This article was written for the Khamar-Dhaban Camp Report (featured in a picture below):
A few potatos, carrots, onions, some oil, a can of meat and pasta or rice--that's the staple meal of GBT volunteers in the Khamar-Dhaban. It is a hearty diety for the volunteer trail builders who spend hours unearthing rocks, lopping branches and moving soil. When they return to camp they are rewarded with bottomless bowls of hot soup and cups full of steaming tea. Volunteer Bach from Germany commented, "The salad is always good and I found the fish soup good for me...everytime I'm full."
However, a recent poll found that sweetened condensed milk by the heaping spoonful in tea, on bread, with cookies or alone is addicting and absolutely necessary to maintaining a health happy work camp. "Without the gooey goodness, I'm not sure I could survive each day" commened a blonde Russian volunteer. Even after multiple projects, Sally from Bostom is almost speechless about her obsession, "what can you say about something that is so perfect?"
At the end of the day, when all the soup is gone and everyone is sitting by the campfire, ther eis just one thing they all speak of, that Goodness Beneath Tin (GBT). "I don't care if each spoonful is plugging my arteries, it's delicious," said Johnny from Portland, OR. In ten years when I remember my two weeks in the Khamar-Dhaban, I'll remember spoonfuls of sticky sweet milk with every meal--the real reward after a hard day's work.
Friday, August 31, 2007
G.B.T. (Goodness Beneath Tin)
Labels:
camping,
Great Baikal Trail,
Lake Baikal,
milk,
russia,
sweetened condensed milk,
sweets
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment