A Journey from Moscow to Vladivostok via the Trans-Siberian Railroad - Part 2
Day 6 – Thursday, 7/26/18 08:13. UTC: Thursday 7/26/18 03:13.
Perm
58.00706 56.2487
By my reckoning: Thursday, 7/26/18 08:13.
We have crossed the boundaries of two time zones. We're
starting to get out of Moscow's gravitational field. Out here we should see the
real Russia. Flyover Russia, er, Trainover Russia. Perm is a smaller, poorer
city. It was not one of the World Cup cities. So there were no scanners to walk
through at the train station.
After breakfast we met our guide, Natalia. We loaded into
our van and off we went. Natalia said we were on Perm's main street, which was
named...? Lenin St. of course. We stopped at a monument, of sorts. A man with
big ears. Perm was a mining town. Salt was one of the things they mined, and
the Stroganoff family owned all of it. They pumped up salt water and evaporated
it. Then carried it in big sacks to the port for export. On the way salt would
get on their ears, which made them large and red.
Kalashnikov had a factory here. Now there are some
universities but no more mining or industry. Yeltsin had ordered them all
filled in. They were no longer profitable.
The city, of about 1,000,000, has a vibrant theater and
ballet culture. One thing they're famous for is the Fat Ballet. The dancers are
all over 200 kg. About 40 of them. They all come on stage together and the
audience laughs. Then they start dancing. Soon the audience is enraptured. They
become absolutely silent, their faces following the dancers like sunflowers
following the sun. Russians love their ballet.
They are building a road from Perm to Siberia. There is the
train but no road. Soon there will be. Prisoners were sometimes made to walk
from St. Petersburg to Siberia, a trip that took two years for some and never
for many.
Someone brought up Putin and Politics. Natalia said she was
firmly in the President's Kremlin whereas Yevgeny was not. He thinks that with
Putin there's no choice. He feels that Putin did a lot of good at first, but
not so much now. He's had enough of Putin and would like to see something
different. He did admit that things were bad and that Putin has done a lot of
good for Russia. And most people love him. Natalia thinks it might be a
generational thing. Those who remember Brezhnev, Gorbachev, and Yeltsin, the
older generation, tend to like Putin. Those who have no memory of the dark days
think different. This is natural and happens everywhere. The young forget, the
old regret.
And I got some dirt on Tsar Vladimir. He's supposed to be
the richest man on earth, which he denies. He's had affairs and has a love
child with a young gymnast and maybe other lovers. Tabloid stuff. I asked if
there was a lot of criticism of Putin. They said, yes. Under the Soviet Union
there was only one media outlet, Pravda. Now there are lots of programs out
there and political debate is robust. One show always has someone on who is an
advocate for the American position, no matter how ludicrous. He is routinely
reviled, like Russian expert Stephen F. Cohen is over here, though Cohen is
never allowed on the American Pravda. They don't know why the Russian
equivalent keeps doing it, except for the money. Or shock value, I suppose.
Russia had their Rush’s and Alex Jones’. Just like every other penny ante
republic.
On our way back we stopped at a roadside stand and bought
wild, fresh picked strawberries. They were a bit sour, but good. Our driver got
stopped for not having his seat belt on. He received a fine of three American
dollars!
Then we got to the ice caves. Truly amazing. The rock is
gypsum and there are a lot of underground streams, so it erodes erratically.
Sometimes tubes slowly eat their way up from a great depth. When they reach the
surface they open a yawning sink hole in the ground, possibly under your feet!
We went from 30+ degrees to -5 entering the caves. The ice
grows and recedes throughout the year. There is an underground lake that some
people have gone swimming in it. The water is crystal clear and cold.
Karl Marx Street. |
Lenin Street |
Peace Street. Mir is Peace in Russian. It also
means the whole world.
|
After lunch we headed back to Perm. Dennis and Michelle had
lost their luggage. They took the same route from DC to Moscow as I did, but
later then me. Moscow airport had some flooding in tunnels and 2000 people were
without their luggage. We went out so they could buy some stuff. More people
here didn't speak English, so they used a translate app. People were very
friendly and helpful. A woman in an optics store offered Dennis 40% off on some
sunglasses. She spoke English and was extremely nice and helpful.
In a grocery store we picked up a few things. We both got
some vodka. For about 400 rubles you can get a half liter of a decent quality
vodka. I got one called Russian Select and Denis got one called Kalashnikov.
Gotta love it. We figure the state must subsidize it. Bread and circus. Or
vodka and football.
On the way back to the hotel we walked through a park. It
was like a carnival with rides and animals and little tacky gift shops,
musicians singing on the streets and metal trees especially designed so people
could pledge their love by placing pad locks on it like in Paris.
Tonight we check out at 21:30 and ride the train to
Ekaterinburg, arriving at 3:30. Dennis and I traded a few shots. Straight up!
Strip joint next door. Or so they tell me. |
Our tour bus. |
Completely meaningless tourist attraction. AKA Long 59E. Lat 59N |
Ah, the Kungurokaya…Lbdyanaya…Oh, forget it. The Kungar Ice Caves. |
35 degrees outside. 5 below inside.
|
Underground, albeit cold, river. |
Father Frost. |
One or two hundred rubles, I think. |
A park in Ekaterinburg. |
Teatre Opera y Baleta… Zoopark…Teatre
Kukal… Galarea Kovremenora Eskusva. A
Theater. A zoo. A puppet museum. And an art
gallery.
|
This stadium was built for the world cup. The
Romaneaque façade was from an original
Soveit era arena which they meticulously
kept.
|
What should we say about Vladimir the Terrible? Putin is a
tsar, but a tsar for the 21st century. He has to answer to the Duma, courtesy
of Nicholas II. There is a robust media which routinely criticizes him. The
cities I visited so far have been clean and safe, the people friendly and
helpful. Are they repressed? Somewhat. Not in the drag off to the Gulag type,
but there are certain expectations on what you can say or do. It would make an
American uncomfortable and some people resent it, but again, generational
differences made it either repressive or a breath of fresh air. Giving up
liberty for a little security? Maybe. On the one hand it's bureaucratic. On the
other hand it's liberating. It depends on how much you want. Anarchy? Regiment?
Or just Russia? Franklin for thought.
Sunset 9:00PM. Sunrise 3:30AM.
Vocabulary word for the day: привет Priv-YET Hi.
Day 6 - Addendum
When we first got to the hotel a couple went out exploring.
They found bars and stores open, people coming out of the bars, and general
activity. Yevgeny said Thursday night is gay night. I don't know if that's all
over Russia or just here. The custom had to come from some place. No, gays are
not hunted down by wolves driven by bears bearing Kalashnikov's and hammers and
sickles! They are for the most part left alone, except by Russia's version of
our assholes. Just like here. Yes, Russia has some draconian anti-gay laws in
some republics. So have we in some of our states. Perhaps we should clean up
our own act before being the conscience of Russia, hmmm?
While talking to our guides yesterday about politics, the
Church came up. I asked if the Church had a lot of power. Yes. And it's
growing. Putin is a Christian and goes to church on Sundays. Now. Is the Church
gaining power because of Putin or does Putin have power because of the Church?
Good question. The Church has been gaining power since the fall of the Soviet
Union, so it's probably a little of both.
Russians have a reputation for being cold or distant. But
they will readily talk to strangers about their personal lives. Don't ask a
Russian how he is unless you've got all day. Russians don't go to
psychiatrists. They just go find someone they've never seen before and will
never see again to unburden themselves. People they bump into, taxi cab
drivers, you name it.
So I've got an idea. Let's do the math. Say you're having a
general bad day. That could take a 50 ruble taxi drive. Basically you get in,
say you hate life, and get out. Your kids are misbehaving, 100 rubles. You had
a fight with your spouse, 2-4 hundred. A close relative died, 500. Kids are
becoming juvenile delinquents, 1000. Elderly parents are getting on your case
for not joining their political party/Church/bridge club, 2000. You are under
investigation by the FSU, 5000. All of the above, 10,000. You're still ahead of
the deal.
Think Blue Cross will cover it?
Day 7 – Friday, 7/27/18 12:02. UTC: Friday, 7/27/18 07:02.
Ekaterinburg
56.83695 60.61808
By my reckoning: Friday, 7/27/18 12:02.
We got into Ekaterinburg around 3:00 this morning. Off to
our hotel and straight to bed. I got up in time to grab breakfast and then went
for a walk before we were scheduled to leave at 2:00PM. I need to get a watch
band. The area around the hotel is in a pretty built up area without a lot to
see. Up the street I saw an electric trolley without any track to run on. It
used overhead wires for power and it ran on tires like any other vehicle. How
clever. If you want to extend a line all you need to do is hang some more wires
and you're good to go!
Ekaterinburg is Russia's third or fourth largest city, in
competition with Novosibirsk at about 1.5 million each. It is Russia's
industrial and mining center. There is metal here, some of which was used in
the Eiffel Tower and some in the Statue of Liberty. And it's the mayonnaise
capital of the world, should that interest you. Personally, I’m a sour cream
man, myself. Borsch, and all, you know.
Pushkin, the Russian Shakespeare, lived here. Every Russian
school child memorizes Pushkin and can recite it. Chris asked Yevgeny to recite
something so he recited the first verse of one of Pushkin's poems. He said it's
difficult to translate.
We had a very nice lunch of salad, fish soup, and a kind of
pork stew that was very good. Speaking of food, on a visit to the US Nikita
Khrushchev discovered corn. He liked it and ordered the farm collectives to
grow it. At first people didn't know what to make of this grain on a broom
handle, but they got used to it. After the fall of the Soviet Union all the
state subsidies dried up and the farm collectives or 'Soviets' were no longer
profitable. Well, they were never profitable but they were at least viable. Now
wheat is grown north and south of Moscow. And there is a kitchen garden on
everybody's front lawn. Everyone owns a dacha (pronounced gotcha! but with a
short a instead of the ‘o.’) out in the country with a kitchen garden for their
own use and for market. Plus people forage and hunt. You make due.
By the way, the other day was Dennis' birthday. When we got
off the train, our driver had a present for him. A half-liter bottle of vodka!
Michelle didn't arrange it, so I, at least, don't know who did! That was a very
sweet gesture.
Yevgeny said during Soviet times there were only so many
nationalities you could choose from for your passport. Russian, primarily. But
there were the other republics, such as Tatar, Kazhak, etc. Now you can put
down anything you want. So they have passports for Hobbits, Jedi, Morlocks,
anything you want. Here's a factoid for you. Only 18% of Russians have
passports for travel outside of Russia. So only 18% have had contact with the
outside world. They are curious about us more than anything else. Yevgeny said
he watches CNN. I said, I'm sorry. But how many Americans watch Russian news
shows?
In the van we had a little discussion about Putin. Yevgeny
is still of the opinion that he's been there too long. He did a lot of good for
Russia, but now he may start abusing his power. He readily acknowledges his
popularity and what he's done, but it's time to go. Not to mention that there
really was no selection in this latest race. It was Putin or, well, it was
Putin. He thinks it might be a generational thing. People remember the Yeltsin
days in the Crazy Nineties. Boris Yeltsin led the way in privatizing Russia's
state run sectors, which was not very popular. He issued vouchers to everyone
so they could buy shares in whatever new, capitalist style corporation they chose.
The idea was to have the industries be owned by the people in the form of
shareholders so it would be socialism and capitalism. What a stupid idea.
That's the theory. The reality was that there was no food on
the shelves. People couldn't wait until they started earning dividends on the
shares and they couldn't exchange them for cash, so they sold them to buy food,
a much more urgent investment. Or they lost them. They were too busy thinking
of eating to think about economics.
The result was that some oligarchs were able to buy up the
companies and grow immensely rich. Then in 1998 the currency was devalued and
prices went up five or six times overnight. They were devastated. The Crazy
Nineties. Yeltsin is not very popular today. Everyone knew that we got Yeltsin
reelected in 1996 and even bragged about it on Time magazine. People believe he
sold them out, though in reality his hands were probably tied. Russia was on
its knees and western carpet baggers were calling the shots. With Putin Russia
stood back up again.
Many of the oligarchs live in London, where they avoid
paying taxes to Russia. London asked Putin if he wanted them back. He said, no.
Just send me the money they owe.
Let's see. Ekaterinburg was founded by Peter the great about
30 years after he founded St. Petersburg. It is named after his wife,
Katherine. Someone looking for gold in the area some time later found iron,
instead. Good quality iron.
The bridges tend to come to
life around here.
|
Yevgeny in his home town in front of a block
of iron ore.
|
Remnants of the World Cup |
Yevgeny said that after the fall of the Iron Curtain heroin
from Afghanistan started pouring into Russia. That's when the Russian mafia was
born. There were gang wars, killings, drugs, and prostitution. There were too
many fat police, officers who took bribes and grew fat. The mayor of
Ekaterinburg decided to do something about it. He put together a committee and
set up a hot line where citizens could report gang activity. Slowly, the
problems diminished. Then disappeared. Many of the war lords just became
legitimate (sic) businessmen. And he passed a law that cut the salary of
overweight police. Yevgeny said it was like that all over Russia. There is no
longer a drug or crime problem in Russia. I mentioned Ben Franklin's admonition
about those who will exchange freedom for security deserving neither. However,
people can't deal with freedom. There's something to be said for the strong
arm. Sometimes.
But, being tough on criminals is great until they decide to
be tough on you, of course. Still, this mayor was immensely popular. When it
came to electing a governor for this region, even though he is a critic of
Putin, he won handily. Putin changed the laws so now he appoints the governors
of the republics, all 85 of them. Imagine if Trump could just appoint state
governors? That's a pretty strong arm and just begging for abuse, if not by
Putin, then by the next guy who comes along. This is one of Mashe Gessen's
legitimate complaints about him. Who watches the watchers? Who governs the
governors?
Does Putin see himself as a tsar? Possibly. Has he abused
his position? I'd be surprised if he hadn't. How will history judge him?
Vladimir the Great? The Terrible? The Ambiguously Good and Evil? Or just the
Leader Dealing with an Ungovernable Mass of Humanity, Russian, at that?
How should I know? That's for history to decide. And the
Russians themselves have lots of opinions and they're not afraid to express
them. But I don't see the personal animosity that I see in the west. People may
argue, that's a national pass time in Russia, but there's not the name calling
or shouts of Treason! Bigot! X-o-phobe! that passes for rhetoric in our
country. Every Russian is a Russian, regardless of race, religion, or belief.
I said in America we have a great deal of animosity. A tow
truck driver once refused to help a young woman stranded on the highway because
she had a Bernie bumper sticker on her car. He couldn't comprehend it. Neither
can I. Now who's the enigma? I've been called a Putin lover because I refuse to
let others do my thinking for me. So be it. I'm a Putin lover. Now let's talk
about it. A Russian may argue about politics and the price of borsch in
Belorussia, I'd check their pulse if they didn't, but leap to help you if you
are in need. That's their enigma.
Russians have a lot of hands. On this hand this but on the
other hand that...This is a good place to be since each hand holds a little
truth. Even Masha Gessen, the Russian civil rights activist, will admit that
Putin has done good for Russia without being called a Kremlin Kupkake. They
have a lot of hands they use for thinking. We're different. Some of us have a
lot of shoulders. Each one balances another chip. Each one a fight waiting to
happen.
Would I like to live in Russia? Well, the people are lovely
and kind and the country is vast and beautiful. The current government is good
to their people, as good as they can be, considering the economics today. We in
the west may bash them and exaggerate their living conditions and lie about
their politics. But it's easy being a well fed philosopher.
What should we think of Putin? Besides the fact that it is
none of our business what Russia does with its internal politics, I have never
had a problem with him. He has done great things for the Russian people and
isn't that what he's supposed to do? He can be Tsar Vladimir if he and the
people of Russia want it. What’s that to us? Only how he treats us. Nothing
more.
We headed out of the city to Asia. There is a monument right
on the border of Asia and Europe. It is a popular spot for tourists and wedding
parties. They don't let them put locks anywhere, but the trees near the
monument are covered with ribbons. There was a wedding party there when we
arrived. I asked a member of the party to take a group picture of us. She said
sure, and pretty soon she had a little pile of cameras in front of her. She
cheerfully took pictures with everyone's camera. It's a custom for people to
bring champagne and drink some on one side and finish it on the other. Oh, and
someone snuck a lock on one of the signs. Long live the revolution!
We were in the Urals, but there was nary a mountain in
sight. There are a lot north and south of here, but right here is a low spot,
so, naturally the trains and roads run through it. Still, not a great photo
opportunity.
The next stop is more somber. While excavating for a new
road, they discovered a mass grave from Stalin's era. 18,000 remains were
found, unidentifiable. Their names were recorded in Moscow, but they were not
marked individually. They built a monument there which is much like the Vietnam
Wall memorial in Washington, except much bigger. In the center is a monument
with an Orthodox cross, Crescent and Moon, Catholic cross, and Star of David on
the four sides, memorializing all the faiths that suffered under Stalin. There
were probably more. There were fresh flowers and ribbons on many of the names.
Russians don't forget. And this is just one site of victims from Ekaterinburg.
Estimates of Stalin's murders are from two to as high as twenty million.
Joseph Stalin is still a controversial figure in Russia. There are still people who like him. Under Communism there was food in the grocery stores, health care, education, and university was free. And Russia was great. What's not to like? OK, the borders were closed, people could be disappeared, there was corruption at all levels, and they were rigorously lied to. But the Russian spirit was strong. Russians will go from one extreme to another. There's a saying in Russia. Russians will endure a lot of suffering, then there will be a revolution. They also say that you can't understand Russians with your mind. Or measure them with any instrument. Or as Churchill said, Russia is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma…
Four sides. The Orthodox Cross. The Catholic Cross. The Star
and Crescent. And the Jewish Star of David.
Monument to Stalin’s murders in Ekaterinburg. No. These are
just his murders IN Ekaterinburg. Other cities have their own monuments.
The last stop was the mine where the bodies of the Romanoffs
were dumped. There is a monastery there now. The women were asked to wear head
scarves and aprons if their knees were bare. The mine shaft is very deep. I
don't know how they were discovered. It's been excavated and filled in. Now
there is a walkway around it. At one end is an oak cross. The cross was made
from a tree taken from one of the sites of the battle of Stalingrad, where
2,000,000 Russians died repelling Hitler, thus breaking his back. It had been
riddled with bullets from the intense fighting. When it died it was made into
this cross. The Russians are nothing if they're not good at symbolism.
Once a man walking in the woods found a ring. He liked it
and had it enlarged so he could wear it. Then, when he was in a place where
jewelers were, someone recognized the ring and read an inscription inside. It
was one of the Romanoff girl's rings. It is now in a museum. I asked Yevgeny
about something I've noticed. Once, Forbes was selling nine Faberge eggs from
his collection. He was going to auction them off. An oligarch in St. Petersburg
contacted him and said, name your price. He then built a museum in St.
Petersburg to house them. Is it common for people to give valuable items to the
public? Yes. Russians are taught from childhood that valuable things are not to
be horded by anybody. They belong to everyone.
We went into one chapel where a service was going on. The
monks’ singing was beautiful. I noticed that Yevgeny crossed himself at the
threshold.
I asked Yevgeny what Russians think of American politicians.
They don't like any of them. Good, I said. We have that in common. How about
Russia? People have a lot of different ideas about Putin, Stalin, even the
royal family. Do your debates get heated? No. People just disagree. What an odd
idea.
Russia has adopted the practice of building presidential
centers. Well, one for Boris Yeltsin. You have to start somewhere. It cost one
billion Euros. That's right. Euros. Not Rubles. Euros with a Yu! The government only put up some
of the money. Oligarchs put up the bulk of it. Putin gently reminded them that
Boris Yeltsin had been responsible for their arguably illegal and bloated
wealth and raping of Mother Russia and they may just consider ponying up a few
rubles. Amazingly, they all did. Putin can be very convincing.
The center was fabulous. They had some of the limos he used.
Pictures. Gifts. The helmet worn by a Mir cosmonaut. Gary Powers came down
here. There's a room there like one of the grocery stores with empty shelves.
We didn't go all through the exhibits so I saw very little, but it certainly
throws light on a desperate situation. I came away with a little sympathy for
Yeltsin (or Eltsin.) He was a player with no rulebook to play by.
It was getting close to train time but we had one last site
to see. The Church of Blood. The place where the Romanoffs were slaughtered.
Alexandra was English and the granddaughter of Queen Victoria. Nicholas was a
cousin of George II. Victoria had the gene for hemophilia, which women can
carry but cannot get the disease. Of course, Alexis, her son, could and did.
Doctors said he wouldn't live past 17. An earlier tsar had passed a law saying
that women could not ascend to the throne. This was after that little incident
of Catherine the Great's husband and son dying of obvious causes. Many people
thought the Tsar was cruel. He was bloody. He was out of touch with the people,
etc. He wasn't cruel. Bloody? Yes. All rulers are. It's often necessary but
people like Ivan the Terrible enjoy it. How do we judge history? I can’t. Can
you?
At Nicholas' coronation 1,800 people were crushed and died
in the stampeding crowds. He did not call off the evening ball. This is in
extremely poor taste for Russians or anybody else. It's called celebrating on
bones. That was bad. But he also had a sick son and heir to the thrown to think
about later on. In 1905 was the first revolution. This one demanded limits on
the Tsar's power and more say to the people. He consented and created the Duma,
the Russian Parliament. That’s not even ten years of governing. And he had lots
more to come.
I told Yevgeny that the same thing happened to Trump. His
inauguration was attended by so many people that millions were trampled to
death. He looked confused, so I said, Joke!
Then in 1917, the Bolshevik and Communist revolutions.
Nicholas agreed to abdicate. He tried to get asylum with his cousin in England,
but there was too much opposition and George betrayed him. So. He and his
family…
And that brings us to the night of July 16, 17, 1918. The
royal family was kept in confinement in a house in Ekaterinburg. Soldiers
guarding them mocked them and stole valuable items from them. They're not sure
who ordered them to be killed, there are no records. It might have been Lenin
or it might have been Sveydlov, the mayor of Ekaterinburg. Sveydlov was Lenin's
right hand man. There were no records.
Either way, they were woken up at night and ordered to the
cellar for a photograph. When they got there the soldiers open fired. Two of
the girls survived the firestorm because they had jewelry sewn into their
corsets which acted like a bullet proof vest. So they were bayonetted.
The family did not have to die. If George II had granted
them asylum they could have gotten out of the country.
This year, the 100th anniversary of the slaughter, 18,000
people came to the church and walked all night to the place where they were
dumped. Now they are saints in the Russian Orthodox Church and their memory is
preserved. Cities have been renamed. Russian historians are reevaluating the
Romanoff era, including Rasputin, who certainly was given a bad rep by the
Bolsheviks. History sweeps. The dustbin takes.
The Soviet Union has become a smear on history, easily wiped
away.
Now we board our train and travel for the next 24 hours,
stopping only for breaks. Das vedanya.
Vocabulary word for the day: доброе утро Dobro-U-tro. Good
(kind) morning.
Day 8 - Saturday 8/28/18
I have no idea where we are, what're our coordinates, or
what time it is. We are on the train and will pass through one time zone and
into another over the next 24 hours. Google maps thinks I'm still in Ct. The
location app just stares at me blankly. My phone coughs uncomfortably when I
look at it. Outside a sea of birches and deciduous trees float by. We've got
probably another twelve hours on the train. This one is going at about 120
km/hr. The high speed train from Moscow went about 180.
It's 10, 11, or 12 thirty later that morning/afternoon.
We've stopped at a little town called Oomst to stretch our legs. It's
comfortable but promises to be hot again today. Above 30 degrees. Back on board
I cut up and passed around some sausage and cheese. There’s hot water for tee
or instant coffee.
At one rest shop vendors were offering their wares. Fish,
handmade knitted items. And hats. Fur hats. The kind of hat you MUST have in
Siberia when it's 30 below outside. Customs in the US would confiscate it, of
course.
It's pleasant here. About 21 degrees. Slight breeze. Lots of
people. Our train is almost full and there's got to be at least 15 cars. Ours
is first class. Second class has cabins with bunk beds in them. Third class is
all open, bunk beds on both sides of the isle and tables every so often. I hear
there's a forth class. What's that like, the train in Dr. Zhivago?
The meals on the train are surprisingly good, of course we
are traveling first class. We had salad, potato and chicken soup-there was a
chicken leg sticking out of the bowl, and a chicken mushroom stew.
Outside the countryside keeps rolling on. Siberia is 80% of
Russia. Occasionally we pass fields and farms. No crops, just hay and
haystacks. They look like lodges for land beavers.
We'll be at our hotel in about an hour. Who knows what time
it is?
We've crossed through one time zone and into another and are
now in Novosibirsk. It's around 7:40PM here. After checking in a few of us went
exploring and looking for some place to eat. They gave us dinner on the train.
I couldn't eat it all and had my mushroom stew a while later, so I wasn't very
hungry, but I went along for the walk. We found a neat Russian restaurant the
front desk told us about, but it was full. We ended up in a Mexican restaurant
a few blocks away. I just had a bowl of chili and a beer to be sociable. Then
we came back and we men, Rob the Ausie, Dennis from Michigan, and I had three
rounds of Baluga vodka, and went to bed to sleep the sleep of the damned, for
tomorrow is the revolution. How very Russian.
Vocabulary word of the day:
пашли PASH_li. Let's go, I am going, Go!
A train station, one of many.
|
And dachas everywhere. Before factory farms,
this is where food came from.
|
The endless rails. |