“I’ve just had the most amazing morning.”
The beach sunset
The girls have headed into the city to lodge paperwork to get Lari registered in Russia. Since she’s just arrived, she needs to be registered somewhere and Alisha is able to do this for her. Alisha actually needs to be registered in St Petersburg herself, so it’s easy for her to fill in the form for Lari at the same time. All Russian citizens have to register in a city in their own country if they are there for more than three months, which she has been. Everyone has one passport for moving around inside the country and must apply separately for a passport to actually leave Russia. The first one is just like the ID cards used in a number of countries as a primary form of personal identification. In order to get that external passport the individual has to fill in a bunch of forms in their home city that get sent to Moscow and used as doorstops for half a year. When its life as a doorstop finishes the person is notified and they then must travel to Moscow once or twice to submit more forms and be interviewed, photographed and otherwise tortured by the bureaucracy. Getting your external passport apparently takes six to eighteen months depending on whether the bureaucrats have already had their hearts and souls removed to feed the demons within the government, or are just working towards it.Beachside vodka session
Even Russians pull faces after drinking vodka shots
On their way back Lari and Alisha have decided that we’ll have a fire on the beach tonight and they bring back the firewood. Energy levels are low, and the fruit juice they also bring is helping a lot as we wander very slowly down to the beach carrying firewood and paper. We have no clear idea how we’re going to light it without kindling, but the attempt should be amusing anyway. After I shuffle around logs and some cardboard for a while, Don notices some hot coals and adds them to the mix. Don questioning the manliness of the fire
I spend a lot of time fanning it and eventually the pine logs burst into flame. For about a minute, before needing vigorous fanning again. We can’t find any kindling, we have nothing to split the logs and it looks increasingly hopeless. The only answer is to have some more shots of vodka, which we all do a few times. The sunset is lazy and cloudy and we alternate between water and vodka shots and take increasingly silly photos of ourselves on the foreshore. I suddenly remember an idea I had back in Australia and lurch down to the water and put my hand deep into it. I then touch Don and Lari’s foreheads with that hand, leaving a vertical stripe above and between their eyes.“We’ve touched the water of the Gulf of Finland on the Baltic coast of Russia. Now we have to swim in the water of Vladivostok at the other end of our journey.”
They both nod lazily. We finish the drinking water before heading inside to sleep again before the next adventure.
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