Showing posts with label shopping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shopping. Show all posts

Monday, September 5, 2011

Today's market haul


Starting from the front left... 2 zucchini, 1 bag of mushrooms, 1 capsicum/red pepper, 3 carrots, (2nd row) 3 heads of broccoli, 1 BIG bunch of asparagus, 1 very big bunch of bok choy, (3rd row) 2 pineapples, 1 watermelon, 3 mangoes and 1 bunch of tiny little bananas!

Total cost 135,000 kip. At first it seemed like I spent more today than I usually do- specifically on the vegetables.  My SIL wasn't with me today, but, it's not like she negotiates or anything either, so there is no reason for them to try to rip me off when I'm on my own versus her being with me.  I don't know.  In the end though, I calculated that 135,000 kip is still only about $16.50USD.  And really, that's still not a bad haul for only $16.50, right?

Oh, also, I washed the bok choy as soon as I got it home.  Gave it a good thorough rinse without tearing the leaves apart.  Because you know, just in case there were any uninvited guests still hanging around in there...I hope I got them out! :)

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Highs and lows of the last two days...

What's say we start with the lows and just get them out of the way, and then end on the wonderful highs?

Last night I was making some bok choy for dinner.  I rinsed it quickly because Beni was already over-tired, wanting to take a bath and go to bed. I cut off the ends (where lots of dirt gets stuck sometimes).  Then I threw the bok choy in the pan to stir-fry, when all of a sudden I noticed THE WORM that fell out of my boy choy and was now sizzling in the wok.  I was using chopsticks to stir, so I just picked up the worm, threw him in the garbage, swallowed that little bit of vomit that was creeping up my throat, and finished cooking my bok choy.  Then I ate it.  Finding worms in my food = seriously lowest point of the whole day yesterday.

I can only hope that today's low point has already happened... here's how it went.  I have to start by saying that the whole garbage situation was never really explained to us- and maybe it's never really explained to anyone, but, the point is, we don't really know how to handle it.   Last Thursday, Joel had already left for work, when he remembered that it was garbage day.  So I got a text asking to put the garbage out, and I did it.  I took the fancy basket we received the other week, filled with our stuff, and put it at the end of our driveway, as it seemed other people on our street were doing.  Well, a few minutes later, I see the maid from across the street come over and drag our garbage on to her side of the street.  OK.  Maybe they only pick up from one side.  Fair enough.  Well, they didn't pick up until fairly late in the day, but then, at the end of the day, I realized that all the garbage receptacles, including our lovely basket, were cleared from the side of the road....except they were just gone.  As in, OUR BASKET was not in our driveway, yard or anywhere else.  So, now we don't have a basket.  Also, last week, when I was putting the garbage out, there were a couple boxes left over from our packing that had been left out in the driveway in the rain.  Needless to say they were a sopping mess, and I didn't feel like dealing with them, so I left them.  BIG MISTAKE.

So this morning, I get another text from Joel, "Just realized as I'm driving down the street- it's Thursday and garbage day!  Can you put the garbage out?"  Urgh! But of course, what am I going to do...have to put the garbage out!  We had more empty boxes to get rid of, so, I already planned that I would take one of the empty boxes outside, pick up the mess of leftover boxes from last week, throw them in there and then haul it all out.  Good plan.  And it worked.  But it almost made me skip eating today at all, and I have washed my hands like 10 times since, and I'm pretty sure I did puke.  Because, in the last week, there happened to have been a bag of kitchen furniture in those boxes as well.  So when I went to move them the ants swarm nearly ate me, and the inch long maggots started dropping out left and right.  Oh FFS I just threw up again.  And now I need another shower.  DISGUSTING.

I don't like bugs.  Ask my husband, he would lives with me in climates where bugs abound, and he has to kill every roach I come across.  He's well and truly fed up with my inability to deal with a bug like a roach when I come across it, but, I just can't.  I'd have to take another shower.  ICK.

So there you go, as I said, I can only hope that I don't have any moments that are lower than that today!

Now, the high points!  Yes!  The last two days have had some very, very high points!!!

Yesterday was a fun day because my SIL and I took the babies and went to Thailand!  Just for the day.  Just for some shopping and a stop in at Starbucks!  Oooh yeah! I just think it's cool that I can go to Thailand for a day trip. I mean, ok, I get it, going to Thailand conjures up images of laying on a beach, drinking cocktails and eating phad thai, and that is hardly what we were doing, but still... we went to Thailand for the day!  The amazing thing is how, for whatever reason, you can have shops and order and cleanliness and what not that you just don't have over here just over the border.

So SIL and I went to a big cash and carry (Americans, think Sams or Costco) and picked up random bits of things in bulk- things like chips and Coke for a certain someone, for the house things like dish soap, hangers, toilet paper and a few more kitchen gadgets (some serving bowls, serving spoons, a whisk, a small pan...).  Then we went to a grocery store that is a proper grocery store plus more- Meijer, Woolworths, Shoprite

After a long day shopping in those two stores- at one point even carrying a sleeping Beni in one arm while shopping/pushing the cart with the other arm- I was tired, and LORD did I need to use the bathroom.  We made our way to the Starbucks right there in the same shopping mall, and took a much needed break.  I got my favorite drink- a caramel macchiato made with soy milk...and savored it as much as you can when you have to keep track of a fussy, over-tired 1 year old! It was lovely.    

When we got home, only a short time later, Joel came home with the highest high of the day.  Our new car!!!   It is a 4 door VW Golf.  It has a hatchback- but a surprisingly large trunk space.  It's a late 90s model, but has less than 74,000kms on it- so less than 45,000 miles.  It has a few little things that need fixing, and it's not fancy, but, I tell ya what... it holds the lot of us- and will be big enough for two cars seats if there is the need ever.  It has room for our stuff in the back.  And it GOES!  And the air con works.  Thank goodness. :)  

So here she is... 


As I said, nothing fancy, but it is clean, doesn't look overly worn... 
(the floor is already dirty from me driving two trips...)

Plenty of room for Beni in the backseat...


From behind...


The only challenge Little Blue is going to have is dealing with the pot holes around here.  The only reason I really wanted an SUV type car is because it rides higher, and would deal with pot holes better.  I have to crawl down some streets as I navigate around the craters in the road...but, I've been up and down the road a couple times now, and made it just fine.  So it's all good.  And yes, I have driven into town twice- once last night with Joel and Beni, and once this morning just Beni and I.  I didn't hit anything, didn't break any major traffic rules, and didn't get lost.  Yay! (This is actually the first time I've driven in a foreign country, if you don't count Canada, which really, you can't. ;) I have been trying to pay attention when we drive around here knowing that I would eventually be driving myself, but of course, there is a certain amount of learning that can only be done once you're actually behind the wheel.  So far so good though!


Friday, August 26, 2011

This little froggy went to market...

About once a week, my SIL and I go to the market to buy fruits and veggies.  The amount of fresh food you can buy for less than $10 is ridiculous.  This week I got a bunch of bananas, one head of cauliflower and one head of broccoli, a baggie of small tomatoes, three carrots, a bag of citrus fruits (I thought they were limes, but then my SIL said she thought they might be tangerines, so, I decided to give something new a go and try them out anyway!) and... maybe that was it for today.  But I got all that for about 60,000 kip, if that, which is about $7.50.

The difference in prices between the market and the mini-mart for vegetables and fruits is ridiculous!  The fruits and veggies at the mini-mart are easily twice the price, if not more.  So going to the market is definitely worth it.

When we go to the market, we attract a lot of attention, of course.  SIL and I both wear the babies when we go, so that we have both hands free to carry bags and pay for our goods.  Any number of these things attracts attention.  Mostly it's the little blonde/bald white heads and tiny white feet.  The Lao people love babies and they are not afraid to let you know.  I think my nephew got touched by approximately 50 people at the market today.  At one point, my SIL said, "That's it, little man!  You're getting a bath when we get home!"  I don't blame her.  Between the amount of people putting their hands on him and the amount of sweat pouring down the lot of us, we all need baths when we get home.

Hardly the organized, clean, open air, twice a week farmer's markets of back home... the markets here are all day every day kind places...I'm not sure the opening and closing hours, but, my guess is that it's quite early and quite late.  They seem like the kind of places that are never really empty (though I'm sure at some point they are), which also means that they never really get a proper cleaning.  They are built on concrete slabs, but often have wooden slats laid down over holes, water leaking here and there, rubbish on the floor, etc. Because of the rain in Laos, they are also covered- this means that there is very little air circulation.  The smell of the meat and the fish, and possibly some sellers piss-pot all mixes together with the food that is being cooked in the little restaurants and who knows what else.  The smell of the city and the people themselves.  Today's market didn't smell that bad.  The first market SIL took me to was the worst in terms of smell.  I honestly thought I was going to vomit at one point.  The smells were very strong, acrid, rotten smells, and it was hard for me to get through parts of it!  Don't get me wrong, I'm not usually a person who can't handle smells- I don't gag at diapers or anything else.  But these smells, they were strong!

We've gone to three different markets since I've been here, just to check them out and see what each has to offer, and this one today was not the best.   It wasn't the worst smelling thankfully, but, it did have the oddest assortment of food products, and it was not well organized.  Both of the other markets we went to did at least have all the fruit in one place, the veg in another, the meat and fish together, and then the stalls that sell packaged food, kicthen items, etc, together as well.  This one was all over the place.  Because we couldn't really understand where to go, we spent a few minutes wandering around the whole place to start just to see where we might find the nicest fruits and veggies.  You never know what else you might come across, so I was quite happy to do the wander.  But this wander took us past some more stuff that I had a little trouble with.

You all know I'm a vegetarian that cooks meat for my omnivorous husband.  I handle meat, I cook meat- I'm generally not bothered by meat.  Every once in a while the smell of it cooking might turn my stomach a little, but, I cook it anyway.  But the meat we saw at this market, made me almost toss my breakfast.  We walked past little wash tubs on the floor that were full of slithering, slimy eels, hoppy, worty frogs or toads, all kinds of little and big fish- some alive, some trying to jump out of the pot, others dead.  There were live ducks in plastic bags- just their heads sticking out.  There was some kind of dried meat that looked like jerky, but one side was covered in coarse hair.

The eels were what got to me the most.  I know people eat these kinds of things, and I don't have anything against that, but the whole tub was full of them and they were just slithering around all over each other.  It was a writhing mess of little heads and tails.  Shudder- I just got goose bumps thinking about it again!  I don't know why the frogs didn't try to jump out of their bowls, because they were certainly shallow enough that I would have thought they could have, but they didn't.

We had to walk through this one section twice, as we went in one direction and then backtracked.  Needless to say I was very glad to leave it behind us! And, because I had Beni on my back, I don't think she got touched as much as my nephew, as she wasn't as obvious as he was, being worn on my SIL's front side, his smiling head facing out.  Because the people the handle the frogs and the eels and the ducks...they are the same ones that want to rub your kids face and hands.  Barf.

One of these days, maybe on a weekend, when things settle down, when we have our own transportation, when we're not running around trying to buy up stuff we still need for the house, we'll go to the market and try to take some pictures.  I would certainly like to share the sights with you- be glad I can't share the smells. :)  Or, go pee in your full garbage can, then close it up and let it sit in the sun for a week, and then open it- that's kind of like what that one market smelled like.   

Monday, August 15, 2011

So we've moved in and...

Here is what I have to say about it!
-You know what is fun?  Going to the local version of a "superstore" and getting to pick out just about everything you need for the house from dishes to floor mats, towels to mops and brooms and cleaning supplies, kettles and toasters, pots and beer mugs, tupperware and clothes pins.  Only thing, we forgot to get a can opener!  D'oh!  Also, it is kind of a different feeling seeing your total add up to more than 8,000,000 kip!   That is a lot any way you look at it- but in USD it's about $1,000.  Getting everything you need for the house for $1,000 isn't bad either. :)   
-Ants and cockroaches consider this your warning.  You are not welcome in my kitchen (or the rest of my house for that matter).  Please vacate, or prepare to die.  I will do what I have to do.
-Turns out, our tubs in the upstairs bathrooms have not been properly installed. In fact, they've hardly been installed at all!  They've just been shoved into the corner.  Last night, as the water drained from Beni's bath, the floor began to flood.  Unhappy surprise. We're going to have to see what we can do about this!
-So far in the moving in process, I've focused on getting the kitchen set up.  It proves to be true again and again, that I feel at home, when I have my kitchen stocked, and I can fully use it. 
-Speaking of kitchen stuff- WHY OH WHY do manufacturers insist on sticking labels on things with impossible to remove adhesive in totally horrible spots.  For instance- the new wok I bought yesterday- 2 square inch spot of adhesive smack dab in the middle of inside of the dang pan.  I don't know why I haven't learned to check these kinds of things before I buy, because I am almost convinced I am going to simply have to buy a new wok.  Grrr.  (Anyone have any advice?  I tried using nail polish remover, and it didn't do much.)
-On another kitchen note- guess who doesn't have hot water in the kitchen???  Yep, us.  My BIL/SIL don't have hot water in the kitchen either- apparently it's not really standard here because to have hot water you need one of those individual electric water heaters.  Sometimes one might boil hot water for dish washing, but, we're also just going to get used to washing with cold water and plenty of soap.
-I love the feeling of new possibility when moving into a new house.  Getting to choose where to put stuff, buying new stuff, etc. It's fun.
-There are things about this house that I would change, for sure.  But, that said, I love this house.  It feels like home.  It's comfortable.  It doesn't actually feel THAT different from a house that we might have chosen to buy elsewhere in the world...except of course, we'd choose hard wood floors (not just floors that LOOK like wood) and closets! But, I love this house.  I love that it's ours now.  I love the potential it has.  And I'm so very happy we live in it alone! :)
-The last 4 and a half months have really brought to light how lucky we are as a family to have so many people around the world that love us enough to host us for a few days, weeks, or even months.  It is a good feeling to know that you are welcome, and invited, and wanted.  That said, it is SO NICE to have our own space again!  To be in charge of where things go in the kitchen, to be able to leave anything we want in a spot that we deem appropriate, to be able to walk through the whole house naked- if I so wanted... it's just good to have your own space!
-I should go now, because, even though the kitchen is fully unpacked and in place (yes, that includes washing all dishes before putting away, cleaning out cupboards, etc), I haven't unpacked, or hung up ANY of my clothes.  Priorities, I tell ya. :)    

Saturday, August 13, 2011

And we thought it was hard last time...

Since we arrived in Laos, we've had two main projects to handle... 1) finding a house, and 2) finding a car.  We're got #1 handled now, of course, but we are still working on #2.  And goodness gracious, is it NOT a fun process.  I mean, back when we bought a car in the States we thought that was stressful and difficult because you never know who you can trust- are the used car salesmen trying to rip you off?  Is a private seller trying to hide something? You just don't know.  And everybody has an opinion as well- you're paying too much, you're buying too quickly- but, at least we found, most people were all talk, and no one was willing to come to bat for us!  So we ended up doing what we were comfortable with, and I drove that Impala with a smile on my face for a full 7 mos and we never had any problems with it, and we sold it for just a little less than we paid for it.

Now, we have this whole buying a used car thing under our belts, but, it's way different here in Lao.  Two issues complicate the whole deal.

The first is that there are a lot of cars in Lao that are brought in by non-profit organizations.  When they bring in these cars, they don't have to pay tax on importing them.  They are hence referred to as "tax-not-paid."  These cars can be sold, BUT, you cannot transfer the title of the car until the taxes are paid- so in essence, if you bought one of these cars you'd have it, but, technically, according to the paperwork, it wouldn't be yours.  Unless of course you wanted to pay the taxes...but, from what I have been told, the taxes amount to quite a large sum of money, and the whole process is quite tedious as well.  And you can imagine, selling a car later on that technically isn't yours isn't all that easy either- which is why most people shy away from tax-not-paid cars.   This then, brings down the number of cars available to buy drastically.

The second issue is converted cars.  Apparently there is big business in bringing in cars from Japan, Thailand or somewhere else where they right hand drive (driver is on the right in the car), and then convert these cars to left hand drive.  I have no idea what this process involves (more than just moving the steering wheel apparently), but have been told that if it's done poorly, the car will be completely worthless.  If it's done well and correctly, apparently it can work just fine.  But, there is no way to know if you're getting a good one or a bad one until it's too late.   This is a major bummer because this takes another HUGE chunk of available cars off the market.  Also, it stinks because my favorite pictures of any car that Joel has showed me were of a lovely Honda, that was clean and new and spacious and just lovely, and then he said, "Oh oops...this is a converted one."  :(    

The third thing that is an issue just for us/me is that I have never driven a stick before.  Well, I did once, but only for one evening, and I was only mildly good at it.  So we'd like to get an automatic, because it would be easier for me, but, there are 9 manuals to every automatic- and it seems that a lot of the autos are the converted ones. Sigh.

So, our search continues.  And searching, by the way, means driving around town, searching for cars that have for sale signs in the back window.  When you find one, you take pictures, get the number, and then try to call about it.  We've actually met with people to check out two cars, and taken one to the mechanic.  The mechanic told us that one needed a lot of work.  So we're still searching.  And we're considering trying to negotiate the price down on the one that needs work.

For now, Joel is riding around on my SIL's motorbike, and Beni and I are getting around only courtesy of my BIL/SIL and their car.  While Joel could continue in this manner for some time, Beni and I need our own transport sooner rather than later.  So now that we're just about moved into our house, we're definitely going to focus full steam on finding a car.  Wish us luck!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

The good news and the bad news...

Maybe it's all good news...

I haven't been to a proper market yet, and I'd really like to go to one, buuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuut... we went to the "mini-mart" where my BIL/SIL tend to shop, and I was SUPER impressed.

I'm not sure why everyone calls them mini-marts.  When I heard that there were no grocery stores but only mini-marts, I'll admit, I had a little bit of fear about doing all my shopping at what I thought was going to be a 7-11.  I was afraid that the selection would be similar to a 7-11 or a gas station or something.  Nope. Not so.  Yes, the store is smaller than your average grocery store and doesn't have the massive displays of food a real grocery store might, but, what I saw today was plenty ok!

Just to list a few items that impressed me, they had... soy milk, almond milk, hazelnut milk, BLACK BEANS (canned and dry!!!!  I may or may not have bought all 6 cans that they had today!), castor sugar, brown sugar, some local, brand of yogurt that has no extra anything, a big assortment of cheese including things like parm, cheddar and cream cheese, an assortment of healthy cereal, fresh really nice bread, lovely veggies (including broccoli and mushrooms which are so nice to see after the drought we had of those in Angola!), tahini, all kinds of coffee, including several organic ones, some Tex-Mex imports (salsa, tortillas, etc), a lovely range of pasta sauces, chocolate chips, Vegemite, Mint Slice and Tim Tams (Australian cookies) and more.  Honestly, I would have to say that this one store probably had better variety and range of product to impress me than any store I saw in Angola or Latvia.  And the best part is that although some of the items were a bit pricey, nothing in there was as overpriced as a lot of the things in Angola were.  Needless to say, I am happy.  Very happy.

So that is the truly good news.

The bad news is, it looks like I might have to learn to drive a stick.  I never had a need until now, but we've found a vehicle we like, that seems to be in good condition (we're going to take it in to a reputable mechanic before we buy it), but it's a stick.  It's a Hyundai Santa Fe.  The truly bad news is that it is an ugly color. :)  It is a coppery bronze- a color very similar to one that seemed to have just gotten very popular in the States before we left there, and which made me shudder every time I saw it on the road.  So, that sucks.  But, like I said to Joel, at least I will be able to recognize our car easily when I've forgotten just where I parked!  But obviously, finding a car we like, and will be able to afford, is actually good news, whether or not it is a stick or an ugly color.  And learning a new skill- like driving a stick- is actually good too, isn't it.  We'll see how that goes though... I'll keep ya updated!

In other good news, I got myself a new phone and a phone number and we should be starting our house search tomorrow.  We were supposed to do that today, but, it was raining again and the agent only had a moped, not a car.  So, we rescheduled for tomorrow.  I think he's supposed to have the car tomorrow.

Oh, I remember the really bad news.  The store that sold the phones also had an appliance section.  So we wandered back to take a look at what they had.  Good news- they had a dryer.  Bad news- it cost somewhere around $1300!!!!!!  Not cool!  We're going to keep looking to see if we can find a cheaper one (we had about $400-$600 budgeted for a dryer), but if we can't, I'm SOL.  Even I know it's not really worth it, to spend that much on a dryer, but, you better believe I'll be crying in my Cheerios if I don't end up getting one.  And my laundry will keep taking 3-4 days to dry as it is now, and my jeans and tank tops will never fit again without a dryer to shrink them back down to size.  :(  Cross your fingers for us finding a cheap dryer!

More good news?  I still love it here.  :)

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Saturday Surprise!

We went shopping this morning as we have been doing recently on Saturdays.  We went first to the South African supermart, then to the expensive import store...but then, we also stopped by the other location of the expensive import store (they opened a second store in our neighborhood earlier this year) and look what I found!  THE LAST ONE!  Score!

At the first expensive import store (it's the new location), we also found a new display of bakery goods.  They have always sold fresh bread at both locations, but these sweet goods are a new endeavor.  Those are meant to be chocolate croissants, but we'll see what they're like.  I'm not expecting a true French pain au chocolat.

Being at the grocery store today though reminded me of another thing you have to deal with sometimes here... power cuts!  We were most of the way through the superstore when the power went off.  Remember, this is a huge store with no windows.  So when the power goes out, it's dark!  It was the first time we'd been in the store with Beni while the power went out.  She got a little freaked out and grabbed for me.  But I said something funny and laughed and then she was ok.  We just stayed standing in the spot where we were until the power came back on... it took about five minutes.  Then it came back on, and about 10 seconds later went off again.  Then it came back on again much more quickly and stayed on.

True story, a girlfriend just stopped by while I was writing this post and saw the picture of the sour cream.  She immediately exclaimed, "Where did you get that???"  I told her which store and she was like, "Yes! Ok, good."  And then I had to say, "Sorry, it was the last one."  She was so sad. :(  True story...that's shopping in Luanda!

Friday, March 18, 2011

Can I get some sour cream, please?

We had Mexican for dinner tonight- and of course, when I say Mexican, like most Americans, I mean Tex-Mex. :)  A vital ingredient in any Tex-Mex for me is sour cream.  But tonight we had our Tex-Mex- it was nachos- without sour cream.  Why?  Because there is none to be had!   I don't mean just none in our fridge...  I mean, there is none to buy.  The last two times I have gone to the store(s), there has been no sour cream available, and therefore our fridge has none, and finally, we had to eat incomplete Tex-Mex.

The thing about the grocery stores here in Luanda is that for the most part, they look like normal grocery stores- what you would expect.  They are set up in normal grocery store fashion.  They have a produce section, a cereal aisle, a baking aisle, a drinks aisle, there's the pasta and canned goods aisles.  It's fairly normal.

In the produce section you do have to weigh your goods there.  This isn't normal for most American stores, as all that is handled by the cashier at check-out, but, it is standard throughout Europe, and possibly elsewhere.  I had to do it in China too, if I remember correctly.  The problem in Angola is that the scales are broken often, or jamming the little stickers with the price on them, or there are just so many people shopping and just one lone guy manning the weigh station.  Usually when we go shopping Joel just gets right in line and I walk around gathering the produce.

Otherwise, mostly, you could be anywhere.  The differences of course pop up in what is actually on the shelf available for you to buy. 

There are several stores that we frequent regularly. One, the smallest, is a pricey imported goods store.  They import a lot from Portugal, some from the States and I'm sure stuff from other places as well.  This is the store where we buy meat, because it is owned by ex-pats and they make sure that their meat stays cool.  It is also the place I buy sushi necessities- nori, ginger, rice.  Recently it is also the store where I buy most of our fruits and vegetables because the selection they have is the best looking and widest.  Until very recently, it used to be the only place where you could get any type of Mexican stuff- tortillas, taco shells, burrito kits, salsa. We pay for it though.  That burrito kit will run you about $18 (yes, it's the same one you buy in the States, a well known yellow-boxed brand).  The fruit- this week I paid $16 for 4 nectarines.  That's $4 a nectarine.  Shh, don't tell my husband. :)  We used to never buy the fruit from this store, but, after 3 years of looking at it, and especially now that Beni also eats it, I just can't say no anymore.  I gotta have it! 

This store now runs its own risk though... it's an expensive place to shop, and everyone knows it (we have actually seen people checking out and paying over $1,000 for only one piled high cart worth of stuff).  The other day, a woman was robbed at gun point just outside the store.  This kind of thing doesn't happen everywhere all the time- don't anyone start worrying about our safety- but it does happen, and expats (especially those with white skin) are definitely a target.       

The next store that we go to is a South African store, and therefore gets all of its items from South Africa.  It is set up as a supermart, so you can buy toys, car parts, gardening supplies, dishes, etc plus all your food in one place.  Mostly this store isn't bad, except that it has cheaper prices and is therefore ALWAYS full.  The lines are always long, and they play really loud inappropriate music (think rap with explicit lyrics, etc) so it can be an overwhelming experience.  But we get basics there- some veggies, napkins and toilet paper, rice and pasta, flour and sugar when they have it.  My husband buys his ever important supply of Coke from there.   One other downside to this place is that is does not keep up cleanliness standards that we might hope for.  It's not unusual to see roaches there.  If the flour supply lasts on the shelf for too long, it is bound to have bugs in it when you bring it home.  We've also seen mice.  The worst thing for me is the blood on the floor.  I don't know what it is they do, or don't do, when they package their meat, but, it is all too common for there to be trails of blood all along the floor- obviously drip, drip, dripped throughout the store from someone's cart.  I'm not usually very squeamish about meat or blood- but, the blood on the floor is dirty, it stinks after a while, and it's just plain gross.  Bleh.

The last store that we have just recently started going to only recently opened.  It is also a supermart, and it is, right now, very nice.  It is clean, airy, spacious, bright and not too full of people.  They also have some stuff that you can't get elsewhere- for instance, they have a whole section of yellow-box brand Mexican stuff from the States.  They have much more of a variety of items though which has been awesome.  They carry tortilla chips of the variety that I am used to and also salsa.  The salsa costs $10 a jar, but, last time I bought 3.  Recently they also had brown sugar, which I snapped up instantly, even though I had some in my cupboard back home. 

You may wonder why I buy these things in bulk, or when I already have them... that is the kicker about shopping here in Angola.  Things appear on the shelves, and they last for a while, maybe, but they disappear and stay gone for much longer than they were there in the first place.  I imagine it is simply the fact that everything is imported, and comes from fairly far away, and has to sit in customs for months... you just can't count on anything still being there when you want it to be. 

One example that pained me was tinned artichoke hearts.  At the beginning of this school year (so in August) the import grocery store had tins of artichoke hearts for the first time that I had ever seen.  I bought several at a time for weeks- I stockpiled a few but also used them because I loooove artichoke hearts!  By the time October rolled around the artichokes were all bought out.  I ended up bringing a few tins back with me in my luggage after our October holiday in Cape Town, South Africa.   Alas, those all got used up months ago, and I've had no artichoke hearts since I was in Australia at Christmas time. 

Complaining about the lack of tinned artichoke hearts might make me seem a bit snobby and ridiculous, but I could also tell you about the time when we went about 2 months without eggs, or the time we went without flour for a whole semester, or the time when there was no sugar for about a month.  It sucks when something you really like suddenly appears, and then disappears again...but, it is definitely worse when one of the most basic staples is gone.  I remember that period without eggs... it was awful!  I remember when one of the supermarts finally got eggs in- word spread like wildfire, and then there we all were buying up whole flats of them!

Coming back full circle to the sour cream now... when we moved to Angola we came from a land of dairy.  Latvia loves its dairy products and the selection never leaves you wanting (well, except maybe in the ice cream dept...).  So I was used to not just being able to get sour cream, but to have it coming out my ears, in several different varieties.  That was nice for me, because sour cream might just be my favorite condiment.  I love it with Mexican (I could have tortilla chips, salsa and sour cream AS dinner), I love a dollop in a brothy soup and on pancakes- especially potato pancakes.  I love it on potatoes of any sort.  I just like sour cream, ok.  But when we first came here, I was sure I was going to have to find a new favorite condiment because I never saw any in the stores.  A couple of months after we moved here, I remember finally saying something about it to a friend who had been here a year longer than us, and she said,"Sour cream?  You can get it here!"  But see, there hadn't been any on the shelf for months!  It did eventually show up, and for as much as you can stockpile a food with an expiry date, I did.  But alas, I did not stockpile enough the last time I saw it, for tonight we ate nachos with black beans, cheddar cheese, tomatoes, black olives, avocado, salsa and chicken for Joel... but no sour cream.

So that's our shopping experience... when it's good, it's good...when it's bad, it's out of stock, crawling with bugs or dripping blood.  What about you?  Do you enjoy grocery shopping?  What are your highlights and lowlights of the shopping experience?       
  

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Seen for sale on the street

Every Wednesday for the last few months, Beni and I get moving a bit earlier than usual to drive into town to attend a mommy and baby play group.  The drive into town is not far distance wise-not much more than 10-15km/6-9m .  However, the length of the drive can vary from an hour and 15 minutes to 2 and a half hours.  This city was not built for the amount of traffic is now has, and rush hour traffic can literally back up for miles and miles and miles and move at a snails pace for a long time. 

Luckily, this drive, while long, is rarely boring because there is so much going on just outside your car windows.  Beni would always nap during this drive, and I always looked forward to it as a quiet time to stare out the window.  I regret that I never kept an actual list, because fairly early on in my drives I started keeping a mental list of things I saw for sale on the street. 

When you're sitting in that bumper to bumper traffic three lanes wide on a two lane road, all of the spaces between cars are full of men carrying things for sale.  They just walk up and down the middle of the street, every once in a while taking a break on the side of the road, offering up their goods.  If you show interest, they run right up to your window and complete the transaction right there.  If traffic starts moving while you're in the middle of a transaction, they will run along side your car until they are done.   One thing that always makes me happy is that every time I have bought something (usually just a cold drink) the vendor always runs along, or even runs to catch up to my car WITH MY CHANGE.  In a country where the poor are as poor as they are, one might not expect this. Especially when the change is worth less than a dollar.


So I wish I had been keeping an actual list, but as it is, I didn't, so for this one post, I'm going to try to remember any and all of the things I ever saw for sale in the middle of the road. 

For sale on the street in Luanda
  • cold drinks (Coke, Sprite, beer, bottled water and several kinds of canned juices- they carry them in huge plastic bags full of ice)
  • Whole boxes of tissues
  • small bags of popcorn- salted or sweet
  • shoes- dress and casual for ladies, sport, casual and dress for men
  • remote controls for every possible product that might need a remote
  • batteries
  • towels, blankets and sheets
  • guitars
  • screws, nuts and bolts
  • electrical mumbo jumbo I can't even name (cords and stuff)
  • extension cords
  • newspapers
  • phone credit cards
  • mosquito nets for your bed, fly nets for food
  • salt/pepper/oil and vinegar sets
  • HUGE wall clocks
  • toilet paper
  • shirts
  • sunglasses
  • hat stand/coat racks
  • carpets
  • all manner of local fruit and veg (although to be fair, this is sold on the side of the street and you do have to pull over to buy it)
  • mosquito zapping rackets
  • belts
  • children's toys
  • blow dryers, irons, ironing boards
  • cds and dvds
That's all I can think of right now... but rest assured there is more.  My husband, Joel, just added that as far as he is concerned, if you want to buy it, you can buy it on the street in Luanda.  I'm not so sure about that...but, you sure can find a whole lot of things. 


Unfortunately, the mommy and baby who lived in the city that we used to go visit on Wednesdays have now moved out of Angola, so we won't be making those weekly trips into the city again.  In fact, in the month we have left in Angola, I'm not sure how many times, if at all, I will have to venture into the city again.  If I do, however, I will be sure to keep an actual list of everything I see for sale on the street that day.