Thursday 26 April 2018

Pictures from my DSLR

I thought that if I add them to the days they might get missed, so I thought I'll add them here. I'm not very good at pictures, and Geo's are generally better, so I will just add ones not represented by Geo's yet!






St Petersburg, Day 8

It was the last day on our trip to Russia and we wanted to spend it in city centre.

We started the day with listening to the noon cannon at the Peter and Paul Fortress. Wow ... just wow. They do this every day at noon, and we were in the courtyard below it with a great view of the cannon, we arrived perfectly timed as well. The blow was massive, like not even sound-wise more like the shock wave! Geo and I were flabbergasted, the shock wave blew the air out of my lungs, it actually felt surreal.

So after that unusual experience we headed along the river enjoying the weather St Petersburg spoilt us with and watching the ice plates float along the river. Due to the chain of sunny and warm days we had during our trip all the snow melted and the ice on the river broke. It was an amazing view.



Then we walked past the St. Isaac's Cathedral (finding it was closed on Wednesday's) and on to our Pelmeni lunch (Russian dumplings). Geo really enjoyed them and I love the potato mushroom ones so who am I to object! 

The main goal of the day was the Hermitage. We got free entrance as students so that was really nice, but we couldn't buy tickets to the golden chambers because they only had Russian excursions and apparently a non-Russian can't join that....stupid but oh well, we got to see the rest:

With all its intricate wooden floors...
...grand halls...
...the famous peacock clock...
...and mosaic tables. (YES it's mosaic, it's so small you can hardly see it!)
On the way back we browsed through a large grocery store, buying snacks to take with us and looking at anything we might have missed.
With that we rounded up our touristy side of the trip and spent the last night with my relatives eating and talking. While wanting to stay up the whole night until we had to leave for the airport at 3, we ended up falling asleep after all. But we still had a smooth trip and safely got home.
It was a wonderful trip showing the touristy and homey side of Russia and seeing my relatives. I was super happy to be able to introduce Geo to that part of my culture.
-KK

St Petersburg, Day 7

So as you can see we are not doing the alternating order anymore, but that is more because I want the blog done while it's still fresh in the memory and Geo unfortunately has a lot of university course work right now, so I'm finishing off the blog when I get the chance.
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Right, so our second to last day started with a follow up visit to the doctors (yay..) but all was good so then we returned to the house for some rest. Having walked so much in the past days really wrung us out so we just had some down time on the bed with the cat (Need to enjoy having a pet around while we have the chance!)

After another wonderful home-cooked lunch, of chicken cutlets (totally got the recipe, they were that good) with Russian salad we got a ride to the naval village and fort of Kronstadt outside of St Petersburg. Being the defence of St Petersburg and being one of the main naval bases it had a lot of navy based artillery, submarines, ships and a naval cathedral, which was the main attraction of the trip.






Tuesday 24 April 2018

St Petersburg, Day 6

A bit late but here is what we did on day 6:

For breakfast we went to a specialised pie bakery, to try some Russian pie - and it was amazing. Geo had a salmon filling while I went for the more traditional cabbage filling. They were really nice and Geo asked me to try bake them some day *gulp* really not a good baker, but I'll give it a go some day.

Next was, the less exciting and more unfortunate, visit to the doctors, as I had gotten an infection...sigh.
In Russian hospitals you have to wear these on your feet to keep the floors clean (ironically we also had to wear them at the Catherine Palace to preserve the wooden floors
Thankfully it didn't take up too much of our day and accompanied by extraordinary weather of sunshine and 19 degrees we headed into city centre for a walk. Our plan was to walk around town and then head into the Hermitage, as we had explored some of city centre already and the museum had to be seen. What I had totally forgotten that Monday was a museum maintenance day, meaning that it was closed... Well then, at least it was nice weather so we went for a stroll along Nevskiy Prospect (High Street).

Venturing to the old and very elite looking Elisey shop in which one of my relatives worked many generations ago, we were in awe by the extravagance and prices of this place.

While walking back towards the other sights we had stumbled upon a caricature artist, and remembering our fun experience in Seoul, Korea, we decided to get one here as well. After some very awkward 10 minutes of standing and smiling here is the result:
Lastly, we went to the Island on Neva river to look at the columns and walk along the promenade. We also considered going into the Kunstcamera - an ethnographic museum famous for its room of unusual animals - however it was closed for Monday maintenance, too.

Once again, greatly underestimating the distances on the tourist map we ventured to the next metro station that felt a life time away, but oh well walking is healthy right?

When coming back to the place we were staying we thought that our walk was not enough and wanting to help my relatives to retrieve some things from their other flat, climbed the stairs to the 23rd floor. Unfortunately for me, on the way down Geo realised that I had forgotten one of my bags upstairs (thankfully he didn't realise it on the ground floor, but it was already floor 8) so I had to walk 15 floors back up.. my legs were not amused.

We were thanked with an amazing home cooked meal and appreciation from the cat for bringing it, its claw stretcher. This was the end of a long day of walking and adventure.

-KK

Sunday 8 April 2018

St Petersburg, Day 5

The day started off very chill as we had a bit of a lay in and as it is Russian Easter were treated to some eggs and traditional sweet dishes. From there we headed to the miniature museum Grand Maket, which is a model of Russia. It had amazing attention to detail, with gradual night over the room due to Russia's many time zones, tiny flashes on cameras of model people, moving transport and so much more.




Afterwards we met with family to let them try some Korean food. It was a very nice place and according to Geo pretty authentic. 

Lastly, the highlight of the day was our visit to the famous St Petersburg circus and its current show "Dreaming of Flying". It was Geo's first time at a circus and he seemed to enjoy it! We both were quite neutral about the animal numbers, as we felt bad for them and they weren't very thrilling. The clowns were quite funny, however Geo was laughing more than me (I think, I lack some kind of humor -_-). Most impressive were the acrobatic numbers, which thankfully were every second one. There were acrobats being thrown in the air, jumping between trapezes, leaping from swinging platforms and doing aero shows without any support. Those were mesmerizing and completely worth the tickets. We both agreed that a circus with just those numbers would be 10/10. 
-KK

St Petersburg, Day 4

Chill but Surprisingly Busy Day

Arrival @ St. Petersburg

As Ksen wrote previously, we arrived at St. Petersburg @ 7am ish.
Compared to Moscow it was much colder at St. Petersburg which was a shame cause I only had a wind breaker.... yay me. 
None the less, we carried ourselves out of the station and made it back.  
We had to reorganize for the "thrilling" day that we had set for ourselves.

Cheerleading(?) Competetion

You read correctly.
We did in fact watch cheerleading on this Russian trip. 
It was a moment that made me realize I'm really unhealthy and can't flip. (sad face)

Catherine's Palace

From the event hall the competition was held, we took an uber to Catherine's Palace.
We got food from a cafe/restaurant near by. Twas classic let's say XD
We were too hungry to get any pictures so use your wildest imagination as to what they looked like.

It was quite late in the afternoon after the competition but we were lucky enough to have reached the palace  with enough time to go through the exhibit but in a non rushed manner. 
We were warned that usually the line to get a ticket takes nearly an hour but there was a single group infront of us when we went, so yay us. 

Have I mentioned we've been extremely lucky with the weather during this trip?

Any who, we found out that the whole palace was destroyed during WWII, but the government has been constantly restoring the palace to its former glory. 
Apparently to rebuild one side of a door way in the palace, it costs approximately 5 million rubles. 
Although photos were prohibited, the most interesting room has to be the Amber room.
Although it was a  recreation as the original is a mystery to this day, it was quite impressive.




After that it was just going back and resting for future days of the trip to come. 
- GK

Day Trip to Moscow, Day 3

Train Ride

After getting to the train station with a very grumpy and rude Uber driver (who took my phone to put his own - undeserved- 5 star rating) we boarded the painfully early train to Moscow.  The "Sapsan" took us to Moscow in 4 hours going at a speed of up to 250 km/h.  Geo took a long nap to catch up on the sleep, I so meanly deprived him of by choosing an early train. I watched a show on my phone and then joined him for a short nap.

We arrived in Moscow a bit sleepy but ready to start the day.
In the Metro (Underground) Geo was still contemplating his life choices.

The Kremlin

Our first thing on the agenda was the Kremlin, as it requires a reasonable amount of time and is the main sight of Moscow. After seemingly and eternity in the line for the tickets, we made it inside.


We walked around inside, looking at the churches and cathedrals. Here are some pictures from the outside, as inside photography was prohibited.


This is Zsar Kolokol (Zsar Bell) according to the leaflet the biggest bell in the world. It weights 200 tonnes with the broken off piece weighting 10.
The police in the Kremlin was very vigilant and constantly blowing their whistles to direct people back on the pathways. Thankfully we were careful enough to not be whistled at! That ended our sightseeing inside the Kremlin and we exited onto the main square.

Our City Walk

Being quite hungry we continued on to lunch, and found ourselves in a chain restaurant with a cafeteria style food. Having selected our food we took our trays to a table and enjoyed a quick, cheap and simple lunch.
From there we started our (very long) walk around the city. Moscow is very grand and while planning our walk I underestimated the distance we were walking (oops). Google had said roughly an hour and a half, and with a whole day to spare I thought that it was very manageable (well then). In total we walked over 27 000 steps (that's 19 km) and I can tell you we were shattered. Anyways, we managed to visit all the main sights so here are the highlights:



Inside the main shopping mall GUM

This was the last place of the tour so energy was low

Evening

We still had several hours until our train back to Saint Petersburg, so we took the Metro to go see the modern business quarter of Moscow - Moscow City. After looking at the new skyscrapers we headed back to city centre and walked around the main touristy pedestrian street and watched some street artists to spend the time. Geo's favorite was a spray paint artist doing a live show, mine were a band consisting of a string quartet and a drummer. 

Lastly, we boarded the night train at 22.30. We shared a room with another couple who had booked the two top bunks. The beds were surprisingly comfortable and being so tired from the long day we slept through the night, and would have probably slept even longer if the lady wouldn't have woken us up as we were entering the train station in Saint Petersburg.
-KK

Saturday 7 April 2018

St Petersburg, Day 2

First Day Alone

Unlike the previous day today we planned to go around the city by ourselves. 
We'd planned the day out and set off hoping to finish it XD

Our first destination was Saint Issac's Cathedral.

Saint Issac's Catheral

We were planning on going in as well as go up but found out our student cards don't get us discounts.
We needed something called an ISIC (international student identification card), many sadness.
This lead us to just decide and go see the view from the top after receiving intel from Ksen's mom that it's not worth going in cause of our future plans visiting the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood. Here are some exterior shots:

After an ungodly climb of too many stairs we made it to the observatory at the highest golden dome.
Who says I'm unhealthy?




A happy Ksen going down

Bronze Horseman

Right before we got some food (to prevent hangry Ksen from appearing) we made a quick detour to the Bronze Horseman for a quick photo or two.


Lunch

For lunch we decided to go to one of many many many many many suggestions, Brinza (브른자).
A Russian restaurant chain that specializes in cheburek, a Russian pastry of sort. 
We went for classic fillings; meat, cheese and potato-mushroom.


We had dessert as well but as the theme of this trip is 'we can be healthy if we try' it will not be posted.

Kazansky Sobor (Cathedral)

Due to the unfortunate circumstances of lighting being on our side we currently have meh pictures but please understand. 

As this is a currently operational monastery, we weren't allowed to take pictures inside. 

Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood

Now to the highlight of the day (traditional touristy values wise) we went to the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood. A typical example of Russian orthodox church architecture or so google says.


























Arcade Museum

Through Ksen's extreme research skills we found an old Soviet arcade museum next to the Church.
Our obvious next step, old-skool gaming.



That was pretty much it for the us on our second day in St. Petersburg. 
We had to catch an early morning train (half 6..... why Ksen....why) so we headed back with 21987 steps under our belt. 

Oh never mind, one more thing I didn't get reminded or anything because Ksen is right next to me watching me type like a hawk. We had a great time meeting up with Ksen's relatives for a Georgian/Russian cuisine restaurant. They were kind enough to introduce us to the restaurant order food that I would have never ordered and been able to enjoy without them. 
- GK