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Sep 29, 2013

This Week's Postcards and Purchases

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I am starting university and work on Tuesday! I am so stressed out that swapping seems like an obscene thing to think about. Of course, one thing that doesn't seem like a guilty activity is buying something nice for oneself :)) But first of all, the postcards. Only two of them came in this week.

A thank you- card from Malaysia (via Swap-bot)

The kind swapper who sent it said men with pet monkeys were typical in Malaysian villages, helping the locals pick coconuts. He also said it wasn't a common sight anymore. A very interesting cultural detail!

From U.S.A. via Swap-bot
(P. S. Write Back #33)

This swapper's postcard that I was supposed to send back to her got lost somewhere along the way and I never received it. She didn't want to risk losing another treasured postcard again, so we arranged to simply exchange naked and stamped postcards.

I also managed to almost finish two letters, wrote a couple of postcards and prepared a tiny package. I still need to take photos of those, before I mail them out.

And now, the things I spoilt myself with this week. They have very little to do with swapping, but they made me almost as happy as swapping does, so why not show them here ;)

I am very glad to finally have been able to obtain some variety of postal stamps. It appears that there's only one place where they sell philatelic stamps in Madrid, and it made me think it was probably because there was little interest in buying them among the madrileños. Rather, there is little interest in distributing the stamps by the authorities, because the queue at the post office seemed never-ending. However, I was patient and lucky and I got to buy the coolest Spanish stamps ever, with the electric postal van on them. The van really exists, I saw the cutie circulating the university campus a couple of times. These are my spoils of war of the day:



Aaaaand, although it's little relevant, I discovered a Russian supermarket here in the capital. I had been given the advice by several people that I should look for Lithuanian products there. When I went back home to my country this summer, I hardly ate any typical local food, but having a very curious boyfriend, I decided to give it a shot and introduce him to the Eastern-European foodstuffs. We had a blast. There were so many kitschy souvenirs and different kinds of pickled vegetables, I ran around yelling "this is what I grew up on" and "this is made from pig intestines, preservatives, toilet paper and magic, yay!", and we just kept filling the shopping basket. They had items from all over Eastern Europe, and many of them were from my home country, so the gastronomic experience was more than successful. That's what we got in the end*:


1- Kissel. A very typical starchy fruit desert. The cranberry version of it is a must on the Christmas Eve table in my country.
2- Big marshmallows, called zefyrai in Lithuanian. I actually hate them, but when I was little they were only served on birthdays, as a real delicacy. Still, it doesn't explain why I bought them.
3- Very light Russian beer that didn't survive the ride home :D
4- Kvass a.k.a. "the Soviet Coca-Cola". It is a sparkling soft drink made of fermented bread. It's like the beer's little brother :) During the Soviet era it was sold directly from tank cars on the streets. I still remember something like this from my childhood.
5- Kefir. It's basically sour milk, fermented with lactic acid bacteria. Tastes pretty much like liquid yoghurt.
6- Sautéed carrot garnish. That's all I can say about it by now, since we haven't tried it yet. If it's what I think my grandmother used to make, it should be quite yummy.
7- HORSERADISH sauce!!! How could I live without it? It's normally eaten with meat dishes in order to give them some spiciness, but I can finish the jar in one go, alone.
8- Sour cream. It's mainly considered to be a complete sauce rather than an ingredient where I come from, eaten with dumplings, pancakes etc. where I come from. I personally think it's edible embolism and try to avoid it whenever possible, but each cuisine has its dark side, and the boyfriend needed to make an informed decision about loving/hating this one. 
9- Doktorskaya sausage. It is a Soviet legend, a heavily processed/ground pink Bologna sausage whose fabrication process is also a legend of its own. It was said to contain pig brains and toilet paper, but in reality it's just a meat product that contains a lot of lard (although not visible) and preservatives, nothing that wouldn't actually be edible. As with any kind of sausage, it's better not to see how it's made. It tastes pretty good, I must admit.
10- Dumplings with meat filling, an international classic. Heavy, tasty, simple. We loved them (with a drop of sour cream, he he).
11- Canned bristling in olive oil. I sometimes miss it on a white bread, egg and mayonnaise sandwich.
* The coffee machine and the microwave weren't included. I just felt uninspired and didn't bother to find an artsy setting for the very unsophisticated food items.

I wonder if any of my readers has grown up on similar food or buy some of it now on regular basis... For me it's basically an expat survival kit, I would rarely buy any of that stuff if I were at home, although I'm eating it with pleasure now.

Time to go to bed, but I just started craving that Hello Kitty sausage.

Sep 27, 2013

All Summer Postcards!!! (W #29-38)

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I am sure I'll want to bang my head on the keyboard after I'm finished with this post, but that's the price one must pay for being lazy for way too long. On the other hand, lazy feels better than uploading postcards feels bad, so it's a very fair bargain. Actually, I love going through my postcard collection, reading the messages, remembering all those great swaps that I joined in order to receive them. Except that this time it's almost fifty postcards I want to share with you so it's probable that I get an aneurysm from all this pleasure that is ahead of me. 

Although I didn't send any postcards while I was away on holidays, my greedy mailbox back home was working as hard as ever, and so was my boyfriend... He would take photos of all the new postcards and send them to me! Poor guy, you might think. He said he was excited to be the first one to get to see the postal treasures, ha ha :D Exchanging mail is contagious, and he had been warned!

Gier güi gou! (<--- A valuable Spanglish phonetics lesson in case why not)
     (Here we go)

From Belarus via Postcrossing
Aquatic Warbler (Acrocephalus paludicola)

From Singapore via Swap-bot
(NYUP Sender's Choice #8)

It's a Doctor Who card and I get the impression that they're very sought-after by the fans. I, however, am absolutely ignorant of the programme. I just googled it, seriously.

From Belgium via Swap-bot
(Send me a postcard! - one person per country #2)


From Poland via Postcrossing
From Germany via Postcrossing

Unbeknown to the sender, I am a ---
                                                                                                       --- of Grace Jones, especially of her modelling work and music. Such an inspiration! The sender had a great sense of humor. He said the card showed him on the left with his wife on the right :D Maybe I just got a postcard from Christopher Walken.

From U.S.A. via Swap-bot
(P. S. Write Back #33)
For those who have never participated in "P.S. Write Back" swaps, it's a great way to add a very dear postcard from your unwritten card collection into your written and stamped- collection. You send it blank to your partner, he/she writes on it and sends it back to you. You do the same for somebody else. Of course, as everywhere, there are cheating individuals on swap-bot that might just keep your treasured card for themselves, but I believe the odds of that happening are reasonably slim. So far all of my postcards have been returned, and that's how this beauty ended up being mine forever. Some postcards are just too gorgeous to let go of!

A thank you- card I received from Lithuania (bought in Montmartre!)
From South Africa via Postcrossing
My first official postcard from South Africa on Postcrossing!!!

From Russia via Swap-bot
(Multiview postcard #1)

From Finland via Postcrossing
Peanuuuuuts!

From France via Swap-bot
(P. S. Write Back #33)
Another postcard I wanted to keep. To say that I love beer would be to undervalue the relationship I have with it :>

From U.S.A. via Swap-bot
(All things bright and beautiful)

From Finland via Postcrosing

Private swap from Russia
"Feline vacation"

From U.S.A. via Swap-bot
(QUICK cute animal postcard #35)
I am really glad that my partner for this swap chose something else than a typical kitten/puppy postcard. This one is a bobcat cub! I sent a postcard with marine mammals (don't dear to say walruses are not cute) to my partner.

From U.S.A. via Swap-bot
(P. S. Write Back #32)

From The Netherlands via Swap-bot
(OVERSIZED OR ODD SHAPED POSTCARD SWAP #2)

Although the scan is ugly, the postcard itself is very cool. It combines two representative features of the country, one in its shape and the other in the image. It is my first irregular-shaped postcard.

From U.S.A. via Swap-bot
(PC Trading: Starts w/letter)
This time the letter was "I", obviously

From Russia via Postcrossing
It was among my favorites! Thanks!

From Germany via Postcrossing

Another thank you- postcard from the same girl in Lithuania

From Ukraine via Postcrossing
I love this card!

From Japan via Postcrossing
This one is actually pretty curious. It's The Statue of Liberty that came from Japan. On the other side there were a couple of phrases in hiragana and one in romanized Japanese, neither of which I could understand. I still wonder about the postcard choice and the meaning of the message.

From U.S.A. via Postcrossing
(Another Statue of Liberty!)

From U.S.A. via Swap-bot
(What´s on your pizza? Postcard swap :))
Wait, another one?.. :(( I must have around 20 Statues of Liberty by now!

From Netherlands via Postcrossing
Ohh, I know it's unhealthy, but I just have a thing for brachycephalic animals...

From my penpal Heather in Switzerland
She was camping in that place. Wow!

From U.S.A. via Postcrossing
Abominable by Mark Ryden, 2008

Straight to my favorites! As the sender described him, Mark Ryden is "the Modern Day King of  Pop Surrealism". I'd like to receive more works of his!

From U.S.A. via Postcrossing

From Croatia via Swap-bot
(Love it! Hate it! PC swap)

From Finland (Lappland) via Postcrossing

I really wanted to have a postcard from Lappland as I fancy most things Nordic. Thanks to the sender from Kilpisjärvi, I now have one. Click on the town name to see how much up-north the town is actually situated! It was August when the card was sent, and the sender was glad that the weather was warm, with temperatures reaching 14°C :)

From U.S.A. via Swap-bot
(International Postcard Swap #1)
Mmmm, a map card!

From the United Kingdom via Swap-bot
(Easy PC Swap - sender's choice #10)

From Russia via private swap

From Greece via Swap-bot
(Easy PC Swap - sender's choice #10)

From Russia via Postcrossing

From Canada via Swap-bot
(Lenticular (3D) Postcard Swap #5)

From Russia via Postcrossing

From U.S.A. via Swap-bot
(One Unsual Postcard)
Sweet Relief by James Jean, 2006

This postcard is really beautiful and unusual, as the swap indicated. I wish it didn't have that ugly postmark that I tried to clean with alcohol but couldn't. Any advice on that, please? From my experience, postmarks are really easy to remove from some glossy cards, and from others it's plain impossible. Could that have anything to do with the ink? This postcard is matte, so I didn't want to rub it too hard either. It's also worth mentioning that although all of my postcards appear as having rounded corners on the blog, this one does have rounded corners. Another point to being rather unusual!


From South Korea via Swap-bot
(P. S. Write Back #32)
Other World by M.C. Escher, 1947

Most of the postcards I want to keep for myself come through blank postcard swaps. The origin of this postcard was no exception. I have been a fan of M.C. Escher for almost as long as I can remember being a fan of sb/sth, so there was no vacillating about what to do with it. Well of course, it was going to travel all the way to South Korea and back, over 20.000 km as the crow flies!


Vanuatu ---> Australia ---> Spain via Postcrossing


From Finland via Postcrossing

From Ukraine via Postcrossing

From Germany via Postcrossing

From Poland via Postcrossing

From France, from a travelling family member

From U.S.A. via Swap-bot
 (NYUP Sender's Choice #8)
Yellow-Red-Blue by Vassily Kandinsky, 1925

When searching for the title of the painting, I realized I had scanned the image upside-down! It was written upside-down as well. I guess both me and the sender saw a cat on the right side of the painting, hahaha! I should punish myself for vulgarizing abstract art :D


From Bulgaria via Swap-bot
(Send me a postcard! - one person per country #2)
My first postcard from Bulgaria!

Aaaand, last but definitely not least - the stamps. I am too tired to comment on my favorites, but there were so many unseen ones this time!





I'll just go and puke shredded paper now. See you next time!