colleagues met Mats Sundin (the Toronto Maple Leafs hockey player) in a club and got his autograph. It's ok, Orest got one in absentia.

Friday, we were with the Hampstead Women's Club on the London Eye for a wine tasting. I was surprised how quickly we went around, because frankly it didn't look like we were moving at all in some places. Something to do with physics, I imagine. Thankfully it wasn't too hot in there, it was well-ventilated, and being able to go around twice was kinda cool too.

Saturday, we were double-booked with a Ukrainian zabava first with the children, followed by a grown-up party for us later. The dance unfortunately was a bust (not enough tickets sold), but the girls had fun in their own way...Adriana sliding on the floor and playing tag with the other kids and Larysa just messing about with the older girls. The second event was a 40th birthday for a friend I play tennis with. It was good fun, but by 1 am, Orest needed to get to bed, so we departed. Shame, that...I had heard that Grace's parties normally ran until 3 am.

Monday, June 05, 2006

BTW

Went to Tesco on a Sunday and was transported back to my Auchan in Warsaw days.

Does every Pole in Finchley only do their shopping on Sundays? Everytime I turned around, there was another one, yapping on their mobile, filling up their basket.

I suspect that most of them work 6 days a week, so the only time they have to shop is on Sundays. Either that, or Sundays are the days when they start putting the food in the clearance section.

I was late picking up the girls from school yesterday, and as I was rushing down the street, another Mum from Adriana's class approached me.

"I'm so sorry to hear about your loss...Adriana was telling the class about it today" she said.

"Excuse me?" racking my brains to figure who had just died.

"She said that your cat died" she explained.

I must have looked like a lunatic, but I started to laugh and said: "But we don't have a cat!"

At that point, I wasn't sure what had happened. Maybe everyone misunderstood what Adriana was saying, maybe someone else's cat died and she made it sound like it was her cat. Or maybe she's just practicing her Munchausen-by-proxy delivery, in order to gage the sympathy she can get out of people.

I had a chat with her and explained how she shouldn't be making up stories about dead cats, and I hope that's the end of that.

I'll know it's something more serious if next time I come walking down the street and another Mum says: "Adriana told us you were dead!"

Sunday, June 04, 2006

Half-term hi-jinks

I hate half-term!

No I don't, it's just a major hassle. The house becomes messier, the laundry triples in amount and I have to spend a lot more time in meal-planning. ("What! You expect lunch too??")

Thankfully, I booked Stefa and Larysa on a week-long drama course, after the two of them have been haranguing me non-stop with: "I wanna be an actress!"and "I want to have my own agent!". This, after meeting a few children who have been in television shows and movies, like Eastenders and Harry Potter. They had a lot of fun, but at the same time realized how much work it is to be rehearsing all day long. The end of the week, they put on their performance of songs and bits from movie musicals. Stefanie was great as Tallulah in Bugsy Malone, (that's the part Jodie Foster played in the movie) and Larysa played prim and proper as Sandy in Grease.
What a great idea to have a real performance at the end of the course, it gives the kids a real sense of achievement.

Adriana chilled out with me for the week, taking Jessie out for her walks, seeing Curious George at the movies, doing the shopping... makin' messes around the house for the most part.

In any case, I'm glad they're back at school this week, I can get back to a routine.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Camping in Surrey - woo-hoo!

This weekend, we could have done some wonderful things that didn't require sleeping in a tent. (Staying home or going out to dinner with friends springs to mind...) But, no, we decided to drive to (what other people would call the suburbs) Surrey, pitch our tents and experience the English countryside full-on. Why Surrey? Well, the Ukrainians have a large plot of land upon which resides an old-age home, and they have allowed us to use the neighbouring fields to pitch our tents for many years now.


This photo is deceiving, because when we arrived, it started to drizzle. Stefa & Larysa were desperately trying to get their tent up, but it took 3 tries before they were able to get in out of the rain. Didn't matter much, since they had pitched it in a low lying part of the field and it turned into a veritable mud bath shortly thereafter.

Now usually in our house, I end up cuddling next to Orest in bed because he's like blast furnace while I'm numb in my extremities, but the first night was so cold that Orest actually abandoned his own air-mattress to take advantage of my body heat. Talk about roughing it!

Next morning was gloriously sunny and the kids went from one outdoor activity to the next without stopping. Can't tell you everything they did, because I was in the kitchen for the bulk of the morning, helping to make hundreds of pyrohy (potato-filled dumplings). It was a veritable assembly line, impressive, until the people came in for lunch and demolished our hard work in a blink of an eye. (That's why I don't like cleaning toilets either - all that hard work, then someone comes along and pisses on it!)

That night we had a campfire with the requisite skits and songs. I suggested that the girls do a skit, where they ask volunteers to pretend they are trees and describe how important they are. These poor unfortunates had water splashed on them (symbolizing the protection they give us from the rain) , hay thrown at them (birds use it to make nests in them) and dogs pretending to wee on them. But it was good for a laugh anyway. The girls are honing that one for summer camp as we speak.

The next morning, after we finished packing up, the girls got dressed in their scouting uniforms and were presented with badges and certificates having completed the 3rd stage of scouting requirements. We then sang a few songs for the old folks, had a dads against the kids football game (check out the photo below - those are the goalkeepers. Good job Dads! Especially like the unbrella in the middle of the goal.) and went home. I'm still cleaning out hay out of everyone's clothes!

Friday, May 26, 2006

Stop the presses! My neighbour is speaking to me!

Mark the time and date!
After living in the same house for almost 4 years, I have finally developed a speaking relationship with my neighbour!
Bea, who I have described to you before in previous updates, as the woman who refused to enter my house when I invited her in for a cup of tea, then proceeded to complain about everything and anything to us, included the sound of Jessie barking inside our house during the day, finally commented on the fact that Jessie no longer barks during the day. Well, I explained to her, when Jessie first came to us after spending 1 month in a German kennel she suffered from acute separation anxiety, so if we ever left her alone at home, she'd become extremely agitated that we were never coming back for her. It took her awhile to regain her confidence.

I could tell she was ruminating on this thought for a few days because today she came to the door and asked if she could do her gardening from our driveway for easier access to the side of her garden. Then she said:
"We didn't get off to a good start, did we?"
"Not really." I said. (I had to call a spade a spade - I couldn't help myself!)
"Well if you had only known what the owner of your house put me through...." (a complete re-hashing of her feud with our landlord ensued, with which I will not bore you further.)

So I suppose that's the closest I'll get to an apology from her, but I'm willing to leave it at that. It's not like we're going to be best friends or anything...

Other excitement today was the school's International Evening. The last time we had one of these at the school 2 years ago, we decided to host a Canadian table. This year, Larysa couldn't decide which to choose, we had both a Canadian and a Ukrainian table.

So this meant hauling out all our cultural "stuff" out of hiding (or otherwise) to decorate the tables with. I was amazed at how many Ukrainian 'coffee-table' books we have and yet so little about Canada. I had no trouble filling up the Ukrainian table with other artisan crafts: carved wooden boxes, ceramics, embroidery, and of course pysanky. The Canadian table was starting to look bare until I found a stuffed beaver and moose, as well as coasters depicting various scenes from the Rockies to fill it with. And of course the table-top air hockey to keep the children amused... Not bad showing in the end!

The headteacher had asked beforehand if anyone was willing to sing or dance in their native language, and this gave Larysa the perfect opportunity to be Ruslana for a night. (If all of you are up on your past Eurovision contest winners, you will remember the Ukrainian entry from 2004 - Wild Dances or Dyki Tansi - bringing home the first prize for the Carpathian lass.) It was unbelievable (and me without my camera!*), Larysa played the crowd, sang her heart out and for the grand finale, swooped her head around with hair swinging every which way - the crowd went nuts! For a 10-year old she's got amazing stage presence.

Britney, Christina and Ruslana - your time has come to step aside for the next generation of pop idol!

* (I'm hoping to load a photo of Larysa in action at a later date when I find someone who was snapping pictures that night.)

Monday, May 22, 2006

Wild Women in Warsaw


It finally came!
Noooooo, not the new phone books, but...

The weekend I've been waiting for since February! Orest reminded me back at the beginning of the year to check my Lufthansa frequent flyer miles as he thought they may be expiring soon. Sure enough, I had enough to fly anywhere warm in Europe, but in the end, decided to go back to my old stomping ground (where does that phrase come from anyway?) in Poland. I booked the flights and soon afterward 3 varying plates and bowls from my Polish pottery broke, so it looked like I had divine approval for this trip.
Then, when we went to visit the Whitesides in Lausanne at the end of February half-term, it seemed that other people were interested in making the trip as well and the ball starting rolling.

Next thing I knew, we had 12 of us flying in from all over the UK and Europe for the weekend. The excitement mounted as Sara booked the hotel for us (thanks Sara) and Deby & Mariola in Warsaw helped booked the evening entertainments.

We arrived a bit late only to find that the traffic had come to a standstill... a rare occurance in the Warsaw that I knew and loved. But we got to the hotel with only minor delays due to the ingenuity of our taxi driver. Lisa and I dumped our bags quickly and were off for some 'bole' shopping just a one block's walk from the hotel. Little did we know we had brought the crappy English weather with us and by the time we had multiple bags of shopping to carry, the thunder, lightning and rain were coming at us in earnest. We decided to get dried off and ready for the evening out rather than risk another soaking - good thing we did, Lynne, Sara and Vivienne were stuck in traffic for ages coming back from the Galeria. The Galeria could wait for another day...


That evening we were at Madame Gessler's newest restaurant called 'Ale Gloria', which seems to be a paean to the Madame herself. The interior was a study in extreme white and red colours, with white feathers, white fake fur, red strawberries and ribbons. I kept expecting Prince (or the artist formerly known as...) to come prancing out singing: "Strawberry beret, you know I love you..." Very over the top as only Gessler can achieve. As it was a mostly traditional Polish menu, I chose the venison pate followed by the duck, which were fabulous as we know how well the Poles make their duck. (I've never had a complaint about Madame's food or service, you just have to keep your head down to not drown in the over-indulgence of the decor!)


We came back to the hotel late and we all started drifting upstairs in dribs and drabs except Lisa, who ended chatting with a local from Finchley (on a stag weekend) of all places and then a Norwegian, who seemed to keep his cards close to his chest on what he was doing there in Warsaw, which leads me to believe he might be an assassin. Do Norwegians have assassins?
Anyway, I had falled asleep around 2 am and woke up abruptly at 5 am, just to check that Lisa was in her bed, but no one was there. In my sleep-deprived stupor, I sort of felt like Kevin's Mom in Home Alone when she realizes she's left a child behind. Just as I was trying to decide who to call: Lisa, the local morgue, the local lap-dance club in that order...Lisa came in. Pheeew! Imagine me having to explain to Lisa's family that I lost her on the first night there?!

Next day, started with a walk to the Stare Miasto to see what had changed (obviously not much - it's the Old Town for goodness sake!) and then my former regular taxi driver collected us to do the rest of the Bole shops of Warsaw. We ended by meeting everyone at a new mall Arkadia, then home to get dressed for dinner at 'Sense'. An excellent Thai meal ensued with 24 of us playing musical chairs all night, in order to have the chance to speak to everyone. The wait-staff deserved an extra tip for having to follow all of us around with our orders!

Next morning we were off to the Galeria to meet up with Deby and shop some more. (Lisa was able to go to the Russian market with Barbara M - but I just couldn't face it that morning.)
After lunch, we started saying goodbye to everyone and Lisa and I went back to the hotel to relax before our evening flight.
At the airport, it was amazing to bump into people we knew: Jenny and Jacquie. But that just goes to show you what a small place Warsaw is...


Sue, Barbara, Sara, Lisa, Louise, Christine & Debbie in the Radisson bar.