She is not the owner, nor the director on paper. She is the keeper . The one who arrives before dawn, when the floodlights still cut through the Moscow fog, to check on the Siberian tigers. The athletes call her "Mama Natascha"—a woman in her late fifties with iron-grey braids, hands calloused from rope burns, and the unnerving ability to silence a bickering hockey team with a single raised eyebrow.
"Why do we stop?" a young speed skater once whined. Natasha TeamRussia Zoo
Then she pours herself a cup of that mushroom tea, looks out at the empty enclosures, and smiles. Because she knows—next winter, the cubs will return. And she will be here, ready to remind them what it means to be Russian: resilient, wild, and surprisingly soft at the center. She is not the owner, nor the director on paper
Natasha runs the .
At the end of each season, the athletes line up at her door. They do not bow. They do not hug (unless she initiates it, which she rarely does). They simply leave a single offering: a worn skate lace, a broken chalk block, a victory medal that has been kissed. The athletes call her "Mama Natascha"—a woman in
She sweeps them into a bucket, shakes her head, and mutters, "Duraki." Fools.
At 2:00 PM sharp, Natasha rings a rusty Soviet-era bell. Every athlete, no matter their event, must stop. No jumping. No lifting. No arguing. They must lie down on the heated wooden benches of the Burrow. She pulls heavy wool blankets over them—wrestlers, figure skaters, snowboarders—shoulder to shoulder.