Lol. I googled your village. You have Paryzius next door)) A picturesque forest, but without lighting at night it is probably risky to walk here because of car traffic?
thanks to tactical gloves, the palms were not as damaged as they could be. Bruises in general. Yesterday it hurt to play video games. Mostly palms, wrists and elbows were affected. The driver offered to help me, but I told him that everything was ok and he left. Today I was already able to lift the bathtub and use a shovel, but there is still pain.
I fell off my bike 2 days ago when I wanted to give way to blue Izh, the rear brake does not work well. Since we had already repaired the brake twice, I consulted with my mother and decided to exchange the bike.
What bike do you have? Mine is Kharkov-made Formula model 2019, something middle between MTB and city bike. I bought it in the April. It has deflated and punctured tires so I replaced them. New tires were more expensive than bike lol
Do you have a driver license? I have a d.l., but I haven't enough money to buy a moped. I hope to raise money for an electric scooter but by this summer I don’t have time to raise money
yes, it is. in fact, the Russian language is dearer to me than Ukrainian. I think Google translate are good in indo-european languages. But there will probably be problems with the moonspeak))0) but I have not yet had the opportunity to communicate with the Japanese.
I really love traveling and I want to go on them, but my longest journey, which I made at my own expense, was 150 km of the Dnieper-Ordzhonikidze in our region at the age of 22. When I was 8 years old, my parents took me to Transcarpathia, 1079 km from home, and so far this is the farthest place where I have been. Also last year I made my longest cycling trip - 66.3 km to the village of Novoselovka. I have been planning for 3 years how to go abroad, but either the coronavirus or the Russian invasion interfere. I wanted to start with Moldova, because it is the closest country to us, apart from Russia and Belarus, where it is legal to travel. Although I have a foreign passport, Ukrainians can enter Moldova on the internal one. I have, in case the telephone connection is lost, there are phrasebooks of Polish, Czech and Romanian.
As for Lithuania, my aunt was there, in Trakai. She was traveling by bus in transit through Belarus and Lithuania to Latvia. I would also like to visit, but during the war it is, alas, impossible. I don't remember much, it was 2019. My parents really do not want me to be drafted into the army, so I have to stay at home until April.
Do you prefer to travel on foot, by bike or by public transport?
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Tinkai pažiūrėsiu!! \^o^/
I really love traveling and I want to go on them, but my longest journey, which I made at my own expense, was 150 km of the Dnieper-Ordzhonikidze in our region at the age of 22. When I was 8 years old, my parents took me to Transcarpathia, 1079 km from home, and so far this is the farthest place where I have been. Also last year I made my longest cycling trip - 66.3 km to the village of Novoselovka. I have been planning for 3 years how to go abroad, but either the coronavirus or the Russian invasion interfere. I wanted to start with Moldova, because it is the closest country to us, apart from Russia and Belarus, where it is legal to travel. Although I have a foreign passport, Ukrainians can enter Moldova on the internal one. I have, in case the telephone connection is lost, there are phrasebooks of Polish, Czech and Romanian.
As for Lithuania, my aunt was there, in Trakai. She was traveling by bus in transit through Belarus and Lithuania to Latvia. I would also like to visit, but during the war it is, alas, impossible. I don't remember much, it was 2019. My parents really do not want me to be drafted into the army, so I have to stay at home until April.
Do you prefer to travel on foot, by bike or by public transport?
🏴Hmm, maybe I try to speak Lithuanian using Google translate...