All posts tagged Trains

  • The Transsiberian Railway

    Ulan-Ude’s giant head of Lenin looking imposing.

    The Trains

    The Russian Railway website does not generally work with foreign credit cards, which meant that we had to get friends to buy our train tickets once we arrived in Russia. As it was the end of August — prime vacation season — this meant that the quality of trains we had access to was not… always the best.

    For one thing, the toilets were questionable. On most of the trains that we took across Russia’s hinterland, the toilet flushed with the aid of a foot lever, and “flushing” was a hatch opening up in the bottom of the toilet and spraying your poop directly onto the tracks.

    Because of the risk of contaminating groundwater, you can’t be having poop on the tracks in all regions, so each settlement was flanked by a half-hour kontrolnaya zona, during which the train attendants would come through the train and lock each bathroom until we had safely passed all signs of human habitation. If you had to go? Tough luck. You should have known not to drink any water while approaching a town.

    Occasionally, the trains we took had a mix of older and newer rolling stock. The newer rolling stock had suction toilets of the kind you might find on airplanes, which sometimes made it possible to go to the bathroom even in the station (I say sometimes because, confusingly, these too were often locked). This did not mean they were without issues. At each stop where people got on, the train attendant would go around to everybody (except for us, whom she skirted with her eyes, certain that we would not understand what she was about to say) and say, “the hot water is at the back and NO TOILET PAPER IN THE TOILET.”

    Did the toilet have a bidet or something to make this easier on everybody? Of course not.

    Surprisingly enough, people did not want to toss their noticeably used toilet paper in the garbage can for all to see, so the toilets inevitably broke. Breaking meant the toilet filled with an unflushable amount of water. As soon as it happened, the same train attendant would come back through the car, peeking into each compartment and wagging her finger. “DON’T PUT TOILET PAPER IN THE TOILET.”

    The first train we took, from St. Petersburg to Moscow, was the last train with tickets available, and for good reason. The train didn’t simply go from St. Petersburg to Moscow, but actually from St. Petersburg to Krasnodar, in the south of Russia, close to Crimea. Crimea is a popular vacation destination, and taking land transport from St. Petersburg to Crimea takes a long time, which means it’s an option preferred by Russians of lower economic classes.

    Picture us, innocent, having just bought the last available ticket to Moscow at the train station. As yet, we know none of this. We settle into our berths and get ready for an uneventful trip.

    This was not to be. One of us proposed buying something from the canteen, but the train attendant didn’t have change for the large bills that the ATM had spit out. We decided to ask around on the train if anybody had change, and that is how we met Boris and Lena.

    Lena was a 42-year-old taxi driver and Boris was a 26-year-old of uncertain occupation (his styling was a bit mobster-esque, but he was also cheerful and friendly and loved to cook — “he made all this!” Lena exclaimed, reprising her exclamations each time a new dish was brought out. Their two-year-old, Misha alternately explored the train and gazed out the window and passing trains, gasping after each one.

    Lena and Boris taught us how to do things that are not allowed on trains. Smoking, for example. The technique was to walk to the back of the wagon and go onto the platform where the doors were. After that, you had to go between the cars, where the movements of the floor could chop off your toe if you weren’t wearing proper footwear, and the clattering din was enough to give you a headache if the smoke from four cigarettes didn’t do it first.

    Since so many people were doing it, the train attendants couldn’t do much more than wag a finger and say nielzya (not allowed) because, really, how to kick every single passenger off the whole, entire train?

    Lena and Boris were also generous people who took us under their wing from first “would you happen to have any change?” “Yes, we have change,” they said. “But wouldn’t you like some coffee?” They handed Adem a packet of instant, which we drank.

    Coffee turned into apples and apples turned into sandwiches spread with lard and grated spam, and lard and grated spam turned into shots of Russian homemade vodka samugon. As the bottle of liquor got pulled out, I began to fear potentially going blind from the effects of moonshine of uncertain provenance, so I told Lena that I wasn’t drinking because I was trying to get pregnant, a lie (I didn’t smoke either, though I did allow myself to be shown how it was done.) After she’d had a shot herself, she drunkenly leaned into me and told me in a low voice that sometimes, when you really want to get pregnant and can’t, the problem is that you can’t relax and what better way to relax than to have a drink and forget your troubles? She cited two friends who had tried for a baby for a long time only to finally conceive during a night of drunken nookie and/or a day of drunken embryonic implantation.

    Adem accepted the samugon and got quickly and gloriously drunk as the shots kept getting thrust into his hands. He tried to refuse, but not speaking Russian, had few tools with which to do so. Waving his hands? Not good enough. The only words he knew in Russian were spasiba and nyet, but these two were not enough to communicate. He repeated nyet like a whimpering mantra, but his refusals were refused by an increasingly aggressive and drunken Lena, who had taken out yet another bag of food and busily tried to force a burger past his lips and into his mouth. Hurriedly, I told Lena that he wasn’t hungry anymore and that I quite fancied the burger that she was trying to foie-gras feed him but not before feeling a delicious wave of schadenfreude wash over me. “This,” I would say to a groaning Adem later in words laced with I-told-you-so, “is how foreign people feel when they come to Turkey. Now tell me, again, how wonderful Turkish hospitality is.”

    Lena and Boris gave us one last gift of a dried fish before we arrived in Moscow, a fish we would take all across Russia and back and christened Gagariba (a portmanteau of Gagarin and the Russian word for “fish.”) On the platform in Moscow, we were picked up by the friends we were staying with.

    “We are so surprised about you taking this train!” they said. “How was it? Was it crazy? You know this is the train of Russians who can’t afford to fly to go on vacation?”

    Ulan-Ude


    Ulan Ude, the capital of the Buryat respublika, is a polluted, ugly city. It is such a hole that even Yandex, the Google and Google Maps of Russia, hasn’t really bothered with it. It could not tell us any public transit details, nor was it much help for calling taxis. This was a surprise, considering that Yandex has even mapped dachaville, middle of nowhere respublika. The more we got to know Ulan-Ude, the more we understood. The only ingredients in the food are meat and dough (dill, if you are lucky and cabbage if you are very lucky), our boogers turned black from the pollution, and even in mid-September it was very very cold.

    We were not in Ulan Ude for the public transit or for the taxis or the food, though. We were there for Russia’s Buddhist temple complex of Ivolginskiy Datsan, the only Buddhist spiritual centre of the Soviet Union.

    Our first morning in Ulan Ude, we put on inappropriate clothing for the weather, blew the aforementioned black boogers out of our noses, and took three marshrutki to the complex.

    By the time we arrived, we’d had plenty of time to realize that our summer outfits were unfit for the rainy weather, so we ducked into the gatehouse to warm up and see if we had to pay to visit the complex. The lady inside proposed an English-speaking tour guide, and soon, for the price of 500 rubles, we were being led into the complex by Anna, a guide with a flat voice and a tenuous knowledge of English.

    “Dear our guests,” she intoned for the first time of many. “Before we start the tour, I must ask where you are from.”

    “Turkey,” we said.

    “Oh my,” she said flatly. She turned to Adem. “I have been working here for five years and I have never met anybody from Turkey before.”

    She ushered us closer to the main temple and began. “Dear our guests, please take a look at this beautiful temple.”

    It was, admittedly, beautiful.

    “Here,” she continued, “lives a monk who is the phenomenon in Russia and all over the world. At this time he is 166 years old.”

    Adem would later confess to me that he didn’t hear this part.

    “Dear our guests. Please listen carefully to this history of Buddhism in Russia. Our Great Queen Catherine allowed Buddhist temples to be built during her reign. She was a great supporter of Buddhism.”

    “Dear our guests. Please pay attention to this beautiful Buddhist university. This is where the Buddhist monks in Russia study. There are only men in this university.”

    “Dear our guests. Please pay attention to this beautiful prayer wheel.”

    “Dear our guests. Please pay attention to this sacred rock.”

    The sacred rock was up on a pedestal, looking much like a regular rock. Anna continued, “If you stand ten metres behind this rock, close your eyes, and concentrate on it, then walk towards the rock and touch it, you can make a prayer and it will be answered.”

    “Oh cool,” we said, nodding enthusiastically since we were the only people on the tour.

    “Now,” said Anna. “You must touch the rock.” Stand here, about ten metres behind. Reach your hands forward, close your eyes, and walk towards the rock. When you touch it, make a prayer.

    Adem and I looked at each other in horror. His spatial awareness and sense of direction are only barely acceptable and mine are about as developed as those of a bumper car. Neither of us wanted to embarrass ourselves by closing our eyes, holding our hands out, and walking in a direction that would certainly not be on the way to the rock.

    On the other hand, neither of us wanted to seem disrespectful by refusing to touch the rock. What to say anyway? “Sorry, I am spatially challenged. I must have done something wrong in a previous reincarnation to be so challenged in prayer.” “Sorry, my life is already so great that I literally don’t have anything else I could wish for.” “Sorry, I don’t have any friends or relatives to pray for.”

    Rather than disappoint Anna, we gamely took up our positions ten metres behind the rock. I went first. Adem stood behind me with his eyes open periodically yelling, “Left!” “Right!” “Left!” “Okay, now just left. Just left, no, now right.”

    Finally, I touched the rock. Relief flooded through me. I quickly prayed that I would never have to touch the rock again.

    Adem repeated the performance as I yelled directions behind him. Having touched the rock, he walked triumphantly back to where Anna and I were standing. We looked at her expectantly. Where were we going next? To the Buddhist library, perhaps? As dear her guests, to pay attention to more beautiful things?

    “I think,” said Anna slowly as we looked at her triumphantly, “that you both need to try again.” We blinked. “Sometimes,” she said slowly, “your concentration is just not enough.”

    Adem and I looked at each other. We took our places at the start of the finish line. We concentrated. And, somehow, miraculously, we both managed to touch the rock again without getting directions yelled at us. It was truly a miracle. I didn’t even open my eyes.

    We returned to the guide. “This is the end of the tour,” she said. “But if you would like to go see the phenomenon in Russia and all over the world, I can arrange for you to receive his blessing. He lives in the most beautiful temple, over there.”

    We definitely wanted to see the most beautiful temple in the complex. “Of course we want to,” we said.

    “Great,” Anna said. “That will be another 500 rubles.”

    Adem grumbled something about religion and capitalism while I reached into my purse.

    “Okay,” said Anna. “When you go into the temple there will be a monk. He will let you in. You will take a scarf as an offering to the phenomenon in Russia and all over the world. You will go up to the lama and you will make these gestures. Now, he is in very deep meditation, so you will not be able to speak to him. But, you can speak to him in your mind. You may stand in front of him for as long as you wish and speak to him for as long as you like. Afterwards, ask the monk that let you in for a scarf. He will tie it into a special knot. With this scarf, if you press the knot to your forehead, you can commune with him wherever in the world you go.”

    We nodded. She led us to the temple and waved us in, but stayed outside herself.

    Inside the foyer, we encountered the monk of which Anna had spoken. Though decked out in robes, he was absorbed in playing a game of Candy Crush. He had a plastic bottle of Coca Cola in his other hand. He briefly looked up and motioned with his head that we could go in.

    The inside of the temple was underwhelming compared to its facade. We pressed gamely forward until we realized.

    The phenomenon in Russia and all over the world was at the front of the temple.

    Bald and seated in meditation posture, missing his eyeballs.

    He was dead, and mummified, and obviously so.

    Unfortunately, you are not supposed to turn around in Buddhist temples, so we could not tell if the monk at the back was watching us. So, we stood in front of the phenomenon in Russia and all over the world for a minute, pretending to commune through our minds. After we decided that we had communed for a respectful enough period, we walked backwards out of the temple to the foyer.  The monk had clearly not been watching us after all — he was still absorbed in Candy Crush and, rather than ask him for the communion scarf, we scampered out of the temple only to be once again surprised by the placid face of Anna who had waited outside. She did us a kindness by not commenting on our lack of scarf for future communions with the Phenomenon in Russia and all over the world.

    “You know,” Anna said reflectively as soon as we got out. “Some people claim that he is dead, but in fact, he is alive and just in very deep meditation. Did you know that the monks here even take his body temperature, and it sometimes goes up to 34 degrees?”

    Adem and I nodded. Of course. Even in Siberia, it gets hot sometimes.

    Anna walked us out to the gatehouse. The marshrutka to takes us back to Ulan Ude was already there. “Just a moment,” she said. “I’m going to ask the driver to wait for you. I need you to give reviews of my tour.”

    She waved us into the gatehouse and spoke to the driver while we bought camel-wool socks, then came into the gatehouse waving an iPhone which she put onto video mode. “Do you think you could say some things about my tour in your languages?”

    We both gave a short, complimentary review, and then skipped outside to the van without a door that would drive us back to the city.

    Four Putins

    Travelling in Russia, we knew enough to keep our mouths shut about any political opinions we might have about Russia – at least until we knew it was safe. And so, if anybody asked us if we had heard of Putin or had any thoughts on him, we evasively said things like, “Oh yeah, Putin. I think I’ve heard of that guy. He’s some famous person in Russia, right?”

    We probably needn’t have worried, as not only did we not meet anybody who was a great fan of Putin (I’m not sure what official statistics are saying, but my guess based on the people we met, with whom we mostly only spoke Russian, is that his popularity has taken a dip), but people mostly only seemed to ask us what we thought about Putin in order to tell us what they thought about Putin.

    Lena and Boris said they used to like him, but now think he’s horrible.

    A couple of drunk guys in the dining car of the train who were travelling to the middle of nowhere and were planning to go to the banya and tried to get us to buy them vodka told us that they thought he was horrible, too.

    Another woman, unconvinced by our evasive answers about how much we knew pressed us to tell her what we really thought. “We think,” we finally said carefully, “that he is smart, and cruel.”

    “I agree,” she said. “Anyway, I am not so interested in politics.”

    Finally, in Buryatia, we met a man who told us about his belief in a Russian YouTube conspiracy.

    It is common knowledge that Putin is an ex-KGB agent, and the KGB and its heir the FSB have lots of resources at their disposal. These include plastic surgery and other methods of disguise.

    At some point or other, the world’s best plastic surgeons were tasked with creating decoy Putins. The reason for this is unclear – to protect the real Putin? Just to mess with people?

    Whatever the case, the evidence for this is (apparently) overwhelming. For example, it explains why, even though Putin (allegedly) used to speak German so fluently that he could be mistaken for an honest-to-goodness Bavarian, he has recently been known to make basic mistakes when speaking German. It also explains why Putin and his ex-wife Lyudmila recently divorced.

    I mean, why would Lyudmila claim that Putin was no longer the man she married, unless… he… was… LITERALLY… no longer the man she married?

    I like to imagine this conversation.

    Putin: Lyuda dear, what’s for dinner tonight? Something involving potatoes, kasha, or dill? No, no wait, don’t tell me. It could also involve cabbage, beets, or sour cream. Hmmm…. Even after 30 years of marriage,  you still know how to keep me guessing.

    Lyudmila: Volodka, I’ve been thinking recently.

    Putin: Pierog?

    Lyudmila: I would like a divorce.

    Putin: (surprised) But why?

    Lyudmila: (bursting into tears). You’re just not the man I married anymore! The man I married spoke German like a Bavarian! The man I married came by his good looks honestly! And you speak of surprises. Surprises! After this long! HOW can you POSSIBLY not know after 30 YEARS that I ALWAYS make vareniki on Thursdays? You claim to have been a KGB AGENT!

    In one version of the legend, the other three Putins offed the real Putin. This is apparently why Putin has been acting out of character lately, though it isn’t clear exactly in what way his behaviour has been out of character (except for the German mistakes.)

    We would just like to say

    We were shown around/helped/encouraged by some very kind friends (and some very kind people we met along the way), to whom we owe a lot for the great time we had. Thank you 🙂

  • Postcards from the TransCanadian Railway

    In September and October I went home to Canada for a bit and took the TransCanadian railway across the country, starting in Vancouver and ending in Halifax. I had a great time. The long-haul trains in Canada are convivial places, the cast of characters I met along the way hilarious, irritated, full of love, sad, memorable, and occasionally very proud of being from Moncton. Here are a few of them.

    ***

    I stayed a night at an AirBnB in Winnipeg for two nights between trains. The host, a woman in her late thirties, had described herself as “a real Jesus freak” in her profile. Before I arrived, she let me know that she would be holding a Bible study in her home that evening and was wondering if it would bother me. I said that of course it wouldn’t.

    The Bible study, which I eavesdropped on from my room, was clearly an awkward convergence – four women of varying ages who either clearly did not know each other or had no sense of humour. Not a single chuckle was to be heard, not even in response to an on-colour joke. I felt fortunate that I had chosen not to involve myself, not because I’m totally disinterested in matters religious, but because I felt like the palpable awkwardness would just be increased by the presence of someone as heathenistic as me.

    After the Bible study, I asked my host if she’d enjoyed herself.

    “It was okay,” she said. “I’ve been looking for a good Bible study for a while, and I keep striking out. This one seems alright – there’s a special study technique where you underline a lot of stuff, but I don’t know. We’ll see.”

    “What would your ideal Bible study look like?” I asked.

    “I work all day,” she said. “I don’t really want to discuss things. There’s already too much going on in my brain. I don’t have energy for discussion or parsing apart the text. What I want is just a Bible study with ready answers. Answers, you know. Like something clear. Not discussion.”

    “Oh,” I said, feeling suddenly very sad.

    ***

    “Where are you going?”

    This is generally the first question people on the Canadian long-haul trains ask each other by way of introduction, hoping to get a sense of a person by understanding their direction.

    “Saskatoon,” was the answer of one gentleman in his early 70s. “I bought myself a rail pass and I’m going all across Canada. I have two grandsons in Saskatoon, and I’ll visit them. After that, I’ll head to Toronto. Maybe I’ll go home for a bit to Kingston, I don’t know. Maybe after this I’ll buy an Amtrak pass too and just keep going.”

    “That might be nice to go home for a bit,” I said, “after these long train journeys.”

    “No,” he said. “My wife died. We’d been together since 1956, when we were eleven. We got married when we were 20, which was as early as anybody’d let us marry. For now it’s really hard to be home, so I bought a rail pass. Maybe after this I’ll buy an Amtrak pass. I don’t know yet. Eventually though, I’ll have to go home.”

    ***

    “Watch out,” said one of the train attendants as the train was rolling leisurely into Toronto. “Sometimes kids camp out on that bridge and shoot at the train with pellet guns. Actually, it doesn’t happen so much here, but it does happen a lot on the train up to Churchill. It’s a problem.”

    The train cook was passing through the car.

    “One time I was taking the train up to Churchill,” he said, “and somebody shot a 22. at us. Smashed the window to pieces.”

    “Jesus,” said the passengers in the car.

    ***

    The first train I took, from Vancouver to Winnipeg, was nine hours late and, though the website indicated that the train had WiFi, this was not true. 

    Many passengers were upset. The most upset was a tall German man of about 65 hoping to rent an RV and visit the old homestead of some German relatives who had bid so long farewell to Germany and had made their fortunes in Canada. Being late for his RV pickup, the tall German man complained to anybody who would listen.

    “Zis ees a joke,” he said to me. “Zis schedule ees a joke. Zer ees no vifi. Zis ees a joke.”

    Every time I walked by his seat, he would repeat this like a tired refrain. I, too, was none too pleased by the lateness, but was coping better. I soon took to avoiding eye contact with him on my journeys throughout the train.

    Two days later, he was on the same train as me again, this time from Winnipeg to Vancouver. Unfortunately for his sanity, this train was also nine hours late. He decided to complain to the train staff who responded with the demeanor of a secretary at an MP’s office, charged with getting rid of the pesky constituents who’ve called to make their opinion known about how reneging on your electoral reform promises is a bad thing to do. There was much “Mhm, mhm, okay, let me tell you how this works. Yes, it’s too bad, but really you have to understand…”

    Afterwards, the German said to me, “She has been at her job too many years. She does not care. She does not even understand what we are saying. Zis ees a joke.”

    The next morning, I spied him in the dining car.

    “Good morning,” I said. “How angry are you feeling today?”

    “Me? Angry?” he said. “I am not feeling angry at all.”

    Momentarily confused, I stared at him. “You’re not feeling angry.”

    “Of course I am feeling angry,” he said. “Zis ees a joke.”

    ***

    The German wasn’t the only passenger on the second train who had also been on the first. I also met a couple in their sixties who told me that they were out of step with their friends because they had had children later in life.

    “We wanted to have children when we were in our early twenties,” said the wife. “But then we weren’t getting pregnant so I went to the doctor and it turned out that I had gone through early menopause! My uterus was the size of a prune! And my hormones were completely menopausal! So we thought, well I guess that’s not going to happen.”

    She spoke with a bubbly enthusiasm, all the time.

    “So when I was 34, I started to notice that I was getting this belly and so I started working out more and more to try to get rid of it! But nothing worked and it turned into this little hard round thing. At one point I got my husband to jump on it. I said, ‘Jump on it, jump on it! Feel how hard it is! What is going on?’ Then a little while later I saw motion on my stomach – and of course it was the baby kicking, but I didn’t know that then. So I called my husband and I said, ‘come in here, look at this!’ And then the next day I went to the doctor and said, ‘I’m dying.’ Turns out I was six months pregnant! And you know what, at the time that I was pregnant there were two other women at work who were due around the same time as me, and they couldn’t do anything. So I said, ‘Oh, well, you sit down and rest and I’ll do all the the lifting, setting things up and whatnot. And turns out I was as pregnant as they were! I was in the American medical journal in 1988 because of it!”

    “You should have been on Oprah,” said her husband.

    “I should have been on Oprah!” she crowed. “Although of course there wasn’t Oprah in those days. Anyway, when my son was born, the doctor said to me, well ‘this is basically a miracle. This is never going to happen again to you, so don’t have hope.’ And so away I went and we had our little boy, and then a little while later I started feeling kind of weird and I thought, ‘if I didn’t know any better, I would say that these were the signs of early pregnancy.’ But this time I didn’t want to go to the doctor because the last time I’d felt kind of stupid – and I’m not stupid – because I did not know I was pregnant. So I bought one of those kits and it turned a little bit blue if you were a little bit pregnant and brighter blue if you were further along, and lo and behold it was bright bright blue. So I took it into the doctor and I told him, “I’m pregnant and I’d like to have an abortion” because I thought, ‘I’ve gone through menopause and my eggs have degenerated. I’ve had one healthy baby and there’s no chance I’ll have another one.’ But my doctor was Catholic and he said to me, ‘No, unfortunately I can’t do that for you,’ and so I had the baby and he was even more perfect than the first! And then after that we thought, of course this can’t happen again so we took some precautions.”

    “How are your sons doing now?” I asked.

    “Oh well, they’re good,” said Maureen. “Our oldest is working, and our youngest is too and he’s also transitioning to be a woman! It was such a surprise to us because he was always so masculine and he liked sports and he was very athletic.  Anyway, we were totally okay with it, except it’s a little hard to remember to say she and her all the time. And also – and this is interesting – she’s also a MomDad! Before she transitioned she met a woman while on vacation and she got pregnant and now they have a beautiful little boy!”

    ***

    “That’s some engagement shit right there!” crowed a member of the group that I had started playing cards with on the train. Besides playing cards, we traded stories and facts about our relationships. He stuck his hand out to show us his engagement ring.

    “So,” one of us asked, “What are you planning for your wedding?”

    “Well,” says he. “We have to elope in Vegas.”

    “Why?” I asked. “Do you just not like big weddings, or do your parents not approve?”

    “Parents don’t approve,” he said, and left it at that, leaving us collectively in suspense.

    Not for long as it turned out.

    “Well, the reason we have to elope,” he said conspiratorially a bit later on, as though he’d been waiting for the exact right moment to drop the juiciest details “is that our parents are married. But we, y’know, didn’t grow up together or anything.”

    “So you’re marrying your step-sister” someone said.

    “I hear that’s one of the most popular porn genres” said someone else.

    Later on, he told me I looked familiar. He looked familiar too. We tried to figure out how and if we knew each other.

    “Were you part of the Marxist community in Montreal?” he asked.

    “No,” I said. “Did you hang out on the same floor I did at university?”

    “No,” he said.

    “Maybe we just saw each other in our university lobby,” I said.

    “I can only think of one other possible way that we couldn’t know each other, but it’s a bit weird,” he said.

    “What, like a swinger party?” I asked.

    “Did you ever have an, erm, tryst with my ex-girlfriend Catherine?”

    So I was not too far off with the swinger party.

    “No I never had sex with your girlfriend,” I said confidently.

    “Are you very sure?” he asked.

    “Yes,” I said, having been an unfashionable -1 on the Kinsey scale for as long as I can remember. “I’m sure.”

    A week later my husband was heard me cry out disappointedly.

    “What’s wrong?” he asked.

    “I just realized that I missed the only chance that I might have in my entire life to seriously respond to somebody with ‘I did not have sexual relations with that woman.’” I said.

    ***

    The train to Halifax was also several hours late leaving, so the people in the lineup got cozy with one another.

    The woman next to me started complaining about her job.

    “My boss is 71,” she said, “and I’ve been waiting to get her position since she was 65. She leaves early every day. She’s lazy. She has no oversight in her position. And every year she hires different summer and winter staff even though the summer staff would be happy to continue working the whole year.”

    “That sounds terrible,” I said.

    “Well,” said the woman with finality. “I’ve decided I’ve waited long enough. They’re opening a new medical marijuana plant in my town, and I’ve applied there to be a manager. I have managerial experience and I need to work at this point because my own retirement’s coming up!”

    “Good luck,” I said.

    “I think I’ll get a position,” she continued, “because it’s for medical marijuana and so they actually need people who don’t use marijuana to work there because it needs to be sterile and all that and you can’t just be pickin’ leaves of the plants for your own personal use. Anyways, they asked me if I had experience, and of course I couldn’t say that I had experience growing marijuana ‘cause it’s still illegal. But I told them, you see, ‘I’ve grown tomatoes, I’ve grown squash, I’ve grown catnip, and I’m damn well sure I can grow marijuana too.’”

    “Well I’m sure you can,” I said.

  • I Love Platzkart

    The legacy of the Cold War has left North Americans with precious little knowledge of the post-Soviet world. Sadly, some of the things that North Americans don’t know are rather nifty.

    Ex-Soviet transportation infrastructure makes North American transportation infrastructure seem an ersatz, shameful excuse. Expensive North American taxis, buses that take forever to arrive, and subway systems that only privilege huge cities pale in comparison to post-Soviet transportation infrastructure, which tends to be efficient and affordable. Yes, the subways are creaky, the buses look like they haven’t been updated since 1940, the marshrutka* drivers clearly have a collective death wish, and the taxis are uncomfortable and painted in jewel-tones, but I’ll be darned if the whole system doesn’t just work better than it does in North America.

    Vladikavkaz tram

    A tram in Vladikavkaz.

    This isn't a taxi, but many post-Soviet taxis do look like this.

    This isn’t a taxi, but many post-Soviet taxis do look like this.

    Although I geek out about all aspects of transportation infrastructure in the former Soviet Union, one particular type of transportation is special.

    Platzkart. I love platzkart.

    Platzkart is a class of train travel. When you travel by train in North America or Europe, you buy either a seat or a berth in a cabin. In the post-Soviet republics, platzkart is an intermediate option. If you buy a ticket in platzkart you will spend the night in a bed in a train car that contains 54 beds. It’s like a hostel . . . in a train.

    Russians tend to feel disdainful towards the idea of platzkart. I told a group of men from Krasnodar about my love for platzkart. “What?!” they yelled all together. “Is it the not showering? Is it not having hot water? Is it feeling dirty and smelly that you like?” They mimed showering with a bucket of cold water in a postage-stamp sized bathroom in platzkart over a several day trip.

    I told another group of Russians from Moscow. “What is it you like about it?” they asked, perplexed. “The smell?”

    I told my Russian teacher, and now every time I change cities she asks whether I travelled platzkart, and then laughs her head off. Of all my Russian friends, she is the kindest to platzkart and can understand why I choose to travel that way – but she still finds it hilarious that I’m such a big fan.

    Each wagon in platzkart contains 54 beds. Half of them are lower berths, and half are upper. At the beginning of the journey, everybody sits on the lower berths. As evening approaches, passengers roll out a provided mattress pad and make the beds with the provided linens.

    Platzkart upper berths

    Platzkart from above, before making the beds.

    Platzkart doesn’t really smell. (There was one time the toilet broke, but that was just once.) Yes, if you have back problems or are a light sleeper, or are taller than 5’6/168 cm or so, platzkart might not be for you. The berths are usually a bit hard, sometimes people snore, and people will probably bump your hands or feet if they stray a few centimeters off the bed, which is easy to do because the beds are only about 170 cm.

    The pros outweigh the cons though. Platzkart is a great social mixer. Spending 12, 24 or 36 hours in the same space with no internet starts conversations flowing. I’ve met missionaries, political scientists, tourists, a girl who moved to Azerbaijan for love (yikes), people who grew up in the train’s destination, and so on. Platzkart holds people captive and all but forces them to exchange stories. Half the time I leave platzkart, I leave with a phone number of somebody who lives in that town. “Give me a call if you need help,” they say. “Really, if anything goes wrong, just call.”

    That’s not to mention the funny things you witness in platzkart. The woman who was trying to get 20 packs of diapers across the border without paying duty? Well, the whole train had to wait, but only the folks in platzkart were able to laugh because we were the only ones who knew what was going on.

    In platzkart, people have shared their food with me, given me advice about travel, patiently corrected my broken Russian, invited me to breakfast in their homes, and promised to help me celebrate my birthday. They have also provided me invaluable information about the cultures of my destinations, things I might not have learned only by travelling to the destination because conversations are more difficult to start when people are not forced to occupy the same space. In fact, a few of my upcoming blog posts started as conversations in platzkart.

    Platzkart is also the safest way to travel as a woman travelling alone in the ex-Soviet Union. It is possible to buy a bed in a four-berth (kupe) or two-berth (lux) cabin, but unless you are travelling with friends, it only means that you will be sharing a cabin with one or three strangers instead of 53. In platzkart, not only will 52 people hear if something goes wrong, stealing is more challenging because everybody keeps an eye on others’ stuff.

    In the upcoming weeks and months, I am planning a series of posts inspired by platzkart conversations. Stay tuned.

    *A marshrutka is to the post-Soviet world what a dolmus is to Turkey.