The
landmark for finding my way back to the apartment is turn
left at the UNIX garage. At least for the first couple of
days I thought UNIX was the name of the garage, which is
funny enough and adds a whole new meaning to UNIX
drivers. Then today I saw the same UNIX sign on another
garage on Bartók Béla út downtown so
I figured it must be something the garage sells. When I
walked home past the garage tonight I looked more closely
at the sign and saw the work
autóalkatrészek in smaller letters
underneath the UNIX logo. So, the garage sells UNIX auto
parts! Somehow that's even funnier than being named the
UNIX garage. UNIX auto parts!
I'm
getting to know the sights and sounds and even fragrances
of my little neighborhood. There's a fragrant mint plant
growing on the sidewalk in front of the house. I can
smell the pleasant scent from two houses away. This is
how I recognize the house because there's no number on
it. Just open the gate with the "beware of dog" sign next
to the mint plant. There's a beware of the dog sign on
the gate here but no dog. This may be the only house on
the street without a dog. The neighborhood dogs really
get a good chorus going around 10:00 at night. They bark
at me individually when I pass each of their gates in the
morning. At night and in the morning the predominant
sounds here are dogs barking and collared
doves cooing their long
coo-coooooooo-cuh song. At night there are also amazing
numbers of crickets singing.
The train I take every morning goes
past the Roman site at Aquincum. A military amphitheater
looks pretty imposing on one side of the tracks.
Foundations and a few columns, plus the museum that
explains it all are across the highway on the other side
of the tracks. The remains of a Roman aqueduct are
preserved in the median strip of the highway. Ancient and
modern. Commute through history.
Besides Roman ruins, the commute on
public transportation provides lots of people watching
opportunities with little vignettes of life. The first
night that I took the #19 tram from out by where
István and Marti are house sitting, I watched a
young man dancing with a middle-aged woman in one of
those Sörbar (beer joint) places along the tracks.
There's a whole strip of little beer bars and wine bars
and tiny casinos near many of the stations. The bar was
brightly lit and they were dancing in front of the open
doorway. The thumping bass penetrated everything. The
young man was exaggeratedly polite and the woman quite
stately. The man danced around the woman doing gyrations
and sexy moves while the woman just kept dancing the same
sedate step in time to the music.
Another night some weirdo in the
metro station kept trying to kiss me, exclaiming "Csok,
csok!" (Kiss, kiss!) in between sucking his thumb and
trying to get his hands on me. When the train came, I
made sure he was on it and the door closed while I waited
for the next train. There are nut cases in every culture.
It certainly makes for an interesting commute.