Russian
Info Good to Know
Our first
morning in Russia our guide whet our appetite for a fabulous trip with, “You’ll
experience the dynamic city of Moscow and the opulent splendor of imperial St.
Petersburg. Cruising between these cities you will discover the unknown Russia where
daily life has remained virtually unchanged for centuries. Along the canals,
waterways, and lakes is a land of ancient monasteries, shimmering forests of
silver birch, thriving street markets, and churches filled with the sound of
chanting voices.”
The
country of 147 million people represents 40 nationalities. The Ural Mountains divide the country into two main areas;
European Russia, and Siberia. European Russia
is the lesser half but houses the majority of the country’s population.
The
huge country has plains, mountains, rivers and lakes. The Volga River
starts as a spring and runs 2325 miles to the Caspian Sea.
The Siberian rivers Ob, Lena, Yenisey, and Angarta are so wide that when
standing at the river’s edge one cannot see the opposite side. Lake Baikal
is the world’s largest fresh water basin. The water is pure in the world’s
deepest lake (5714 feet). The lake has only one outlet, the lower Angarta
River, but 336 rivers feed it.
Oil
fields lie between the Volga and the Ural Rivers.
To the west iron ore is on the edge of Ukraine.
In Moscow the Russian word tsentr, meaning center, designates the
down town area, but throughout the country, tsentr refers to Moscow itself as
the center of everything Russian. The sprawling city of Moscow has 2500 historical and architectural
monuments, 70 museums, 125 cinemas, 50 theaters, 4500 libraries, and 540 higher
education and research institutions.
Stalin
built the Moscow subway system in 1932-35. They were to be the best and most
beautiful in the world to outshine capitalism. Each station is a museum in
itself and each is different. We learned the subway system is closed only four
hours a day for cleaning. The wheat design bronze vents change the air in the
system three times a day. Some of the system is 350 feet below ground level,
and Stalin had an underground command post within the metro system.
The
stations were so clean! There was no graffiti and they really were beautiful.
The first station we entered was lined with huge bronze statues of fighting
men—the protectors. Another station had beautiful crystal chandeliers, and yet
another was literally an art museum.
Like
all subways systems one must act quickly to get on and off the train. Trains run frequently, are inexpensive and easy to use.
Vodka
is the national drink and lots and lots of it is consumed each day.
Everyone in Russia referred
to WW II as the Great Patriotic War.
This was a
wonderful and most informative trip. My journal is thick and there are many more
stories to come.
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