Sunday, March 27, 2005

Report #6: Ulyanovsk to Moscow

We just made the 6:15 PM departure of our train out of Ulyanovsk to Moscow. Before leaving we went to the supermarket and bought sausage, water, cucumbers, almonds, goat cheese, and bread for a picnic supper on the train. We had a full first class compartment to ourselves. I highly recommend it becuase the coach accommodations are much more spartan and if you do not buy the whole four person compartment, you may ride for 16 hours with unpleasant strangers.

It was a big relief when we pulled out of the station and were on our way. As difficult as Ulyanovsk had been, the train was a good place to decompress, relax, re-charge, and re-group for our next move. We watched the countryside roll by until it got dark, then broke out dinner. Threre was a gentleman walking the passage selling snacks and beverages and I bought two 20 ounce bottles of beer from him for atotal of less than $3. Things were getting better. Here are a few things that made our trip in general, but train travel especially much more pleasant. I put photos of each in the replies below too.

1. A little bottles of Purell hand sanatizer that comes in a rubber harness. I clipped onto my backpack sternum starap for fast access. DW bought them at target. We have a larger bottle in our baggage to re-fill from.

2. A small Leatherman type tool with bottle opener, needle-nose pliers, knife, etc. Good for making field repairs and preparing food and opening bottled beverages.

3. Small reading lights witha spring clip on one end and a flxible shaft. We got ours for about $10 at Borders. Great for reading or subdued lighting. A lot of rsidential lighting in Russia is flourescent, very bright. I use it to get up to go to the lavatory at night without turning on the lights and waking up DW.

After dinner we pulled out the DVD player and watched three episodes of Larry David's Curb Your Enthusiasm from HBO. More humor livened our spirits.

After the episodes ended we went to the lavatory, prepared for bed, retuned to our compartment and dozed off to sleep. I slept great to the rocking of the train despite thin walls between compartments that transmitted the sound of a gentlemen in the compartment next to us snoring like a Homelite chainsaw part of the night. Luckily one of his compartment mates was kind enough to kick him for me.

Exactly as scheduled, we arrived into Kazansky Station in Moscow at 9:52 AM on Saturday (March 26) where our Moscow coordinator met us as we alighted from the train, took us to his car and drove us to our lodgings.

DW in train compartment


More of DW in train compartment


Easy access Purell


Leatherman type tool


Mini-book light


DW preparing our feast


Many a tale has emerged regarding the lavatories on Russian trains. Here are a couple of photos from ours. Pretty good I'd say considering what expected


And the sink

Report #5: Disappointed in Ulyanovsk

The next day (Tuesday, March 22), DW and I awoke to see Ulyanovsk in the light for the first time. We gathered ourselves and headed for breakfast prepared by one of our hostesses at the apartment. Our hostess were a mother and daughter duo respectively named Tatiana and "Nasta". Tatiana is in her mid to late forties, about 5'5" with dark hair and blue eyes. Nasta as I recall is about 20, a little taller, with blue eyes too and blond hair accented with various shades of pink. Tatiana is descended from the Germans that Tsarina Catherine the Great settled along the River Volga in the 18th Century, and accordingly, is sometimes referred to by adoptive parents staying with her as "the German lady."

We relaxed and cooled our heels until early afternoon when our translator called and said that we would be going to the Ministry of Education in a few hours. She also mentioned that it was unlikely we would see the little boy we came to see that day, but perhaps tomorrow. Within a couople of hours a van with our translator appeared, we boarded and set out on a 30 minute ride from our apartment - on the east bank of the River Volga near the "cottage" orphanage - to the Ministry of Education in the part of Ulyanovsk on the west bank of the river.

We arrived at the MoE, climbed a flight of stairs, and waited in a narrow hallway decorated with synthetic wood paneling and placards displayng the ministry's latests news. About 15 minutes into our wait, our coordinator emerged from one of the doorways to announce a recently dicovered problem that would keep us from seeing the boy we came to see. Ostensibly, the birth-mother's relinquishment letter did not have her passport number and was defective. Until this defect was corrected, would not be able to see the candidate. However, she showed us the file on another little boy we could go see, though except for being a boy, he shared hardly another characteristic with the candidate we came to see. She told us to wait and we would meet with the MoE official for more details shortly.

We waited about another 15-20 minutes dodging ministerial traffic in the hall way. It was during this wait that our translator was called away to assist another family. A short time later one of her colleagues arrive to assist us. We were then ushered into the office of the head of the regional MoE section related to adoptions. After polite introductions the official told us of the problem with the absence of the passport number from the birth-mother's relinquishment letter and that becuase of it, we would not be able to visit the candidate. She then added: "I told your agency of this problem and told them to tell you not to come to Ulyanovsk." I was incredulous!

The offical then proceeded to tell us of the little boy our coordinator had mentioned in the hallway. She asked whether we would like to wait and see what happend in efforts to cure the relinquishment letter defect or go and see the alternate candiate. DW and I excused ourselves to causcus at the far end of the hallway outside, decided to wait and see if the passport number problem could be solved, and retuned to inform our coordinator and the MoE official of our decision. They said they would do what they could to resolve the problem as rapidly as they could and we said our good byes and depatred.

The moments afterward were quite ackward. Our van was late picking us up - they have any families and lots to do - and we waited on the sidewalk outside the MoE. The official from the MoE was there too, waiting for her husband to come pick her up after work to go somewhere for his birthday.

The van arrived and took back to our apartment. Later that day we received calls from our local coordinator assuring us that the passport number problem would be resolved soon. I spoke with my agency inthe US late that evening and they assured me that the necessary documentaton would be delivered to the MoE at 8:00 AM the following day (Wednesday, March 23) and we would visit the candidate then.

Well, the next day (Wednesday, March 23) came and went. No documents were delivered and we never left to see the the cnaddiate. We did, however, receive plenty of calls with reassuring updates about all that was being done. But those updates also came with news of expanding problems. Things like the birth-mother had lost her passport in 2001 or 2002 and becuase of that she did not have her passport with her when she signed her relinquishment letter. And becuase of her multiple marriages with different names her passport number could not be found. Becuase the birth-mother had an unsavory past and lived in more remote section of the region, it would be challenging to find out information on her or find her herself in order to cure the defect holding us up. The day went by without progress.

Luckily we had brought our portable DVD player and were able to watch some movies to pass the time. The wait would have been excruciating without it. Knowing we might be in such a situation, I loaded our DVD case with a lot of light comedy. If you can afford the expense and the weight, bring a portable DVD player; you never know where you'll get stuck, for how long, or why. Laughing made me feel better even if it did not improve the situation. As bad as things were, I couldn't help but feel unbrudended when I loaded a disc, flipped in the DVD player, and was greeted by: "Hi, I'm Johnny Knoxville and welcome to Jackass."

Additionally, to get out, our hostesses took DW and I to the flea market, the local mall, and the super market. This was great. First, just to get out, and walk around in fresh-air outside of what had become a very gllomy apartment. Second, it was a beautiful sunny day, perfect for a winter stroll. Third, becuase we had already become very fond of our hostesses during our brief, but intense time together.

On Wenesday evening (March 23) our translator called to tell us that they had located the birth-mother, our local coordinator was going to see her with a notary to get a new, and compliant, relinquishment letter, and that we would be going to visit the candidate tomorrow (Thursday, March 24).

Thursday morning came and with no news from our translator or coordinator. Then late in the afternoon our translator called to tell us that they had discovered all sorts of new problems related to the birth-mother's being married at the time of the birth, the incarceation of she and the birth-father on drug related offenses, but also of their recent release, etc., etc. The sum result of all this was that the candidate we came to see was not avaialable for international adoption. The van would shortly pick-us up and take us to the MoE to hear this officially.

The MoE official explained the problems in a vague and evasive manner so that neither DW nor I could really be sure what was going on. Really, the reasons were not important, we were just not going to see the little boy we traveled from Chicago to see. She then offered us the opportunity to visit the other canddiate mentioned at our first meeting.

The official stepped out of her office to speak with some of her colleagues. What happened next was like having denatured alchohol poured into an open wound. Our coordinator and translator started working DW and I to arouse interest in the alternate candidate that we had already respectfully, but firmly declined. I mean they worked us hard, like a coulpe of car salesmen two cars short of quota on the last day of the month. The only things missing were banners promoting factory rebates or low interest financing. I was waiting for one of them to step out to "talk to her manager and see what she could do." (I hope none of you are car salesmen, no offense intended)We still declined, returned to our apartment, and called our agency back in the US.

Our agency representative told us that they were working on alternate plans and would arrange for our departure from Ulyanovsk. Unfortunately, it was already too late to catch the evening plane. We tried to get on the Friday morning plane, but it was full and there were no seats available on the Friday evening plane so the soonest we could fly back to Moscow was Saturday morning. Otherwise we could take the train. We were eager to leave. I like travel by rail and DW had never taken an overnight train before. So we elected to take the Friday evening train from Ulyanovsk to Moscow. We spent Friday packing-up, at the nearly Internet cafe, and shopping for gifts for our hostesses. At the flea market a couple of days before I observed our hostess Nasta admiring a pink purse. So we went back and we bought it for her. My Russian was doing well enough so that we could shop in the flea market by ourselves and I could translate at the mall for DW as she tried on a pair of boots that she saw a couple of days earlier too.

At about 3:00 PM a van arrived to take us to the train station. Becuase of scheduling demands the van was early and dropped us off at the Venets hotel to wait for a while. Concrned, we left most of our bags in the van and went inside with our translator for some tea. The van returned with all of our bags about 45 minutes later and we departed for the train station.

I'll never know what really happend in Ulyanovsk. I'm sure its a perverse mixture of the bizarre and serendiptitous; fact and fiction interlineated amongst each other. There are no guarantees, we all know that going in. However, here are some of the things that suggest the dubious veracity of the stories DW and I were told in Ulyanovsk.

First, we waited nearly three months for clarification of the medical report on the candidate before we departed to see him. I find it remarkable that during that time no one could have revealed all of the birth-parent related problems, yet within two days after we arrived, the sun suddenly shone upon them.

Second, the official at the MoE did not identify who at my agency she told to not have us come. When exiting the van for our second MoE meeting, I asked our coordinator about this. She said that she called "someone" in from our agency in Moscow and relayed the message, but that we were already in the air on our way from Chicago to Moscow. I find it remarkable that she could not even remotely recall the name of who she spoke to, not even whether they were a man or a woman. I also find it remarkable that between our New York to Moscow and Moscow to Ulyanovsk flights, DW and I drove around Moscow for five hours with our coordinator and not once did he mention any distressing news, least of all instructions relayed from the Ulyanovsk MoE that the canddiate we were coming to see was not available and we should not come. Nor after our arrival in Ulyanovsk as we drove from the airport to our apartment with our coordinator and translator did either mention any problem. Perhaps they said nothing at the time becuase they we confident in finding a solution before our MoE meeting the next day, and/or they did not want to upset us after a long journey. But then they said nothing in the next ,orning or afternoon before our first MoE meeting either. At other times when we were going to receive bad news, they usually primed us by delivering it informally first.

Third, I was "fortunate" that our primary translator was not at the first MoE meting with DW and our Ulyanovsk coordinator. When I later was able to speak with our primary translator and Ulyanovsk coordiantaor seperately, I noticed significant inconsistencies in their stories and their recollection of the sequence of events preceding our arrival and the events that occurred afterwards.

Fourth, the whole story about the birth-mother and her lost passprt is suspect to me. Those of you who've been to Russia know that you can't as much as take a pee without a passport. How did the birth-mother happen to live without her's for two to three years?

These things, among others, arouse my suspicions about what was really going on in that agency-coordiantor-translator-MoE-orphange back-office. You know, the one behind that opaque glass where you can see the silhouttes in frenetic activity, but you can't exactly see who it is or exactly what they are doing.

DW and I keep in mind that adopting from Russia is an unpredictable and sometimes cruel process. That is what we all are signing-up for. We are all at the mercy of the unyielding malice of fortune. However, DW and I've decided that this will not deter us and that our fortunes will change. More on that in the next editions.

A local Home in Ulyanovsk. Note the artistry of the lentils onthe windows.


Another lcoal home. This time note the amount of snow too.


An Ulyanovsk sidewalk with some of the local inhabitants and their pets.


The exterior of a typical Ulyanovsk mid-rise apartment building.


Crossing west accross the River Volga. Atop teh west bank you can see the outline of the tower of the Hotel Venets and the Lenin Museum beneath it.


Looking up the River Volga with a power transformer station in the foregrond.

Saturday, March 26, 2005

Report #4: Moscow to Ulyanovsk

After arriving at Vnkovo airport, we checked-in and got tickets to the business lounge to await our 8:45 PM flight to Ulyanovsk. The replies below have some photos of the Vnkovo business lounge for those of you who may soon be traveling through there. Please pardon that poor focus in the photos. The lounge is comfortable and has a bar where yu can buy beer, wine, spirits, soft drinks and snacks. The staff also call you when it's time for you to go to the gate and board your flight.

At around 8:20 we went to the gate. From there we walked down some concrete stairs to a bus that drove about 0.5 miles out onto the tarmac to our waiting aircraft from Volga-Dnpr Airlines. We disembarked from the bus and walked about 50 yards through approximatley 1.5 feet of snow to the tail of the aircraft where we boarded up the satirs that drops down from under the fusalage like the 727's and DC-9's you used to see more often in the US. The aircraft seated aboit 35-40 passengers. The spaced was very confined. You would be luck to fit a deck of cards onto the overhead storage rack. I held my backpack on my lap for the two hour flight to Ulyanovsk.

When we arived in Ulyanovsk at almost 11:00 PM, we deplaned and walked through mid-calf deep snow to the "terminal". This building really was more akin to a an abandonded WWII Army Airforce base in the middle of nowhere Nevada than the airport for a city of over 700,000 people. But at least they had a cat we could pet while we waited for our bags. When we picked our bags up, a young lady actually checked our claim checks against our bags. Not something you see too often anyomre.

Much to our distress, our local Ulyanovsk coordinator and translator who were to meet us were no where to be seen. We waited as everyone else left the terminal. Soon it was 11:30 at night and it was just me, DW, a local militia officer, a tenacious cab driver soliciting our fare to a hotel in town, and a cat. I tried to call our coordinator in Moscow and our agnecy back in the states, but my MegaFon Moscow mobile phone was roaming in Ulyanovsk and I cound not for some reason make outgoing calls. Desperate, in my poor Russian I started to negotiate the fare to a hotel with the cab driver. Then, as we had bags in hand and we were headed fro the door, our coordinator and translator pulled-up. We introduced ourselves and they themselves. We then boearded their van for a forty minute ride to an apartment where we were to stay. A few observations about auto travel in Russia. First, many autos have no suspension to speak of. Second, becuase of the harsh climate and the almost exclusive use of asphallt to pave roads, they are replet with potholes resembling children's wading pools. Third, they do not plw the roads wo hurge ruts accumulate in the ice and snow. Combined this produced a van ride what I would describe as being shaken in a coffee can for forty minutes.

At about a quarter after midnight we pulled into our apartment, intuduced oruselves and to our hostesses, brushed our teeth and fell into bed.

DW in Vnkovo Business Lounge



Nungesser at the Vnkovo Business Lounge



Bedroom at Ulyanovsk Apartment



Living Room at Ulyanovsk Apartment



Shower at Ulyanovsk Apartment



Toilet at our Ulyanovsk Apartment

Report #3: Chicago to Moscow

Ladies and gentlemen:

Sorry it's been a while since you've heard from me, but, a you woul all expect, events since DW and left Chicago last Sunday have been murcurial. In this tgread and as series of other new threads, I'll update you on our journey so far and include as many phos as possible too. So you can see the photo without having to go open links, I'll post each photo as my own reply to my original post in each respective thread.

Last Sunday morning we finalized the last minute things to go into our bags (you know those things that you can't pack the night befoe becuase you need them right until the time you depart like your cell phone charging cord), packed up my parents' car, and headed for an 11:00 AM departure from O'Hare to LaGuardia on United Airlines. After arriving at the airport we checked in with no problem and headed for our gate. Becuase we had a lot of carry-on bags - a backpack and a duffel/gym bag each - plus jackets, we stopped at a shop on our concourse and bought one of those fold-up luggage carts. Great idea. Now all those bags were on one cart. I pulled it along with one hand free, DW with both hands free to stop and grap us some breakfast and what might be her last Starbucks latte for a couple of weeks.

Our flight to LaGuardia was unevenetful and we arrived about 15 minutes early. A dcar with a driver named Joe arrived shortly after we claimed our bags to drive us from LaGuardia to JFK. As it turns out Joe is a Moldavian jew who emigrated to the US in 1988. Consequently, I was able to start practicing Russian in the car. Joe drove us from Laguardia to JFK, with and intermediate stop at a Queens Rite Aid Pharmacy to pick up some water and Venus razor blades fro DW. In retrospect, the stop was not necessary; you can get Venus razor blades at stores in Moscow and Ulyanovsk.

We arrived at JFK at apprximately 3:30 PM and got into the queue forming up for the evening Аэрофлот flight to Moscow. A Delta agent said that the Аэрофлот agenst should arrive at 4:30 to starts check-in. The arrived promptly at 5:15 PM. Here is a few observations for those of you decding whether to fly first or business class instead of economy class. Аэрофлот has a seperate queue for first and business class passengers. The queue is about 10% of the length of the econmy class queue. Moreover, if you are not a Delta Crown Room member, a business class ticket comes with passes to the JFK Crown Room. DW and I decided to fly business class and both thought the shorter check-in queue and subdued Crown Room atmosphere to be featutres that recommend business class for a again.

While DW relaxed in the Crown Room I headed downstairs into the main terminal to get some supper and what I was certain would be DW's final pre-departure Starbucks latte. I got a sandwiches at the Starbucks too. Then I headed over t the Duty Free store t get some last minute gifts. I wagered that our Moscow coordinator would appreciate a good bottle of Laphroig (single malt scotch). I also bought two cartons of Marlboro Reds for unexpected gift giving. I'm told that the composition of marlboros sold in the states is different than in Russia and that many smokers prefer the American formula. We still have yet to find out. In any event, I thoughthat buying gifts at duty free was a good way to circumvent baggage weight restrictions because you pick up your purchases as you board the plan long past any scales. It was not necessary. No one weighed our bags, and if they did, they said nothing about their weight even though with all of our stuff, we were approaching the Аэрофлот's published 30kg business class weight restriction. More reassuring was a look at the size of the loads many of the Russians on the flight were taking. I've seldom see bags so large. We're talking cordura steamer trunks.

Our flight (Аэрофлот SU 316) boarded promptly at 7:30 PM. Boarding a Russian airliner is not for the timid. Imagine a standing-room only crowd fleeing a burning theater. I'm only modestly exaggerating. We quickly found our seats, stowed our bags, and setled in for the nine hour flight. The lady in the row infront of us approached me and started speaking rapidly is Russian. In my best Russian I replied that I did not understand her in Russian and asked if she could repeat in English. She was asking me to move some of our bags so her's would not crush the items she saw in my duty free bag. I cheerfully obliged and then sat down. She then turned to me to apologize for accosting me in Russian, explaining that from my appearance she was certain I was Russian. I replied that no apology was necessary and I was actually flattered.

At least in business class, Аэрофлот's flight attendants are very curteous and attendtive. The food was also very good. They served some apaetizers of thos little quiches passed about at cocktail parites topped with caviar and cheese blintzes. Then a seafood plate with salmon, caviar, and shrimp followed by a Ceasar salad. The entree was filet mingon. Luckily mine was rare.

Contrary to the conventional wisdom and my better judgment, I decided to enjoy some vodka with supper. What I got was a snifter with about 2.5 ounces of vodka in it. When it ran out, our flight attendant asked if I would like more. I said "just a little". A few minutes later, poof, another 2.5 ounces of vodka. She was relentless and everytime I emptied my glass, there she was again filling it again. I think I drank more vodka on that flight than I did the entire time I was in college.

About the time our aircraft was heading out over the Atlantic from Newfoundlad, we prepared to go to sleep. Two things that I highly recommend. First is a good blindfold like the ones sold by Magellans or the Tempurpedic ones offered by Brookstone. I have the fomer, DW, the latter. They really form fit to te contiurs of your face and keep all of the light out. They are really worth the extra $15-$25 if you can swing it. Second is relaxing sleep music. I loaded some of DW's onto my iPod and it was great. It relxed me and concelaed the cabin and engine noise.

DW didn't get much sleep. I awoke about half-way between St. Petersburg and Moscow. About an hour later we were on the ground at SVO II and deplaning. I hired the VIP Lite service offered by Peace Travel (www.go-russia.com) and was very pleased. Their agent litterally escored us to the very front of the passport control queue ahead of everyone else. The same at customs too and we were not hasseled about our bags at all. I recommend this service to everyone as long as you can endure the icy stares of all the people you cut in front of on the passport control queue. Our bags arrive quickly; much faster than I usually get them in a US airport.

After departing customs we entered the man public arrival terminal area. As planned, I headed upsatirs to the TGI Fridays and met our coordinator. Soon we were in his car headed into Moscow. We spent the next 5 hours driving about Moscow accompanying our coordinator on his errands. If you are prone to motion sickness, like DW, bring some dramamine becuase Moscow traffic is bad and it's a lot of stop ' n go. We also stopped to buy DW a hair dryer and have some lunch. Then we headed south out of the city to Vnkovo Airport to catch our 8:30 flight to Ulyanovsk.

Stay tuned, Moscow to Ulyanovsk and What we found there next.

Final Departure Preparations



Loading Up The Car



United Check-In

Saturday, March 19, 2005

Report #2: Packed and Ready to Depart for Russia Tomorrow

Ladies and gentlemen:

I’m pleased to bring you the second installment of DW’s and my first journey to Russia. Yesterday you saw the “war room” with everything lying about waiting to be packed. Well, after much editing and pruning, it’s all in the bags in the photo below. Our gear is stowed, weighed, and ready to go tomorrow morning. We leave for O’Hare at approximately 9:00 AM. We got it all packed and DW only once suggested that she might kill me. My first success, and the trip has hardly begun.

It still does not yet feel real yet. Did any of you feel that way on the eve of departure for your first trip? Perhaps it will start to hit me when we check-in at the Аэрофлот counter at JFK tomorrow afternoon?

One more thing to note; the roll above the bag on the left is my coat. It’s rolled up and secured with strips of StrapAll (www.strapall.com). This stuff is great! It comes in a nine foot roll that you can cut to whatever length you want. It sticks to itself like Velcro. It’s like a bungee cord, but lighter, stronger, and more flexible and adaptable. I highly recommend it! I go mine at REI. I’m sure you can get it just about anywhere camping and outdoor supplies are sold.

Stay tuned.

Friday, March 18, 2005

Report #1: Preparing to Depart for Russia

Ladies and gentlemen:

I announced last week that DW and I are departing on Sunday of Russia. I'm going to try to keep you updated on our progress with posts on this forum and illustrate those updates with the maximum amount of photos too.

Like many of you, I have posted photos of the room DW and I prepared for what we hope to soon be our son. So endearing.

Well now it's time to put the cute nursery and child photos aside and show the some of the "down 'n dirty" side of international adoption. Yes, I'm talking about packing-up for your trip! Here is another photo of that room, temporarily converted into our Russian travel planning, preparation, and packing "war room".

We're packing-up and preparing to go. After some last minute laundry, we should be all packed-up by noon tomorrow so we can catch our breath before our trip starts in earnest.

Here is a photo of our packing "war room".