I had to go shopping on a bicycle
today. It was a frigging nightmare. Luckily the snow had stopped and some rain
had sort of made the pathway only semi-suicidal. Oh the irony!
I have totally rewritten the
chapter about the history of Rhodesian bikes taking me for a ride and here I
am, an old tired man and I am forced to mount another invention designed to
kill me.
I haven’t thought up a name yet for
this contraption that has been leant to me. It was designed for the Jolly Green
Giant, not Miserable Shortarse Greenberg. Still, no pain, no gain and with
supplies running low, I strapped on the little suitcase to the back and with
trusty rucksack on my back went off into the Bavarian countryside towards the
few shops eking out a living. I mean this city (CITY!, oh give over, they don’t
even have a post office), makes Gokwe look like a tourist resort.
So I peddle away, skinny bum
hurting from the even skinny saddle, thighs aching and after what seemed an
eternity, get to this place where they have a Penny discount supermarket, a 1
Euro junk shop and KiK clothes
and cheap shite store. Ironically, opposite is a huge Porsche car dealer. Not that you actually see many customers
crossing the road in either direction. The lot looking at the Porsches wouldn’t
be seen dead at Penny and those
spending a penny (or 1 Euro) were lucky to, well, have heels on their shoes.
In KiK, I am very pleased to get three pairs of warm socks for three
Euros. I need them as quite few of my socks have some serious holes in them. I
also reluctantly, had to buy another winter jacket because the last one I
bought from the same shop has been used for work. (Yes, I do occasionally
work.) I was hoping to get the same jacket. Sadly they had sold out. But I
grabbed a compromise and off I went to the next place.
Heading back home, and a small
detour past the cemetery where a passing car nearly put me in it because I
forgotten that they drive backwards here, I screamingly forked out over eight
Euros for some fag filters and papers. Mounting the monstrosity, it was back
down to the ‘local’ supermarket Netto.
Luckily for me they had restocked the Weissbeer from my last visit and before
any other alcoholics laid claim to them, I had 4 by 6 plastic bottles of the
stuff in my trolley.
Then it is push the wheeled basket
to my all time favorite hole – the deposit machine. Cracking fun. You fire all
your empties into it and the fancy lasers and spinning wheels and stuff do a
right merry jig examining what you just placed in it. Then satisfied, it takes
it away and you feed in the next one. Not too fast hey, because in Netto, they do all sorts (not like Penny which only crushes the plastic
bottles), Netto even takes glass
bottles and tins! Amazing. Thing is, behind the hole is a rather complicated
set up and if you feed your empties too quick some bird starts chirping nastily
in German because the whole lot has piled up and is now crashing onto the
floor. Great laugh. Me thinks the crooked
Brits could have a ball here. Load up trucks full of all the flotsam of plastic
bottles and tins littering most of the country; drive down and with a scanned
real code fraudulent sticker on the shit, they could make a bloody fortune
fucking the Krauts over again whilst cleaning up there own backyard. I kid you
not. There is serious dosh to be made. Here, the Bavarians don’t believe in the
British hogwash about cheap beer causing binge drinking, so half a litre of top
class beer is still only 33 cents…but, the deposit on the bottle is 15! How
about that then? That’s why you don’t see any binge drinkers here – they can’t
hang around because they too busy bringing the empties back. It is called
exercise and keeps them fit.
So, back to me stocking up for Xmas
on my own (thank God); I had to be very rational. They are rather Holy Joes
here and shops are not open on Sundays or public holidays. I needed four days
supplies. Food isn’t a problem, beer is. So calculating my future input down to
the last sip till reload, along with a frozen chicken and a special offer tin
of ravioli and a giant 500 gramme tube of salami (plus a few small bits and
bobs), it is with huge fear and difficulty I strap the bulging case onto the
rack and stick the exploding rucksack on my back.
I set off and nearly get creamed at
the first bend as the dangerously flexing machine seems to have taken a mind of
it its own and not even shouting in fluent Bavarian at it “Verdamt Sheisse ich
wird dich Schmelzen Sie unten in Sarggriffe,”
(roughly translated – “You damn shit, I will have melted down into coffin
handles.”), seemed to help.
Then, to add more problems to this
death ride, this thing has more gears than the average shift changes of African
dictators. In my panic I start to get confused between up and down and nearly spilt
a gut on the up and scream hysterically on the downs because I can’t peddle
fast enough to change the gears back to up or fucking down or I haven’t a clue,
and my left hand is desperately trying to keep a huge mound of beer on the back
from tipping off and making the foraging crows pissed out their boxes from the
exploded contents on the pathway whilst negotiating snow slush, shouting at old
biddies insisting on taking their mangy dogs for a walk just at the moment I am
risking life and limb to quench a fucking serious thirst I have now worked up
because I am sweating like a kosher pig.
Which now brings us to eggs, chips
and salami. You see, as I unpacked, shaking all over from the exertion and the
fact that somehow I had survived (oh, I have one of those weighing things and
for a laugh, it turns out rack pack was 18 kg and rucksack 9 kg), I pulled out
this huge sausage of salami and suddenly remembered a little anecdote I forgot
to put into a chapter called - ‘Food, food everywhere, but not a thing to eat.’
I quickly noted this down - as you
do when you’re a writer. But as I put things away (beer) into the fridge and
some down my gasping gullet, a sneaky plan dawned. So sneaky – you’re reading
it, because in a way those two chapters about food and bicycles suddenly
combine and leap forward three decades. Well, you will have to read them but,
as far as the salami is concerned –
Sometimes even my step-mum
Katherine, surpassed herself in burnt offerings that even my Jewish father
would consider God may have thought it was taken a bit too far. He would gabble
some lies about it being wonderful, but sadly his palette wasn’t quite up to
it. But not to worry hey, he sort himself out and dash into the kitchen and
one, two, three, potatos peeled and chop, chop, chop, ten slices of (kosher)
salami fired into the chip pan and just as the aroma hit my quivering nostrils (as
I was forced to attempt to consume the muck on my plate), in went two fried
eggs. The greasy pile would be devoured before my starving eyes without a hint
of guilt.
Guess what I am having for dinner
tonight? Well not quite, it seems the eggs are knocking on a bit, so it is
fried salami and ravioli.
Now, if any moaners think I can
snick this chapter into the next book, well think about it. You are getting it now
on credit…HEY!