Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Ready for the train

I left off my last blog entry going out in search of lunch.  Of course I ended up at Glossary.  Not only is a comfortable place for me; the food is also really fresh and good.  I had cabbage salad, mlintsi (crepes) filled with mushrooms and onions and topped with sour cream.  I broke my custom of starting with cappuccino and just had water, saving coffee till the end.  My waiter seems to have devised a custom of his own, serving two confections instead of one with the cappuccino.

It's a good thing I had two confections because the day started to go downhill from there.  I went to the office of the ticket agency a few metro stops away.  It was a secure building with a check-in desk and the two men "guarding" it decided that there was no way they were admitting me to the building.  Frustratingly, I didn't have the phone number of the agency so I went back to my apartment.  I checked email to find that the agency I couldn't get into had informed me that they couldn't get my tickets for me after all and I should go to the main train station myself.  I decided I should take a nap to regain my serenity.

A friend called to meet him for coffee so I walked down to meet him.  It had gotten very hot and I was overdressed.  Inside McCafe, it was really hot.  My friend arrived and decided we should go to an art gallery.  But I had to go to the train station to try to get a ticket.  We ended up having an argument and going our separate ways.  I went to the train station and my evening started going further downhill.  There were literally hundreds of people getting tickets.  I got in a long line and waited for an hour.  When I got to the window, the woman said "wrong window" but wouldn't tell me what window to go to; she just called the next person.   I went out to the lobby and found the Information desk.  The woman spoke no English and told me there was no more train today to Mariupol.  I knew that.  I said I want a ticket for tomorrow.  She pointed to the ticket windows I had just come from; then she called loudly "next!" and I was dismissed.  I gave up and set out for the apartment.  I took a wrong turn and got lost for a while wandering mostly uphill.  I was tired and discouraged.  I phoned my friend, Zoryan who was on a train back to Kiev.  He texted me a website to buy my ticket.  When I got back to the apartment, I found that, even though there was an "English" button on the page, all the reservation stuff was in Ukrainian.  I gave up and went to bed.  It's the first time I ever felt like such a stranger and foreigner in Ukraine.

I got up this morning determined to work my way through the Ukrainian website of reservations.  It took me quite a while with my dictionary, but I think I have managed to by first class tickets both going and coming back.  I saved the confirmation pages and emailed them to Anna, asking her to check that I did, indeed, buy what I thought I did.  I also asked her to print them out and bring them to lunch today.  Then I will go back to the train station with the documents to pick up my tickets.  I know where that internet window is.  However, until I have the actual travel documents in my hand, I won't be convinced the whole process of getting the tickets is over. 

Although I've tried to convince a lot of English speaking folks to come to Ukraine, I'll amend that to "come, but make sure you have a Ukrainian or Russian speaker with you when you have to do business."

2 comments:

  1. Talk abaout a high blood pressure kind of day. Oy! Hopefully your next trip to the station won't be nearly as frustrating. There's not a nap long enough to regain serenity from that experience! Love....

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  2. I can't even imagine being there - even if the UK where they spoke English there were times that I had no idea what they were talking about, but at least I could question until I did understand! I look forward to your train journey as well! I always feel like we are in your back pocket!

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