No, it's not all complaining here.
We just dip our toe in it.
And maybe sit and rest our feet in its cooling waters.
But there's so much to like here too! For instance we have been trying to pick up some packages being delivered to a nearby store here. It is a Russian store! The packages, though supposedly delivered, are mysteriously not there. But that is not the subject of this missive.
The subject of this missive is...
The Russian store!
My neighborhood has Russian stores and a Russian community of some kind. I don't really know that much about it, but it goes way back to the 1800's. There was even a direct train from here to Moscow, or something like that, 125 years ago. That's a long train. There is even a beautiful Russian Church just across the railroad tracks from where I live. I showed you pictures once. It is surrounded by rabbits! I showed you pictures of those once too.
But I would not go into this Russian Store if it weren't for the packages. I would have no reason to and too much shyness. It is crammed full of packaged goods of all kinds, and they are mind boggling. I am not interested in trying any of the things in the packages, but I like to look at them, with their mostly cyrillic script, and bizarre variety.
The first time we went today I looked at the fish snacks while waiting. There was a package of pacific cod, "salted, dried, sugared, and defrosted". Then there were like fifteen other dried fish packages. Most of them weren't entirely clear to me what they were.
The second time we went I stood by the herbs? I recognized some chamomile in a highly packaged bag like one might grab in a gas station convenience store. Like "Oh, I'll just grab this bag of chamomile to snack on until I get home."
These are very random and do not convey the fecundity of the Russian product lines. The whole thing is a bit of a weird twist on the ideas of Russia I grew up with: Soviet stores stocked with 14 different products total.
This was so not like that! There were hundreds, no, surely thousands of products, just jammed in. There were cases of mysterious beverages. There were freezers with packaged ice cream treats to give an ice cream truck a seizure.
How old is some of this stuff, I wondered?
I don't know.
It might never go bad.
If the apocalypse comes, this is probably where my wife and I will get all our meals for the rest of our lives.




















