Today was the day of many discoveries and rediscoveries about the city. Georgia and I walked around from 1:30 until 5:30. And then Dan, Georgia, and I continued for another few hours. And finally Dan and I finished late in the evening.
Georgia and I started on the Cathedral square. We checked out the updated Stibukla tile where Georgia made some wishes for me and Isabella. She told us the next day that she wished for Isabella to grow up soon and was disappointed it did not come true yet.
Then we saw St. Casimir's chapel - the most beautiful one in the church. The statues on the altar are designed in such a way that it looks like angels and other figures are floating in a white cloud. Really sublime. We also found out about the tours of the cathedral crypt and will be checking these out next week.
The next stop was the little Japanese garden on Pilies. As implausible as it seems they've managed to add a pavilion to it. Inside the gallery there was a bunch of ladies doing beautiful paintings on silk and with aquarel. Despite the tranquility of the setting they've glared at us like a bunch of old "tetkas" that they were. This time we were not going to be intimidated. We stuck around until we figured out who the decision maker was. That was the friendliest lady. She said that it was their last class and that they would be starting the new one in the fall. She gave us a flyer from another instuctor who would be coming in town shortly and might have some extra classes. After that we did a quick run through the 2W gallery located in the courtyard of the Argentinian restaurant. Nothing thrilling. Next was the gallery of the red lady. Here is how you save 2LTs: you walk in to the gallery when the sole attendant there is washing the floors and ask to break 100LT note. She waves you in.
All the paintings and etchings there are for sale. That makes it even weirder that they would charge the cover price and that little as that. I think the only explanation is to cover the expense of the attendant. We were left alone to wander around even to the secret offices of the gallery. Inside the building is pretty plain and most of the beautiful architecture is plastered white. The artworks are very pretty. Georgia asked me to tell her a story about many of them and insisted on the happy ending before we were able to move on to the next one. The day was very hot so next stop was to get some ice-cream.
After that onto the University bookstore - nothing special there. Check out the picture on the left enlarged, just another little courtyard in LT. We headed up the Traku gatve and found what for a moment looked like Mecca - the milk bar across the Coffee Inn. Unfortunately they got the bar part right and missed everything else. Not even a little bandele in sight.
After that, with a few more stops on the way we visited the Orthodox Church of St. Michael and St. Constantine. Georgia really liked it. It is as always under construction but looks pretty nice. Finally we stopped by at Tautodailininko Dirbtuve where the artist creates amaz, which was one of our main destination points on the way. The artist who works there creates amazing artworks by carving out shapes on paper with a scalpel. Unfortunately it was closed despite the posted hours. Next time we would have to call in advance. One more look at the Orthodox Church. Maxima to get some food for the evening. And we were off to the Meno Nisa gallery on Basanaviciaus. It features some beautiful jewlery, mostly enamels, and, among other things, horrific looking paintings in strange media that looked like colored play foam.
It was an awesome afternoon. We picked up Dan and continued down Pilies. Watched the procession of Krishnaits. Would be interesting to find out more about them. What drives these people to go on these periodic walks chanting "Hary Hary Krishna" and other stuff knowing all to well that they have just provided 3 minutes of the entertainment for the most people around. Maybe it was a punishment? Do a close-up of the picture on the right. Must have been a lot of effort to put it up unless they have some special equipment.
It is enjoyable to walk through the souvenir booths that at night turn into simple photo screens and look at the old streets and try to see if we can recognize where they are today.
There is now an organic shop on Literatu. Fruits and veggies look like a somewhat rotten variety of their counterparts on the market but other things like meats, cheeses and deserts undeniably appeal to your senses. We had to think about dinner coming up and our rapidly expanding figures so we left this experience for the next time.
Next we went to the youth park and then met up with Andrei and Natasha. We dropped of Georgia at home and had dinner together on the city hall square. It was really pleasant to sit there and watch the people go by. Walked back to the Literatu street later. We finally got home at around 11:30 but 10 minutes too early - the very last thing of the day were the enormous fireworks, barely visible from Georgia's window. Additional notes about the Lithuanian way of working:
While we worked in the morning we had a quick phone call with Alicia. She said she does not need a cleaning woman and that's why she asked Rita, the parasite, to give her the key. But that she still needs help with getting her groceries and other small tasks and Rita would be helping her with that. It is like some kind of a crazy circle. Dan tried to reason with her but I don't think he was very successful.
Then, coincidentally t.Ira called and gave me the contact info for the person who watched her boss's late father as a full time job. The idea was that we are looking for someone to clean the apartment once a week and spend 4 hours weekly doing various chores like grocery shopping. The lady I spoke with sounded pleasant and chatty. I conveyed the expectations and the first thing she said was that "older people need a lot of company, I will be there every day." I repeated the message in the nice terms. Then she said that the house needs a wet cleaning every day with cats and all. I still repeated the message. Then we dicussed the price for a bit. For 6 hours of work she wanted 1/2 of what she was getting the last time around for 30 hours. I gave her our numbers and she countered that we can still discuss it, very pleasantly albeit saying that Alicia needs a lot of help and she would get an idea of how much from her directly. Initially I agreed to meet with her on Monday.
But after hanging up and thinking about how she spoke and getting a clue about the math, Dan and I decided to call her back and say that we will not continue the conversation. She was pretty upset and unpleasant about that. But I really don't like it that a person who did not even make a personal contact is already dictating her rules. We called t.Ira to explain and she said she will continue working on getting the contact for us.
To continue the rant on the subject of the work ethic, Irina has been really great so far: kids love her and she is very patient with them, takes them to her apartment, buys Georgia water and treats, and even treated us to lunch on Friday. But she has not showed up once on time during this whole week and said she had stuff scheduled in the evenings even though we agreed that she will work 3-4 evenings per week. I guess this is how it works here and in most other countries. But I am used to and like better the American way of doing things where the terms of the working relationship are very clearly defined and still leave room for a personal relationship.
Last night our portion of the building lost the power late in the evening. Our German neighbor said that he walked into a man messing with the wires outside our building and he ran away. Dan was concerned that someone might have been setting up the house for a robbery since the power failure disabled all the alarms in the builting. Just in case we called Algirgas the aparment owner. He said not to worry - our apartment has a double metal doors. Nice to know he cares.




























