January 24, 2010

Lunch with Yulia

Lunch with our landlady was a nice experience. She lives outside the city of Moscow. Its about a 30 minute drive. You have to drive to a place called "Luxury village". This was not my first time visiting "luxury village" I had the unusual experience before Christmas of teaching an Oligarchs son near where our landlady lives in Luxury Village.

Yulia (Julia) lives in one of the many gated private villages that seem to be common here in and around Moscow. We have gated communities in Britain, but they are few and far between. I would not mind living in one, if I could afford it, they are safer and cleaner than regular housing estates.

Yulia, made an excellent lunch of crab salad, red caviar eggs, salmon, meat burgers and mashed potato. This was all washed down with large amounts of red and white wine. I noticed that Yulia liked to make many toasts, maybe that a Russian thing to toast to everything? I like the idea a lot. A toast to welcome us to her home, a toast for the New Year, a toast for good health, a toast to us, a toast to this and a toast to that. I did not take part, as I was the unlucky driver. Her house is big and wooden. She told us that it has been in her late husbands family for years and that the land was spilt up, half was given to one son and the other half was given to another son (her late husband), the brothers did not speak to each other. The house is surrounded by birch forest and very peaceful, and the air is clean and fresh. Fresh, clean air is a luxury when you live in Moscow.

Or rent supports Yulia and her old sick mother, of course Yulia has no mortgage, (as far as I can assume), so our money must give her a good life style. She is a widow, her husband died a few years ago, he was a famous Russian actor, who's name I don't know and could not pronounce anyway. The house she lives in, is her former holiday house or "Dacha", the flat we live in, is her former city residence. She told me they used to spend the summer at the Dacha and the winter at their city flat, where we now live. Its a modest flat, small and not at all luxurious (despite the rent price) , but its only a 15 minuet walk to the Kremlin, so we are paying for the location. It a hard and large pill to swallow, since I know everyone else that lives in our block of flats, certainly does not pay the rent we pay,(or any rent) so its does make me a bit angry but rent is rent. We can't live for free.

I told my wife not to become too friendly with her, as after one year she may decide to increase the rent. We did agree to fix it for two years, but its common in Russia for flat owners to just increase the rent as and when they feel like it. If she does increase it, we will move and she will have to search all over again for a tenant willing to pay her the rent that she demands. However, she is a kind person and we are lucky to have chosen a nice landlady. This is very important when renting in Moscow, choose your landlord/Landlady carefully, you will save problems later.

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3 comments:

  1. I guess i know Yulia you're talking about and if it's true you don't have to be surprise the rent you're paying for your flat. That wasn't simply famous actor. It was Russian and even Soviet super movie and theatre star.Every adult russian can say that he really did know and liked the Actor.Well,it was really hard for her to survive after his death (according to the press the Actor didn't make his will, therefore there were some pretenders for his inheritance.His mother and brother asked Yulia to redeem their shares. So Yulia with the help of her husband's friend redeem it all. No one knows how much she paid (and if she's in debts now) but the Actor's inheritance estimates about 5 billon US dollars (all this was said in press about 1,5 y.ago.So if you were in US and stayed in a flat where some day lived some famous actor or artist would you grumble a lot about that?)). Here you just hit the bulls eye you touched some russian history. For this Actor is surely a history of my country and my history for more then 40 years... Respectfully, Oleg

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  2. Oleg

    Yulia is not her real name!! I never use real names on a blog or on the www for privacy!

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  3. I'm glad you cleared that up. Yulia is not her real name. Interesting story though. The lunch sounds good, you got to see a different type of place even if it is the landlady who lives there and you got a great lunch to eat.

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