We arrived in Estonia at 1am on Thursday 30th March. Our transport was a ferry from Helsinki Finland where earlier in the day our plane from Australia had disgorged its weary travellers. The mercury was hovering around 0C as we exited the taxi at the hotel entrance, and we did not take long to roll into bed thankful to be horizontal at last. Waking early, around 5.30am I guess as a result of time confusion, we were met by the sight of a snow covered landscape. Amazing. No sign of snow just hours before and now everything was covered in a brilliant carpet of white. What a welcome to our new land of choice, and perhaps more significantly, to Helve's fatherland. As we wandered the snow covered pathways and parks that day in Tallinn it felt as if this show had been orchestrated for our benefit alone. Curiously it is probably the first and last snowfall we will witness unto the coming of winter in Nov/Dec this year, although the weather man has said it might snow this coming Friday.
Our arrival in Tartu was on Sat 1st April mid morning, having travelled by bus the 180kms from Tallinn. We were welcomed by Anti and Karin and taken to the apartment which is to be our home for the next year. This apartment has generously been made available to us by Anti and Karin and we are most grateful to them. Not only have they made this apartment available they have showered us with help and gifts towards making this place "our place".
Our arrival in Tartu was on Sat 1st April mid morning, having travelled by bus the 180kms from Tallinn. We were welcomed by Anti and Karin and taken to the apartment which is to be our home for the next year. This apartment has generously been made available to us by Anti and Karin and we are most grateful to them. Not only have they made this apartment available they have showered us with help and gifts towards making this place "our place".
The apartment block Vaarika 1 Tartu
The bottom window second from the left is our kitchen window.
The green car is ours.
Our first days in the apartment have been busy with shopping and with jobs like fitting new upper kitchen cupboards, painting and all sorts of small home making efforts. As well as this much of the first few days was spent travelling to numerous government offices and police to fill out paper work to make our status legal. Helve, of course, is an Estonian citizen and only had to register her residency. I, on the other hand, must apply for temporary residency, a process, which we discovered, takes about two months to complete.
This first week had its share of drama's and fun. On the Sunday night, our first full day in Tartu, Helve ended up in hospital, having been delivered there by ambulance. It all come about due to her collapsing whilst having a sauna at Merike and Raimu's place. Merike and Raimu are our relatives also and it was their summer house we have stayed in on our last few visits to Estonia. As it was ladies turn in the sauna, I wasn't present when the fainting happened and by the time I was told the ambulance was already there. Helve has always had low blood pressure and given the right set of circumstances, such as tiredness, lack of hydration she has been known to faint. Usually she is able to recover after a bit of rest, but the girls in the sauna didn't know this and they thought she had died as they couldn't find a pulse. Drama! Anyway, after a short stay in hospital, she was released and is doing fine. Unfortunately it was the next day, Monday, that we had an appointment to purchase her health insurance...... so it came with a small bill. Fortunately everyone, inspite of who they are and where they come from, is entitled to "first aid" in the case of an emergency so that was a big help.
A couple of days later Anti phoned to say he had seen a car for sale that was the type we were looking for. We needed a car that had some extra seats as we will be having numerous guests over the next year, and in the case of David, Michelle, Poppy and April extra space is needed. When Anti came to pick me up to go see the vehicle it was about 4.30pm. We immediately took a liking to the car as it seemed to be in great condition for its age. (2003) After a test drive we agreed to buy it..but
the seller needed cash and I certainly didn't have the 2000 euro in my pocket. Some confusion arose due to the language problems and so the seller decided to drive us back to our apartment to try and solve the cash problem. This was the fastest most hair raising trip I have ever had. The guy drove some mean, black, tinted windows, sports BMW with a huge V8 engine and he drove fast. Very fast!!!! Anyway back at the apartment great discussions in various languages ensued, trying to discover where we could find the cash at this time of the day. Cash was necessitated because there was at least three other guys wanting the car if we didn't produce the money. In the midst of all this (now 5.45pm) someone discover the Swedbank where we had an account was open to 6pm. This time it was a mad scramble in Anti's old Volga Russian vintage car to get to the bank. We arrived as they were about to close the doors. The bank arranged to give us a temporary card (our permanent ones hadn't arrived yet) so we could draw the money from their ATM. So off to the ATM only to find the card didn't work. By this time the bank was closed. Someone suggested trying another ATM and fortunately it worked. Phew!! So with the cash in our pocket it was off in the vintage Russian car back to the sellers place to make the purchase. It was a lot of fun in the end, and the car, which is in the photo above is proving to be fantastic. And all this had happened in our first 3 days in Tartu!!
Since then life has settled down and we are enjoying our town and our home. We have been able to make several visits to see Helve's 96 year old Auntie Erna, who is now a resident in an aged care facility. This is one of the reasons we decided to come for this year, so we could give some time, care and support to Erna. Its great to see her and Helve chatting away, looking at photos and delving into the families history. Similarly we plan to make regular visits to see Auntie Liidia in Tallinn who is 90 years old and still living on her own in her apartment.
Today as I write this it is Good Friday, two weeks from our arrival in Estonia. As I mentioned above, snow covered the ground on our first morning. Amazingly, when we woke this morning exactly two week later snow again covered the ground. To us, beautiful. Not a heavy fall but enough to cover the ground and hang on the trees. We put on our coats, scarves and went for an hours walk to see the snow in our neighbourhood.
Next time I will tell you a little more about our experiences of living in a place where all the signs are in another language, where cars travel on the "wrong" side of the road, where light switches are up for on and down for off, where the warm sunshine comes from the south and where spring comes in May. Till then, take care.
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