Zooks Goes to Viljandi.

Tere!

On 22 of July 2021, I visited a small town in the south of Estonia called Viljandi!

From Tallinn you can go there by train. (Maybe there are busses, but I didn’t consider it at all this time.)

Recently I got a card called Work Ability Card issued. I will write the details about it in the future though. (I didn’t spontaneously issue one, and I didn’t know that such a card existed until I got one.) The card indicates my work ability; either I can work partially or not at all.

Then I found that I can use that card when buying a train ticket on Elron which is an Estonian railroad. I usually bought regular tickets on Elron so far, but this time I bought discounted tickets.

This discount is applied to pensioners, those who are disabled, and someone who can work partially or not at all. If you buy such a ticket, you need to show the certificate on the train. In my case I would need to show my Work Ability Card. (You can read more about it here.)

It takes a couple of hours from Tallinn to Viljandi. However, Viljandi doesn’t have many sightseeing places, due to which I bought round tickets, selecting the time when I could arrive in Tallinn in the pre-evening. A regular one-way ticket costs 7 euro, and yet my discount ticket cost about 5 euro, so 10 euro in total.


Table of Contents
Arrival in Viljandi
To the Main Destinations
Cafe Viljandi
Legend
Others


★Arrival in Viljandi

I planned to go to some sightseeing places, have lunch, take some break, and go home after spending approximately two hours on the train.

One of the surprising facts about Viljandi is that there are (relatively) more slopes. Compared to my hometown, those were just hills, but in contrast to Tallinn there were a few more steep slopes in Viljandi.

The first destination was Kondase Keskus. This is an art museum, but this time I wasn’t that interested in it, so I took a photo of the statue of the strawberry in front of the entrance.

To be honest, I went there just because I wanted to see this strawberry. In fact, such strawberries are here and there in Viljandi, and as far as I know, there was one in the station and near a hotel.

I don’t know what its concept is.

★To the Main Destinations

In Viljandi, there is an abandoned castle as well as a bridge on a hill. I wanted to go there, but I couldn’t because there was a festival on the hill.

Just in case, I asked a festival staff at one of the entrances whether the castle and the bridge are in the festival area. She said yes, and I thought:






Why did I freaking come to Viljandi…?




I was so shocked.

This is because those were my main purposes, I like castles, and the bridge seemed beautiful.

It was still 10.30ish, so many cafes and restaurants around the hill were still closed. Thus it wasn’t straightforward to find an open cafe.

★Cafe Viljandi

Then I managed to find one called Cafe Viljandi. That day I had freelance work, which had to be done on the train, so I had my laptop.

I changed my plan; I would drink something and do some work on my computer.

The inside was so empty (of course), so I got a huge table just for me. I looked up the menu and found “Viljandi Beer”.

I want to try it!

Then I ordered.





Sorry no.




I think she meant that they couldn’t serve alcohol owing to the time.

That day I woke up at 6.00 for the first time in a while, and I was already hungry, so I forgot but it wasn’t even 11 am at that time.

I couldn’t go to the hill, and couldn’t order a beer…

I was shocked and even more shocked. 

Anyway I needed to order something, wondering about what to get, and I found Irish coffee for only 4 euro!

This is really cheap. Even in Tallinn Irish coffee costs at least 6 euro. What is more, in Ireland it should cost at least 6-7 euro.

So Irish coffee in Viljandi is really cheap!

It was a great opportunity though other types of coffee were cheaper, I ordered Irish coffee.

My review is:






There was little whiskey in it.




I think it was cheap as they didn’t use much whiskey.

Then I was about to work on my laptop, asking a staff about WiFi, and she said:






We don’t have WiFi.




No way!

For the first time ever, I heard there was no WiFi in a cafe in Estonia…

I think this is not good as a town in Estonia

They should have WiFi in a cafe if they have WiFi in the woods.

My review on Viljandi was getting so low.

I gave up working online, so I wrote a draft of this article on Word.

Then in my mind I thought:






I would never come to Vlijandi again.

This is because this trip was the worst ever. (Poland is also a travel destination that I would never go again except for the purpose of necessity or Auschwitz.)

By the way, I have been to Tartu, Pärnu. Rakvere, and Narva in terms of destinations in Estonia. Rakvere and Tartu were the best ones.

Of course Viljandi is the worst one.

★Legend

After spending some time in the cafe, I went to a restaurant called Legend as I was hungry.

They have terrace seats, but it seemed those were somewhere slightly far from the restaurant, and I wasn’t aware of it, getting a seat inside.

I wanted WiFi anyway.

I went to the counter and checked the menu, but it seemed available only in Estonian. However, I could understand at least the menu, so it wasn’t problematic for me.

I chose a burger that shouldn’t be untasty. Here’s some fact; in Estonia there are so many burger shops. If you want to eat out, burgers are available pretty anywhere.

Considering that, I thought I was lucky to be Japanese because there are a lot of types of dishes, with which we can enjoy different cultures. We can do this only in Japan. (But perhaps so is China.)

Then the burger was served; it had an ordinary look.

The taste was ordinary too. No good, but no bad. The ingredients were ordinary as well.

I can’t make any more comments about it.

There were chips aside, and a cup of mayonnaise for them.

I know the Estonians love mayonnaise.

It’s not rare to have mayonnaise as a default sauce for appetizers everywhere.






However I don’t like mayonnaise.




It’s said that the Western people like Japanese mayonnaise, but personally the Japanese mayonnaise is the worst. For me European mayonnaise is better. But still I can’t take it unless it’s used for egg salad sandwiches, tuna sandwiches or sauce for a burger.

Anyway, I dipped a few chips with mayonnaise, but not more than that. The chips were salty enough.

★Others

After spending one hour at the restaurant, I went to Coop which is a supermarket usually in relatively rural areas. I looked for Viljandi beer but there was nothing.

I didn’t have anything to do, so I headed to the station.

I was walking, thinking:






I don’t want to live in such a countryside.

Though I’m from the countryside.

Maybe this is because I don’t have local friends there, and just didn’t know about fun places.

Besides, when I was walking, following the Google map, I found the main road was under construction, and got a cloud of dust. What a bad day.

I stayed in Viljandi for about five hours, which was long enough.

If you are interested in Viljandi, just try. For me a day trip was satisfactory enough.

I rather want to go abroad.

あー外国へ行きたい。

Aitäh! 😊

Zooks Declares VAT in Estonia.

Tere!

Since the 1st of July 2021, regulations about VAT on parcels to Estonia (or maybe I should say the EU) have changed. Before that, we didn’t have to declare and pay for VAT if a parcel’s value was under a certain amount. However, from the 1st of July 2021, we came to have to declare parcels from outside of the EU. (Yet, regulations for gifts from family members or friends are exceptional.)

In the latter half of July 2021, I strongly wanted to learn Swedish from the beginning in addition to Estonian. Then I looked for a Swedish learning textbook at Rahva Raamat (an Estonian book store chain), and found one book called “The Swedish Girl” (because I searched with the word “Swedish”). Reading the overview, it seemed to be a detective story which I like, so I searched for the same book on Amazon DE so that  I could buy it more cheaply.

Then I found a second-hand book. The book itself cost only 4 euro, and the delivery fee was around 3 euro. I’m not sure if it was because of the COVID-19, but it said the book would arrive in a couple of weeks. (Considering the geography, the delivery is pretty slow.)

One day in August, I checked my mailbox which I hardly checked, I found two letters from Omniva (an Estonian postal company). One of them was delivered at the end of July, and the other one arrived at the beginning of August. (I thought both were the same contents though.)

Opening the letters, it was written in Estonian, but I roughly understood that

I had to declare the book that I bought on Amazon DE the other day.

However, I still couldn’t believe it because the sender’s country was the UK. (I thought it should come from Germany as I ordered it on Amazon DE.)

Therefore, this time I’m talking about the declaration of the VAT on the book from the UK (or maybe I rather should say this is how to declare parcels).


Table of Contents
★How to Declare
1) Check the letter from Omniva
2) Access MTA
3) Log in EMTA
4) Specify the Parcel
5) Enter Items
6) Error Occured
7) Payment
8) Finishing
★Arrival of the Book
★In Case of Gifts

★How to Declare

1) Check the letter from Omniva

First of all, roughly check the contents of the letter from Omniva. There are two sections in the letter.

In fact there are two ways to declare: one is to do it on your own, and the other one is to ask Omniva to do it. The latter costs, so I did it by myself. (Later I noticed that the order of the sections seemed random.)

2) Access MTA

In my case section 1 had a link to access the MTA to know how to declare, so I did.

3) Log in EMTA

EMTA is an Estonian tax portal. In the page that I accessed above, it was written how to do it (briefly), so I followed.

4) Specifiy the Parcel

On EMTA, firstly, you need to specify the parcel that you are supposed to obtain. The tracking number is the one in the letter from Omniva, which starts ”Saadetise nr”.

Number of previous documents (MRN) is available from the link in the other section in the letter from Omniva. (At this point, I didn’t know what MRN was, so I randomly wrote “0”.)

5) Enter Items

There are several items that you need to enter.

6) Error Occured

As mentioned, I thought the other link in the letter was the one to ask Omniva to declare, and I randomly wrote “0”, so I encountered an error. If you enter the information from the link in the letter, you can go next.

7) Payment

Once entering the items, you go to the payment page.

In my case I paid only 0.63 euro.

Considering the price of the book and the delivery fee, it was understandable, but I thought:

Do I really need to pay for such a small amount?

Anyway, without the payment, I wouldn’t have gotten the parcel so I paid.

8) Finishing

If you complete the declaration, the completion message will pop up.

All you need to do is to just wait for the parcel to arrive.

★Arrival of the Book

After several days, the book arrived.

It wasn’t a paperback but a hard-cover. I opened the book, and found something that it was used in the library.

I thought someone sold the book that they borrowed from the library, but I paid so I just started reading.

★In Case of Gifts

Also, after that, my friend in Japan sent me a super belated birthday gift, which value was less than 22 euro.

Therefore, I thought I could get like before, but the system had changed, and even though it was a gift, I still had to declare. (Omniva didn’t mention this at all!)

In terms of gifts, you would need the sender’s information, so when your family member or friends send you something, ask them to keep the receipts as well as other paper or digital information.

You may think:

But we can enter random information, can’t we?

You will need to upload proofs of the contents and their values. I didn’t know it either, and my friend already threw her receipt away too.

For this reason, she got the information online, and asked her to give me screenshots of that, and its (machine) translation.

I was still worried, but it went well. After that, I got a parcel from her.

So be careful when you get something from outside of the EU!

Aitäh! 🙂

Zooks Bums for Three Months in Estonia.

Tere!

Technically speaking, I did not bum or was not completely unemployed as I had some other freelance job every other week. (I have a Japanese colleague who lives in the U.S. and we take turns every other week.)

However, even though I worked every other week, the income was not so much, so there was little difference between when I had work and when I didn’t.

Then what have I been doing?

Of course in the beginning, I tried so hard to get a job. I had some savings with which I could live a life for several months, but such savings would run out some day, and in Estonia the unemployment allowance is not so big (which is around 180 EUR or so), so I wanted to get a job as soon as possible.


Table of Contents
Difficult to get a job in summer in Estonia
What I had done during the unemployment
A sudden email
Skill up
Unregistration on Estonian Unemployment


★Difficult to get a job in summer in Estonia

I was fired in May, and sometime in June, I received an email from one of Estonian job search platforms about a job that I saved just in case, so I made a CV and cover letter shortly.

Luckily, I had the second interview, where they said they stopped hiring people, and they wanted to ask me if I would still be available in autumn.

I told this to my friend, he said this was a common way in Estonia because in summer they are on holidays and usually don’t need new people.

After that, I applied for some other jobs since I got offers from Malta or Manchester, the UK, but the interviews and portfolio were not successful. (I’m usually okay with interviews, but as for the job in Malta, they didn’t proceed due to the fact I was fired. However, it was more like failing a probation because the supply and demand didn’t match. I wasn’t that interested in that new job anyway though.)

Therefore, it is up to you whether to quit a job in summer without the next determined destination, but it might be hard to find.

★What I had done during the unemployment

Praying to be hired in autumn, I still continued job hunting, I did many other things. With the tax return in March, I bought a new iPad Air (the one that you can choose a colour) as well as Procreate (which is a drawing app), and I had drawn something for 30 days.

This is harder than it sounds because my drawing skill is quite good but I didn’t have any skill to use such technology. Therefore, it is still difficult for me to use the app. However, I killed time, and completed a project, so all is good.

Simultaneously, I practised human posing using the posing book that I downloaded a long time ago. I did two pages – four angles a day.

This was an easier task than the Procreate challenge, and although it took 10 to 15 minutes at maximum, one book had many poses, so I started in the middle of June and finished on the first of August.

Also I resumed learning coding. I have used an app called Mimo which I used while I was in the hospital.

It looks like a game, and if you don’t purchase anything, then you consume one heart out of five every mistake. It takes four hours to get the next full heart, so with a free mode, I did in the morning, consuming all the hearts, and after one night, I got five full hearts again.

Personally it took 30 minutes to use all the hearts at maximum, and 10 minutes at minimum.

However, even though I did those three activities, everything was done basically in the morning, so I had a lot of time in the afternoon.

Occasionally I made postcards or took a nap because I couldn’t sleep at night. My mental health was not good, so I was quite depressed even though it was summer.

I also learnt Estonian using a platform, but I finished it all in June. At this time I thought I wanted to take an exam someday, so I guessed maybe it was a good idea to start studying for the exam.

I am a person who basically does not like to be bored and have plans all the time, so this unemployed time was like a torture. I also think I relatively have more hobbies than usual people, but depending on the situation, I couldn’t do them all. However, I believe that unhealthy mental conditions were the biggest cause. I was scared to be unemployed for more than half a year.

★A sudden email

Then it became July, and on the first Monday in July, I suddenly received an email. I opened it and found that it was from a company who told me to ask me again in autumn.

They mentioned that their business had grown faster than expected, so they changed their mind to hire people now. Of course I accepted. I don’t miss any opportunity.

★Skill up

When I received an email suddenly, I had no idea what to do, and my mood was still down, so I had lots of empty time, but from the following week I got way more active.

Perhaps this was because I could finally buy medicine that I couldn’t buy for a while. (Strictly speaking, I used this medicine of 150 mg, but it was not effective, and requested my doctor to increase it to 300 mg.)

Otherwise, I basically drew manga about my mental condition and situations or wrote some other blog articles. After that week, I got better enough to learn Estonian again. Then one thing came up to my mind strongly:






I want to learn Swedish again!




I might summarise what I have learnt from Estonian and Swedish learning, and make them serieses to upload here so I’m not going to talk about them here now. (Maybe.)

To sum up for three months, I did these different things. I had cried for two days when I lost a job, but now I can think in a way that it was a good experience because losing a job hardly happens to a Japanese person in Estonia.

★Unregistration on Estonian Unemployment

Once you get a new job, you need to unregister yourself from the Estonian Unemployment Fund.

They emailed me in July to start working in August, but my life supporter said to me not to unregister yet as anything could happen.

Then in August, I thought I needed to unregister but I wanted to receive an allowance so I had not done it until I received it.

I wanted to unregister on Monday because I was told to talk with an Employment Fund’s worker.

Then I received the allowance on Monday, and I completely forgot to unregister (as I got something to do).

On Tuesday while working, I got a phone call from them, and told them that I already got a job which had already started, and just forgot to unregister, and then the Fund worker said he couldn’t confirm that I had already started. After the call, I asked my boss, and she asked the human resources, and they registered me as a worker. (This happened because the person-in-charge was on holiday, so they couldn’t just proceed.)

After unregistering, you will receive an email from the tax board that you have been registered as a worker, by which, my employment status has also been updated, so the Fund’s worker could confirm as well. I told him that, and he unregistered me.

Therefore, I still don’t know how to unregister on my own.

However, now everything is alright.

Aitäh! 🙂

Zooks Got the Work Ability Card Issued in Estonia.

Tere!

Sorry to be sudden, but I’m going to talk about the Work Ability Card this time. (Though I don’t have much to say.) I’m going to write what kind of card it is, how long it is valid, and if there are any benefits. You won’t experience such a thing as long as you are just normal.

In April 2021, my mental condition was not really good (which I will explain in the future). Around March or April in 2021, due to COVID-19, we couldn’t communicate with people, and had to work remotely.

I believe this was a tough time for everyone, but in my case it was too much. I have shut out most of my friends that I made in the postgraduate school, and didn’t have many friends though I usually have. (However, I often hang out with just a few of them, even in Japan.) So I thought I need to make friends somehow.

Then one day when I had a regular visit at the hospital, my nurse gave me a brochure of Tallinna Vaimse Tervise Keskus. There are some group activities, and she said that maybe some of them could be good for me.

After that, I contacted the Health Centre, and the staff said she wanted to meet me first.

When we met, she told me and determined to:

  • Participate in the art therapy
  • Use a supporter

I omit details about the above here, but someday I will write.

Anyway, when I met a supporter, doing some procedures, we registered to get benefits of incapacity of work.

To proceed with this, it is required to have a talk with a doctor, but in my case I already saw her during the last six months, so we corrected some information, and applied for it.

This is not something that everyone can do, and when proceeding, you need to answer a huge amount of questions. This was the first step. I think it took a few hours to answer all the questions. The questions were all in Estonia, so I was glad that I had an Estonian supporter. I’m not sure if there is an English version, but perhaps there is.

After applying for it, we met the person-in-charge of my application. This process is managed by Töötukassa (the Estonian Unemployment Fund), and they have some offices in Tallinn.My supporter and I chose an office where an English speaker works. (I think it was in Endla street.)

Until I got an appointment, my supporter took care of the communication.

Then at the office of the Fund, she asked me very similar questions a lot. I think it took about one hour. This was the second step.

At the third step, the answers of the questions were received, and we checked it. Then we waited again.

This is the fourth step. When getting a result email, the email has two files: PDF and the file to do a digital signature. I checked the PDF file.

It was all in Estonia, so I used Google translate, but anyway the results were:

  • Partially able to work
  • Valid for five years

The reason why “I am partially capable of working” is because although I have autism, disorders and depression, those don’t significantly affect my living life.

In this PDF file, it also mentioned how much I can get as its benefit. If your result is “completely incapable of working”, the calculation is 15 euro per day, and if it’s “partially incapable of working”, it’s 8 euro per day. More details available at their web page.

Several days after I got a result and completely forgot about it, I suddenly got a letter from the Fund which included the Work Ability Card. The information on the card is:

  • My full name
  • My Estonian ID
  • Birthday
  • Work condition (“Partially incapable of working” in my case)
  • Validating date
  • Expiry date

In fact, by having this card, there is a hint of goodness. When I travelled in Viljandi, I could buy discount tickets with the card.






Lucky!

However I had concerns about the valid period and the condition of work.

It’s not easy for foreigners to find part-time jobs in Estonia. It is very difficult. Timbeter where I used to work was really flexible, but it was special and exceptional because it was a very start-up company.

So the reality was “the job is full time although the condition is partially capable”..

I thought that might be unfair with that situation, so I asked my supporter, but she said it was okay.

The reason is “we don’t know what will happen/worsen” (the health condition is different).

So it’s like compensating for health conditions with money.

For example, let’s compare two types of people:

  • An individual who is healthy and 100% capable of working at full time
  • An individual whose depression is not fully healed this year, who has autism and disorders, and who is only 50% capable of working full time.

Apparently the latter one is “weaker” and handicapped.

And the benefits compensate for it, so it’s fair.

Thus my monthly income is a salary at full time + the benefits.

I did not feel good about getting special money compared to other colleagues in the same position, but considering the differences of the health conditions, it’s not unfair.

In fact, I have paid for the medicines and the psychological therapies.

I have this Work Ability Card in my wallet with the Estonian ID card as they ask me to show the Estonian ID card when using the Work Ability Card.

It’s literally a card, so it’s not like a disability certificate which looks like a thin notebook issued in Japan.

In Japan and until I got the Work Ability Card, I had never had a disability certificate. I didn’t make one because the services in Japan for the holders were basically available for the physically disabled people. (I wasn’t depressed when I was in Japan, but autism and mental disorders could be considered.)

However, although I live in Estonia, anyway I won’t use the card that often.

So here was my story about getting the Work Ability Card.

Aitäh! 🙂

Zooks Experiences Kalev’s Nurr Products.

Tere!






When it comes to an Estonian candy producer, you might say Kalev!




You might think Kalev is famous for chocolate, but there are much more products. They sell ginger breads in the Christmas season, and they also sell boxes of filled chocolate for souvenirs.

However, I don’t personally often buy sweets or candies, so there are some products that I didn’t know about. Kalev’s chocolate frequently contains dried fruits or nuts, but this time I’m going to show you “Nurr” series that might be a cute souvenir.


Table of Contents
1) Nurr Raisins Coated with Chocolate
2) Nurr Chocolate with Marshmallows
3) Nurr Chocolate with Air Bubbles
4) Nurr Basic Milk Chocolate
5) Nurr Chocolate Ice Cream
6) Nurr Milk Chocolate with Hazelnuts
7) Nurr Chocolate in Chocolate
8) Small Milk Chocolate Bar


1) Nurr Raisins Coated with Chocolate 

The product is exactly what I mentioned.

It’s a small box of raisins coated with milk chocolate.

Since it might be for children, one box weighs only 70g, and maybe it’s unsatisfactory for adults in a sense. Personally I thought this package seemed like some product sold in Flying Tiger most.

Although every Nurr’s product has this cute (?) cat, considering its size, it might be a good souvenir for children. Usually in European or American stores, the sweets’ or snacks’ bags are huge (for the Japanese), but this one is only 70g so it’s easy to eat and carry.

2) Nurr Chocolate with Marshmallows

This is chocolate with marshmallows. It’s a chocolate bar, so you can share it with your companies. Since it contains marshmallows, it’s not easy to break and divide, but still it’s not impossible.

It looked very sweet, but it wasn’t actually that sweet. However, for me one piece one time is enough… Maybe because I don’t usually pay attention to this series, I don’t see this product that often. When I bought it, it was Valentine’s season. Maybe that’s why I saw it that frequently at that time.

Not sure though.

3) Nurr Chocolate with Air Bubbles

This is also a chocolate bar. Looking at it carefully, you’ll find a heart on each piece of chocolate! Since it has air bubbles inside, the texture is light. Like the marshmallow one, it’s not too sweet. You can believe me because the Japanese are sensitive to the sweetness.

Also, comparing this to #1, I don’t often see it at stores. They don’t have big sizes for this of #2, so I think it’s a good option for a souvenir.

4) Basic Milk Chocolate

Kalev’s chocolate bars usually have Kalev’s logo on it, and this chocolate bar also has it. However, I personally want them to have Nurr’s logo on it. The taste is just like a regular milk chocolate.







There’s nothing to stand out.




Nurr’s chocolate is always milk chocolate, so those who don’t like anything sweet or who have low blood pressure should be careful. (When your blood pressure is low, and you eat something very sweet, the blood pressure skyrockets, making you feel nauseous. Believe me, I experienced it.)

5) Nurr Chocolate Ice Cream

Yes! Nurr has ice cream, too!

The taste was very similar to one kind of ice cream sold in Japan that my mum often bought when I was a kid.

However, I wouldn’t buy it again. (I prefer some other brand’s ice cream with lemon flavour, by the way.)

6) Nurr Milk Chocolate with Hazelnuts

One day I went to see a doctor, whose hospital is near Tallinn University. After seeing him, I saw a new advertisement about Nurr.

That was a milk chocolate bar with hazelnuts.

There was nothing special either.

Like its name, it has hazelnuts in the chocolate bar.

If you do love hazelnuts, maybe it’s happy news, but I wouldn’t personally repeat. Also if I’m in a mood, I might buy it again, but fundamentally I don’t buy candies that often, so that would be a super rare situation.

7) Nurr Chocolate in Chocolate

I updated now but I actually found this in November 2021.

It’s just a bar of chocolate that has small candy chocolate inside.

In my opinion, those candies were interrupting the texture, which does not mean that I hate it.

However, I would not buy it again.

8) Small Milk Chocolate Bar

I bought this in February 2022.

I felt like eating chocolate one day I was working, so I went to Rimi.

I am not sure if it has been there for a long time or a new product.

Milk chocolate, in general, is really sweet, but this one might not make those who are not fond of sweets disgusted.

However, Bounty is better, so I might buy this again, but way less frequently.

Aitäh! 🙂

Zooks Goes to See a Dentist in Estonia.

Tere!

Did you know that it is almost impossible to have a corona cluster at a dental clinic? At the dental clinic, they treat patients’ mouths, so the hygiene is good, which is said to make it nearly impossible to have a cluster. 

I read this kind of story in some article, but can’t remember the source…

Anyway, I went to see a dentist in Estonia this time!

Actually this is the second time to see a dentist in Estonia, and I did once in 2018.






Because my front tooth got chipped while eating pancakes.




I know it’s unbelievable, but it’s freaking true.

I urgently looked for an English speaking dentist, and she did some treatment for the tipped tooth. In addition, I asked her how my wisdom teeth were, but she said there was no decay and no need to remove them. (It’s painful when it grows in the mouth, but when it stops growing, there is no pain.)

However, she told me not to use toothpaste for whitening which I used at that time.

This is because the whitening toothpaste scratches teeth.

Since then, I have used regular toothpaste. (But it’s actually not that easy to find since these days whitening toothpastes are more common.)

This time I didn’t have any pain due to decay, was annoyed by wisdom teeth, or got another tooth tipped, but I wanted my mouth cleaner. That’s why I went to see a dentist.

In Estonia there is a Facebook group called Expats in Tallinn. One day I found a post about a good English speaking dentist in Tallinn. Many of the answers mentioned Van Thai Nguyen at Roseni Hambakliniik. Just in case I saved the information.

And then, I booked an appointment. (This is irrelevant but his name sounds Vietnamese, doesn’t it?)

You can book an appointment at Roseni Hambakliniik online.

But!

You need your Estonian ID card, so be careful.

As of July 2021, you can’t book with Smart ID.

Due to this system which is relatively old compared to other systems in Estonia, I had to go to TTU/Taltech’s library in order to book an appointment.

(The reason why I chose TTU was because Tallinn University’s libraries were closed due to the summer vacation, and neither was the central library. Yes, I still don’t have a card reader though I have lived in Estonia for four years. That’s because I can basically do anything, usually with the Smart ID.)

You can select a date and time one month ahead on Roseni Hambakliniik’s website, but I did prefer some time in July. On the contrary the dentist seemed to have a vacation at the end of July, so I eventually chose the date and time in the following week.

Then I went to the dental clinic. It’s located in Rottermani district, but it was a bit difficult to find. If you follow the map, you can see a sign board that says:

Go up

with an arrow. Follow the instruction, turn left to the slope side, and you can see the clinic. (It’s also difficult to explain with words, but since there’s the dental clinic’s sign board, it shouldn’t be that hard to find in real life.)

A nurse gave me a questionnaire about COVID-19, after which, I went to the treatment room.

I was right; the dentist was Asian.

He roughly examined my mouth, and said:

You have stains. We can remove them, but it’s out of the insurance. What will you do?

Really?

I came there just to remove calculus, but I didn’t want stains, so I asked how much it would be. He said with removal of both stains and calculus, it would cost 100 euro.






No no no, I don’t have such a huge amount of money now.




So I asked him to just remove the calculus.

You have white spots too.

What’s that?

White spots are basically seen on my front teeth. However, I have had them since I got them, so I told him that I didn’t care that much.

After the treatment, he recommended me to use rubber dental floss because there are some spaces between a few teeth where a string floss cannot clean enough.

As for my wisdom teeth, there was no problem. (By the way, I have them all.) Other teeth’s conditions were fine too, so he told me that I could come there again next year.

So I’ll go there next summer or some time.

(But I still don’t like having stains… Maybe I’ll buy whitening toothpaste temporarily.)

Aitäh! 🙂

Zooks Creates Postcards in Estonia.

Tere!

On 1st July 2021, my Dutch friend in Japan sent me a postcard! We’ve known each other since we were in the university in Kyoto. I think she’s worked in Japan for a few years now. (I think I’m right because I went to her place in the Netherlands in 2018.)

In return for the postcard, I decided to send one to her, but the biggest post office in Tallinn city centre was closed a few years ago, so I was wondering about where to buy a postcard. (Maybe I could have been to some souvenir shops in the old town though.)

She made a postcard on her own, so I decided to make one by myself too.

Then there is a problem: which photo to use for a postcard.

I personally think I have been to many places in Estonia, but I didn’t have a lot of pictures. That’s why I wondered. Then eventually I chose a photo of the prison in Rummu.

I went there in summer, and this return would be done in summer too, so I thought it was a perfect choice.

Since I always take photos in a square shape, I wanted a postcard in a square too, but there was no choice. In addition, in many copy shops, massive printing is their default, so their supply didn’t match my demand.


Table of Contents
Printing out at Minu Foto
Going to Copy Pro


★Printing out at Minu Foto

However, I managed to find photo printing service called Minu Foto of a shop called Copy Pro, which can be shown in the top of the search results. You can easily find the service, but if you want to find it on Minu Foto’s website, follow the steps below.

  1. Access Minu foto
  2. Click “Photo cards” in “PHOTO PRODUCTS” in the head bar.

It’s easy to use; first of all, choose its back print which is a side you may write messages and/or receiving address.You can choose either nothing or with lines. (In my opinion, I don’t recommend the one with lines, because your card will have Minu foto’s log there…)

Then choose a set of two postcards or eight postcards. Sending one postcard to my friend was the only purpose for me, so I just chose a set of two postcards.

If you want envelopes, you can also select, but in my case I didn’t need any, so I left it blank.

Then click “Create” and go next.

This is finally the editing part of the photo side of the postcard. There is an option to have a square picture, but I didn’t choose because I wanted to have a square-sized photo and my website’s logo. (Plus, I didn’t like that the photo part was on the right side.)

I made a file on Photoshop to align the picture and the logo, but Photoshop’s postcard setting was different from MInu foto’s setting.

Also, on Minu foto’s editing page, you can see layouts on the left side, which have two similar postcard design icons. (At least it looked the same as one another on Google Chrome. It might be shown properly on Edge or Firefox.)

The send one from the below has no margins around the pictures, so if you have a single photo, you will have that picture fully on the card. Of course that wasn’t my option at all. 

I chose the last option. It has margins around the picture selected. I had white margins around the pictures and the logo in Photoshop, but I edited it like below to make it fit in the postcard.

By doing so, it fitted!

Perfectly.

After editing the design, click a blue button written “Save and Go to Cart”, and go next.

Next, I chose the delivery method.

They don’t charge you if you go there to pick yours up. I always choose this method as long as the online shopping is within Estonia.

By the way, here’s a side story; currently (as of 14th of July in 2021) the shop’s address mentioned was under construction, so the address on the website was different from the one on the selection page. I emailed them, and they said that it wasn’t just updated, so now it has a correct address.

There are two card payment methods as well as bank transfer (the middle option). I chose the card payment like always, but both options didn’t work. I still don’t know why. I compromised and chose the bank transfer.

Then they sent me an email about the purchase confirmation with an invoice like below.

As the invoice had the shop’s bank account number, I thought maybe I should pay there, but it was still unclear, so I asked them again. Then they said I could pay when I pick up the postcards. It was easier so I chose it.

At the same time, they said:

Your postcards are ready!

It was literally very instant after ordering.

Since it was fast work, I planned when to pick them up.

★Going to Copy Pro

Then on the day to pick up the postcards, I was wondering about the exact location of the shop. The address certainly exists, but even the Google map didn’t show the sign board or anything.

Anyway, I came to Rävala pst 6, but still couldn’t find it. I thought of what would happen if I turned left at the corner. Then  I found the shop. It was really difficult to find out. 

On the Google map the pin was set in the middle of the building (which is not wrong), but the actual shop entry is where the arrow points out in the picture below. Be careful.

Then I asked one of the staff members, and paid after checking the postcards.

Later on, I bought a stamp, and sent it to my friend. If you are thinking about creating postcards in Estonia (or Tallinn), consider this shop. (Last but not least, the stamp to other countries like Japan costs 1.90 euro, and it is a shape of an Estonian flag.)

Aitäh! :)