Monday 27 February 2012

Belorusskaya Metro Station

Two Belorusskaya metro stations - named for the nearby Belorussky Rail Terminal - are connected via stairway for transfers to and from the Zamoskvoretskaya Line and the Koltsevaya Line. Octagonal mosaics decorate the Belorusskaya-Koltsevaya metro station.

Belorusskaya station is one of the stations on the Circle Line (Brown line).

Inside the metro - how to navigate the metro lines (transfer stations).

Belorusskaya Metro

The beautiful mosaics in Belorusskaya-Koltsevaya Metro station.

Soviet mosaics - Belorusskaya-Koltsevaya Metro stations

Belorusskaya-Koltsevaya metro station.
Outside Belorusskaya Metro Station.
Lenin statue - Belorusskaya Metro
The beautiful roof inside Belorusskaya Metro

Information signs in the metro.




Ploshchad’ Revolutsii Metro Station

Ploschad Revolyutsii ( Пло́щадь Револю́ции) meaning Revolution Square is one of the most famous metro stations in Moscow. The station opened in the laste 1930s and it features beautiful red and yellow marble arches. The station is famous for bronze sculptures. The station has 76 scuptures depicting the people of the Soviet Union e.g. soliders, farmers, athletes, writers, school children etc.






Izmailovo Market

Izmailovo market is mostly focused on tourist. All the familiar matryoshkas, khokhlomas and fur caps are traded here. But you can find cute antique teapots, samovars, irons, gramophones and typewriters. And a whole range of items with Soviet leaders on them. There are a shopping street for artists. Below are photographs from the Izmailovo market and Izmailovo Park Kremlin from a couple of months ago.

Carrie and Adam at Izmailovo Park

Izmailovo Market -the indoor area.

Suzanne and Carrie at Izmailovo Kremlin.

Izmailovo Market

Izmailovo Kremlin.

Izmailovo Market - many fur items for sale

Maslenitsa

Maslenitsa is the Russian Sun Festival – a celebration of the end of winter chills and the start of Spring, of warmth, of hope, of growth. Not surprisingly, it is a particularly big deal in Russia!

Maslenitsa is the oldest surviving Russian holiday; archeological evidence suggests it may have been celebrated as early as the 2nd century A.D. The week-long celebration marking the beginning of spring was one of the most important and elaborate for the pagan culture Blini (pancakes) were eaten as symbols of the sun.

At Maslenitsa blinis (pancakes)  are cooked in very large quantities to and are given to friends and family all through the week. Pancakes are served with caviar, mushrooms, jam, sour cream, caramel, sugar and of course, lots of butter.

During the week of Maslenitsa children take take in a variety of outdoor activities e.g. sledging, building snowmen, outdoor games and dancing.Children and grown-ups assemble a Maslenitsa doll out of straw and old woman’s clothes. They place it on a pole and go dance and sing. Afterwards the doll is carried to the top of a snow hill, while at the same time people enjoy sliding down it. On the final day of Malenitsa (Sunday), people gather to see the Malenitsa doll burned. The burning of the doll symbolises that as the doll is disappearing into ashes, Winter will also soon disappear. Russians celebrate Malenitsa as the end of the long Winter and looking forward to the Spring.

Amy with the ice sculpture.

Gork Park

Maslenitsa Doll

Amy and Jenni - outside Gorky Park

Blinis (Russian pancakes)

Winter Sports

Jenni, Amy and Marina trying to warm up!

Lady selling Russian candy.

Marina, Jenni, Amy, Lauren and Suzanne outside Gorky Park.

A snowy Gorky Park.


Monday 20 February 2012

Novodevichy Convent

  Novodevichy Cemetery is a large park and church by the Moscow river. You can go in and walk round the cemetery.

The graves are amazing (if graves can be amazing). The cemetery is packed with the famous and infamous. Many graves have enormous headstones and statues carved out of solid granite and sandstone. I can't imagine how much these headstones cost? I would think many thousands of pounds. I don't think the 'state' would pay for such things nowadays to rememeber their hereo's, which is rather sad. These statues are larger than life monuments to dead and famous Russians and really worth seeing.

There are artists, scientists and many former Russian solderers and Soviet hero's. Resting below the church and cemetery is a large green large park.

Novodevichy Convent - I am  looking rather cold!

A beautiful winter day at Novodevichy Convent


Cynthia at Novodevichy Convent

Novodevichy Convent

The beautiful religious icons inside the church at Novodevichy Convent

Another winter photograph!

Carrie and Suzanne at Novodevichy Convent

A tiny little church building

The wall to Novodevichy Convent

Some of the graves in Novodevichy Convent

The beautiful religious buildings.

The Bell Tower at Novodevichy Convent

Wednesday 15 February 2012

Photographs from VDNK area of Moscow.

A little stroll around the VDNKH area of Moscow on a cold February day.
Famous Movie statue
Ostankino Tower

VDNK park

A beautiful church in VDNK area of Moscow

VDNK Metro

VDNK area of Moscow




Beautiful art work inside the metro
VDNK exhibition park



































Space Museum

If astronauts, space and space history is your thing, you will love this place. There are a lot of very interesting exhibits including two stuffed dogs that had gone up to space and back. What an experience, museum is underground and contains many original pieces from space mission. An amazing collection of Soviet space memorabilia. This is a rather large park/museum, so reserve 2-3 hours at least. Outside, there are also some statues of important cosmonauts and a cutesy model of the solar system. Inside, you can see Soviet spacecrafts, suits, satellites and even the dogs who went to space (the ones who made it back). You can also enter a real size replica of one module of the Mir Space Station. Be sure to check the vehicles that landed in the moon in 1971.