I've had horse sausage, not that keen to repeat it.Tripe, horse sausage, cabbage
When I was in Serbia I saw someone drinking breakfast brandy and I said "Ooh what's that?" and Igor said "Fuck! I was hoping you wouldn't find out about that".i went to hungary in 1993 but otherwise have no experience. i remember the men had brandy for breakfast. it gets the heart started they said. pretty place.
In Prague had a steak tartare and it wasn't like in the UK when you get a tiny bit, this was a whole plate of raw mince about the size of my head with a raw egg cracked on top of it and a few cloves of raw garlic scattered about, it was fucking amazing. I think it's banned in UK isn't it with raw egg?THeyre not vegetarian frirndly those places
you need someone from lithuania to put up your curtains?I had a guy from Lithuania construct an Amazon chair for me
He was a great guy but he unfortunately dropped some anti Muslim chat and I had to decide if I wanted a probable racist putting up my curtains
I really do need those curtains putting up though
What everyone tells me is that Russians are very shy and don't interact with strangers at all. Once you overcome that barrier they are very friendly but before that they seem very aloof. I remember in Moscow our friend was giving us a lift everywhere and so we didn't need these underground week passes we'd bought and so we either sold or even gave them away... but it was so hard to do cos people were so suspicious of you when you just walked up and started talking to them. That was just a wrong thing straight off. Then one guy got excited cos I was English and started asking if I liked Black Books so I pretended I did to sell the tickets.one thing that i still find difficult is that in some cultures they don't smile so you never know if people are angry or neutral or friendly when they tell you something. i always thought it was a dumb prejudice and i also think it's fine when people don't smile all the time but it's the other end of the extreme when they never smile. you see it in berlin already and it still boggles my mind. people have told me that in russia it's even worse, could you confirm this @IdleRich
i wonder how this came about, all these people never smiling. you would say it's a universal human treat and i feel it's too simplistic to just blame it on the communist past or the weather or something like that.What everyone tells me is that Russians are very shy and don't interact with strangers at all. Once you overcome that barrier they are very friendly but before that they seem very aloof. I remember in Moscow our friend was giving us a lift everywhere and so we didn't need these underground week passes we'd bought and so we either sold or even gave them away... but it was so hard to do cos people were so suspicious of you when you just walked up and started talking to them. That was just a wrong thing straight off. Then one guy got excited cos I was English and started asking if I liked Black Books so I pretended I did to sell the tickets.
or TLDR - Yes
Any eastern European country will doyou need someone from lithuania to put up your curtains?
Some really good clubs I've heard but also I've heard no drugs whatsoever so I'd probably get bored.