Trans Siberian Rail trip September
4- 22, 2013
Monday September 2- Labor Day-
Richmond to San Francisco via Detroit
Our house sitter and boarder Antonina gave us a ride to
the airport at 7:30 for
a relatively civilized departure time of 9:30. We arrived SFO about midday and
took the Marin Airporter to San Rafael where Jill and Ravenna met us. Graham
fixed salmon on the grill for dinner. Ravenna was feeling a little sick after a
long weekend in Wine Country with a mix of other children belonging to Graham's
Northwestern friends. Poor Ravenna would go from acting her usual perky self
when her medicine was working to very cranky when the medicine was wearing off.
Tuesday September 3- Theron's first
birthday
We spent the day at home with Jill,
Ravenna and Theron. It was another up and down day for Ravenna, and Theron
seemed to be stuffed up too.
For Theron's birthday, he went for a well baby checkup and got four shots but
he took it in stride. B&C went to lunch at the nearby Whole Foods and came
to the conclusion California is very different from the East Coast. Billy
identified a couple of new birds in the backyard. For Theron's birthday, he got
a chocolate covered cupcake with sprinkles that Ravenna helped to make for him. He was
quite a mess after eating it. The kids went to bed early and Jill had a moment
to explain to us in much more detail what both of her jobs are all about.
Wednesday Sept 4-
Jill went to work early and Graham
and Ravenna gave us a ride to the bus to SFO. It was a 12 hour flight on Korean
Airlines to Seoul. The stewardesses were very polite, constantly bowing and
smiling. One of them handed B a glass of orange juice which happened to have a
hole in the bottom and so it spilled all over his pants. She was horrified and
all B could do was laugh. She spent a lot of time (Connie thinks a little too much time) trying to
dry the pants. The manager came by and apologized but B said it was not a
problem. The manager said the stewardess was very upset and B said to tell her
not to worry. He thanked B for his kindness.
KAL served dinner then turned off
the lights, then a while later turned them back on and served lunch and then
turned them off again for a few hours. We were very confused and got little
sleep. B watched a documentary about a lost Da Vinci painting and then The
Company You Keep with Robert Redford, Nick Nolte and another couple of aging
stars (Weather Underground radicals apprehended 30 years later). Then he
watched Admission with Tina Fey.
We landed in Seoul at about 6:30
(who knows what time it really was?) and observed life in the airport for a few
hours. There seemed to be a lot of young people who bought bags and bags of
things in the duty free store and then unpacked them into much smaller bags
before leaving. I later found out these were Chinese who come to South Korea to
get better quality cosmetics and things and then take them back to China.
Friday Sept 6- Vladivostok
We left Seoul on Vladivostok Air
(part of Aeroflot) at about 1:30 and landed in Vlad at about 5:30 after a two
hour flight-again no idea what time it really is. Nat Geo met us at the airport
and took us to the Hyundai Hotel in the center of town. It was about a 45
minute ride from the brand new airport along a brand new super highway (all
built to be ready for a global conference in 2012). We took a bit of a nap and then went
for a long walk around Vlad using our Trans- Siberian Handbook as a guide. Vlad
was different from what was expected- hills and big port somewhat like a
combination of San Francisco and Oakland; Soviet style apartments, some pre
Soviet business buildings in the central part; much fewer Asian looking people
even though the Korean and Chinese borders are close (our guide later told us
people from Vlad regularly take trains or buses across the borders to go
shopping); the churches we saw were new, the old ones having been torn down. We
saw the central post office, train station, house of the Brynner family (Yul
lived there), great views of the bays and the open sea. We tried to go to the
Primorsky (name of the region) Museum to see Repins and others on loan from the
Tretyakov Museum in Moscow but the museum was run down and the exhibit now only
showed Chinese art. We had lunch in a Russian cafe (borscht etc) and dinner in
an Uzbek restaurant. There were lots of small white butterflies and dragon
flies attending lots of weeds.
Nat Geo left us some chocolates, a
lacquer box, and a small bottle of Vodka in the room. The room had lots of space,
the strangest toilet we have ever seen, and good internet, so we got to touch
base with home one last time before the unknown connections on the train ride.
Saturday Sept 7- Vlad
It sure seems like a long time
before the Nat Geo part of the trip really starts.
We had read that as part of the
preparations for the global conference,
the higher ups had also decided to connect two major parts of the city (imagine
an upside down U with water in between) that had only been served by ferries
(except in rough weather) by bridge and then to build a similar bridge
connecting an island known as Russia Island to the rest of town. The last part
of the plan was to move all the universities in town (Far Eastern Federal and
Vlad State along with possibly others to new quarters on the island- they had
been spread out in lots of buildings around town (FEFU 40,000 students)). So we
decided to take a bus ride over to see the universities, figuring there would
be lots of students there, lots of coffee shops and book stores etc. It was bit
of an uphill walk to get to the indicated bus stop and later we found there was
one much closer to the hotel, and we took a one hour bus ride across both huge
new suspension bridges,
got a look at the aging Pacific fleet (no subs), saw lots of very sketchy
looking old Soviet style apartments and a couple of defensive forts on the
island. The bus gradually filled with students and we figured we would just get
out where the students did. We came up a hill and there was a stop where the
students exited the bus en masse. It looked promising in that the buildings were
brand new, there was a big sign up for the Pacific Meridian Film Festival, and
there was a line of cars entering. However it turns out there no coffee shops,
there was heavy security checking identification, and one needed student id or
a film festival pass just to enter the campus.
We got back in time from this
adventure to go to the Welcome Reception on the 12th floor of our hotel and
then to go to an excellent dinner in the Fish Restaurant. It was a long block
away from the hotel, but, given the age and infirmity of many of the travelers,
and, given the blind curves and traffic, NG had us ride a bus. The lesson from
dinner is that we will be well fed on this trip- multiple courses with each
meal, and so pace is important.
Connie’s notes from Vlad in an email
to the kids-
Arrived
on Friday morning after 22 hours in transit, including a long 7 hours in the
Seoul airport. Glad we came a couple days early, though, as we like the
down time before meeting up with the group. Vladivostok is an interesting
city but doesn't really cater to English-speaking people. Although signs
in English are frequently seen, there are no tv channels in this hotel and no
menus in English, at least in the three restaurants we tried on our own.
We've walked about the town and yesterday took a bus ride across a
recently constructed bridge to "Russian Island," where the
universities here are in the process of being relocated. After riding the
bus for an hour, we followed dozens of students to the entrance to the
university buildings, where we found it was necessary to have a pass to get by.
Explaining that we were tourists who just wanted to walk around did no
good; their concession was letting me take a couple photos of the buildings.
Turns out it's one of the locations for the Pacific Meridian Film
Festival, which opened yesterday. There were several films from the U.S.
but the only title we recognized was "Chasing Ice." Our hotel
is one of the registration spots and there is a big welcome sign hanging on the
front of the building, Anyhow, after failure to get past the guards at
the university, we caught the next bus and had another hour-long ride back to
town. Seems a long way away to for the students to travel for classes;
don't know if whether or not there are dormitories since we couldn't get by the
16-year old-looking guards/
Last
night we met our group of 20 other travelers, about half from California and
the others from the east coast. I am the youngest woman and Dad almost
the youngest man - but all except one seem fairly spritely (is that the word?)
and congenial. Michael, the daughter and son-in-law of one couple own a
farm-to-table restaurant in Brooklyn called "Grocery" - have you
heard of it? One guy named Pete is from Belmont, CA, near San Fran, I
think, and is an amazing 80-year old. He's traveling alone (I think his wife
died several years ago) but is sharp, interesting and has a great smile.
I wanna be like him at 80.
Sunday Sept 8- Vlad
Today we get on the train, but only
after a long day of touring town by bus. However each of the stops was very
interesting in its own way. First we went to a museum about the coastal
defenses around Vlad and went into a bunker with lots of bits of weaponry from
the two world wars. Vlad was never attacked but that may be because the defenses were so formidable.
Then we visited a very new and beautiful embankment by the bay which we had
somehow missed in our walk around town on our own on the previous day (probably
because it was finished after our book was published). There we walked thru
C-56, a Russian WWII submarine very reminiscent of Das Bot. Next the bus took
us on the very repetitive and complicated set of maneuvers on the new highways
to get to Eagle's Nest viewpoint high above the city. The hill seemed to be held up by cables which were
anchored into the hill further back and posed a significant tripping hazard.
The bay at Vlad is called Golden Horn because it reminded the old sailors of
Istanbul's harbor. It is very hard getting oriented toward where the open sea
is because of all the inlets, islands and hills. We then went to lunch at a
restaurant back near our hotel (and near the kitty cat bank we had used to
change dollars for rubles) and then off to the Far East Federal University
museum complete with guided tour by the museum director. He spent a lot of time
telling us about the history of human settlement in the area up until the time
of the Manchurians, and the artifact collection was very impressive- ceramics,
arrowheads, fish hooks, simple tools. There was also a rare book museum, a
history of the university museum, and a zoological museum which we quickly
walked through. The next stop was the cemetery, sadly very unattended,
where sailors and soldiers of other countries who came to the area during the Intervention
after WWI are buried along with local mafiosi who killed each other off when
Vlad opened up in 1990 (it had been a closed city because of the navy). Then on
the way to a drive by of the universities on Russia Island we passed some
examples of the mafiosi economics at work- they owned some land, built brand
new modern apartments on it but no one wants to live there because of the
severe wind in winter. And speaking of winter, the guide told us the new
suspension bridges close when the wind reaches certain velocity- One wonders
what the students do who happen to live in town and go to school over there
when this happens.
The train was running late because
it got delayed by flooding to the north. At about 7 pm the train crew had had
enough time to clean up from the prior travelers and was ready to receive us.
Our professor George Munro had
told us to sit in the room for a moment before starting to unpack and to see
all the spaces available. There did not seem to be much space at all but after
leaving a lot in our suitcases we managed to fit the essentials in and get
settled.
The welcome dinner was more than
adequate. We sat with a young couple not in our group but from Mexico and in
fact from the town we studied during the Don Quixote class. The train began
moving on time at about 8:45 pm.
Sleeping in close quarters and with
all the bumps and lights of a moving train took a while but we will get used to
it.
Monday Sept 9- Khabarovsk (the most
livable city in Russia according to the Handbook)
Arrived
at 7:45 a.m. and met our guide at 8:30. She was in her mid-60s, is a
university professor of linguistics, works as a guide on the side and was
excellent. We learned a lot about the city, a place I’d never heard of
until we signed on for this trip.
When
we stepped off the train, I noticed that our Nat Geo expert George Munro was
being interviewed and filmed by what we learned was the local TV station.
Evidently having a group from Nat Geo is a noteworthy event; I wonder if they
thought we were all scientists or at least a learned group of people. The
twosome followed us to the first stop on our sight-seeing morning, the scenic
overlook of the Amur River, and interviewed two of our group - including
me. I was simply asked my name, my impressions of the city and whether or
not I’d like to return someday. Easy questions to answer.
Back
to the tour - Khabarovsk is a city of about 600,000 people, built on three
hills and has three main streets. It is known as the capital of the
Russian Far East and is an expensive place to live. The city was closed
to foreigners until 1964, the year Japan hosted the Olympics. Khabarovsk
was on the travel route to Japan so decided to take advantage of all the people
who were attending and allowed them to pass through and visit as well. It
is located on the Amur (“muddy river with strong current”) River, which just a
month ago flooded higher than ever before, with the water level rising almost
25’, and in some areas homes and businesses were severely affected. The water has
now just started to recede.
Khabarovka
was a Cossack explorer who helped establish the first Russian settlements of
the Far East. He led two expeditions of the Russian Cossacks to the Amur
River in 1646 and 1649 and reported the beauty and possibilities of the
area. In 1858 a treaty was signed with China and the region became part
of Russia. In 1861 serfdom was abolished and many Russians and Ukrainians
moved into the area, seeking land and better living conditions. The
Trans-Siberian Railroad (1891-1916) further stimulated development.
Former
and current industries in Khabarovsk include production of military equipment
and machine tools, oil refinery, shipbuilding, pharmaceuticals, mineral
extraction, forestry, fishing and wood processing.
The
sites we visited on the city tour included:
- Assumption
Cathedral - blue obelisk-shaped spires. Built in 2001, it is a
replica of the original which was destroyed in the 1930s.
- Transfiguration
Cathedral - gold-domed - the third largest Russian Orthodox cathedral in
Russia (272’ tall, capacity 3000). Built in 2003.
- Memorial
to the fallen heroes of WWII from Khabarovsk. A 25’ semi-circular
marble wall curves around 20 equally tall panels on which are engraved the
names of 70,000 killed or MIA soldiers. An eternal flame burns in
the center.
- The
Local Lore Museum - exhibits of ethnic groups, local animals, a large map
of the region and a panorama of the Battle of Khabarovsk during the Civil
War, similar to the panorama we saw in Sevastopol.
We
returned to the train by 11, had a good lunch of olivier salad (crayfish tails,
duck, potatoes, peas, other veggies, mayo) and solyanka (yummy veggie
soup). George gave an afternoon talk “Introduction to Siberia,” then Tatiana (expert on board)
spoke on the history of the Trans-Siberian Railroad. Tea was at 5:30 with
a guitarist providing entertainment. Dinner 7:30- 9 p.m. Clocks go
back one hour tonight.
Tuesday Sept 10- On the railroad traveling
all day with a few stops to take on water and to switch engines
Observations of this part of
Siberia- We are now going almost due west and we are about as far north as we
will get. The terrain so far has been flat, a mixture of field (with mostly weeds
or natural, not cultivated) and birch forest. The leaves on the weeds and on
the birches are changing to yellow, more so the further west we get. The
mornings have been cool but warming considerably during the days. Today we have
our first cloudiness which has lasted beyond early morning. There are lots of
little rivers, especially compared to the huge and swift Amur which we crossed
yesterday (getting across it was a big impediment to the completion of the
railroad because of river flows north then east and thus has ice damming it up
in spring- when the upstream thaws and the ice breaks , it would take out the
wooden bridges), and swamps. Other than the small towns there really are no
houses or signs of people. We were told that Siberia is 80% of Russia but has
less than a third of the population. From what we have seen so far, I think
Siberia might have less than 20% of the population.
About the train, after a couple of
days we are used to the size of the cabin, maybe 7x7, and the bath, and
we have found a place or an accommodation for our things. Sleeping
has been bumpy, a little noisy, and a little lonesome in that the
lower berth is wide enough for two but not for all night. That said sleep
has been good. Yesterday the sun set about 8 o'clock and rose at about 7. I
would guess the days are getting shorter by about 20-30 minutes per week
now.
If I could use one word to describe
what I see out the window right now, it would be "empty",
meaning devoid of signs of people or animals or birds- just scrub brush and
birch trees; beautiful, serene, but empty.
Note- all day yesterday we had cell
service but none today.
Today’s
lectures:
History of Russian Tsars – Alla, prof on board for non NG folks
History of Russian Tsars – Alla, prof on board for non NG folks
Russian
lesson - Alla (not a great job, not prepared for so many people, song on
laptop not set to go)
Russian
Orthodox Church - George
DVDs
watched:
Siberia:
How the East Was Won - excellent
Ghengis
Khan - excellent
breakfast
- blini with tvorog and jam
lunch
- herring salad, beet salad
dinner
- vodka tasting with zakuski, golubtsi
Wednesday,
Sept. 11 - on board all day
We
woke up this morning 8 hours behind schedule because of a train derailment (!) last night; fortunately, several freight cars
rather than people flipped and no one was hurt. But - instead of arriving
at Ulan Ude in the early afternoon and possibly making a short visit to the
city center, we passed through at 8 p.m. And now the border guards will
arrive on the train in the middle of the night instead of 9:30 as was
hoped. The only time we got off the train was for about 10 minutes in
Chita; felt good to breathe fresh air and stretch our legs. I walked the
length of the train - 20 cars plus the engine: 12 passenger cars, 2
dining cars, kitchen, bar and 4 for train personnel - found out later that 2 of
these are sleeping cars, 1 for supplies and 1 for the generator.
The
landscape changed a few times during the day - fewer forests, more fields
(forest to steppe), more cows than so far, more habitation but all areas fairly
depressed, with soviet/primitive construction. The morning views reminded
me of Canada with tall pines and rolling hills, then later of California,
Mammoth Lakes area without the mountains, similar to the drive from Owens River Road
to Mammoth - forest and open fields. The weather was cool and clear this
morning, warmed up to probably 60-ish then became cloudy by late
afternoon.
Lunch
- shchi - yum! for
me and bean salad for B
Lectures
- Was Bolshevism Inevitable in Russia? Alla Kiseleva
Russia and Mongols - George Munro
DVD
- The Captivating Star of Happiness - about the Decembrists’ sentenced to to the labor camps
and the wives deciding to give up everything to join them there
Thursday,
Sept. 12 - Ulan Bataar
We
crossed the border into Mongolia during the night. We were awakened
twice, first so the Russians could check our passports, then three hours later,
so the Mongolians could do the same. It was startling to have the
unexpected bright lights in our eyes in the middle of the night - reminded me
of stories of Stalin’s time-
the knock on the door you have been dreading.
As
we got nearer to Ulan Bataar, gers (yurts) began appearing. These are the
portable homes of the nomads, circular in shape, which contain all of a
family’s possessions. The Mongolians have traditionally been a nomadic
people with open grazing for their animals (yaks, cows, sheep, goats, 2-humped
camels, horses- “5 snouts” (cows and yaks count as 1)). The government recently
passed a law which allows people to own plots of land up to a certain size with
the conditions that they register, pay a small fee, enclose the land and put it
to use immediately. This has changed both the traditional lifestyle for many
Mongols and the landscape, now filled in places with many types of fencing (tires,
wooden, concrete) to mark privately owned space.
The
population of Mongolia is about 3,000,000, with more than 1/3 living in the
capital city of Ulan Bataar. The rapid influx of people into the city has
far outstripped the ability of the government to provide housing and services,
with the result that gers and multi-story apartment buildings exist side by
side, providing a strange landscape. The city is crowded, there are too many
vehicles, and it seems unsafe to cross the road at any given spot.
First
stop - Gandan Buddhist Monastery, home to 200 monks (we saw about 6). Notable
were the thousands of pigeons (or so it seemed) covering the square in front of
the temple and people selling seed to feed them (why?). The whole scene
was new to us and we admit our knowledge of Buddhism is nil - so we understood
little of what was before us, including
- the
brass “wishing” or prayer cylinders which are turned in prayer (?)
- hundreds
of about 18” “female Buddha dolls,” a few of which had money in front of them, arranged along
three walls of the temple
- the
HUGE golden Buddha, 100’ tall, in the center of the temple
- outside the temple, 20’ golden feet of the new Buddha, maybe for a new temple
During
Communism, Stalin had 700 monasteries destroyed; some of the monks escaped and
lived in caves in the mountains near our lunch spot.
Museum
of Mongolian National History - B learned about the progression from Huns to
Turkic peoples to Mongols to Uighurs in the area. I enjoyed the ethnic
costumes but find all the weapons and jewelry and stones from museum to museum
fairly repetitious.
Got
on the road to Terelj National Park. After clearing the downtown traffic,
we drove on a new road until - surprise! - we ran into several rocks laying
across the road, signifying a roadblock and the necessity of turning back -
which the driver did by putting the bus in reverse for about 1/4 mile. Then
we used a bumpy, potholed from rain, gravel and dirt road, kicking up dust and
bouncing along on our way to lunch. Our lunch spot was at sort of a dude
ranch for Mongolians where you could rent a ger or stay in a small cabin.
The location was beautiful, looked to us like Wyoming, with tall rock-faced
hills on one side and a wide-open meadow all around. It reminded me of
Israel except green.
During
lunch we had a short exhibition of Mongolian music which included a flute, a
horse headed, two stringed fiddle and some throat singing. The flute playing
which involves circular breathing (in and out at the same time) has been
recognized by UNESCO as part of the national heritage.
We
then went to visit a family living in a ger- plastic floor, colorful painted
wooden supports and furniture, a men’s side and a woman’s side, a stove in the
middle vented through the roof, and a southerly facing door (in older days it
would have had a felt blanket for the door and an open fire fueled by animal
dung). Then there were some modern touches- the four year old child had on
rubber boots and spider man pajamas, there was a flat screen tv, and outside
there was a solar panel.
After
this we were running a bit ahead of schedule so we took off basically across
the meadows on a free for all road, with cars and trucks coming and going in
several directions at once, for a while until, in the middle of absolutely
nowhere and further from town than where we had been for lunch, there was the
world’s tallest equestrian statue- of Genghis Khan. Visitors are supposed to be
able to ride an elevator up into Genghis’ head, kind of like the Statue of
Liberty, but there was no power to the facility today.
After
a bouncy ride back to town and an end of day traffic snarl, we had dinner at a
very good Nomads restaurant, an hour of souvenir shopping at the state run
department store (a la Soviet times), and then back to the train.
One
side comment about the ride to the store and then the store itself- where is
anyone in this town over 30 years old? The bus stops seemed to have nothing but
young women as did the store, and the store felt like a Nordstrom’s- makeup
counters, brand goods. There was also thin screen tvs, lots of cashmere,
Playskool kids yard sets and a Cinnabon franchise at the very top.
All
Mongolians are supposed to know how to ride horses and the way the young who
have come to the city do it now is they get sent to live in a ger out in
the steppes with their grandparents during the summers. This tradition will
probably be gone in two more generations.
Added
note from Connie- The
day in Mongolia was as if on another planet -Buddhism, ger (yurt) life, Ghengis
Khan, other things we knew little about. We were out in the middle of
nowhere, after visiting a ger-dwelling family, when we came upon a 100' tall
silver statue of Ghengis himself, perched on top of a museum which was
unfortunately closed because the electricity wasn't fully working. Also
saw a 50' tall statue of a female Buddha goddess (?) in a temple, surrounded by
3 walls of little Buddhina dolls, hundreds of them. There is so much
about this religion I don't know.
In
the morning we go back through the long double border crossing and will spend
the rest of the train trip in Mother Russia.
One
more side comment from WMG- As we talk to the fellow travelers on this train,
it has become very apparent that most of them have some sort of tie to Russia-
a grandmother from Moscow, a grandfather who came over to the Far East of
Russia during the Intervention after WWI, parents who left Russia and moved to
Israel, and, as our Russki professor on board says, so so so.
Friday,
Sept 13- Naushki and Ulan Ude -
Much
of the day was spent crossing back into Russia from Mongolia -
- arrived
in Sukhe Bator for passport check at 7:15, took a photo (illegally?) of the border patrol saluting the
train as we departed an hour later.
- rode
for an hour through the border zone; noticed a barbed fence along the way
- arrived
Naushki, Russia at 12:30. Russian passport control personnel boarded
the train to check
our visas. This process took about 30 minutes but after it was
finished we were allowed off the train (in the light rain) to wander for
another 30 minutes. I made my way to the local “producti” and
bought some candy, just to buy something after looking around the small
shop.
- another
couple hours of sitting on the train while the engines were changed
Finally,
we were told to be ready to disembark the train as soon as it stopped in Ulan
Ude at 4 p.m. - and they weren’t kidding, as the train pulled away after only
a 5-minute stop. Our NatGeo group was taken by bus to a village of
Old Believers about 45 minutes away.
Back
in the mid-1600s, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Nikon, decided that
over time many variations had slipped into Russian church practice which differed
significantly from the Greek Orthodox rituals. With the agreement of the
tsar, Nikon order changes to return to the more original “correct” Greek
worship. There were five major changes at this time to return to the
earlier way:
- crossing
oneself with three fingers instead of two
- the
manner of bowing (full prostration instead of from the waist)
- the
spelling of the name of Jesus (Исус instead of Иисус)
- polyphony
in singing was eliminated
- the
direction of going around the altar: clockwise or counterclockwise
The
Old Believers stuck with the “old” (Russian”) traditions, while the reforms
closed the gaps between these traditions and the original Greek rituals. Then,
in true Russian fashion (says B), the “new” believers, those that agreed with the
reforms, tried to force them on the Old Believers, with severe penalties (like
death) for not conforming. Some of the Old Believers simply left, with a
minimum of possessions, to the White Sea (north) or the Buryat area (east).
The
houses of Old Believers are made of wood with the shutters usually painted blue
so that when they are closed at night, a bit of heaven is seen inside the
home. The place we visited was a family compound, with a small 5-room
residence, a few storage sheds with wood, tools, an inside storage area for
other tools, coats, etc., a building for cooking and eating, an outhouse
(decorated with painted blue dolphins) and a large garden with the biggest
cabbages I’ve ever seen.
Our
hostess, Olga, seemed ready and eager for our visit; she greeted the bus with a
huge smile as we pulled up to the compound. We think she might be 75-80
years old, was colorfully dressed in traditional garb with a unique headpiece
adorned with pins and jewels. Around her neck were several strands of
amber beads, which we learned were passed on from mother to daughter; the fewer
the daughters in the family, the more amber each daughter would have. Olga invited
us into her home, which might actually have been a museum to show the Old
Believers’ way of life. Her father (1905-1995) had been a well-known singer and
teacher and had traveled through Russia and performed also in France, Germany
and the U.S. The living room walls were covered with photos, letters, awards
and other family mementos plus handmade pieces of embroidery. A couple of very
old handmade dolls sat on stools and there were hand sewn squares used for
kneeling in the icon corner. The one bedroom had a cradle suspended from
the ceiling with a long rudder-like piece of wood which extended into the
kitchen cooking area so that the cradle could be rocked by the person working
in the kitchen.
Olga
and her family (two nieces, the husband of one of the nieces, and two grand
nephews plus others) served us a Russian dinner. It was a full table of food
for 20 people and then they started bringing out the courses- cabbage soup,
then rice pudding (from schish to kish or something like that), then some
chicken, and a few toasts. A few of the items on the table were freshly baked
bread, blini, pierogi with poppy seeds, some kind of thin pastry, tomatoes,
blackberry buns, pickles and cucumbers, little breads made to look like
mushrooms, and a breaded fish roll.
After
dinner the family did some polyphonous singing (WMG couldn’t pick up on that-
tin ear) and some Russki dancing including WMG dancing with one of the nieces.
Next the guys led WMG away and dressed him in Russki traditional clothes and
left him in the kitchen. Meanwhile Olga was explaining to the rest about Old
Believer wedding customs using CIG as the bride to be. Soon they led WMG in as
a possible groom and went through the negotiations over getting married.
Evidently we got married and started dancing but pretty quickly Connie
abandoned WMG for the strapping blond 22 year old. The Nat Geo bunch had a lot
of laughs over our performance.
The
day ended with heartfelt goodbyes to Olga and family, an hour long ride into
Ulan Ude, the capital of the Buryat Autonomous Republic, a visit to the acme of
the Stalinist classical style of architecture, the Ulan Ude Opera House, and a
quick stop at the 42 foot head of Lenin statue in the town square (but no
pictures came out because the statue is not lit at night even though the whole
town has very bright lights on the street sides and crossings and many
buildings). This photo is from the internet:
Our
guide today spent much time telling us about the Buryat heritage, which is a
blend of the Mongols and other local peoples. She was very proud of the
tolerance of the Buryat people. She also continued the story which we had heard
in Mongolia about shamanism as the other prominent religion besides Buddhism.
The shamanists believe in The Eternal Blue Sky and 99 minor gods- 55 good ones
and 44 bad ones. They believe that the Buryat people come from the offspring of
the Blue Wolf and the Red Deer, and those totems are seen in their houses and
art. Lastly, Buryatia has about 1 million people and is the size of
Germany.
Saturday,
Sept 14- Lake Baikal (400 miles long, 40 miles wide and about a mile deep- the
largest fresh water lake in the world)
Awoke
at 7:15 to a pink sunrise over Lake Baikal, a great way to start the day.
We ate breakfast in the chilly dining car while traveling south west along the
southern edge of the lake. Although we knew that it was a BIG lake,
seeing it in person was still a surprise. There was little wildlife, just
a couple of gulls and maybe a few freshwater seals. After breakfast we
stopped at Polovina (“halfway”) Station, a spot by the lake completely in the
country with a few homesteads on the opposite side of the tracks. We
walked along the edge of the lake, took photos in front of and alongside the
train and walked among the few little houses.
One brave tourist (and only
one) took a dip in the lake and was cheered by the rest of us. There were
a couple of trackside souvenir tables; I bought a string of agate (plastic?)
beads, was given a magnet “for free,” and B bought an 1832 5-kopeck coin, the
prize of the day - all for $35 - probably highly overpriced but we were happy
to add to the local economy. I think I left my polarized “fit-over”
sunglasses on the seller’s table after my purchases and didn’t discover they
were missing until the train had left. I hope he will enjoy them.
We
arrived at Port Baikal just after lunch and took a short boat ride to get
across the Angara, the only river which flows out of the lake (336
rivers/streams flow in).
We
boarded a bus at Listvyanka Village for the short ride to the Museum of Wooden
Architecture, a reconstruction of authentic buildings of the 17th-19th
centuries in this area. The buildings seemed solid, contained tools and
implements of the period and at least one had an unusual roof of inverted
(every-other-one) wooden half-cylinders. It reminded us of Colonial
Williamsburg.
Next
- Lake Baikal Museum. It was helpful to see a cross-cut representation of
the geology of the lake and where the greatest depths are as well as a
temperature/depth graph. Also enjoyed seeing the fish species and then actual
fish in a small aquarium.
Came
back to the train, moved about 20 minutes, then had a quick (for us at least)
BBQ outside at a covered area with tables and a fireplace. The fire was
not helpful in warming the area, and since we were chilly, we were finished in
15 minutes and headed back inside at 8:30. I tried omul and found it okay
but not as tasty as I’d been led to believe.
We
are now more than half way through the trip, we have been so busy the last
couple of days we haven’t been able to shower (can’t when the train isn’t
moving) , and pretty much all our clothes are either dirty or half dirty and so
mixed up it is hard to know which is which.
Connie:
Train travel is
tolerable but can't beat a nice ship. The train is 20 cars plus the
engine. We are about 5 from one end, 3 cars away from the dining car and
6 from the bar/lounge. Except for meals (long meals, more like social
events), we tend to stay in our room with the door open so we can see the view
out both sides. It took a couple nights to get used to sleeping on the
train but we're good at it now. Neither of us is very good at climbing
down from the top bunk in the middle of the night. I spent the first few
nights there, but now it's Dad's spot since the lower is too short for him.
Sunday,
Sep 15- Irkutsk
The
trip from Baikal up over a mountain to Irkutsk, roughly along the Angara River
which is the only outflow from Baikal, reminds us of Washington State although
neither of us have ever seen the forests in Washington.
So
far we have gone from rolling hills along the ocean to taiga, mixed birch
forest and open but uncultivated field, to flooded marsh along the rivers,
especially the Amur and Selenga Rivers, to much more open steppe with much
thinner grass in Mongolia, to heavy birch and evergreen forest around Lake
Baikal and Irkutsk, to open field for grazing and birch forest now west of
Irkutsk. As we go along outside the cities and towns with Soviet style and some
newer designed apartment buildings, we see fenced in family compounds composed
a log main dwelling, a big pile of wood for heating the house in the winter, a
tool building, a place for the cow to come home to after a day of grazing, an
outhouse, perhaps another couple of storage buildings, a small garden plot, and
a satellite dish antenna.
Irkutsk
turned out to be a very pleasant surprise. I guess I was expecting a frontier
outpost, and there were a lot of wooden houses and other buildings, but Irkutsk
got civilized to a large extent because of a few of the Decembrist
revolutionaries who were nobility, having served their time in Siberia, set up
houses in Irkutsk with the wives who followed them.
We
walked around the Christ the Savior Church which had an outdoor fresco (!, in
this climate) and then the Great Patriotic War Memorial which was like the Viet
Nam Memorial in DC except showing pictures of those from Irkutsk who died in
the war. We circled back around on the Angara River waterfront and came to the
Church of the Epiphany where a large motorcycle club had just arrived carrying
an icon of Alexander Nevsky.
Next
we visited the Volkonsky house, which is where Sergei V and his wife Maria
lived after he had finished his time in the mines for plotting against Nicholas
I. It was a large house with many pictures of the family and the other families
of the rebels. The whole story told there paralleled the film we had watched on
the train- The Captivating Star of Happiness about three of the wives who
followed their husbands into exile.
From
there we went to the house of a prosperous businessman from the 1890s where we
listened to a concert of music by Chopin, Mozart, Glinka, and a couple of
Russian folk songs performed by a tenor, a soprano, and a pianist, all
excellent, with a champagne toast afterwards.
At
lunch, we had been told there was wifi available so no one talked and everyone
spent lunch checking their devices. For fun I decided to try to download War
and Peace onto iBooks on my iPhone and did it in about three minutes.
After
lunch we went on a couple of walks, one through a very modern esplanade with
brand name shops in a mall (bought Connie a pair of sunglasses) and then along
another part of the riverside embankment. We climbed a church tower on rather
sketchy wooden steps and had the local bell ringer play a brief concert. Very
loud.
Added
note from Connie- We
are spending the day touring the Siberian city of Irkutsk, population 700,000.
Just saw the home of one of the Decembrists exiled here after the 1825
uprising. Interesting that 11 of the wives/girlfriends followed their
guys into exile and when they were freed after 25 years, they established a
good life in Irkutsk - music, literature, fine clothes, good education.
Must have been family money flowing in from western Russia because the Volkonsky
home we visited was spacious and solid.
Now just came from an unbelievable musical presentation at the former home of a couple named Sukachov who must have also been of the upper crust, as they were dedicated to furthering culture in Irkutsk at the end of the 19th century. 11 a.m. on a Sunday, and we had a 45-minute concert with a remarkably gifted pianist and two singers.
Earlier this morning we stopped in at a Russian Orthodox Church, and as we left, about 40 bikers (motorcycle), men and women, who could have been Russian Hell's Angels, all of a sudden appeared with a priest and gathered in front of the cathedral for a group photo.
So in Russia, we are to expect the unexpected, and this trip has proven no different.
Now just came from an unbelievable musical presentation at the former home of a couple named Sukachov who must have also been of the upper crust, as they were dedicated to furthering culture in Irkutsk at the end of the 19th century. 11 a.m. on a Sunday, and we had a 45-minute concert with a remarkably gifted pianist and two singers.
Earlier this morning we stopped in at a Russian Orthodox Church, and as we left, about 40 bikers (motorcycle), men and women, who could have been Russian Hell's Angels, all of a sudden appeared with a priest and gathered in front of the cathedral for a group photo.
So in Russia, we are to expect the unexpected, and this trip has proven no different.
Monday,
September 16 - On the rail to Novosibirsk
Awoke
to a beautiful sunrise. Landscape has become flatter, now in the steppe
region. Alla gave a lecture this morning on Communism and George this
afternoon on transportation in Russia, specifically by water and rail. Had
borscht for lunch, yum. I listened to Dmitri, the amazing pianist, who played
in the club car for a half hour before dinner The train stopped in
Krasnoyarsk in the middle of dinner. I tried to call Mila’s daughter but the
number I was given was not correct. Set the clock back another hour
before bed - really like traveling east to west on the TSR and gaining the 7
hours between Vladivostok and Moscow.
Connie
adds from her email: Monday
was another full day of travel.. We were able to get off the train twice
for about ten minutes each but the first time it was raining and the second was
during dinner. There were two lectures during the day, Russian language
class for those interested (not me) and the usual two-hour lunch and dinners,
so captive on the train wasn't as bad as it sounds. We're just glad we're
not in car 1 or 13, the furthest from the dining car. It's a long haul
with about 15 doors to open and close each time you go to a meal or the lounge
car. Monday during dinner we were surprised with a double rainbow of the
brightest colors I have ever seen.
Tuesday,
September 17 - Novosibirsk
Enjoyed
millet kasha this morning for breakfast, much better than buckwheat. Arrived
in Novosibirsk by 9 and were off the train soon after. Third largest city
in Russia, with a population of 1.5 million. Toured the downtown area,
with the first stop at the statue of Alexander III at the edge of the River Ob
and a look at the single railroad track along the bank - as the TSR was when it
first opened. On to a plaza with three statues: Lenin in the middle, to
the left a triumvirate of peasant, worker, soldier and to the right a statue of
a peasant man pointing toward the future, and a peasant woman with wheat,
symbolizing the fertility of Russia. Behind the square on which these
stood was the opera/ballet house, and our tour there lasted about 45 minutes.
It is supposedly the second widest stage in all of Russia. I sat in the seat Vladimir Putin sits in when he is in town. Tonight is the
season opener, Leonard Bernstein’s Mass.
Next
was a 30-minute ride to the Railroad Museum, an expo of 10-15 different trains
used since the beginning of the rail system, all painted and new-looking, not
like any we’ve seen on this ride. We were able to step inside several of
the cars and to see, for example, how 1st, 2nd and 4th class passengers rode in
the early 1900s, a surgical suite car for use during some war (there were 6,000
such cars) and a car for transporting prisoners which held 75 men, 7 to a cell,
no windows.
As
we were getting on the train to leave there was a strong wind and sleet/ hail
for a few minutes.
Connie’s email from Novo adds: Yesterday we stopped in
Novosibirsk, a city founded in 1893 with the construction of the Trans-Siberian
Railroad; its growth in the 20th century to the now 3rd largest city ( pop 1.5
mil) was largely due to the railroad industry. We saw the beautiful opera
and ballet house (with disgusting stand-only bathrooms) and got a backstage
look before their season-opening concert of Leonard Bernstein's
"Mass" last night. In front of the opera house stand three
typical Soviet statues: in the middle a large Lenin, on one side a triumvirate
of worker-soldier-peasant, and on the other a young, athletic healthy-looking
guy (the face of Russia) pointing toward the future, and with him an equally
robust and country girl holding a shaft of wheat, symbol of Russia's fertility.
Good grief, propaganda still exists. Later we traveled 30 minutes
to the outdoor Railway Museum, where there were 10-15 actual trains which had
been in use (but now all had fresh coats of paint) sometime in the past 100
years. Seeing how 4th class passengers traveled back in the 30s made me
glad we're taking this trip now and paying the extra for a private room and
bath. The hospital car used during WWII was pretty interesting, though I
can't imagine how any doc could have operated on a moving train. Thomas
would have liked all the trains and especially the engine that we were able to
board.
The
rest of the day was riding along toward Yekaterinburg.
Wednesday,
Sept. 18- Yekaterinburg
It
was another cold day- clear at first then cloudy. All day during the tour, I
felt I was one layer short of comfortable.
It
is too hard on this bouncing train to write Yekaterinburg over and over so
I will abbreviate it to YK.
YK
was chartered by Peter the Great in 1723 and named after his wife
Catherine. The occasion for opening the city was a dam across the
local river and then use of the power for budding mining industry (malachite,
gold, mica, amethyst, and lapis). During Soviet times it was called Sverdlovsk
and was a closed city to non Russians until 1991. However there was one
exception to that in 1960 when Francis Gary Powers "dropped in" after his U-2 spy
plane was shot down by MIGS (very embarrassing for Dwight, ruined his chance at
detente and a better legacy). (Watch the movie "Bridge of Spies".)
YK’s
greatest fame came after the story of the last Tsar, Nicholas II, and his
family were murdered here in 1918 became public knowledge.
Our
guide today was Dasha, a 20 something year old newly wed, a very cute girl with
an impish sense of humor. However she also gave Spanish tours and mixed the
languages up a bit so she would talk about the Peter and Pablo fortress as
an example. She also has never been to the US and her English syntax was
translated straight from Russian. She also would say things like Nicholas was
mostly thinking about his hair when she meant his heir. Instead of the Tsar’s
family’s remains she would say “rests”. But her English was much better than my
Russian.
Our
first stop was Ganina Yama which is where the Bolsheviks brought the Tsar and
family’s bodies after shooting them, then doused them with sulfuric acid or lye and
dumped most of the bodies in an old coal mine and then covered them up. Since
the discovery of the remains, the church has built a modern monastery there
with 7 chapels, one for each family member (ignoring the 4 family servants who
also were murdered). We visited the coal mine site and a couple of the chapels.
It seemed artificial to me.
Next
we drove back into town (more modern than anything we have seen because of the
industry (machine tools), fourth largest in Russia, a real city according to
Dasha because it has an Ikea (and also a “motor mile”)) to go to the site of
the Ipaniev house where the family was shot, now the huge Church of the Spilled
Blood. There is a side chapel in the church which is supposed to be located
where the basement room was and there are photos of the room after the
shooting, with damaged walls from the shots (a lot of ricocheting bullets
since the daughters had diamonds sown into their clothes- the diamonds largely
disappeared-what a surprise!?).
We
had lamb kebobs in an very upscale restaurant- crowded with professional
looking young people. When our Nat Geo rep wanted to order some coffee, he
called the waitress “young girl”. I can’t imagine doing that in the US.
Next
stop was the hypothetical border line between Europe and Asia, and again it was
artificial but a lot of fun. There was a very red nosed young guy in a
soldier’s uniform to check our passports and to ham it for the photos, and some
of our group got pictures taken jumping from Europe to Asia and vice
versa.
At
this point the sun started to come out and I really learned that black absorbs
heat- it was the best I felt all day walking on the plaza over the dam where
the city got started. As we were walking here and between the old train station
and the new one, we got the most gawks we have gotten on the trip. I guess it
goes back to being an open city for only a relatively short time.
Connie
email from YK: We
are nearing the end of our rail trip, with only two days to go before arriving
in Moscow. We will be in Ekaterinburg in an hour and will have internet
access at the lunch restaurant, so I'm writing this now so as not to be in a
mad rush like last time, ignoring our table companions (who themselves were
checking in, actually). The sights today center around Nicholas II, the
last tsar, who was murdered along with his family and some of his personal
staff in July, 1918. We've had a lecture and seen two movies about the
family and the events at the time so feel a little prepared to hear the local
guide's presentation on the bus. We'll visit the church which was built
on the spot where the murders took place - the actual house was demolished by
the Soviets around 1976 - then will drive outside of town to see the memorial
erected at the place their bodies were dumped. A sad part of Russian
history, much of which is sad. The final stop before lunch is to an
obelisk marking "the geographical border of Europe and Asia." I
wonder if it will remind me of Four Corners (Remember that, Mike and Beth?)
On
to Kazan.
Thursday,
Sept. 19, 2013 - Kazan
Rain
and about 50 degrees on arrival. The rain got a little more intense during the
early morning but stopped after we visited the Kazan Kremlin. It never did
really warm up beyond about 52 and stayed cloudy.
Kazan
is another big Russian city with more than a million people. It was founded in
1005 and was the seat of a khanate until conquered by Ivan the Terrible in
1552. Now it is the capital of the republic of Tatarstan within Russia (there
is a conflict between Tatarstan’s constitution and the Russian constitution in
that Russia does not allow a republic within the federation to have a president
but the Tatarstan constitution requires election of a president- nothing in
Russia is black and white). Kazan and Tatarstan is mixed- a significant %age of
Russians but a majority of Tatars, mostly Moslem but some Christian. They all
manage to live together harmoniously and intermarriage is quite common.
Kazan
by the way is not on the normal Trans Siberian route- we detoured south
yesterday to get here and will head back north tomorrow to Moscow.
Our
first stop was the Kazan Kremlin (fortress) which provided a great view of much
of the city from its hill. We visited the Kul Sharif Mosque (blue and white)
which was approved to be built inside the Kremlin only in the 1990s. In a city
which used to have a lot of mosques, all torn down by Ivan the Terrible, this
was viewed as a really big gesture since the other dominant structure within
the Kremlin walls is the Orthodox Annunciation Cathedral.
We
drove around a bit with the guide pointing out a lot of high rent condos and
government buildings. We then visited the monastery where the Virgin of Kazan
Icon, one of the three holiest to Russian Orthodox believers and recently
returned from the Vatican, now resides.
Our
guide told us something about tatar cuisine and we went to a good restaurant to
try the good things they do with potatoes (stuffed and folded like a tortilla)
and the honey flour desert called tchak tchak.
After
lunch we went to the Techno Idea Park which is a business incubator somewhat
unique for Russia. Then a short boat ride on the Volga River.
Our
last stop of the day was at the local conservatory where we had a quick tour,
saw some amateur traditional folk singers practicing for a competition, and
then listened to a series of wonderful performances in a small concert hall.
There was an organist, a pianist playing Chopin and Rachmaninoff’s Piano
Prelude, a balilaika and dobro playing pair of girls doing folk tunes and then
a soprano singing a couple of arias.
Two
famous sons of Kazan- Shishkin, the painter, and Shaliapin, the bass.
Back
to the train for dinner and the ride to Moscow.
Friday,
Sept. 20- Moscow- drizzling and about 50 degrees
After
Kazan, we felt like we were back in Europe and in the Soviet Union. Russia does
some things extremely well, like statues, monuments etc, but the rail view into
Moscow was mostly of dilapidated buildings just this side of collapse and the
old rusty looking apartment buildings. I felt like we were back in the 50s.
Then
we arrived at Kazan Station. At once one could feel the vibrancy of the big
city- throngs of people going in every direction.
One
feature of the approach to Moscow especially for us is that the train dropped
the diesel engine about an hour or two outside of Moscow and added a coal fired
steam engine- not much good for the environment but it added to the ambience.
After
saying thank you and goodbye to all the staff we had come to know, and after
making sure all the bags were accounted for, we got on a bus for a quick
overview tour of the city on the way to our lunch at the Suitcase restaurant
owned by the star of Kolya, a famous Russian movie. After lunch I got the
feeling we were killing a little time before we could check in to the hotel rooms,
but we did another couple of spins around Red Square and the Kremlin. Then we
stopped at a place with a good view of the Novodevichiiy Convent, which is known
for two main things- this is the place where Ivan the Terrible sent his wife to
be a nun when he was tired of her (Peter sent his half sister here to get her
out of his hair), and then there is a famous cemetery within the walls where
Khruschev, Mussorgski, Raisa Gorbachov, and Chekhov among others are
buried. At the scenic spot there is also a duck and duckling sculpture given to
the Russians by Barbara Bush. The last stop was an overlook near Moscow State
University with a view of several of the Stalin Gothic towers including the U
and of the Moscow River.
A
word about Moscow- Wow. In the main part of the city, the buildings are a mix
of old, classic, and then brand new. Moscow itself is an example of what the
Russians can do well- The restaurants were lively, the crowd courteous.
We
checked into the Lotte hotel, near Smolensk Metro stop and New Arbat street, to
find a huge TV, a truly wonderful shower, and a heated toilet seat waiting for
us.
Addendum from 2/25/2020, courtesy of Planet Money,
"Japanese toilets are marvels of technological innovation. They have integrated bidets, which squirt water to clean your private parts. They have dryers and heated seats. They use water efficiently, clean themselves, and deodorize the air, so bathrooms actually smell good. They have white noise machines, so you can fill your stall with the sound of rain for relaxation and privacy. Some even have built-in nightlights and music players. It’s all customizable and controlled by electronic buttons on a panel next to your seat.
In Japan, these high-tech toilets are everywhere: hotels, restaurants, bus stations, rest stops, and around 80% of homes. It’s glorious. Then, I come back to the United States, and our toilets are stuck in the age of dirty coal mines and the horse and buggy. They basically have one feature: flush. No heated seats. No nice smells and sounds. No sanitizing blasts of liquid. It’s like cleaning your dishes without water. It’s gross. And it got me thinking: Why can’t we have high-tech toilets too?"
Addendum from 2/25/2020, courtesy of Planet Money,
"Japanese toilets are marvels of technological innovation. They have integrated bidets, which squirt water to clean your private parts. They have dryers and heated seats. They use water efficiently, clean themselves, and deodorize the air, so bathrooms actually smell good. They have white noise machines, so you can fill your stall with the sound of rain for relaxation and privacy. Some even have built-in nightlights and music players. It’s all customizable and controlled by electronic buttons on a panel next to your seat.
In Japan, these high-tech toilets are everywhere: hotels, restaurants, bus stations, rest stops, and around 80% of homes. It’s glorious. Then, I come back to the United States, and our toilets are stuck in the age of dirty coal mines and the horse and buggy. They basically have one feature: flush. No heated seats. No nice smells and sounds. No sanitizing blasts of liquid. It’s like cleaning your dishes without water. It’s gross. And it got me thinking: Why can’t we have high-tech toilets too?"
Connie
had a bit of a cold and we felt like we should repack in an organized way so we
took the night off while the rest went to dinner and a walk around Red Square
at night.
Saturday,
Sept 21- rain and 50 degrees
We
had an early entrance ticket to the Armoury Museum and Olga our guide was
excellent. She stopped and explained any number of significant holdings- too
numerous to mention, but, as an example, boots cobbled by Peter the Great for
himself, 10 Faberge eggs, Catherine the Great’s carriages and wedding gown.
Then
in pelting rain we went outside for a quick orientation to the churches in
Cathedral Square (I think I have them straight now) and then on to a great
Georgian restaurant for lunch.
After
lunch Connie and I split from the group again and went to the Tretyakov Gallery
to see our favorites- Shishkin, Vasnetsov, Repin and a couple of others. We
took the Metro all by ourselves and had no major problems. One little mishap-
The Metro machine would not accept Connie’s pass, she asked the attendant, she
didn’t understand him and asked him to slow down, he said "how can I help you if
you don’t understand?". Then we checked and Connie was trying to use her hotel
room key to enter the Metro. Once we found the pass all was ok. A light moment,
but we didn’t have the courage to let the attendant in on the joke.
Dinner
at Armenian restaurant and then repacking.
Home
for me tomorrow and St. Petersburg for Connie.
Note from Connie about her St
Petersburg time- Sounds
like my trip through the airport came off better than yours. I had a
really nice driver who was pleasant to talk with and introduced me to some
Russian "narodni" (homegrown? local color? "real"
people's?) music. I had to ask for help to find the right check-in spot
at the airport but all went okay, and there was an hour to spare before
boarding. I had the center seat, but next to me was a guy about Michael's
age wearing a Clemson sweatshirt. That was cause for saying hello, and
"Nic" turned out to be both pleasant and conversant. He works
on ships, contracts out to different cargo carriers (or something like that)
and was headed home to St. P. for three months' vacation. He had been to
several ports all over the world, including up and down the east coast, and got
the t-shirt while on a South Carolina stop in Charleston. He'd been to
Norfolk but not on a long enough stopover to see Virginia Beach. Anyhow,
it was a good thing we chatted, because when I couldn't find Margarita inside
or outside the terminal, I ran into Nic again and borrowed his phone. Everything
turned out okay; since our plane was 30 minutes early, she had only just
arrived.
So off to the Astoria Hotel, which appears clean and comfortable, to leave my big suitcase, then we went to a new little restaurant called Soviet Apartment, sort of a 50's diner-like interior except how everyone decorated during Soviet Times. Hemingway's portrait on the wall, along with big rugs of animals and photos of classmates that is just how Margarita said that her parents' apartment looked, and the friend who joined us said they still have Hemingway on the wall of her dacha. I took some photos to show you. I had solyanka (that good beef and veggie soup) and beef pelmeni.
We then got on a bus and headed toward the Russian Museum, but this time to the Benois wing, which has its entry on the canal where the Church on Spilled Blood is. M wanted to see a temporary exhibition by a Russian artist named Arkady Plastov. Google him - I really liked his work, more real Russian people stuff. We also breezed through an exhibit by Filipp Malyavin, who M says was sort of the first Russian impressionist, and that was okay, too.
So off to the Astoria Hotel, which appears clean and comfortable, to leave my big suitcase, then we went to a new little restaurant called Soviet Apartment, sort of a 50's diner-like interior except how everyone decorated during Soviet Times. Hemingway's portrait on the wall, along with big rugs of animals and photos of classmates that is just how Margarita said that her parents' apartment looked, and the friend who joined us said they still have Hemingway on the wall of her dacha. I took some photos to show you. I had solyanka (that good beef and veggie soup) and beef pelmeni.
We then got on a bus and headed toward the Russian Museum, but this time to the Benois wing, which has its entry on the canal where the Church on Spilled Blood is. M wanted to see a temporary exhibition by a Russian artist named Arkady Plastov. Google him - I really liked his work, more real Russian people stuff. We also breezed through an exhibit by Filipp Malyavin, who M says was sort of the first Russian impressionist, and that was okay, too.