Showing posts with label New Years. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Years. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

New Year's Eve in Boston

The Dance by Eric Fonteccio and Alfred Georges. Photo by Alik E.
We have lived in Boston for several years now, but this year was the first time we welcomed the New Year in our hometown. We considered going "out on the town", but decided to keep our outing short, especially when the temperatures got down into single digits (Fahrenheit). In fact 40 mph wind gusts forced the authorities to cancel the traditional midnight fireworks!

We started celebrating New Years on the Boston Common looking at several ice sculptures. I really wanted to see the parade, so we secured a great spot along Charles Street between the Boston Common and the Public Gardens. In fact our spot was so great that there were very few people standing next to us. As it turned out our "great" spot was just a few hundred feet past the point where the parade ended.

The snow sparkled as it fell turning us into snowmen while we walked down the middle of the Commonwealth Avenue on our way to Copley Square. There were more ice sculptures in Copley Square, including my favorite ice sculpture ever--The Dance by Eric Fonteccio and Alfred Georges from Brookline Coal and Ice Company. For me this sculpture really stood because of its design and craftsmanship.

By this time, my toes were sufficiently frozen to end our celebratory walk. So we jumped in the T and headed to Ginza, one of our favorite sushi restaurants, where the house green tea and excellent food revived us. We topped the evening off with a movie and champagne at midnight.

Monday, May 19, 2008

Treasure Hunting

Ornaments safe at homeWhen I was little, New Years was a very big holiday for us, just as it was for most people in the Soviet Union. Dad and I put up our fake New Years tree. We decorated our apartment, and I waited for presents from Father Frost on New Years Eve.

As far as tree ornaments went my mom loved large balls, and greatly preferred them over various figurines. Every December, despite the cost, she bought one or two of these ornaments for the tree. By February the decorations were wrapped in napkins, put away into large shoes boxes, and everything together with the fake tree went back to grandpa’s garage. There the treasure lay until next December. And there it lay untouched for many years.

Recently I realized that if I am ever to put up a Christmas tree in my house, I would like to have some of the ornaments I so dearly loved when I was little. Coming to Moscow this time I was determined to get to those shoe boxes and bring back a couple of those pretty balls my mom bought.

First attempt to open the garageOur first attempt to get into the garage was rather unsuccessful. None of the three keys available turned the giant padlock hanging on the garage door. Since neither my aunt nor my cousin harbored any hopes of finding the right key, only one option remained—cutting the lock.

The next morning, my aunt and I headed to the market. The sales person knew exactly what we were up to when we asked for the magic combo of a padlock and a saw. When I told him that I was planning to do the job myself, laughter erupted behind me. A young guy just could not believe his ears and there was nothing I could have said to convince him. Men in Russia still expect their women to cook, launder and bear children, and to mind their business when it comes to such manly tasks as sawing.

Back at the garage, I got through about 3 millimeters of the lock thickness in about 10 minutes, but progress was slow. The saw we bought was missing a screw, and the blade kept slipping. So I walked over to neighboring garage where an older guy was putzing around with some instruments. He gave me a doubtful look, but added a screw to my saw. As I started to walk back, he offered to do the job with an electric saw. As determined as I was to prove Russian men wrong, I could not resist the electric saw. Our garage neighbor cut the lock off in less then 5 minutes, and doing it by hand would have taken me close to an hour.

Pawing through cobwebs my aunt and I ventured inside. She held a rickety ladder as I climbed up to the shelf under the ceiling to extract the boxes of ornaments I knew so well. The boxes were beat up and dirty, but inside the pretty sparkling balls lay untouched carefully wrapped in napkins as if packed away just a few months ago.

As I picked out a few favorites, our garage neighbor came back. He clearly started worrying that he just helped two strangers break into someone’s garage. He relaxed when he saw no car inside, but wondered if New Years came early this year.

The shiny new padlock contrasted with the rest of the garage front, mostly unused in the last three years with grass growing across its entrance. As we left, my aunt was hoping that she will not have to go through the lock cutting process again, and I was wondering how in the world I would pack my shiny pretty treasure to stop it from turning into a pile broken glass during our flight home.