A Brit's view of Russia from working there, marrying a Russian and trips over.
Monday, 20 October 2014
blog name change
Goodbye Life As We Know It: Russia, Hello Another Shore. Call me fickle, but I'm back to second one, this blog's original name.
Thursday, 16 October 2014
Squirrels, metaphorically speaking
Lily and I are trying to declutter. We'd been acquiring stuff in the way typical of many new-weds, for whom money isn't free-flowing and life plans change with the seasons. 'We'll take it' and 'we'll keep it, just in case' saw us become overwhelmed by possessions... two washing machines, three Christmas trees (yes, seriously), a printer for which we have no cables or adapter. Insane! Now... ebay if it's worth something, recycling if it's beyond repair in the damp cellar and charity for things that we can't be arsed to deal with any other way. All this got me thinking about stuff and the British and Russian attitudes.
A Siberian squirrel. |
Monday, 13 October 2014
The Dacha
Many Russians have a dacha, a country house. If a Brit mentions going to spend the weekend at the country house, you think of the landed gentry and large country estates. In Russia, it could mean many things.
Picking potatoes. |
Is Going to Work in Siberia (or Russia) Right for You?
I went over to Russia for the first time in 2004 to teach English; not just Russia, but to Surgut - a smallish town in the frozen wastes of Siberia. The time was right for me and it was just what I needed. That, however, isn't the case for everyone.
Siberia... snow and apartment blocks... get used to it. |
Sunday, 12 October 2014
Blood Pressure and the North of Russia
In Siberia, there is a common belief relating to the effects of living in such a cold, northerly environment on people's blood pressure.
Nine months of this can't be good for you, can it? |
Friday, 10 October 2014
Book review: Gulag: A History by Anne Applebaum
Given as a present to take on my first trip (to inform or to put the fear of god up me?), ten years later I finally finished this impressive work.

Russian food in the UK
When you live abroad for a while, especially when you're talking years, you pick up a taste for the local food, eating habits which stay with you. You miss elements of British food and certain products when you're over there - I remember wanting malt loaf for about a month and having to make do with a dark, fruit bread. Equally, this leads to similar quests for particular delicacies back in Britain...
beer snacks |
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