Sunday, May 24, 2020

First Month of Quarantine (COVID-19)

One of the last normal things that we did before the world exploded with coronavirus was Nika's birthday. She turned 15 this February and as usually we celebrated in our little family circle. She wanted to have tacos for dinner and tacos she got!

Tacos with homemade flour tortillas! Yum!

Her sisters got her this shirt for her birthday and we got her a FitBit. She also got some money from us and from her Babushka. All of the gifts made her happy. She's been talking about FitBit for a couple of years now and was trying to convince us that she absolutely needed it to motivate her to exercise more and to show us that she walks a lot more steps a day than either Spencer or I. Well, three months later she is consistently in 3rd place (I guess FitBit is not a good motivation after all). 


Nika picked pumpkin pie to have for breakfast (yes, we are that crazy family that eats pies and cakes for breakfast!) and brownies for her birthday cake (pictured here). Yep, she's got a sweet tooth. No, actually she has something like 28 sweet teeth!
And the very last normal thing that we did was celebrating 8th of March (Women's Day here in this part of the world). It was also the last day we gathered together as a branch of our church. Just four days later Kazakhstan had its first official case of COVID-19, and two days later they shut down all of the schools in the country as well as all of the extracurricular activities for the kids (a sad day for our kids as they loved doing their sports and music). A few days later the government put the two major cities, Nur-Sultan (where we live) and Almaty on a complete lock-down with other cities to follow. The students at the universities had to leave campus and move to online learning. Our campus became like a ghost town in a matter of a few days. Spencer joined the rest of us at home and finished teaching the rest of his school year from our bedroom. For many weeks we were not allowed to leave home except for grocery shopping or pharmacy or to take our dog on a short walk. We took our dog on many short walks throughout the day so we could also take one of the kids out along with the dog (kids under 18 could not be out without parents). 

Celebrating 8th of March and not knowing what chaos that week is going to bring.

When they first announced that our city will be on lock-down, the very next day grocery stores saw crowds like never before. People were stocking up on grains, flower, shelf-stable milk, toilet paper and other necessities. The craziness lasted only for a couple of days. Amazingly, the stores stayed well-stocked during the entire quarantine unlike the stores in America.

On Sundays we held (and are still doing it) our home church meetings with just our family since we couldn't gather together with other church members. We improvised  by using medicine measuring cups (I am not sure why I was saving those over the years but they came in handy at the time of crisis) for our sacrament.

Ready for home church.

Nika and Lina both finished their Personal Progress Program in Young Women (usually girls would finish this program in their junior or senior year of high school but when Nika and Lina learned that the program will be discontinued, they worked especially hard to finish it much earlier)  and received their Woman in Excellence Awards. Lina got hers back in January but Nika received hers on March 8th (the last day of our official church meetings).  Here they are both sporting their medallions.

We've played a lot of these and other games together in quarantine.


The very first week they still allowed kids to be on campus without parents supervision, and since the girls could not do their track and figure skating any longer, they exercised outside. 



That first week we also took walks together with the girls once a day. The spring came to Kazakhstan very early this year (usually we still have freezing day temperatures at the beginning of April) but this year snow started to melt by the middle of March. This is what was left of NU Winter Park that they built this year for the first time.

Outdoor skating rink. You can't see it in the picture, but there is a big puddle in the middle of it.

Yuki likes this kind of weather!


She could totally be NU mascot!


Our crew.

We had to adjust our lives while in quarantine and one of those things is that we had to do a lot more cooking. But everyone pitched in and we learned to cook a lot of new dishes. The kids are turning into amazing little chefs, and Spencer and I ... well, we are turning into very creative big chefs! :) 

Here is Sophie and Lexa working on their dessert which is in the picture bellow...

Baklava!


Nika continues to perfect her baking skills and now she is a pro at making the best cookies ever that just melt in your mouth...

... Brownie Cookies

Lina continues to specialize in Asian cooking and during quarantine she tried and successfully created a few Asian dishes. Our absolute favorite are these ...

Chicken (and later she did spinach and mushroom) filled Chinese dumplings. 

I do not have a picture of Spencer and I in the kitchen but here is Spencer's new dish that we often have on Sundays - Moroccan Stew!!!

And as for me, in the last few weeks I learned to make a lot of new salads and breads, one of our favorite being these pretzel rolls.
Our life in quarantine was different, but good.  We were healthy and happy and still had a job and access to food, clean water, and communication.  We were not planning on spending the spring this way, but we were making the best of it.

To be continued...