Nice.

Right now we are enjoying a very pleasant surprise, which we never saw coming.

In eight hours, we’ll board the flight that will eventually take us to the States. We are in Prague, finishing a co-worker’s wedding and a couple days seeing the city. But our flight tomorrow is at 6am, which presented a big problem. What to do the night before, and how to maximize Gabi’s sleep? We want as cheerful a little girl as possible before a long plane flight. PRG airport is 17km from the city. As mentioned in the previous post, we have a lot of luggage. Public transportation would not be possible if we stayed in the city. I looked into airport hotel rooms (though I can’t stand paying $100+ for a room I’ll spend very little time in, I’m learning as a parent that some of these expenses are necessary), but even that would mean leaving the room at 4am and waking Gabi reeeaally early. So we decided to look for a comfy-ish place to sleep in the airport, a corner where we could put Gabi down in her travel bed. She’d be able to sleep a precious extra hour, and we’d be calmer knowing that we’re already at our destination. Of course, we predicted lousy sleep for the two of us, and a chance that Gabi would be awakened repeatedly.

Tough choice. We decided to scope out the airport and see how it looked, and then get a hotel room if necessary.

Unexpected surprise #1: We were able to check our heavy bags in at 6pm the night before our flight. Words can’t express how relieved we are to see all that stuff float down the belt and off to some back hangar, hopefully for a reunion in SEA.

Unexpected surprise #2: The woman at the check in counter didn’t give us any flack for bag weight. Some of our bags were definitely on the edge, and the wrong agent can make life quite difficult. Big smiles and small talk get you a long way in any culture.

Unexpected surprise #3: Ducking down an out of the way hallway on the third floor, we found the “Mama s Detmi” (mother with child) room. Huge score. This 20×20 carpeted playroom has a changing table, sink, table and chairs, a baby see-saw, a crib in the corner, and decorations of Lightning McQueen all over the walls! Oh, and it’s empty. Gabi had dinner and went to bed on time, and she’s been in dream land for three hours now. Jess and I got to spend some precious time in prayer for the huge transition ahead of us. We haven’t had nearly enough of that lately.

This is such a great gift from the Lord. It’s amazing how the little things mean so much to you, especially when you’re in flux. Where we expected constant loud flight announcements and bright lights on a hard floor, we instead got a quiet room with a quite romantic view of the sun setting on the runway. And now here I am blogging while Jess sleeps a few feet away.

So far our only guests have been an employee on break and a guy without kids, both of whom quickly excused themselves. If you’re reading this, pray for seven more quiet hours! And pray that we get some sleep.

*I’m slightly hesitant to blab the secret of the Mama s Detmi room, but I suppose the overlap is quite small between readers of our blog (a few) and people traveling through Prague and looking to sleep in the airport. So don’t worry PRG, your secret’s safe with us!

Taking the train from Sarajevo to Prague

Our co-worker David was getting married Aug 27 in his hometown of Prague, and that is an event we were determined not to miss. We realized that plane tickets to the USA are much cheaper from Prague than from Sarajevo, so we decided to travel by train to Prague, and then fly home after the wedding (well, and a few days to see the city of course).

Our other co-worker Vedrana was traveling with us, and we had the four of us plus our entire entourage of suitcases containing our life for the next year. We’d brought the absolute max allowable by Lufthansa: one checked bag for each of us including Gabi, one carry-on, and a “personal item.” Add my guitar for an extra cost, and overfill the bags with food and diapers to last a week, and it would be an understatement to say we were traveling heavy.

Day one on the train was Sarajevo-Budapest in 12 hours, and day two Budapest-Prague in 7 hours. Having never taken the train for a lengthy trip, we were nervous about it with Gabi. But if we drove our car, we wouldn’t have anyone to return it to Bosnia when we left. And driving means Gabi would be locked down in her carseat, while on the train she could play and move around. Plus, many friends had told us that the Sa-Buda train has enclosed small cabins, and since Sarajevo was the beginning of the line we were sure we could stake our claim on one and be comfortable.

When we got to the train station at 6:30am, it took two heavy trips to get our bags onto the platform. Surprise #1 hit when we saw that the train was just the engine car and one passenger car…no enclosed cabins, just a communal car with city bus-style seats. Oh, and a teeny bit of space above the seats for luggage. I asked a couple workers what was going on, and they gave me a Balkans shrug that means “Ain’t nothing I can do about it” and walked away. One added that some more cars would be attached in Doboj, three hours north of Sarajevo.

We can handle that, we thought, and stuffed our bags everywhere possible on that car…on free seats, overhead, at our feet, next to some other guy. We got the anticipated “what is wrong with these people; bringing so much stuff?” looks, and I avoided eye contact. I wanted to yell “We’re traveling for a year, not just a week!”

Fortunately, the busyness of getting settled distracted us from the sadness of pulling away from our beloved Sarajevo. The passengers around us were wonderfully kind, largely because they were enraptured with Gabriela. She talked and smiled and waved, and they melted and made small talk with us. One thing we love about the Balkans is that people are tremendously kid-friendly. No one would ever criticize parents of a kid who’s making noise, and they instead offer their food to the child–watch out for chocolate…it’s not the best before 12 hours in a confined space!

We made it to Doboj uneventfully, and when we saw that the cars being added to the train had enclosed rooms, we jumped to move our stuff over. The mother and adult son sitting next to us helped us transport stuff and ooh-ed and ahh-ed over Gabi one last time, and we shut ourselves into the 6 seat cabin (one of about 10 on the car, almost all empty) and celebrated. This would be doable for a long trip!

But soon it became apparent that the temperature was rising, ahem, significantly. This was late August, and it had been abnormally hot lately and getting hotter. Oh, and did I mention the train had no A/C? This communist-era dinosaur had sliding windows which did not stay open, but instead had to be held in place to allow any breeze in. A mild annoyance at the beginning, but after a couple hours we were hanging heads out the window for air. All four of us were soon bathed in sweat.

Speaking of train quality, the bathrooms were a separate adventure. Weak non-potable water from the faucet, no soap. A rusty metal toilet with a square metal plate at the base to catch everything, and a foot pedal which, when pressed, released the panel and dropped the cargo on the tracks below. As I prepared to use it, the train rolled into station and stopped. Oops…better wait until we’re moving again. And it was hot in there, with no window. I was soaked in sweat after 10 seconds.

So all of this is tough enough, but the kicker is that this train does not sell water or food, and the stops are only long enough to change passengers–no getting off to stretch your legs or find supplies. This is one of the bummers of the Balkans: tourism isn’t big enough here for anyone to be investing in the infrastructure, so rarely is anyone making improvements or offering any of the little bonuses (like say, water) that make the trip comfortable. It’s like buying a train ticket means “we’ll get you there, somehow, sometime…you may be dehydrated, drenched in sweat, in pain, and unhappy, but you’ll arrive.”

As the temperature rose, it became clear that we didn’t have nearly enough water. Gabi was slugging it down like we’ve never seen. At a stop on the border with Croatia, I asked the ticket-checker if there was a place to get some water nearby. He said no one sells it there, but that there was a spigot nearby and that I had about 5 minutes. I sprinted with all of our bottles, and when I arrived another worker there said that he wasn’t sure the water was safe to drink. I was ready to take our chances, but then another worker walked up and chugged some. I filled up and made it back just before the train pulled away.

In the ensuing kilometers, I tried to put Gabi down for a nap in a nearby empty private cabin. It seemed very workable: our awesome travel bed fit in the leg space, so I had her set up just like anywhere else. I even turned on the little rain noise maker we use to make the location feel familiar. But two factors were working against me/her/us. The first is that it was melting hot inside, and she was sweating. The second is that every time she seemed to be calming down the train pulled into a stop, and the jerking motion and sound of people walking around alerter her. She’d pop up and look out the window excitedly, yelling “Guck, guck, guck!” Gabriela is enthralled with trucks these days, and anything that rolls on wheels is a guck. I tried valiantly for 30min, and Gabi was no closer to sleeping than before. Probably further, as it was kind of a game to her. Nap fail.

Jess walked up to me and told me that our former train car, the communal car, the one we left about five hours earlier, had air conditioning and was much cooler. I stood there, soaked shirt stuck to my chest, leaning desperately into the tiny breeze creeping through the window I held open with my hand, wide-awake child standing in her travel bed behind me alternating between crying and guck-ing, and at Jess’ words felt so deflated I wanted to collapse. I wanted her to be wrong, so that I could know that the entire train was suffering like we were. Equal pain on all sides, in these moments, can seem better even than the chance for improvement. Especially when improvement means we were wrong. And when it means I have to move all. our. suitcases. again.

But she was right. The other train car was a lot cooler–though still quite hot. And so we moved Gabi and all of our luggage through the moving train a second time, baring the blank stares and whispers in Hungarian of passengers aghast at the number of trips back and forth I made (about 5, I believe).

The last four-ish hours of the trip passed slowly, even in the new car with semi-AC. Gabi was overtired and thus cranky and quick to holler, so we tried desperately to placate her with crayons and a new coloring book. We walked up and down the aisles with her, trying to keep her from touching sleeping people. Oh, and the train was delayed an hour, prolonging our joy. When we finally hit Budapest Deli station (a different station than we had been told by the Sarajevo station…Budapest has three), we were relieved to see that our friend Laci had somehow found out which station we’d arrived at, and was waiting for us. We were stinky and looked like we had just run a marathon in our clothes, but we were there.

On the way to his house, Laci told us that the Budapest-Prague train would be at a quality level called “European standard”. We all agreed that we had no clue what that meant, but it sounded wonderful and luxurious. And it was. Air conditioning, private cabins, very friendly German grandparents and granddaughter sharing our cabin and happy to help us with Gabi. Who, bizarrely and blessedly, was amazingly well-behaved the entire 7 hours and contentedly played and sat in our laps. And napped on our seat for an hour. What a difference a day makes!

In the end, our verdict was that train travel is a wonderful way to see most of Europe, but we can’t quite handle the roughing it of Balkan trains. If it were only the two of us, the entire experience would have been funny and quite do-able. But with a toddler…next time we’ll have to find a different way.

Power, pride, & the visa process PART 1

Each year we need a visa to live and work in Bosnia. The application process is rather unintelligible to someone living outside of Eastern Europe, so let me break it down in an easy step-by-step manner:

  1. Start at least one month before your current visa expires. Lighten your work schedule in preparation.
  2. Drive across town to the visa processing office, and ask what new laws are in effect that will affect your application and required documents. Receive a vague and partial answer.
  3. Collect original copies of every vital document in your possession, including birth certificate, diploma, passport, marriage license, police document showing that you have not committed crimes, contract with landlord, landlord’s personal documents and proof of citizenship.
  4. Translate all that are not in Bosnian.
  5. Prepare official letters from employers in the USA and in Bosnia, bank statements, and an assortment of others.
  6. Wait in line.
  7. Get an HIV exam and full medical exam (including vision, weight, lung x-ray, and other more “personal” items).
  8. Get a passport-sized photo, but do not smile. Smiling is strictly forbidden.
  9. Make multiple copies of all documents – 1 of some, 2 of others, other amounts of others, all subject to change at any time.
  10. Drive across town several times.
  11. Take all documents to a government office to be notarized. (Carry every document you’ve ever used in your life with you during all steps, just in case it’s needed.)
  12. Wait in line.
  13. Get told by the employee that your documents are not valid/correct/legible/pretty enough/written on magical papyrus, and thus unacceptable.
  14. Repeat multiple prior steps, repaying at each stage.
  15. Listen to different employee tell you you had the right documents the first time, and now they are wrong.
  16. Repeat multiple prior steps, repaying at each stage.
  17. Return to government office several more times and be rejected for the same or for different reasons.
  18. Repeat multiple prior steps, repaying at each stage.
  19. Finally, spread dozens of documents and copies on your living room floor to be gathered into the sacred order.
  20. Prepare all documents in a thick stack and, after much prayer, take them across town to the visa processing office (which operates from 9am-1pm three days a week) to be submitted.
  21. Wait your turn, and then be berated by an employee for not knowing that the law changed three weeks ago and several of these documents are now completely outdated, or for having extra documents/not enough documents/mismatched pants and socks. Be told to come back tomorrow with the right documents.
  22. Repeat multiple prior steps, repaying at each stage.
  23. Re-submit stack, hopefully now acceptable. Be told that they’ll “let you know” with a look implying it’s doubtful you’ll ever be allowed to set foot in this country again.
  24. Return–in person, because calling would be pointless–every week to check on the process.
  25. Pick up a temporary document from the visa office stating that your visa is in process. Note the one-month duration on the temporary document.
  26. Return after 30 days to request (yes, request) an extension of the temporary document while they continue processing your visa. Be told, with a look of exasperation, to return tomorrow for said extension.
  27. Drive across town the next day for extension.
  28. Eventually, be told to come in for your visa.
  29. Drive across town to pick up the visa, and be told that you need to surrender your passport and return tomorrow.
  30. Drive across town again, and pick up your passport with new visa sticker. Success!
  31. Return home, and throw away roughly two dozen notarized copies, representing approximately 137 hours spent waiting in lines, which it turns out were not needed after all.

Excuse me?

Here in Hungary, we’re reminded what it feels like to have no idea how to communicate. Kinda like our first month or so in Bosnia, but then we were much more motivated to learn the language!

Check this out. Hungarian ranked #2 on this informal survey of hardest languages in the world. Note that Russian is #6, and Bosnian is very similar to Russian…props to us!

If you want a challenge, we put a special “Learn Hungarian” in the sidebar to the right. If you figure it out, you can teach us!

Would you like a bat with that?

This happened a while back but its definitely worth mentioning that we had two surprise visitors in September, a bat, and our landlady.

One beautiful, hot evening we left all the windows open to let air in throughout the night (who needs AC?). The next few days we both heard strange shuffling sounds coming from the kitchen. At first we thought, maybe mice in the walls? But no, no mice to be seen. Then, another day went by and we began to hear the light squealing noise, and gave up trying to guess what it was.

Sure enough, that same evening, we were enjoying a quiet night at home, when all of the sudden a bat swoops into the living room, circling over our heads. I screamed and threw myself to the floor, covering my head, while Deron ran to the kitchen to grab a broom. I mean, what would you grab? Deron managed to open the door to our balcony, thinking he could gently usher the bat in that direction. Wouldn’t you know that instead, the bat began following the broom and made contact with it several times before landing on the floor. Deron ran over, used the broom to check if it was alive, and finally, it jumped up and out through our balcony. Whew!

I must say that this was a first for both of us. Any of you ever had a bat in your house? I flashed immediately to the movie Ace Ventura 2, where Jim Carrey is chasing down a very sacred bat. Yuck!

The other anecdote is brief but also worth mentioning; Deron and I had just finished ever so cleverly moving some of our landlady’s furniture by lending it to a friend (our apartment is over-furnished). She lives in England so we thought, she probably doesn’t care. And besides, we’ve never even met her or spoken with her.

The next morning we get a phone call. Its her! She tells Deron that she is in Sarajevo and was hoping to come over THAT DAY in the next couple of hours to meet us and see the place. And would that be ok? Deron smiled and in Bosnian told her, of course its not a problem. He hung up, and we proceeded to clean the entire place, putting things back to please her. I remember that I was still taking off the gloves and changing my clothes when she knocked on the door.

In the end, we are SO GLAD she visited. She was so nice, and generous. But you know, this just would not happen in the US, or would it? So renters, beware, because your landlady might be waiting for the moment you decide to redecorate!

Easy go…easy come

Last Thursday I went to Bjelave, a student dorm, to play basketball. I stashed my cell phone and keys off to the side of the court, in what I thought was a good spot. But at the end when I went to get them on my way to coffee with some of the students, my phone was gone. Stolen.

I was bummed 1) for the lost stored phone numbers, 2) for the worry of losing my own number, and 3) for losing a good phone I’ve had for 3+ years. I mean, it had a tiny full keypad, which made text-messaging SO easy!

But in a very Bosnian way, I said “Šta češ?” = “What can you do?” and went to coffee with the guys.

When I got home, I found an old phone of Jess’ that still works decently. Other than a weak battery and habit of shutting off spontaneously, sometimes in the middle of a call.

But the most amazing part? The next day I went to inquire about getting my number back, and had an absolutely efficient and pleasant experience working with Bosnian government! This is absolutely monumental. The three women in different departments with whom I spoke were friendly and helpful, and the entire process took about 20min (yes, that is actually quick) and I was on my way.

It might have been worth getting my phone stolen just to have a positive story to tell about Bosnian bureaucracy…

Learning to love–like?–soccer

I am a sports fan.  Up until age 11, that included playing and enjoying soccer.  But at 12, American football took over and I never looked back.  Until now…  Unless you’ve lived in a cave your whole life without access to any international media, you know that outside the USA soccer is king.  No, that’s not a fair analogy, because sometimes people don’t like the king.  

Soccer is a BIG deal in Europe.  Jess and I traveled through Italy in 2006 a week after they won the World Cup, and people had graffitied “Campioni del Mondo!” everywhere.  Here in Bosnia, the tram doesn’t operate on game nights because excited (or angry) fans will celebrate (or mourn) a victory (or loss) by destroying the trains.  After the last game I watched on a giant outdoor TV downtown with 500 of my closest friends, a Bosnia victory over Belgium, the streets filled with revelers speeding down the road, sitting in the windowsills of their cars and waving flags, honking, and screaming.

Knowing all this as I moved here, I decided that I’d need to learn and enjoy football proper, the non-American kind.  Now I have no objections to playing soccer!  I’ll play any sport, and have played soccer a number of times in the States.  I have no real strategy or technique, but I get along alright.  
But watching it on TV is a new experience.  Specifically because I don’t know anything.  I can tell you the tricks and rules of American football & baseball, but in soccer I’m still not 100% sure why being offsides is illegal.  Not to mention that there’s about 17 professional leagues with different names and tournaments.  My knowledge of teams is about summed up like this:
– Manchester = rich
– Real Madrid = good, and with a cool name (not the same as Fake Madrid)
– Liverpool = plays dirty, and thus popular with a lot of college guys
– Chelsea = actually a team, not just Clinton’s daughter–who knew?
When Jess and I got married, it was clear she needed to become a USC football fan, so I taught her about the game.  Now I’m asking the same questions about “what just happened?” and “who’s that guy?” and “how many minutes are left?”  I comment on the really obvious stuff that no one who’s seen more than 2 games would say, like “Wow, these guys can really control the ball well.”  Last night I was confused as to why one player had a microphone earpiece on while the others didn’t, until my student friend pointed out that he was the referee. (Hey, it was a tight camera shot and jerseys weren’t visible!)
But I confess…I’m loving it!  It’s interesting–I appreciate the skill involved and enjoy watching slide tackling and especially headers into the goal.  It’s one more way to get into the culture.  And it’s fun to watch sports with friends.  Even when games (often) end in 0-0 ties.  Yee-ha.

I’m guessing CHGTV never caught on…

Communist Home & Garden Television, that is…
So we’ve been here for more than 6 months, and we thought it’d be nice to hang a few pictures on the wall. Here’s the problem: every wall in our apartment is solid concrete, not the easiest material to pop a few nails into. Most of the communist-era buildings in Sarajevo are this way.
When we first moved in, we thought it’d just be impossible and so we used super sticky, permanent heavy duty tape to glue some smaller frames to the wall. Looks great, but once they’re up, they’re there for good! And when we tried to pull one down, we were left with chunks of sticky residue.
After hearing from some friends that you can hang stuff using a drill and plastic drywall anchors, we borrowed a drill from a friend. 
Here are the results:
Total time spent: ~ 1hr
Number of different drill bits used: 3
Number of drywall anchors I sliced in half to try to MacGyver a fit: 5
Number of different size/style screws attempted: 5
Times I burned my fingers on a searing hot drill bit: 4
Fingerprint smudges on the cheap matte painted wall: 8
Failed holes now plainly visible on our wall: 8
Successfully drilled, deep enough, useable holes: 0
That concrete was hard! I’d get about a half inch in and then hit a layer that felt like steel. Now it looks like our apartment was strafed by machine gun fire.
So maybe Tito (Yugoslavia’s President) and the rest of the Partisans undervalued a decorated home. They certainly weren’t making it easy for the average joe (or Slavko) to create atmosphere! Now I consider myself a decent fix-it guy around the house, but this was shaming. Next up: buying hole-patch compound.  Any more ideas, home gurus? Dad? Rob Sanford?

Kisses and Kissing

Yes, kisses.  I just wanted to let you all in on a funny cultural situation.  People here generally greet friends with kisses, and you usually give a dear friend a peck on both sides.  This is to be repeated every time you see your friend, not just for special occasions.  I won’t even go into what we’ve learned about how a kiss can categorize what level of friendship you have with a person here.  As you can imagine, this took some getting used to for Deron and I.   

Even with more experience now, we can’t go long with out an occasional faux-pas.  For example, no less than 5 times in the last month, I have almost kissed 4 women on the lips.  This is not good.  In the moment we see each other, we both tilt inward.  You are supposed to go to different sides.  However it doesn’t always work out perfectly.  I have become a “mono-side” kisser, where I now only kiss to the right first, and then to the left.  Otherwise traffic becomes a wet one on the lips of a friend.

Can anyone say awkward?  This is so not desirable, and yet inevitable.  Just when you think you are becoming adjusted to a small cultural detail, you embarrass yourself and your friend in public by kissing in the wrong direction.
In some ways this reminds me of driving.  From the beginning we are taught to drive assertively, confidently, with no questioning or hesitating on the road.  Maybe greet-kissing in this culture should be like that.     From now on, no hesitations, I’ll just dive forward and claim that right side!

Freezing, getting fined, and breaking down is half the fun, too (here comes a good but long story)

On Sunday we got together with some Bosnian friends to drive to the mountains and play in the snow. They were very excited because almost none of them have cars, and we were happy to use the EUS (ministry) car. It ended up being 8 of us in two cars, and off we went. We had no idea what we were in for…

We headed northwest out of Sarajevo to Mt. Igman, one of several mountains that were used in the 1984 Winter Olympics here. Igman was the site of the ski jumping event. On the way up the hill, our car (a ’96 Ford Fiesta named Dorcas–she’s a character in Acts…look it up, it’s another good story) was really struggling. Needing a new head gasket and quite a few other repairs, this was not a surprise to us. But as we screamed up the windy, icy roads at about 20km (12mi) per hour, I got an earful of sarcastic teasing from our friends.

Finally we arrived, and promptly realized we’d forgotten our two disc-type plastic sleds. No worries! In typical Bosnian adaptability, our group pulled out a few plastic grocery bags and used them as sleds. (This is something really cool about people here…they roll with difficulty and make the best of tough situations really well.) The bag-sleds were fast and they were messy…snow everywhere! Now I forgot to mention that only 2 of the 8 of our group had waterproof pants. Jess and I were both in jeans, me without even longjohns. We were immediately soaked and numbing. “Gonna be sick,” we thought, but dismissed it with a prayer and continued. We certainly weren’t going to be the ones to complain and quit!

So it was something of a relief when one of our Bosnian friends started to lead us on a hike up the mountainside. Hiking uphill meant warming up a bit. It also meant kicking steps into a 45′ slope in waist deep snow, we realized. We were hiking up to “get a close-up look at” the giant ski-jump track, which was looming there like a giant concrete relic from ages ago. Sure, why not?

But we continued past the ski jump, turned left into a grove of trees, and found ourselves on a platform where an operating ski chairlift passed over (we were one hill over from ski runs with skiers on them.). Our friends said we should get on and ride it up to the top and back down for a great view. Now in hindsight, we cannot explain why this passed the “common sense/we’re not criminals” filter so quickly. Maybe it was our soaked jeans and numb legs. Maybe it was the sense of freedom/adventure we felt being on the opposite side of the world with new friends. Maybe it was continuing to adjust to “going with the flow” in a new culture. Regardless of why, we jumped on the chairs and began to enjoy a nice ride.

About 5min up the hill, the lift stopped. There we were, in 4 consecutive chairs, dangling 20ft off the ground in perfect silence. At first I thought “Ah, no big deal. The lift broke down or something. This is Bosnia…it’ll be going again in a minute.” But after about 15 minutes, we realized 1) there was no one else within view on the chairlift, and 2) it was 4:30pm. Realizing the ski resort was closed and had surely stopped the chair for the night, we got a bit nervous. Unpleasant visions of hanging overnight in sub-zero temperatures with frozen jeans danced in our heads. My friend and I decided our only option might be to tie two jackets together and use them to lower one of us close to the ground, then drop the rest of the way and go for help. We were literally about 1 min from trying this (hoping the snow below was deep enough to catch us without breaking bones) when suddenly the lift re-started. Turns out our more insightful Bosnian friend had called information (which we didn’t know existed) and got the number for the office, then the lift operator. I can imagine how that conversation went over. “Hi, we jumped on the lift half way up the mountain, and now we’re stuck here…wanna help us?”

We rode the lift up to the top and around (and they were right, it was a great view!) and down to the bottom. It was freezing, and by this time we were pretty numb. Yet my mind was more focused on what might await us. The lift operator gave our first friend off the chair a pretty good scolding, which we completely deserved, and then charged each of us 5km (about $3.50) for the ride. This was completely fair, and in fact was very lenient, as that was the rate for a single trip on the chair. *No doubt if he’d known that some of us were Americans, the fine would have been more than 100km.

We were all very happy to hike the 1/2 mi back to our cars and return to civilization. While descending, I noticed that Dorcas, our car, was shutting off at times and wouldn’t blow hot air through the vents. At the bottom of the hill she died completely, and barely made across an intersection and to the side of the road. We left her there and went in to a cafe for a cup of coffee (this is Bosnia, after all!) and to warm up, and enjoyed re-hashing the whole story.

But we weren’t out of the woods yet. After coffee, Dorcas decided she wanted to stay a bit longer and refused to start. (She must not have noticed our still-wet jeans.) We said goodbye to half our group in the other car, and then 4 of us waited, very wet and very cold, at a nearby bus stop. The temperature had dropped dramatically and it was now dark. Further, since it was Sunday the bus would only come once per hour and we didn’t know when. (Bus stations in Bosnia never have the times printed.) We tried to distract ourselves from freezing solid by playing “I Spy.” After 25 min, the bus finally arrived. We bused it back to Sarajevo, then finally caught the tram for another trip to our neighborhood. We’ve never been so happy to arrive home.

On the way back we talked with our friends, and realized through all the mess we’d had a really fun day together. Everyone had stayed positive and in good spirits through our “avantura,” and we now had a good story to tell.

Not that we’re anxious to do it again…