May 14, 2016: Hiking Up the Mountain

We were woken up by Nikoli knocking on the back door.  Dominica answered the door and he immediately made her go over to his and Maria’s house for something.  I had been asleep so did not answer the door but Luciana came back to get me to let me know that “mommy had gone over to the barn area.”  So I got dressed and went over to see what was up.

Maria was making bread in the outdoor wood oven.  We got to see the traditional bread baking processes here which was very cool.  It is a huge outdoor oven that probably warmed up over night and they put half a dozen loaves into the embers and some other break items to cook and the four of us sat down to espresso and cognac at nine thirty in the morning.

After many drinks sitting out under the awning in the light rain, Nikoli and I set out on a long walk so that he could show me his fields high up on the north ridge above the church.  I stopped and put on sneakers instead of my sandals as we headed out as it was raining all morning and I would be pretty wet in a few seconds once we were off of the road.  It turned out to be a very good thing that I did this.

We started by walking through the school yard across the street.  I have not been there before even though we look at it directly out of the front parlour.  I got to see that they have an actual outhouse because the school for the kids to use!

From there we climbed up the hill behind the school to a seriously muddy road that runs along up there.  It is where the “other road” through the village is but it would not be passable by a car in this rain, there is no way a car could make it through.  I am guessing that that road is used by horses only!  That would make owning a house back there less than ideal.  Good to know.

Along that old, mud road Nikoli showed me the old wooden church, moved here hundreds of years ago after having sat for a very long time somewhere up north.  It is one of the old wooden churches built during the Hungarian occupation like the fancier onces in Maramures that we went to see up north a few weeks ago.  Much smaller and the steeple was mounted on a slab on the ground instead of being on top of the church, it was probably too difficult to reassemble when they went to move it.  We could not go inside, though, as it was locked.

From there we climbed up the hill some more and before long came to Nikoli’s orchards.  He has extensive plum and cherry orchards up on the hill side and mixed in with them are his vineyards.  We walked up and up the mountain to the top of his orchards.  He said that there were great panoramas up above there.  So we kept marching up the mountain, in the rain.

Above the orchards there was a tree break, then a terribly slick mud track cutting through the fields.  The mud track was so slick that I could not walk across it.  The falling rain, my sneakers, the slick mud and the angle of the mountain were just too much and I could not get enough speed to cross the track; I was slipping backwards faster than I could propel myself forward!  I cannot believe that I did not fall over!

We walked through huge fields and eventually got so high that Nikoli said that he had never been so high in the village before!  We were up above all of the fields and heading towards the monument up at the highest point.  A cross mounted overlooking the village.

The views from up above the village were amazing.  We could see for so far.  This was the highest peak in the entire region.  There was a little table up there and we sat for a bit, in the rain.  We were both a bit tired after the walk.  Had it not been raining and muddy the walk would not have been bad.  But as it was we were soaked and the walk had taken a lot of effort.

 

Baita, Mures, Transylvania, Romania
Baita from Above

Once we had rested we walked over the hill and into the dark forest behind it.  There was a bit of a path through the forest, but I have no idea to where that might have led.  To another village, I can only imagine as it went no where near our own.

Through the forest we went and took a number of twists and turns and eventually worked our way our down into a hidden valley to the north west of the monument and down to a high plateau where we came through some fields and found a little hidden house where you would never expect one with no road or path leading to it.  Incredibly secluded.

We went to the house and I got introduced to the local tuica distiller who unlocked a secret room and introduced me to one thousand litres of tuica being made!  I got to try some and it was so strong that my lips were numb before I even swallowed.  The still was put in one hundred and ten years ago!

The walk back was nearly worse than the walk up as the rain never let up and the mud eventually got so slick that there were whole areas that I could not continue moving or, more appropriately, I had no ability to stop moving and just slid and slid and slid.  A miracle that I stayed upright the entire time.  It was a terribly hard walk.

Altogether it was not that far, just a little under five kilometres, but with the big elevation changes, the continuous rain, the thick mud, no food, all that cognac and tuica, no water and very little sleep it was a difficult walk for first thing in the morning!

Once I was home it was time to get hosed off, shower and relax.  It was afternoon by the time that I had gotten home.  Dominica had had a nice morning with Maria, they had not hung out nearly as long as we had on our walk.  My shoes had to be left outside and all of my clothing cleaned.  We had walked through plants so deep that I was soaked to my waist from the fields and wet on top from the rain.

After that the afternoon was a relaxing one just spent being lazy around the house.

May 13, 2016: NTG Lab is Down for Relocation

It is Friday and the NTG Lab is all broken down and packed up so I am not able to use any of my normal equipment for the next two weeks.  In a way, this is sort of a forced vacation.  Not really, there is so much other stuff for me to be doing, but it is kind of a change of pace at the very least.  And it is finals week at RIT which means no need to worry about communicating with professors this week, either.

Today was not so busy until this evening when we discovered that there was a security issue on MangoLassi and I had to deal with that for several hours.  That was no fun.  But the break caused some other things to get fixed, too.  Emojis are back after months of not working.

It has been a tiring week for some reason.  The kids have been coming to the house for many hours, every day and that has really been making us exhausted.  They come early and stay a long time.  The lack of communications makes things super hard as we can’t tell them when Liesl has school to do or the girls just are not up for it or that we are busy or whatever.  It kind of causes us not to have control of our own schedule in any way.  But we are very happy that the girls have so many, dedicated friends who are over to play with them nearly every day.

May 12, 2016: Four Years Abroad

Thursday.  Today marks the four year mark since Dominica, Liesl, Luciana and I arrived at JFK Airport in New York City and awaited our very first flight as a family to head overseas.  That was the beginning of the adventure that we are now on.  A lot has changed since that day, but the main goal has remained constant – a journey to find home and to raise our children as global citizens.  Four years later and we are more excited about and more committed to that goal than ever.

It is amazing to see that our dreams really came true and we have spent a huge portion of the time since that original flight actually living around the world and doing what we set out to do.  For a couple years there in the middle we had some times when it seemed like things were not really going to work.  We’ve had a lot of changes and unplanned events, but here we are.  We did our epic tour of Europe in 2012.  We knew by 2014 that we were on our way to live abroad full time and all of 2015 and thus far in 2016 have been spent living the dream.  And no plans to stop.  This has been one crazy adventure.

And we already know where we are off to next: Moldova.  With the NTG Lab equipment going offline today, a lot of the normal work that I do is not able to be done for the next two weeks which means that it is a perfect time for us to get away, again.  This is a much, much shorter trip that we did last time to the Balkans.  This time will be a train trip and only to the country right next door.  No big driving for me, I get to relax, which will be awesome.  Really looking forward to this excursion.

We decided that we are not going to be going to Odessa in Ukraine like we had been planning. I have a friend who grew up in the Crimea and we spoke and she said that having talked to friends in Odessa that things are not very safe there right now and it is not a good time to be visiting.  Military in the streets and extreme, sudden poverty with the country actively at war and real fear of invasion as the occupied Crimea is just over the horizon on the Black Sea.  We were told that for the Ukraine, we should stick to the rural west or Kiev.

 

 

May 11, 2016: Prepping the NTG Lab

Wednesday and the rain continues.  So much rain here in Transylvania!  Today and tomorrow the big tasks are getting the NTG Lab ready to be broken down, boxed up and ready to ship off to California.  We have all of the gear that I normally use heading out west to the brand new Tier IV Colocation America facility that is being set up in Los Angeles.  A full rack is being dedicated for the server gear.

We had to trim things down for the move and only eleven of the servers are going to be going.  A lot of the older stuff is going to be left behind.  If we had more time to get things ready or if I was local to work on stuff maybe we could have gotten one or two more ready but as it was, getting eleven ready was pretty much a miracle.  There are SAN, NAS and other gear going out in addition to the servers themselves and, of course, all kinds of networking gear including three 10GigE switches!  It is an exciting move.  It is a ton of capacity that is bring brought online all at once and the setup in Los Angeles is going to be really sweet.

Today was pretty slow and my evening call got cancelled at the last minute. So between prepping the lab, having kids descend on the house again and working on writing there wasn’t a lot of free time.

May 10, 2016: A Street Full of Cows

It is Tuesday.  Today was a light rain day, we got a bit of a break after nearly a week of rain that has been coming down.  Everything is saturated with water and the grass is getting really high.

We had kids over again today, but not so crazy as yesterday.  That was really nuts.  We are working hard on getting Liesl’s school schedule shifted forward so that she can get most of her work done before kids show up and interrupt her but it is hard because she likes to sleep in and get started late and we never know when people might plan to arrive or how many will come or how long that they will stay!

Today we saw tons of cows coming down main street in Baita.  It took me by surprise. I thought that I heard something outside and went into the parlour and found a whole herd of cattle just coming down main street.  Some would stop in the front to eat some of our grass.  There is plenty of it for them.  The street is covered in manure now.