Where Have All the Flowers Gone?
By Turlough
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16 June, Sunday
For the first time since Wednesday I saw a golden oriole in the walnut tree. Having feared all feathered friends might have shuffled off their mortal coil, it cheered me like nothing else had done this week. It was a bit of a Noah and the dove with the olive branch situation except there was no flood; June’s sun already has the ground baked hard like a school dinner lady’s pasty.
Am I pruning damaged trees enough? Hoping they’ll bear new leaves this summer, I’m not as brutal as Priyatelkata. Following a heated exchange, I feared she might prune me.
17 June, Monday
At least it was a bright summer morning. Had I got up in the darkness of winter to encounter such widespread skitterings from dogs’ bottoms on the kitchen floor there’d have been a risk of standing in them.
We bought a Lamborghini (or maybe a Fiat… it’s definitely Italian) from the woman who runs the ornamental stonemason’s beside Nikolay’s workshop. If we’ve any problems with the brakes she’ll do us a deal on a nice gravestone.
Celebrating and grieving simultaneously, we had luncheon in the garden restaurant in Arbanasi while waiters brushed up storm damage. Nobody’s hurt but everybody’s stunned.
18 June, Tuesday
We met lovely Maria and Petr at a notary’s office in town to transfer custody of Fyodor the Fiat which we promised to keep clean forever and not just the first month. To earn a living, Petr sculpts three-metre-tall 19th century Bulgarian revolutionary soldiers from stone blocks for public places.
Neighbours Ismail and Amelia can’t earn a living because they’ve no cash to repair their storm-damaged work van. Normally they work like slaves selling fruit and veg in markets. We’re mega-morose but they’re absolutely distraught. Our upfront payment for a thirty year supply of rosovi tomatoes will hopefully help them.
19 June, Wednesday
By 6:00 am we realised we’d been overprotective in keeping la voiture neuve in the bedroom to shield it from Balkan weather.
By 3:00 pm we realised the covered veranda at Gorna Oryahovitsa’s Auto Morgue wasn’t protective enough as a thermometer screamed 41°C. Our cars were weighed and we received 55 stotinki (25p) per kilogram for them. Old motors are cheaper than potatoes.
Back home, grinning gypsy neighbours, eager to work, took delivery of fruit and vegetables to sell in tomorrow’s market. Our new car sat in our parking space no longer littered with battered remains. There were happy tears!
20 June, Thursday
It was already 26°C on our covered terrace when I drank my coffee at 7:00 am. This isn’t uncommon here for August but it’s still only June. Great swathes of a country that almost drowned a week ago are today on fire.
Cat Nouveau is all grown up now. A month ago he decided he was street tough and turned to the outdoor life. But now he suffers the heat in his Tibetan yak hairdo so he’s a house cat once more, snoring long hours under the air-conditioning.
Replacing the cat’s name with mine, you could repeat the previous paragraph.
21 June, Friday
The inaugural day of my 6:00 am kick-off in the garden routine. I beat the heat but not the flies nor the neighbours’ yappy dog. Tidying damaged trees and bushes is becoming less disheartening. New shoots appearing was balm to the brain.
It’s summer solstice time but, although the top hemisphere is now hurtling towards winter and in Homebase in Trowbridge they’ve got Cliff singing Mistletoe and Whine, our weather wasn’t any cooler.
Priyatelkata makes ten mosaic-top tables per day to avoid outdoor catastrophic scenes and temperatures. Not having a flat head is all that saves me from being mosaicked.
22 June, Saturday
It’s Cherry Day in Bulgaria. They call it Chereshova Zadushnitsa (Черешова Задушница, literally ‘cherry stew’). Bulgarians care for the souls of anyone who’s died since Good Friday. Apparently they’re double busy in Heaven from Easter onwards so souls that should get in are hanging around waiting. Wine’s poured on their freshly cleaned graves before they’re decorated with fruit, and we’re knee-deep in cherries this time of year.
I’m only aware of Frank Ifield and the President of Iran dying in that time, but I’ve no idea where they’re buried, and the Iranian lad probably isn’t up for wine on his grave anyway.
23 June, Sunday
My friend Milena explained why our village, but not every village, was battered by hailstones recently.
Every Bulgarian village has a Zmey (Змей), a multi-headed dragon with golden scales. These ferocious creatures ward off the Hala (Хала) which, with a snake’s body and a dog’s head, is the personification of hail and steals from fields, orchards and vineyards. However, if villagers have angered their Zmey, it sulks in its cave allowing the Hala to wreak havoc.
In March a series of kitsch-looking, two-metre-high, multi-coloured plastic letters spelling out I Heart Malki Chiflik appeared in our village square. The Zmey couldn’t miss them.
24 June, Monday
I love my country because every day is celebrated as the day of something or other.
Today’s Enyovden (Еньовден), the day of St Ivan the Herb Gatherer. Before dawn, sorceresses, healers and enchantresses gather herbs for curing childless women, chasing away evil spirits or casting spells for love and hatred. In more state-of-the-art villages we just cut herbs and chai from our gardens for drying.
I hate to bang on about our recent hailstorm but today we felt quite inadequate as our garden has been blown away. So we had nothing to hang up to dry but our freshly laundered knickers.
25 June, Tuesday
Booking a one-way ticket really confuses Easyjet. I know because eight years ago today I flew to Bulgaria from England with absolutely no intention of returning. They still send me emails expressing concern.
I was over two hours at the KAT, de-registering and registering vehicles from our ever-changing fleet. Dimitar helped me. He gave me two litres of the finest homemade rakia to celebrate everything. Double-distilled and matured in oak barrels in his mate’s basement, it’s the stuff that makes Tsars see stars.
Priyatelkata and I didn’t touch a drop but felt happy for the first time in a while.
26 June, Wednesday
The day began gloomily. Our cats often stay out all night but usually return by 7:00 am for full feline breakfasts. At 10:30 there was still no sign of Crado Cat Nouveau until I visited the downstairs loo where he was asleep in the washbasin. He’d been incarcerated at least twelve hours.
Insurance assessor George came to inspect our jigsaw puzzle former roof. A very serious meeting until he sat on the dogs’ squeaky rubber duck on the settee. It squoke perfectly because it was kept inside during the storm. I hope the quacking and laughing doesn’t affect our claim.
27 June, Thursday
Turkey won and progressed in the Euro football thing last night. So if Russia hadn’t come along in 1878, liberating Bulgaria from Ottoman occupation, we’d be celebrating now too. Bloody do-gooders!
Five nice ladies in five chilled offices dealt, or semi-dealt, with insurance affairs too numerous to mention. Having not experienced three parties, fire or theft, we could expect little more from the ladies than them being nice.
Dining at the Asenovtsi with Scottish friends, French Priyatelkata likened the dialect of Glaswegian Brian to that of the Swedish Chef in the Muppets. Luckily, Brian didn’t understand what Priyatelkata was saying.
28 June, Friday
Little more than a fortnight after our general election, the Bulgarian National Assembly has at last chosen a Speaker. So now they can at least try to negotiate the formation of a coalition government. This was never a problem in those heady days of brutal totalitarianism. She’s Raya Nazaryan from Armenia and she’s young and attractive in a don’t-mess-with-me sort of way, but then she’d need to be.
Apparently they’ve an election looming in Britain too. There’s no need to read the manifestos or watch the televised debates. Just remember that Hi Risk Anus is an anagram of Rishi Sunak.
29 June, Saturday
These hot afternoons it’s grand to lie on the settee with jugs of glacial tea and a summer soundtrack. Joni Mitchell, Joseph Canteloube, Bob Marley and Mississippi John Hurt on scratchy vinyl all sooth as Pavlovian mosquitos snarl from their sides of insect screens.
Recovering plants yearn for rain. Thunderstorms will arrive in the coming days. Nervously we’ll look out for mammatusi, clouds from which great ice-laden cellular pouches hang like udders. Not to be confused with Gypsy Mama Tusi who tells fortunes in a tent in a layby on Plovdiv ring road. Does she have cellular pouches I wonder?
30 June, Sunday
In weather so hot my fillings melt when I open my mouth, neighbours Hasan and Slavka have no money, no transport and now no water because of their Communist era plumbing. I bought them twenty litres at the village shop. Embarrassed, they offered me spanners as payment.
I tried to order a book on Amazon. It’s called Rakiya - Stories of Bulgaria, by Ellis Shuman. They said it can’t be dispatched to my delivery location.
We’re Europe’s poorest country, here to provide the so-called ‘developed’ world with cheap labour and jokes. I say ‘we’ and not ‘they’. I love Bulgaria.
Part One -
Image:
In our garden not even those in high places escape the wrath of Hala (Хала).
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Comments
Wrath
...of elemental beings not to be taken lightly as any gardner kno'. Sorry to hear of your weather devastation, hope joint vigorous pruning brings back your tree plantation.
Aways a warm pleasure to read your work.
Best
L
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Hi Turlough,
Hi Turlough,
I see you don't hang around when it comes to getting on top of things that need doing. You are certainly an early bird working in the garden at 6.00am.
It's strange but for the first time both me and my partner are suffering with hay feaver, which makes it difficult to spend too much time in the garden. For me it's horrible, especially after my illness. For years I've been healthy and never unwell, and now it's all coming at once, which is a real drag.
I liked the part about Crado asleep in the downstairs wash basin, do you think he was trying to keep cool?
The part I could really relate to, was to lie on a settee listening to Joni Mitchell, what a way to chill out, on a hot summer's day, sounds like heaven.
Life is for living and you both certainly know how to live the dream...so keep on dreaming Turlough.
Jenny.
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I have many favourite bits
I have many favourite bits from this piece Terry...Crado in the wash basin (as above) being one, but possibly my favourite is Hi Risk Anus. No need to guess where my vote is NOT going.
I love that despite the recent climate induced traumas, nothing affects the love you have for your adopted country X
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Nothing worse than a summer
Nothing worse than a summer storm for gardeners - when you see what's supposed to be the highlight of the gardening year all toppled and sad looking - nothing worse except enormous hailstones. I'll never complain about my keeled over foxgloves and cardoons again!
Hard to raise a smile during this tail end of the election campaign, but high risk anus managed it, so thank you.
I look forward to hearing about your gentle restorative rain and the resurrection of your poor neighbours' businesses next month - thank you for another piece of fabulous writing Turlough
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Those amazing hailstones
Those amazing hailstones reminded me of some of the disasters faced by the Ingalls-Wilders as told fictionally in 'Little House on the Prairie' and the rest of the series, especially trying to farm the prairie. I think there were big hailstones, and a frost on July 4th one year I think. Rhiannon
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That was so good of you to
That was so good of you to buy water for your neighbours, I can't imagine having no water in such heat! It is not even sunny here, let alone hot - according to weatherforecast it is 9 degrees now! (cat under son's duvet)But reading your account of the heat and flies makes me grateful. I loved the Swedish Chef, also the washbasin, wondering like Jenny, if it was because a cool place. Sure I have heard of dogs sleeping in baths. Great news about the flourishing new shoots and the golden oriole, I hope your neighbours' businesses are up again by your next diary, and there are more birds too. Really enjoyed this, thankyou so much for posting
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Another wonderful piece - I
Another wonderful piece - I feel I'm learning so much about Bulgaria, or at least your corner of it!
Your community sounds so supportive of each other. I don't suppose it's always like that, but it does seem to be pulling together in your current heartbreaking situation. How awful that your neighbours have lost their livelihood, one hopes temporarily.
We're not allowed to mention the Swedish chef in our family. Son's partner, who is from Stockholm, does not find it remotely funny.
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"If we’ve any problems with
"If we’ve any problems with the brakes she’ll do us a deal on a nice gravestone." I like this. Diversifying.
Hope everything works out with Fyodor the Fiat (the car that could be a Lamborghini). Sounds good to me. Happy tears...yes!
"I love my country because every day is celebrated as the day of something or other." There seems to be so many saints to celebrate and myths and legends in Bulgaria. I can see why you love it so much. Never a dull moment. Not so sure about the mad weather over there. It's raining here and a tepid 13C. Oh to be in England?
[Turkey beat Austria last night in the Euros. Can only imagine the celebrations over night!]
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It's not like me to be right
It's not like me to be right twice in the same day. Once is a rarity. I know nuffink, of course. Well according to my OH.
The bond between Turkey and Bulgaria is clear for all to see from your razor sharp writing. You should consider compiling these into an almanac/book and publishing. It's a unique insight into a unique country. You would have an audience and it would sell.
Just a thought for another day maybe..
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Great stuff. Just the
Great stuff. Just the distraction I needed, wonderful writing. It's our Pick of the Day! Do share on social media.
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Not everyone finds
their place, but I'm very glad you've found yours. Otherwise, there would be none of this acerbically-tinged whimsy to cheer me up when I read it.
умний писчий приятно и читать
E x
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Shit, I thought Scotland was
Shit, I thought Scotland was the poorest country in Europe. Then I remembered we were no longer in Europe. So I guess Bulgaria win again. What great news, as expected Labour to win, but also the defeat of the National Front in France. I don't know what the Bulgarian is for fuck the Tories and the National Front (and it doesn't need to rhyme).
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