Friday, 27 November 2009

The Damn Winter Sun


I love it here. I really do. But I make no secret to the people that I know that it drives me nuts to hear all the complaints about the weather. I will make it no secret with any readers now as well. I am from New Jersey, USA, where your skin begins to melt in the summer and your moisturizer freezes in the winter the second you walk outside (no kidding, every pore gets a little tingly "pop"). The truth is, the weather is not all that bad here. Blasphemy!

I know, I know, it rains. Well...it rains in New Jersey too. That's what helps to make it the Garden State. The Scots would have you believe that it rains every day here. Nope. It doesn't. And even if it does rain every day, the sun usually peaks out as well at some point. It never ceases to amaze me that people will stop on the street to chat and I'll say, "isn't it lovely out," and they will reply, "too much rain. Did you hear it last night." I can never make the connection between how rain in the night ruins the beautiful day in front of you right now.

Don't get me wrong. When it rains for days and days and days and it is dreary and icky, I, too, hate the weather. But that really doesn't happen that often. Plus, I believe we humans are pretty much water proof. Add to that the ability to put on rain gear, and you have it made! No one likes to get caught out in a storm unprepared, it can be miserable and getting wet can make you chill to the bone in the time it takes one gust of wind to come through. But mostly, you can be prepared. By the way, I recommend Paramo gear. It is ungodly expensive, but worth every dime. I have one of the smocks...it cost the same as a small cottage, but I don't regret it now. One day I'll save up enough to buy a pair of the trousers!

So, why the rant today? I am usually not a ranter, so I'll blame it on the short days we are having. We have had some beautiful sunny days here and in the absence of rain and general weather to complain about, I heard someone complain about the sun. No lie. In fact, the quote was "the damn winter sun."

It was about how low in the sky it is just now and how it makes driving difficult. True? Yes. Significant? Yes. Worthy of planetary damnation? No!

I bit my tongue. Oh, so hard did I bite it. And, I walked away. When there are only 8 good hours of daylight, I think you should embrace every last bit of light, not damn the sun for it's position in the sky. In my head I said, "You just drove a mile...walk! Walk I tell you, walk!"

It simply runs deep here. It is the very culture to complain about the weather--good and bad. I spent my first year here disagreeing with people about how the weather was actually quite mild and how I liked a good, windy day. They all looked at me like I had five heads, two of them with tentacles and one of them with horns. Now I just give a sympathetic head nod and continue my journey. I am the foreigner. This is their land. I need to adjust and let them be who they are.

Quietly, I will tell the sun that I am on it's side.

Friday, 6 November 2009

Moray Coastal Trail: Roseisle to Hopeman

I decided that since I live on the Moray Coastal Trail that I needed to walk it. I have walked some of the legs more than once and yesterday I did the Roseisle to Hopeman (via Cummingston and Burghead) trek.

It was a beautiful day, crisp and cool and sunny most of the way. I went with my friend, Martine, and my dog Milton. We moved slowly talking to everyone we could along the way. Plus, while watching the surfers in Burghead, we were dazzled by the dolphins playing close by.

If you get the chance you should try some of the Trail. It is so worth the effort.

Burghead from Roseisle

Waves crashing to shore outside of Cummingston

Who cares about the rain when it is followed by this view?

Monday, 2 November 2009

NaNoWriMo

I actually feel guilty writing this post. I have signed up for the National Novel Writing Month. A challenge where you pledge to write 50,000 words in the month of November. It is crazy. I am hoping to do it in 22 days (leaves me a cushion if I get the swine flu!). I have 4683 words in place so far, but my neck hurts.

I have joined the local region (Scotland::Other) and there are 777 other members but no one seems to be answering posts on the NaNoWriMo site. I just can't believe there are 777 other folks in this remote region trying to write a novel. So cool to be a part of that collective. Lonely not to know any of them.

In any case, am off to continue my book. Will see what time will tally.

Wednesday, 28 October 2009

The Beloved Buttery

My husband, the biggest fan of butteries ever, said that I should let people know what a buttery is, especially after I wrote about them in a previous post. I agree. So here is a plate of butteries for you to salivate over.

I once used a plate of butteries just like this to entice my sister and her husband who were visiting to finally ignore their jet lag and wake up. They were served as breakfast in bed with a carafe of coffee and are still talked about to this day. She says she'll be back to visit me, but I'll never be totally sure if it is more to see me, or to get more butteries. Hmmm????

Monday, 26 October 2009

Darkness


I can't believe the darkness that is falling on my front garden. It is only 3:34 and and it is almost sunset here. I love, love, love the long days of summer, but these short days (getting shorter still) are making me a bit sad. The street lights will be on soon and I'll have to close the drapes...until April at least! There is no such thing as daylight savings in the northern darkness. Luckily I have my SAD alarm clock/dawn simulator to keep me from complete hibernation.

Tuesday, 20 October 2009

Talking Funny

When I first moved here, I went flying into a local convenience store and after quickly skimming the tiny space I asked the clerk where I might find the batteries.

She looked straight at me, then tilted her head to the left and asked, “Batteries or butteries?”

I was happy to clarify, “Batteries.”

She tilted her head to her right and said, “Batteries or butteries?”

Again, I answered, “Batteries.”

She tilted her head to her left and said, “Batteries or butteries?”

This time I got it right. I answered, “Batteries. Electronics. Power. Can’t eat them.” To which she happily put her head back on straight and with a slight nod pointed to the stand where they were hidden in plain view.

This would be the first of many times that I would be misunderstood. I’ve made changes in some of my pronunciations for survival's sake (I got tired of getting a potato when I asked for tomato). I’ve also learned a trick or two…like I never go right into a question or a request when I enter a shop. I always start with a “Hello. It is a beautiful day today” or some such pleasantries. This is for no other reason than to let the person catch up with the fact that I am not a local. Well...and I am pleasant.

I was on the other side of almost that same exchange with my friend’s son last Sunday. It started with, “Are you Clyde or Clive?” and went three head-teetering rounds before I had him spell it. It is Clyde, by the way…in case you were wondering.

It does crack me up that whether it is me that is talking funny or listening funny, the resulting conversation has a corresponding and questioning cock of the head. It is the cultural equalizer and I wonder if it is possible to ask for clarification without the head tilt action in any language, any culture.

Footnote: For those of you who may be wondering what a buttery is, well…it is a local baked good made with, you guessed it…butter. Think of a rich, buttery, flaky croissant. Now pack it down until it is very, very dense and add a bit of salt. That is a buttery. You would hate to ask for a buttery and get a battery…that I can assure you!

Monday, 19 October 2009

Ingredients

Trying to find ingredients that I am used to finding easily in the states is sometimes like finding a needle in a haystack. I have a healthy understanding that things are different here and that I won’t find (nor should I!) everything that I am looking for, but sometimes you get homesick for the familiar. That having been said, I have had a great deal of luck in the past couple of weeks.

I recently found the following items in the wonderful grocery store of a local “spiritual community” (read: hippy commune) called the Findhorn Foundation:

  • Proper horseradish (not horseradish sauce!). Now I can make deviled eggs which no one here even knows about (yet). And, more importantly, I can make killer Bloody Marys.
  • Chipotles in spicy adobo sauce. Finding this in a country that has never heard of poblano peppers, puts a ketchup-y creation over corn chips instead of salsa, and says “jalapeno” with a “j” as in “just plain wrong” is quite the coup.
  • Sour dough bread. Someone at the Foundation must have come from San Francisco!

I also luckily found pretzels the other day at a local grocery store…they are from Poland and I was so excited, I almost opened them before I got to the check out. Unfortunately, they weren’t Snyder’s Sourdough pretzels.

I am still on the hunt for corn meal for corn bread, graham crackers, and cherry pie filling in a can.

I had to give up on the idea of ever having a fresh baked bagel let alone an everything bagel. It might have been the lowest of lows when I “concocted” one recently. I basically mixed the “everything-s” (sesame seeds, pepper, salt, onions, garlic) into cream cheese and spread it on toast. I was sad and desperate and even sadder after I was done! The description of the event in my Facebook status elicited some of the most sincere sympathy from my friends back home I’ve had to date.

The flip side is there would be things that I will miss if I ever go home…like my single malt collection, Glen Fiddich liqueur, oatcakes, cheese and onion pasties and, of course, cullen skink (that’s fish soup for those of you who don’t know)…

Wednesday, 14 October 2009

My Lazy Day


On Sunday, I woke up and all I wanted to do was stay in bed, do very little, and read. My husband was working and I guess that I felt a little guilty—being unemployed is a strange place for me and I don’t know how to totally enjoy it. So, I thought, Well if he’s working, I should be doing something as well. But what…

I decided to take the dog for a 4 mile walk. I figured doing that one chore that is totally mine would make me feel less guilty. We walked the East Beach and up the dunes and back along the River. It was lovely. When I got back home, puppy was happy and I was ready for lunch.

After lunch the guilt returned and I thought…I better at least vacuum. I didn’t want to, but thought that I should. So I got up off my duff to do just that. Just getting up was inspiring…I ended up taking all the recyclables out. I even picked up the poo in the back garden (that's the "back yard" in Scottish-speak). So far, so proud. All the time Milton (the dog) was dancing around. As long as he was outside, I figured I would bring out the counter-top compost container and empty it in the garden container. Then I went back inside to vacuum.

Gosh, was I just a household maven. I plugged the vacuum into the dining room outlet and got started. As I was moving through the room I realized there were muddy bits following me around. NO WAY. It wasn’t mud at all. Apparently, in the time it took me to throw away the poo in the garden and go inside to get the compost, the dog had poo’d again (unbeknowst to me) and now I tracked it throughout the kitchen and the dining room. Now I had to clean the kitchen floor, scrub the carpet, hose off my shoes, and vacuum again.

And after letting the dog back in, I watched in horror as HE tracked brown stuff through the kitchen. It turned out to be mud, but the process had to begin again! Wipe, wash, vacuum.

By the time my husband got home, I was exhausted and remarkably guilt-free about being lazy.

Friday, 9 October 2009

Long Before I Moved to Scotland

Long before I met my husband, long before I saw the beautiful countryside of Scotland, long before I knew who I was going to be or what I was going to do, I longed to live in a foreign land. But the person I was (often fearful and way too practical) and what I did (nothing that made very much money) just seemed to narrow my scope through those young daring years of my 20s and 30s.

Growing up my dad (really mom) would pack up the station wagon and us kids in the wee hours of the morning and off we would start on a cross-country trip. This was before the days of seat belt laws and child seats, when we either sat in the back or the “way back” or on special journeys we would sit with the back seats folded down and travel in the “whole back”. We saw the United States that way. At least from New Jersey to Colorado.

My folks were not loaded. Vacations weren’t like they are today for many families, we didn’t jet off to some exotic place. We visited. And if we visited some relatives who had a pool, well, that was even better. It was the way my parents traveled…within their means and with meaning. And it was the beginning of a life-long passion for distant places.

So, when I left college and got my first horribly humiliating job with its pittance for pay, I started my travels as a single woman the way I knew how. I visited. I would hop in the car and go pretty much anywhere on the east coast. Eventually, new jobs brought me new opportunities to travel. I started to board planes and finally got past the Rockies. But I wanted more.

I wanted to go to Eastern Europe. I wanted to learn a language. I wanted to travel by train over many borders. Unfortunately, I wouldn’t go by myself. I was too scared. I was so scared that I never even got my passport. What could be sadder than that?

I eventually decided to apply to the Peace Corps. An organization that would sponsor my travel, teach me a language and watch over me while I was away—I was hooked. I went through the application and interview process and it even looked like they would honor my request to go to Poland, or at least Eastern Europe. I used to walk around my home saying “Uzbekistan” just because I thought it sounded really cool. Almost the same day my letter arrived saying that I would move on to the last phase of the selection process, my mother became very ill. That was that. I would have to wait.

Then I turned 30. Then I bought a house. Then my dad got sick. Then…then…then…there was always something to cripple my plans.

Then 9/11 happened and I woke up. I got my passport! My friend invited me to go on a bus tour of Italy. I followed that trip up with a trip to New Zealand. Then Italy again. Then England. And so on…

Now I live in Scotland with my husband in a former fishing village on the North Sea where he grew up. And I love it.

This adventure is what I will be writing about most, I suppose. It is my life and my experience as an American woman living abroad. I dreamt about being a "foreigner" long before I knew where I would end up…I just knew I needed to be far away.