Travel Mishaps, Part Deux

Despite the misadventures, if there is any one thing I regret from my journey to the northern half of this country, it is that I did not stay longer in the prominent border city of Ruse (pronounced Roo-say). Even outside of the city centre, old apartment blocks seemed somewhat better-maintained than in other parts of Bulgaria. Apartment blocks, of course, are not my primary criteria for judging a city. Ruse’s claim to esteem on my part–though I was there for only a day–is its atmosphere and architecture. There is a vibrant culture of pedestrian traffic, cafes, and many clubs that gives an air of vibrant youth to the city, yet all of this exists within the backdrop of the sort of imposing architecture which gives Ruse the title of “The Little Vienna.”

To my temporary inconvenience, however, Ruse, even with the personal appeal, is still a part of the Bulgarian transportation system, and with that necessarily comes the occasional problem. Myself and two other (totally amazing) Fulbrighters, themselves living in Ruse, had decided beforehand that we would travel to Silistra, just East along the Danube. Knowing that there was a bus heading out at 10:30am, we found a taxi and got to the station.

As we approach the bus terminals, I see a tiny white shuttle bus that could seat about 10 people, maybe 13 or so without much regard to comfort. This bus was completely full beyond rational capacity and still had about 10 people lined in a semicircle around it. We were still looking for our bus, which should be arriving soon, but I see no other active vehicles around. Possessing most of what little Bulgarian we collectively knew, my role in the group was to try and figure out what was going on and where we could buy a ticket. After some misdirections by random bystanders, I approach an information window. “Uhhm, we’d like three tickets for the 10:30 bus to Silistra, please,” I attempt to say. The man points behind us; “That bus,” he says, “you buy the ticket on the bus.”

I turn around and realize that there is no other bus here besides the sardine can of a shuttle that was already loaded up like a clown car. He was pointing to that bus. Sure enough, I circle around its front and find that it reads “RUSE -> SILISTRA.” There was no way we would ever find room on that thing for the three of us, but, disheartened, we decide to wait and people-watch just to see what’s going on.

Just after we took a seat on a bench, a woman exits the small mob lingering outside of the shuttle and walks over to us. One of my companions stands up to greet her; the approaching woman is a fellow teacher at a school in Ruse, and, as if the gods themselves sent her as help, she speaks English. She explains to us that there was a bus scheduled to go to Silistra at 8:30 that morning. Somehow, this bus never appeared, and so everyone who was waiting for the 8:30 was now making a bid for the 10:30, along with everyone else who had planned on leaving at 10:30 also. The helpful teacher explains to us that she will be on this bus and so does not have much time, but she helps me at the info desk again to ask about the next bus to Silistra. We thank her heartily and she returns to the bus, which puttered off out of the station a few minutes later.

We enter a little waiting area within the station to locate the correct window from which to buy the tickets, as there were multiple bus lines in operation. I look at the bus schedule and see the correct time and destination. “Three tickets to Silistra at 11:30, please.” “21 leva,” she says dispassionately. I put the money down on the tray–it is custom in Bulgaria to put money down on a tray first rather than to take it from someone’s hand directly–and she scoops it up slowly, printing out our tickets. I ask her where the bus will be; she mumbles something in response that sounds like numbers. “Sorry, I don’t understand,” I say. Suddenly, a sign that I imagine read “Do not disturb” gets slammed onto the window, and a shutter is pulled down. A different employee for the same company steps out of a door adjacent. Obviously somehow irritated, she yells, “HERE, HERE,” pointing at some vague location in front of the waiting room. I nod my head and acknowledge just to get out of the situation.

Waiting outside at a table, the three of us get a small snack and watch the seconds tick away, since we had at least an hour to wait. There was little room on table for our small banitsa one of us had purchased from a store inside, as all of our bags were sitting on the table; in Bulgaria, there is a superstition that leaving your bags on the floor will bring you poverty. Whether out of belief in the superstition or simply to avoid being hassled–as some Bulgarians will let you know when your bags are on the floor–we complied with the tradition.

11:30 rolls around, and I have seen no bus with our destination listed. The anxiety really starts to build for me, as I’m worried we’ll have another no-show bus and then will have to wait even further and be stuck on another crammed shuttle. I gather the courage to go to attempt asking the information desk, again, for information. “I don’t see our bus,” I say, or something like it. He fires off a few sentences with great speed, and I suppose he sees the confusion in my eyes, so he says more slowly, “It has not arrived yet.” Recalling the no-show bus, I inquire, “Will it arrive?” “Yes, I think so,” he says. Reassuring.

Fifteen minutes late, a bus reading “SOFIA -> RUSE -> SILISTRA” pulls around the corner. We all leap up and hurry to stow our baggage just so we can be on the bus and maybe sleep for the two-hour ride.

Me sitting next to the Danube in Silistra
Me sitting next to the Danube in Silistra

Silistra, though fairly remote, turned out to be quite nice also. While in Ruse, I was never actually in a good position to get a look at the Danube; I got that opportunity abundantly in Silistra, where there is a whole magnificent park which stretches along the riverbank. Unlike in Ruse, we also got to see, and even thoroughly explore, several sites of old ruins, as they were open to the public, not closed off by fences or gates. It was a strange experience to be cracking jokes in modern English, a tongue which the inhabitants of these structures would never have heard even a word of, while walking through what were once their walls, all of this happening, at times, nearly two millennia after the structures had been abandoned.

Ruins, a fairly typical sight in Silistra.
Ruins, a fairly typical sight in Silistra.

We stayed at another ETA’s apartment in Silistra, still with the intent of making it to Bucharest the next day. We had some contacts in Silistra, including a cab driver who would be willing to take us across the border and into Bucharest for a flat fee, and a fairly reasonable one, at that, for both the journey there and back again. We thought this was fantastic, and set our alarms for the next morning to meet the driver.

Upon awakening, we could not see out of any windows for more than a few yards; apparently the Danube had kicked up some serious fog in the area. If you looked closely, you could actually see the particles of water vapor dancing about. We pack our things, check that we have our passports, and set foot outside. I again regretted leaving my George Mason hoodie in my apartment back in Pazardzhik, as the temperature was still chilly. After awkwardly standing around for a few minutes, the taxi driver pulls up; we pile in our bags, and we’re off to the border.

Guards at the border control peer into the cab’s windows to verify that we bear some resemblance to our passport photos. At one point, a guard, apparently not knowing what kind of a word “Colby” was, asked me if I was “Alexander” (my middle name). I nodded my head. The cab driver, also not knowing any English, decided to call me “Alex” for the rest of the trip.

Once through the border control gate, we start moving through the fog… and then suddenly stop at a line of cars. People are getting out of their cars to go into several shacks nearby or simply stroll about. We asked ourselves a lot, why aren’t we moving across the bridge? Somehow, word gets to us that it is because of the fog; there isn’t enough visibility to make it across. Us ETAs decide to step out of the car and have a gander at the area, only to discover that there is, in fact, no bridge at all; the line of cars lead up to a ramp, which ends abruptly in the Danube. Looks like we are taking a ferry across.

No less than a full hour later–cutting into our planned Bucharest time–the “ferry” meanders up to the shore, and when I say “ferry,” I mean a dinky Romanian tugboat with a rickety metal platform towed behind it (these “no such thing as an atheist in a foxhole” moments seem to be quite common for me on this trip). We run back to our taxi, and almost immediately after, the driver says, “Ah, the ticket!” and hops out to run into the nearest shack, presumably to buy the ticket for the “ferry” which he should have gotten ages ago. He hops back into the cab, and we inch forward onto the precarious platform which was to separate us from the cold waters below.

The “ferry” proved to be surprisingly stable. So stable, in fact, that as we were standing outside of the cab looking around us, we noticed a stowaway Bulgarian pigeon walking about, apparently trying to sneak across the border via our ferry. In the distance, we see another ferry approach, filled to the limit with cars just as much as ours was; among the crowd standing about we notice a familiar face. We see another ETA who was on her way back from Romania. We eagerly wave to her, and I think that was one of the most sincere and excited “Hello!” waves I have ever given.

The drive to Bucharest was long, but the roads were well-maintained, making for a smooth ride; we managed to get some shut-eye before we entered Bucharest and had to pull over to ask at least 3 other taxi drivers how to get to our destination, a hostel, since none of our Bulgarian phones worked in Romania and the hostel was located on some random side street that few people would know off the top of their heads. We pay him the agreed amount of leva for our whole trip and he speeds off, promising to meet us the next day at around noon.

If anyone has the opportunity to see Bucharest for a night, I do recommend taking that opportunity. Though, do beware of which taxi cabs you get into, as after dinner (partially consisting of some Staropramen beer on my part) and having explored some of the more important landmarks by foot, we were looking for a way to get back to the hostel. A man approached us offering a taxi (red flag #1); we looked at each other and said, “Sure.” Inside the taxi, no prices were listed (red flag #2), the meter was completely twisted to the side such that only the driver could read it (red flag #3), and the driver mentioned something about there being “night tariffs” (although a legitimate thing, they usually aren’t that much more expensive than daylight trips, and so probably would not be worth mentioning at all, especially if prices were posted: red flag #4). About a third of the way through our journey, I begin to realize that maybe, just maybe we were going to get seriously ripped off. But none of my companions seem to be alarmed, so I chalk it up to paranoia. Paranoia and beer.

In this part of the world, 83 RON (~20USD) is way too much for a cab ride a few kilometers across town. Whatever, nothing to be done about it; we scrounge together the money, get out, and settle down in our lovely hostel.

Finally came the last leg of our journey; getting back to Bulgaria. The ETA from Ruse decided she would find her own way back home by bus or train, as both myself and companion 3 had to go back to Silistra (he lives there, and I left a bag in his apartment). No point in her tagging along, really, so she heads out just before our original cab driver is supposed to meet us.

The cab driver is forty-five minutes late. I never learned why this was, but perhaps it was because of Bucharest’s horrible traffic. Anyhow, he exchanges some words with my colleague from Silistra; apparently, the servers were down at the border control in Silistra (from which we came), so if we wanted to get back home, we would have to drive all the way down to Ruse first, and from there to Silistra. Overall, a lot longer than the original, planned-upon 2 hour return leg home.

If I had not left my bag in Silistra, I could have just been dropped off in Ruse and I would have gotten home smoothly, as I had to go back to Ruse anyhow to get to Sofia, and from Sofia to Pazardzhik. This level of convenience was, of course, not available to me. The drive to Silistra seems to take forever as I begin to worry, would I arrive on time to catch a bus? I knew a bus was supposed to leave at 3:30, but there was no possibility of making that now, as we had to take a detour through Ruse first, adding at least an hour to our trip. There was one more, however, at 5pm that I might just catch. “Alex,” the driver said to me, “I think you will be successful with that bus.”

And successful I would have been, as we rolled into Silistra around 4:30. The ETA and I go into his apartment, I grab my laptop bag, and I run back to the cab to make it to the bus station.

The driver says, “Where is your friend?”

I (try to) say, “Oh, he’s not coming. He’s in his apartment, where he lives…”

“What about the bill?”

My heart sinks. I thought we already paid the bill for both to and from Bucharest when he dropped us off at the hostel. But I’m in a rush, so I ask him how much the bill is, figuring maybe I can just pay it myself and be on my way.

“200 leva.”

It was at this moment that I realized I would be stuck in Silistra for that Monday night. Now I had to rely on all transport going smoothly on Tuesday, as I had to be back at school by 8am on Wednesday morning.

I run back to the apartment. Out of breath, I explain that the driver is saying we owe him more money. We walk down and try to discuss with him what is going on, as my Bulgarian was not quite up to par for this task. Apparently, we were to pay him the one-time fee if he stayed in Bucharest for the night, which he did not. Instead, after dropping us off, he drove all the way back to Silistra, and so today’s fee was because he had to drive all the way back. A stupid misunderstanding.

I woke up early the next morning to catch whichever damned bus was the first out of Silistra. Mentally exhausted, I slumped against the window for the entire 7+ hour ride to Sofia. From there, I managed to get a train without problems back to Pazardjik. I walked into my apartment at about 8:30pm that night, fewer than 12 hours before I was to begin classes the next morning.

And I hadn’t come up with a lesson plan.


During one of my classes the following week, we had some extra time, so I recounted an abridged version of my tale to the students. I asked, “This is about as bad as transportation gets in Bulgaria, right? So I should be able to handle anything at this point?”

A girl rose her hand. “Nah, that’s pretty average.”

I’ll have the rest of the year to find out whether or not she was joking.

(A big thanks to Angela, for housing me in Ruse and providing an emergency lesson plan, and McKinley, for housing me in Silistra. You’re the real MVPs.)

Adjustment, Plus Travel Mishaps

For the first few nights of living here in my apartment in Pazardzhik, I could only stare out over the whole town and towards the Rhodope mountains from my sixth-floor apartment and think:

“Where the hell am I?”

Admittedly, my anxiety was unnecessarily provoked even further by the state of my “new” home sweet home. At first, I was under the impression that this is simply how apartments in Bulgaria exist, but after some fresh insight from a few people visiting my apartment, a thorough cleaning was done of the place, which by some miscommunication had not happened according to schedule.

Still, I love the view from my apartment, even though partaking in this view brings into my line of sight some sets of clotheslines hanging just below the window, right over the street below. I have clotheslines inside too, but hanging shirts and the like outside is far preferable, since the breeze is unhindered, leaving the shirts less stiff from hanging in a totally static position inside. The issue–and a funny issue to have at all–is that, at first, the clotheslines outside filled me with a weird sense of dread and anxiety. It must have been some combination of the height and the thought of my shirts simply breaking loose and falling into the street, but every time I thought about hanging an article of clothing there, a wave of apprehension overtook me; I had never really hung clothes to dry at all, let alone outside, so I had no idea what the standard operating procedure was. Eventually, I made the leap and set out a single unimportant undershirt, which might as well have been the Soviet flag raised over the Reichstag in terms of my feeling of success, secured by a total of four clothespins. I do still own that undershirt, and I have been hanging more and more shirts out there since. Jeans, even!

Another compact victory was the purchasing of a watch. For whatever reason, last week, before school officially started, I was feeling particularly down and unmotivated. Yet, I knew that I had to have some method of timekeeping for classes; a watch seemed like a good solution, but so many doubts ran through my mind. How much would a watch even cost here? Would I be able to communicate enough in Bulgarian with a shop owner to pick one out? All of this was occurring while just sitting on a bench overlooking one of Pazardzhik’s many town squares. Eventually, I realized I could sit there all day just thinking about it, but eventually I did need a watch. So, I got up, strolled around, found a store, and purchased a fairly cheap watch. I even managed to understand that the watch came with a guarantee for a year or two. For awhile, I wore that watch like a war medal.


Not all of my adventures have been resounding victories, however. This past Tuesday, the 22nd, was Bulgaria’s official independence day. Generally, days between holidays and weekends are given off from work also, and I do not teach on Fridays, so I had a five-day weekend, Friday through Tuesday. Feeling incredibly homesick and dying to see some familiar American faces, I decided to spend it with other Fulbrighters while seeing some more of Bulgaria. I ended up connecting with other ETAs in the cities of Ruse and Silistra; some even suggested staying for a night in Bucharest, Romania, which I agreed to.

The problem is, Ruse, and Silistra especially, are both on the opposite side of the country from Pazardzhik (have a look at my map on the “About Post-Communist Colby page to see places I’ve travelled to). It is no small journey to get so far Northeast. My best bet was to take a train to the capital, Sofia, and then from there get a bus to Ruse at about 10:30am, putting me in Ruse just after lunch. Perfect, or so I thought.

I woke up at 4:30AM in Pazardzhik to get ready and catch a cab to the train station; construction was being done on the train tracks, so there was to be a bus leaving from the station at 6AM to drive us a few villages over where a train would be waiting for us. So, I arrive at the station at 5:30, manage to buy the ticket, and communicate that I am indeed aware of the bus transfer situation. Strolling outside into the chilly morning air, I begin to wait. And wait. And wait. 6:15 rolls around. Other passengers to-be are looking antsy. Normally I try not to draw attention to myself by speaking, because I then immediately reveal myself as a foreigner, but I figured I should at least find out who is going in the same direction as me. “Are we travelling to Sofia?” I ask to some older ladies. “Yes, to Sofia,” they say, eyeing me up and down a bit. I hear some chatter about about the town where the train is waiting. Meanwhile, I am only in a t-shirt–my sweatshirt was still wet from the previous night’s washing–so I stood there rubbing my exposed arms a bit. One of the ladies looks at me and says, “You don’t have a coat?” It takes me a few seconds to process the word for “coat.” “Yes, but in the apartment,” I say. “Ah, in your apartment,” she says, smiling a bit.

Eventually at around 7am, with the dawn finally starting to break, a bus meanders its way out of a side road near the station. The lady says to me, “It’s here. This one.” “This one?” I say, pointing to it. “Yes, this one.” The bus pulls up. By this point at the station, a herd of people had gathered for some bus or another and mobbed the door the bus. A short lady with a rather angry, irritated demeanor stepped down from the bus yelling Bulgarianisms incoherent to me. I looked at the bus and realized that there were already a ton of people on it, thinking, “There must be some sort of mistake!” People were handing the angry lady tickets, but for no reason obvious to me at the time, many passengers were bluntly refused entry onto the bus. Yet, the older lady I had spoken with at the station handed a ticket and hopped on. I pushed through the crowd a bit and stuck out my ticket towards the angry lady. She looked down at it, checked it off, and motioned me on. Thankfully I had boarded when I had, because this bus was getting full quickly. The angry lady then re-boards, shouting very loudly in Bulgarian down the rows of seats. People are shifting around, some are moaning, some are getting off the bus, and I have zero clue what is going on. I see people on the bus whom I overheard purchase tickets to Sofia, however, so I just hide in the corner of my seat and pray to various deities that everything will be okay.

I nervously eyed Google Maps throughout the whole bus ride to verify that we were indeed headed in the direction of the promised town, Belovo, where a train was awaiting us… if there was even still a train, since we were well over an hour late. We stopped in a town halfway to Belovo; the lady who had initially assisted me got off, but most others stayed on. I was tempted to follow her, but thankfully I remained true to my herd instinct, continuing to find refuge in the corner between my seat and the bus wall, and the bus set off again. Eventually, we reach something resembling a train station, and Google tells me that I am indeed in Belovo. Yet another older lady, who happened to be sitting next to me and somehow deduced that I was a foreigner, I suppose, turns to me and says, “We’re here.” I thank her, hurriedly grab my stuff, and powerwalk through the herd to find two trains opposite each other on the platform. I pick the one with open doors, get into a second class car, and find some people already waiting. I pick an older couple towards the back and ask if we’re going to Sofia. They affirm: “Da.”

A few minutes later, the train begins to roll out. I look down at my phone. The time, as I recall, is at least 8am. I was supposed to be nearing Sofia’s city limits by now. Still, since I had already completed a leg of the train journey by bus, in theory the train ride should be shorter, and I should make my early bus from Sofia to Ruse.

Well, that never happened. The train ride still took a full 2+ hours, despite having completed 26km of the journey already. My bus was to leave at 10:30 am. Again, I nervously eyed Google Maps tracking how much distance I had left until we got to Sofia’s main train station, which, conveniently, is next to the bus station. The time ticked away with each tiny stop we had to make at various dilapidated neighborhood train stations in the Sofia area. The train pulled into the station around 10:20. I figured just maybe I could make the bus.

I hurry to the bus station, only to see a bus with a prominently displayed “SOFIA > RUSE” sign already loading up its last passengers and getting ready to close its doors. This, of course, required me to go into the station, look at the schedule, find the next bus to Ruse (which thankfully was only a bit over two hours later), and communicate to the cashier that I wanted this ticket. I went to a cafe opposite the university and the Nevski cathedral for awhile, and returned to the station for the next bus without incident.

With some difficulty, a group of us figured out how to get tickets for the bus out of Ruse to Silistra the next morning.

(There is much more to this tale of travel; I might put up a part 2 in the near future!)

Feet to the Fire

“From Moscvu?” the taxi driver said, attempting some broken Russian.

“No, I’m American.”

I paid my 10 leva fare and stepped out of the taxi, the driver hopping out to help me remove my bags from the trunk. I was glad to be out of the van, as our relationship was somewhat awkward; upon exiting the airport, a man had come up to me, presumably–but maybe not–from a taxi, and just reached for my bags. I’m in a totally new country, and it is hot as hell outside. Despite anxiety and the desire to just go with the flow, I just ignored, turned, and walked the opposite direction for a few steps, until a man at the designated taxi kiosk pointed to the grabby stranger. He was to be my driver to the hotel. Super.

Despite the blissful reprieve from heat and anxiety upon my arrival, and the following flopping on the bed in the hotel room, awkward situations were certainly not behind me. Meeting with another ETA, we approached a restaurant; looking to sit down and in typical American custom, he stated our party size, “Два (two).” The waitress looked puzzled and replied, “Да (yes)…?” Most of my Bulgarian was escaping me–including the word for “eat”–so we tried some gesturing with no success. Having sufficiently botched the social encounter, we turned around and left to look for another venue where perhaps our embarrassment would not be known.

More awkwardness ensued at the post office. This time, I went with a different ETA, the objective being to procure enough stamps to send off fifty postcards total, twenty-five each. The window at the desk open, my partner motioned me in to talk, as I had the best working (though by no means well working) Bulgarian. I try to get out, “We want postal stamps for fifty postcards.” The man just sighs and says in English, “You want stamps for fifty cards?” My companion holds up an example of a postcard. “For Europe? Or USA?” We say the latter. He nods his head and walks around to get stamps, and returns with several pages’ worth. Well over fifty stamps total. I look at the numbers on the stamps; there were at least fifty stamps of 1.30 leva, and a myriad of others. Anxiety begins to build as I realize there is no way that we have enough money to pay. We had only brought 50 leva or so total, thinking that stamps for postcards would be cheap. I see the total on the screen. “105.50 ЛВ.” She and I sift through our wallets pointlessly, and then hold up what we have. The man sighs again and says, “There is ATM across street. I will charge the items, but you just come back in next hour to pay.” We braved a quick jaywalk across the road and were back in five minutes, walking out with four different sheets of stamps.

These are some of the more memorable social situations; the ETA orientation process has begun, and it isn’t exactly brutal, but fairly tiring for someone newly arrived and still acclimating. The day after I landed was the only one for me without orientation obligations, so I spent that exploring Sofia, the photographical results of which can be found HERE.

After a long day of orientation training, we were taken to a restaurant in the mountains above Sofia to eat and see some Bulgarian folk performances. As I’m being funneled through the gorgeous stone walls and nicely decorated tables, some men in black suits with fancy earphones catch my eye, but in my brain it gets chalked up to some random important person being in another part of the restaurant. Eventually, I just sort of drift to an empty table to which we are vaguely being motioned. Just after I sit down, a man in a polo and jeans approaches our table; everyone gets up and shakes his hand for introductions. I wasn’t quite sure who he was or what was going on, but he seemed nice, so I went with it. He goes to sit down when another gentleman swiftly approaches him and says, “Ambassador, your security detail,” pointing to the empty seat directly to my right, “wants you to sit on that side of the table.”

My heart jumps.

A million worries rush through my head. What do I talk about? Will I be cutting my food the right way? Will I have to tackle an assassin to the ground?

Turns out, Ambassador Moore was quite likable, and casual, too. I also got to sit next to Eric Halsey, creator of the Bulgarian History Podcast; being between those two in conversation was super interesting, and not terribly awkward. For once, I felt somewhat at ease, perhaps because of the section we were sitting in which was under the open sky.

Eventually, after many glasses of wine and “Na Zdrave!” toasts, some performers in traditional Bulgarian dress danced, not incredibly fluidly, but I suppose that is tradition. I bobbed my head to the rhythm. Eventually, lights started to dim and drums began playing. A small bonfire, which I had previously seen in a small round pit and had wondered about the purpose thereof, had since disintegrated into coals. This was, as promised to us, to be used for traditional walking on the coals. The coals having been spread evenly across the shallow pit, the performers held up some sort of prop (hard to see what it was), lowering it and then holding it up into the air over and over again in front of the pit, which much resembled an incredibly starry sky, but orange and of varying hues as opposed to discrete white blips. An extended camcorder flash lit up the stage; the main performer stopped what he was doing, holding up his hand and giving a stern look towards the light’s owner. The flash turned off.

All the beholders, including myself, squeezed as close as possible to the show. Then, suddenly, the performer breezed straight across the coals and onto the stone floor, seemingly taking care to not spend too long getting burnt. Performer two did the same, each quickly walking in arcs across the circular pit. Without much notice, one performer went and picked up a young lady from our group and carried her across the still glowing coals. As I was taking this in, I only thought to myself:

I’d rather do that than deal with all these other awkward social situations.

My view from my first hotel room as of about 06:00
My view from my first hotel room as of about 06:00
Hand-painted icon I bought from a woman named Maria who loves to paint and sometimes sells her products outside of the Nevski cathedral.
Hand-painted icon I bought from a woman named Maria who loves to paint and sometimes sells her products outside of the Nevski cathedral.