I remember...21 years ago...I was here, a little kid with her mom, both flying to Jordan to the
This time it was very different to what i remembered, starting with the fact that everything looked smaller (well, i grew quite a bit in the meanwhile :)), Soviet union was gone, cafes appeared, technology, markets, etc, etc...All signs of letting the world in.
The city was still beautiful, a real cosmopolitan, been all over the place there, Red Square, Vorobyevy hills, Novodevichiy monastery, The church of Christ the Savior and everywhere else i managed to see in 3 days. It helped a lot that i speak the language, it was cool.
I went shopping as well, they have proper shopping malls, i like that, it's very few that i've seen that could compete with our City Stars in Cairo...
But out of all this, my absolute favorites were the St. Bassil church and the monument of Peter the Great.
The church looks like it was straight out of a folklore kids story, very colorful, very beautiful, the domes look like Marshmallow :) (Think Hansel and Gretel). The interior is all painted in traditional Russian style, and by all, i mean all, the whole walls, the ceiling, everything. Plus, you can get quite nice views of the city from up there and some pretty artistic photos :)
Another great thing about this trip is that i actually managed to get my mom along, she was very happy and i was very happy to have her with me there, it was much more fun touristing together :)
I still haven't told you how i ended up there in the first place. Well...I booked an OFS3 course there which was 4 days after crew change, so i decided to do the city rather than waste the 4 days flying back and forth, and it was a great idea. The course got moved to Tyumen, Siberia (relax! it's not as bad as it sounds). But that's a different story :)
:) ah yes, the 'oh my God all this used to seem so much bigger' feeling!
ReplyDeletedo want to visit Moscow sometime, but don't wanna have to learn Russian for it :D
You should manage in Moscow without Russian, and it doesn't change how people will treat you, you feel totally unwelcome both ways :D
ReplyDelete:)) wow, isn't that the most comforting thing? :P
ReplyDeleteYup! I'm promoting Russian tourism :D
ReplyDelete