GUESTBOOK

Friday, September 27, 2013

MY LATEST TRIP: MOMENTS, TASTES, SCENES, ARCHITECTURE, PEOPLE AND MORE... #12

#6 BRATISLAVA NOT IN A HURRY

Fairs, market places and markets
 are one of the complements of the mood and atmosphere of cities, towns and villages, aren't they?


Bratislava has not many but a few markets. Let me share with you my visit to three of them. I started by wandering through Mileticka, the city's main and largest open air market, where locals who want to buy vegetables, early every morning set off for it, and simultaneously a place where they can not only do their perishables shopping but also eat and drink...
I noticed that, in general, Bratislava people, particularly at the markets, didn't look at ease with foreigners, a fact that didn't enable me to get as many shots as it would have been desirable. The photo below was the exception that confirmed the rule. Surprisingly, the three young men promptly accepted my request.




Anyone can come to the market and sell almost anything. Look at the photo below and you see an old woman, perhaps living on her own and selling goods as a way to complement her pension.  This unregulated market allows her that opportunity... 

A large section of the Mileticka or Mileticova market as it's often called, has stalls that sell goods/services regularly. Those stands are often owned by Vietnamese vendors. During the Cold War, Vietnam, as a communist country, was considered an ally of the then Czechoslovakia. As a result, Vietnam sent thousands of its students and workers to then-Czechoslovakia decades ago so that the they could improve their skills in another Communist country. Many of them stayed. According to an estimate, there were as many as 20,000 Vietnamese in Slovakia in the late 1990s. The market stalls are their most obvious legacy. 

I saw them in everything from underwear, luggage, electronics, cosmetics, etc. In each stand the same... 
I noticed, however, that some of them are more entrepreneurial than others. In one booth, I saw a Vietnamese woman using a sewing machine to shorten a client's slacks. Quite an interesting service. I asked permission to take a photo but she, like all other Vietnamese, never allowed. They must have their own reasons...

When I needed to quench my thirst in that hot-weathered Bratislava, I looked for something very Slovakian - a glass of fresh, crispy beer CORGON. Though, I very very seldom have beer or any alcoholic drink, I wanted to try it. It was excellent!
 I gave a quick look at Jedlikova open-air market, off the city's main shopping street. On sale there were mainly clothes and accessories. Again, many of the sellers were Asian people.  I didn't enjoy having a wander around it. Not my type of market... no smells, no sounds... Not interesting at all, excluding some restaurants, pubs and caffés, nearby.
The photo below shows a restaurant/bar located inside the market area. You don't see buyers and/or sellers. The market was already closed at the time I took this shot.

The next and last stop is at a covered market, built in 1978, opened in 1981 and since then it looks as if time has stopped.  I found a good variety of fruits, vegetables and cut flowers, but also many China made clothing and others.














The slideshow below shows you further aspects of the markets and a few scenes of the shopping street off which Jedlikova market is located. 
Enjoy!



~~ Thank you! ~~
~~ Have a wonderful weekend ~~

8 comments:

  1. Hi Belita!! Another interesting part of your Bratislava tour. Markets can often be interesting places for both people and produce. I always prefer the fresh food markets myself, they always look more interesting . A great set of shots :-))

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    1. Thanks, Mitch! In fact, I have already seen much more interesting and colourful markets than those three in Bratislava. Even though, I thought that it might be good to introduce them on here, just to give an idea what they are like.

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  2. These markets are not very busy but they are are a good way of knowing the people and their basic needs. Always shows us this side of the places as you are a great observer.

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  3. What a wonderful tour guide you are!!!! Loved every minute of it, both reading and viewing your wonderful photos...including your fabulous slideshow! So very different from here.....though the cultures seem strange, they are quite thrilling to see how other parts of the world lives....

    Enjoyed very much...TY, Belita!

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    1. Thanks, Linda, for having accepted to be guided by me. It's already a pleasure to share on here my thoughts and my impressions with people like you... thank you!

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  4. I loved to read your chapters of your trip :)

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    1. I'm glad to know your visit on here has not been a waste of your time... Thank you!

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