Friday, August 29, 2008

More for the sports fans...

The past 2 weeks have been physically difficult.
I keep getting sick and it feels like I have lost the ability to take care of myself. Times like these I feel like I need to be back home in my childhood room, receiving the hot washcloths, ginger ale and saltine crackers from mommy.

I had some mild food poisoning that passed after a couple of days, just in time to welcome the nastiest cold I have ever had.
Mostly I have just been bed-ridden. Too tired to walk to the store even. I had a small temperature, coughing up lots of gooey stuff, not sleeping well, sore throat, and the most impressive amount of nose-blowing. Yesterday my wonderful french doctor gave me some antibiotics. I really hate taking medication, but the pain I am feeling all over my head with this sinus pressure is pretty unbearable.

I should be better just in time for my September trip to Nice, France. Oh yes my friends. I am going to the beautiful French Riviera for "work"
I will be there for 10 days, afterwards I am sure I will have some great pictures to share.


Before that, I want to show some pictures/share some stories about two things that we did this summer that are of interest- the Eurofolk festival and the Russian Railways Cups with Chelsea, AC Milan, Sevilla FC and Lokomotiv.

In the previous post with aerial shots of Moscow, I included two pictures from Tsaritsino Park. We visited this park for a Eurofolk Festival.
We only stayed for a few acts. First was an Irish duo, then a soloist from Czech Republic and we left after a quartet from Sweden. It was a pretty cool experience to see famous folk musicians from all over Europe.

Festival:
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Park:
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If you look at the center left, you can see a newlywed couple taking photos.

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The other side of the bridge from the last picture.

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For the most part, the pictures of the castle didn't work because the sun was on the wrong side, so everything is dark.

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The glass museum.

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The music-cued fountains.
A youtube video I found of the fountain at night:


Like I said in the other post about this park, it was built and used by Catherine the Great and other Tsaritsinas during the 16th-18th centuries.


So, "more for the sports fans"

If you remember my previous post about the Champions League Final 2008 that took place here in Moscow, between Chelsea and Manchester United.

Again we were able to see Chelsea and other equally as talented teams.

Lokomotiv, the football club in our neighborhood in Moscow held a tournament called the Russian Railways Cup.
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Sevilla FC from Spain, AC Milan from Italy, Chelsea from England (a Russian favorite) and Lokomtiv played 4 games in 2 days.
We went the second day for the finals.

Chelsea and AC Milan played for the 3rd place spot. I was hoping that AC Milan's recently signed player(and my absolute favorite footballer), Ronaldinho would be there, but he was away for the Olympics.

They were all friendly matches, more of the second-string was played, and there wasn't a very competitive spirit, but knowing all of this did not prepare me for this game. It was quite possibly the most embarassing game of football I have ever seen adults play.
Chelsea beat AC Milan 5-0. At least 2 of the goals were completely fudge ups by the big goon of a goalie.

Here is a video of the 5 goals. It isn't very clear and the audio is a little bit annoying, but you can see that the first goal goes between his legs and the third one he completely misses the ball as he kicks it, falling on his ass and the Chelsea forward just tapping it into the goal. That is maybe the worst and most embarassing way to mess up in a game, especially for a keeper.



Really, it seemed as if AC's defenders were paid to give these goals up. The first goal none of the defenders even try for the ball, and the second goal is assisted by the defender heading the ball to the top of the 18. WORST!

Ok yeah so pictures:
Vasili, Sarah Beth, and our Russian friend Dima outside of the stadium

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SB and I

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The incredibly elaborate Lokomotiv mascot

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Fans of Lokomotiv

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Lokomotiv vs. Sevilla

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Cute kids do a victory lap with their trophy after winning the youth Railway Cup.
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So cute!

The stadium and the train

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Something interesting about the stadium- there is a story that it was built to cover up the construction of an underground bunker during the Soviet Union.
There is also a bunker underneath the Kremlin and our family's neighborhood in Taganska. They are all connected by a secret metro system. Their purpose is partly for the fear of nuclear attack, and I think partly because they were sneaky.
This is all according to a television show I watched in the U.S. a couple of months ago with my dad. The only Russian I talked to about it said that it's all rubbish.
The bunker that is supposedly underneath the stadium looks like a beautiful palace inside.

Actually, I just found this article about one of the bunkers being opened up to the public:

"Underground Marvels

A once-secret bunker, located 60 meters beneath central Moscow, opens to the public and may soon contain a museum devoted to the Cold War.

By Anna Malpas
Published: April 20, 2007

The entrance to the Tagansky Protected Command Point is concealed in an unassuming 19th-century building a few minutes' walk from a busy intersection. Given a paper pass by the guard, visitors take a high-speed elevator down to the formerly secret headquarters located 60 meters -- almost the height of a 20-story building -- underground. At that depth, conversation is drowned out every few minutes by the roar of metro trains passing overhead.

Sold off in an auction last year, the bunker now belongs to a private company that plans to turn it into an entertainment complex with a museum about the Cold War, a restaurant and even a spa. But it is already possible to book excursions around the 600-meter-long network of bare, cavernous tunnels."
http://context.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2007/04/20/106.html

I must go, as soon as possible.


Now, my stomach is growling and I think that the banana bread has finally cooled off enough to eat.... I'll be back in a week and a half with pictures of the beautiful French Riviera.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Georgia-Russia War

This video sums up my opinion about the war:



Don't believe what you are hearing in the United States. If anything, follow BBC News (if you have the television channel or the website)


And if you want to know why the U.S. has such a bias:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26097719/

OIL!

-More than 37,000 refugees from South Ossetia have applied to the Russian Migration Service for temporary shelter in Russia

I added a newsreel on the right that shows the top stories about Russia from GoogleNews. Not the best source for unbiased news, but at least this way if you visit my blog you can see the basics of what is going on in this country.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

At least one of my friends loves me enough to visit me in Russia!

Look at me! Two posts in one week!
The truth is, life has been slow. I've been feeling really under the weather and haven't had much responsibility, so I have been taking it realllyyy slowly. I have been spending most of my time sleeping and reading. I just got a bunch of new books and have read about 3 or 4 of them in just 2 weeks.

The last few weeks have been pleasant though, because we have some very welcomed visitors. Right now the "in-laws" from VA are here which has been such a delight. And last week my friend from Richmond, Sarah Beth was here. So she got me out of the house a little bit. We did a few things I haven't done before, but mostly it was just really, really nice having an old friend here.

Sarah Beth took some great pictures and I want to share some of them here. Much of the content you have seen before, but these are from different eyes, so they are captured much differently. It's like hearing two sides of a story, and I really like her version of Moscow:

Pictures from the Red Square at sunset:
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Metro pictures:
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The dark, steep escalator tunnel in/out of the stations

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Waiting for the train at our station, Taganskaya

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Lucky dog statue at the metro station of the Red Square

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a high ceiling with a painting of the Soviet flag at the top the Taganskaya station

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Young boy playing the accordion for money in the metro


Around the city:

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Famous graffiti wall for a Russian musician on Old Arbat

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Delicious looking greens at the Alexander Gardens of the Kremlin

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Sarah Beth at the KGB at sunset

Pictures from our day at the Moscow State University:

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The great part about MSU is not only the cool architecture, but this fantastic view that you get of the entire city. The campus is set upon a high hill that overlooks Moscow. Pictures of the view in another post.

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A newlywed couple on the side of the hill, about to release some doves.

Behind them you can see the ski slope down the hill that is used, no matter what the weather.

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The lift wasn't working so we just walked down the hill to the river.
The walk down reminded me of an old video game I use to play on Playstation.
My knees hurt so badly after walking down this steep hill.

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We walked along the river to this metro station that is situated right above the water.

Something I really love about other cities (outside of the ones I lived in for a significant amount of time) is the markets.
Moscow has GREAT markets. One of them is a food market that I had heard of but never been to. Sarah Beth and I went, spent about $40 on fresh fruits and veggies, and I had about 15 conversations in Russian. It was great practice.

But my favorite market is the one in our neighborhood at Izmaylova. Our neighborhood is known for 2 big things: the gigantic park and the market.
The market is indescribable- it's another world where the rules are different, the dialects and languages change at every hall and you can literally get lost shopping.
I like to take people there because it really is like being in another country. Sometimes you are in China, Vietnam, the Caucasus, somewhere in the Middle East- all developing, and nothing western. The entire place is probably as big as the town I grew up in. You think you are in the market before you actually even see the high arched doorway. It is a maze inside. A maze where every hall has a different item. The first two halls as you enter are fur coats. Then some are shoes, purses, umbrellas, jeans, etc.

I usually just stay on the main path and enjoy all of the sights, sounds and smells. For the first time I ventured into the Asian part (Chinese, Vietnamese, Korean, I really don't know) and bought some delicious tofu!! The only tofu I have been able to find here is the soft silken tofu that's really only good for making pudding or as an egg substitute.

But for $1.5/$2 (30/40 rubles) I found firm and smoked tofu!! This is a huge improvement for my diet since lent ended. This part of the market also has greens that I have never seen in Moscow, and never seen in my life. I can't wait to go back this weekend. They also have some things that are hard to see and stomach- chicken carcasses completely exposed, buckets of live fish bigger than my midsection, crawfish, squid, and all kinds of animal parts. All exposed and butchered how you want it on a piece of cardboard on the ground. Yeah, maybe buying anything from them is risky- but the tofu is pre packaged so I feel okay about it.

Here are general pictures of walking through the market:
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They have these vendors that walk through the market and sell food, cigarettes, and even small stationary items. We saw a couple of guys with huge carts holding 10-20 melons, they were cutting them up with big machetes right there and selling them piece by piece.

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‘Nothing can stop our independence now’ – breakaway republics

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Saint Petersburg trip with our Swiss/German friends

So, finally here I am with the Saint Petersburg pictures.
It's about time, I know, I know!!

Before moving to Russia I really did not know much at all about Saint Petersburg- you could probably say that I knew nothing except that it was a major city second to Moscow. So, I will assume that many others don't know too much about it either and I will share some information that I have learned before the pictures.

I have heard many Americans and tourists say that Saint Petersburg is their city of preference in Russia because of it's aesthetics that Moscow is lacking. It is a gorgeous city, very European, with colorful architecture (for a while it was illegal for owner's to not paint their buildings, we saw only one black one), it is called the Cultral Capital, it holds a lot of history as it once was the capital of Russia and an important city in many wars.

In the last century Saint Petersburg has undergone many name changes. Up until 1914 it was Saint Petersburg, then for 10 yeas it was Petrograd, then for 67 years it was Leningrad and was changed back to Saint Petersburg in 1991. Some people, mainly the generations older than mine, still refer to it as Leningrad.

The city is Europe's 4th largest (Moscow being #1), therefore Russia's 2nd, with 4.6 million people. And it is the northern most city with a population over 1 million.


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On the train- 12 hours overnight. But we had a personal 4-bunk room which was nice and cozy.

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Russian countryside from the train.




After leaving 12 AM Friday night(Sat morn.) we arrived in Saint Petersburg around noon on Saturday.

Saint Petersburg is known for it's many canals, which gives it the nickname "Venice of the North"
Yeah... sort of maybe... but you can't really compare anything to Venice.
One of the first things we did after checking into our hostel was explore these canals on an hour long "cruise"

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Our friends on the boat.

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Us on the boat.

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Winter Palace/Hermitage Museum. We didn't get to go inside, and it's a hard one to miss out on. There are over 3 million pieces in the museum, including works by Picasso and Rembrandt. It is a major attraction of the city.

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Beautiful European-like architecture.

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Exploring.

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The Northern-most mosque in the entire world.

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We rested here for a bit and played a little bit of Durak (Russian card game)

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Evening falls....


The main reason I wanted to come to Saint Petersburg during this time is not only that the weather is comfortable, but to experience the "White Nights"
This is the time of the year when the sun never completely sets and full darkness is not experienced.
At 1 AM-2 AM we climbed up to the balcony of St. Isaac's Cathedral:

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And this is what we saw:

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The next morning we had brunch at a famous restaurant called "The Idiot" where I had one of the best salads of my life- it is VERY difficult to find a leafy green salad in Russia. They usually consist of cucumbers, tomatoes, fresh dill and maybe cabbage.
However, the real leafy green salads I have had here have been out of this world. I highly reccommend The Idiot if you visit Saint Petersburg.

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Our main venture for the day was the Imperial Palace (Peterhof) which requires a half hour boat ride on a hydrofoil across the Gulf of Finland (of the Baltic Sea.)

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This palace is known for it's great gold fountains.
It's called "the Russian Versaille" and I thought that that was a more accurate comparison.
It was built in 1721.

In front of the palace, looking down above the waterfalls towards the Gulf of Finland.

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Our lovely group-

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Inside the palace-

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Behind the palace in the gardens, a newlywed couple were enjoying their day

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We didn't stay long, headed back to St. Petersburg and walked around a bit more before we had to go back to Moscow.

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The WWII Eternal Flame-

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He didn't feel like smiling in front of a war memorial, but I felt a connection to it since my grandfather spent a significant amount of time in Russia during WWII and it is something our entire family holds a lot of pride in.


What was really strange were these brides taking pictures at the eternal flame. Some of them were holding Cosmopolitan stuff, so I suspect that it was a photoshoot or a contest for them.

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The last big thing we saw was the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood which is similar to that of Moscow's St. Basil's

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Afterwards, we headed back to the train station and found a cafe to watch the Germany-Spain EuroCup final. We had a little bit to drink, watched some football, bought some fruit and water for the big trip back, and returned to the little 4-bunk room for the 12 hour ride home.

*I want to mention that we stayed at the Nevsky Hostel on Nevsky Prospekt. It was PERFECT. They were extremely accommodating, affordable, comfortable and right around the corner from the center of the city. I HIGHLY recommend it.