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Lively pedestrian street, with the Kremlin at the end

Lively pedestrian street, with the Kremlin at the end

We’ve now settled in Nizhny Novgorod for a couple days, our first real stop in European Russia. Since entering Russia from Mongolia, we’ve spent 134 hours on the train and crossed 5 time zones to make it to this ancient city, just a few hours east of Moscow.

Jim makes a friend

Jim makes a friend

Nizhny is a beautiful city with a stunning kremlin (a heavily fortified compound, central to many historic Russian cities) overlooking the confluence of the Oka and Volga rivers. The city boasts lots of beautiful architecture, a lively pedestrian zone full of restaurants and bars, and some beautiful old monasteries and churches. The space inside the kremlin is like a city unto itself, filled with city administrative buildings, museums, monuments, and peaceful parks.

Last night we found a great cocktail bar called Franky. The bartenders knew all the intricacies of cranking out beautiful classic cocktails, so we couldn’t help but have a couple perfectly crafted Negronis.

Architectural detail, Nizhny Novgorod

Architectural detail, Nizhny Novgorod

Tomorrow we’ll complete the last short leg of our Trans Siberian journey from Beijing to Moscow. After so much travel and so many short stays (two days here, a night on the train, two days there, one day here, another night on the train), we’ll be very glad to settle into the big city for a few days. We’re determined to do less moving around in the future.

After Moscow, we’ll travel on to St. Petersburg, where we will meet up with my parents for a few days — the first time we’ll see people we know since leaving San Francisco five weeks before! They will have spent the previous week traveling by river from Moscow, which we can’t wait to hear about.

Sunset over the Volga

Sunset over the Volga

I’d really like to have a nice map of our travels, but this has proved more challenging than I’d like. Maybe I’m missing something obvious?

I did find a little map creation program called GoProTravelling that allows me to list the places we’ve been and the dates and transportation types. It then makes a map that I can embed. So I’ve stuck it on a ‘Map’ page in the navigation bar above.

I can’t say I’m super thrilled with the output. It can be quite slow to load. And I don’t have much control over any of the imagery.

It does, however, offer a mildly entertaining little animation. This shows our journey with a little airplane when we’ve flown and a little car for everything else. It can also display some other animations for walking and bicycling. It’s a bit disappointing that I’m stuck with the car for our long train trips, but what the heck.

If anyone has tips to offer on better, but not overly burdensome, ways to construct a decent travel map, please pass them on!

I won’t even try to be subtle about this. The air in Yekaterinburg today is packing extreme amounts of dandelion fluff.

I’ve been surprised by how many public spaces in Russia seem to be overgrown with weeds, especially with big, huge stalks of dandelion flowers, which are fast turning to fluff and taking to the breeze. Everywhere in the city today, it looks like there are snow flurries. You constantly need sunglasses to keep them out of your eyes. And they still tend to get in your mouth and nose.

I was unable to capture this weird appearance of snow flurries with our cheap pocket camera. So finally Jim just leaned down and scooped some up from the sidewalk for your viewing enjoyment.

Jim scoops up dandelion fluff from the Yekaterinburg sidewalk

Jim scoops up dandelion fluff from the Yekaterinburg sidewalk