Monday, December 3, 2012

what a difference a day makes

Vilnius in Lithuania has a small old town and I had found a lovely little hostel on its periphery.

When I say little - in light of my Kiev post - I should mention my room was about 4 times the size of the previous one and came with a table and two chairs to sit at and a decent sized wardrobe and bedside table! I mention this so that you aren't sitting in front of your computers fretting about my sleeping arrangements!

Getting here is perhaps not worth the telling as it involves missing my first ever flight, frantic anxiety filled mad taxi drives, three seperate airport visits and hurling abuse at a disgusting Ukranian taxi driver!

Despite all that, the bizarre part of the entire saga is the fact that I ended up arriving in Vilnius earlier than I would have had I not missed my flight in the first place.

Even though Vilnius is the capital city, parts on the edge of the old town retain the feel of a small hamlet. (NOT a diminuitive Danish prince.)

It is a lovely little artsy place absolutely stuffed to the rafters with churches and remarkably well dressed beggars.


near my hostel


cold misty vilnius morning


morning wake up call?


vilnius street


wall art


cathedral


accidental poster art


st annes church


st annes again


gediminos tower


do trees get cold?


vilnius from castle tower


christmas tree freshly erected


one day to the next


snow falling

I had been wondering when I would first encounter snow falling on this trip.

It is a lot of fun wandering about in falling snow.

For about 20 minutes.

Then it is necessary to find a warm cafe and watch the snow from indoors while eating cake.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

kiev kwickly

Kiev improved dramatically once the sun came out.

It's amazing how a cloudless day can transform a seemingly dull and drab metropolis. The colour of autumn has finally disappeared and has been replaced with a uniform greyness in the sky, the trees and the people. But in the glare of winter sun the city manages a bit of sparkle!

I have noticed Kievites eschew bright clothing so when I am walking around in my burnt orange goretex jacket I tend to stand out somewhat.

I'm staying in the heart of Kiev right on Independence Square. Most of the interesting things to see are within (at least for me) walking distance.

It has been easy to fill my couple of days here with generally meandering - the Museum of Contemporary Art was unfortunately closed (between shows), the numerous catacombs satisfied me with a visit to just one - how many endless tunnels of glass coffined corpses is it really necessary to see?

And I've just about had a gutful of the inside of churches. I'm almost desperate for a palate cleanser of industrial landscape grunge.

Otherwise, my time in Ukraine has been quite an enjoyable one and I don't regret deciding to visit here in early winter.

Now it's onto the Baltic countries!


really loooooooong escalators


kiev kiosk


christmas tree under construction


st. sofii church


monastery of the caves


monastery of the caves


kiev war memorial


mobile cafes everywhere


kiev kafe


kiev panorama (click to enlarge)


st. michaels golden domed monastery


kiev monument to female spirit protector berehynia


house with chimaeras


house with chimaeras (look carefully & you can see rhinos, elephants and mermaids!)

Friday, November 30, 2012

irony explained: "room"

So you all do not live under the delusion that I am away living the high life - below is my hostel room in Kiev.



'Cosy' someone said to me.

But - location...location...location - it overlooks Independence Square at the very heart of the city.

It had a comfortable bed, a bedside lamp, a heater - what else do you need?

All that for just $18 a night!

(though I have to admit - it was the smallest hostel room I've ever stayed in!)

why I don't wear a watch...

Like a lot of people - I usually rely on my mobile phone to provide me with the time.

As I am not carrying my phone with me on this trip I needed a convenient timepiece - so when I was in Seville I bought a watch.

This is how it looked after 5 weeks:



The wristband broke at the end of the first week, and the cracked face occured when it flew out of my pocket and under a bus as I was heading to Moldova.

It still works.

No worries - it cost $6.

(yup - I'm still using it!)

kiev, ukraine: 12.20 pm nov 30, 2012


I can see the sun.

First time in 14 days - thought it blog-worthy!

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

sunless, steps and sofa beds

The Russian influence in Odessa is far more pronounced than in Lviv. Here Russian is the most widely spoken language and I've noticed a marked increase in the number of bottle-bleached blondes (probably Domestos), Ladas with rear spoilers, and here for some reason they seem to really like Telamons (male caryatids - those figures you see in Classical architecture holding up various bits of buildings.) They're everywhere.  

I caught another night train here - four bunks per compartment. Naturally I am in the one with a snuffle-grunting snorer. He sounded like a lawnmover being driven over gravel.


kupe klass kabin

At one point I had to leave the compartment as it was driving me crazy. Walking up and down the carriage it was quite apparent my compartment had the ONLY snorer on the entire bloody train.

This is why I no longer stay in dorms in hostels.  

Arriving in Odessa at dawn I am quite impressed by the grandeur of the railway station. I know my hostel is only 20-30 minutes walk so halfway I stop at a cafe for breakfast. Just after leaving I manage to fall base over apex on the footpath - not a gainly sight when you are carrying a rucksack, day pack and half full grocery bag. It was to be a lesson well earned. Odessa footpaths are dangerous things and not to be trusted.  


odessa central station


orthodox church near the station

Besides the grazed palm and bloodied knee I felt I quite liked Odessa. My very cheap hostel is in one of the very best neighbourhoods and about 90 seconds walk from the renowned Odessa Opera House. And with tickets priced between $2.50 - $19 and a performance on that evening how could I resist.  

Despite the cyrillic confabulation, even I could ascertain it was a performance of Don Quixote. So I coughed up $6 and turned up for a bit of a sing song. Shows how cultured I really am - it turned out to be a bally ballet.


odessa opera house


oooh...classy!


nothing in my backpack to wear for opera houses

Like Lviv, it is very cold here - days maximums have been around 2 or 3, and no sun to be seen at all.  


potemkin steps made famous in eisenstein's 'battleship potemkin'


scene from film featuring the steps


grand old hotel being renovated


old covered street called 'passage'


detail in passage


odessa city park


local colour


footpath numbers - not a clue

I overestimated the qualities of Odessa and realised 6 days was a tad too much. So I decided to spend a couple of days in Chisinau (the capital of Moldova) to see what it had to offer.  

Unfortunately not a lot.  

Inexplicably, accomodation generally was quite expensive but I fortunately found a single room for €15. It turned out to be a sofa bed in someones loungeroom.


my chisinau accomodation block

The owner is one of those bottle bleached blondes with a sullen teenage daughter and a yappy dog. It's like paying for bad couch surfing.  

One full day wandering the city seemed sufficient taking in the National Gallery, the main church and the two central parks. Not surprising when number 7 on the top things to see in Chisinau is the large shopping mall called...wait for it...Malldova.  


disused stadium


local hero - steven the magnificent...or steven the fabulous...or something or other


chisinau building


sovietesque sculpture ('nipples to the wind'!)


dry fountain

On the way back to Odessa I had the opportunity to pass through my first non-country Transnistria. (It is formally an unrecognised state.)


transnistria from train