Moscow

After landing at Moscow Domodevedo we took (another) train to Petrovsky station where we shuffled about for a bit, realised we had no hope of figuring out the Metro, especially laden as we were, and opted for a cab to our hostel instead.

The cabbie had real trouble finding the hostel, eventually leaving us in the car park of a block of flats, gesturing at a nondescript door and answering “Da, da” to our questioning stares before snatching the money and driving off.

We stood bewildered in the nighttime snow for some moments and then tentatively approached the door and, all the while exchanging this-can’t-be-it looks, pressed the buzzer. We were greeted by a gap-toothed babushka and herded into a council-estate lift which rumbled up to the 6th floor. Still no sign or any indication that this was a hostel, we rang door 204 and stepped back. A woman answered, brusquely waved us in and told us to take off our shoes. Amy turned to me and mouthed “I’m scared”…

But everything worked out in the end. I mean, we are pretty much staying in someone’s flat; but its a well kept flat and is so central that we have a view of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour and we can easily walk to the city centre.

Christ the Saviour – we could see this from our bedroom window.

Moscow is fantastic. It’s enormity is bewildering. The city is centred around the Kremlin, a collection of state buildings and golden-domed churches encased by a huge red wall that connects twenty fairy-tale turrets. It sits, broad and imposing, along the bank of the Moscow river and is flanked on one side by Red Square. Red Square is something special. At the one end the Moscow Town Hall and the Resurrection Gate conjure up those grainy black-and-white images of soldiers marching and tanks rolling by beneath; and then at the other St Basil’s Cathedral. We both agreed that there is no other building quite like St Basil’s, with its multicoloured onion domes and tent spires seemingly made from painted porcelain, and were honestly awe-struck.

Red Square at night…shepherd’s delight?

St Basil’s.

Moscow is also strange – familiar yet strange. On the one hand it has all the hallmarks of a big European city but then the Asian-esque churches, the golden cupolas, the wide boulevards and of course the funny writing, combine to give it a drop of Eastern promise. The language barrier is insurmountable (nobody speaks English, and why should they?), and the Cyrillic alphabet takes some deciphering. It is also ridiculously expensive – using the (inter-?)nationally recognised yardstick of how expensive a city is: a pint of lager is about £8!

Peter the Great (probably)

It’s the scale of the place that makes it so fascinating. Apart from the Kremlin and Red Square, the Bolshoi and the Lubyansky are monstrous, the Soviet buildings even more so, and most buildings are as wide as they are tall. At night the whole lot is bottom-lit which gives it a spooky, Gothic air, and makes the Kremlin seem like the lair of some evil fairy-tale King.

The Kremlin

In case you hadn’t guessed, we were quite taken with Moscow. Mostly we just walked around gawping, through the city, through Gorky park where we couldn’t quite work up the motivation to join the hundreds of ice-skaters, through the Kremlin – which actually is far more interesting from the outside, through Red Square and through the plush shopping districts. We took a tour of the Metro (spelt MetPo), the underground stations being marvels of architecture in themselves; some hanging with chandeliers, others with columnar arches and some yet with gilded frescoes on the platform walls.

This, believe it or not, is a ‘MetPo’ platform.

Tomorrow we board the Trans-Siberian express. Next stop China.

Another mild winter’s day in Moscow.

Brrrr.

Aaaah,

Basel (and Zurich)

The 2 weeks prior to our departure were spent in a state of almost perpetual hangover as we went round saying goodbye to our nearest and dearest. It was time, we felt, to give our livers a break.

So off we trundled, backpacks and all, to Kings Cross to catch an unnecessarily early Eurostar to Paris. It was as we struggled breathlessly to navigate the Paris Metro to Gare du Lyon that we realised we may have bought too much gear. Too late now. Now we just had to ensure nobody stole any of it during (and beyond, but one thing at a time) the 2 hour wait we had before our train to Basel left.

I think we expected the 3 hour journey to Basel to be an Alpine spectacular but instead it was mile-after-mile of banal French countryside. Good practice for the Trans-Sib, we thought.

Basel is a city with an identity crisis. It lies at the convergence of the borders of Switzerland, France and Germany, such that the city proper is in Switzerland, the suburbs in Germany, and the airport in France! The net result is that you never know whether you should be paying in Euros or Swiss Francs, or saying danke or merci.

Scariest cakes ever. Gingerbread aliens?

The reason we came, though, was to visit Amy’s sister Koco, who is performing in a German production of We Will Rock You. She has been put up in an enormous apartment-cum-house in the German suburb of Lorrach; complete with ping-pong and pool room and some pretty views of the surrounding hills. She shares with 4 colleagues who, understandably, like to partake in a little drinking after a hard day’s dancing – our booze break was not off to the best of starts.

Basel itself is a nice enough city, and not so large that we couldn’t wander round most of it in one day. A stand-out feature is the town hall (the Rathaus), a striking building with a crenelated red facade covered in beautifully kept frescoes of 16th century kings holding court, and crowned
by a glittering gold spire. Also, we found the time to visit a Christmas market where we supped a dizzying tipple of Gluewein (mulled wine) on a carousel bar (yep, a bar which spins round as you drink) and gobbled a bratwurst sausage in a log cabin whilst toy trains hurtled around above our heads.

Real men drink mulled wine.

The remainder of the day was spent stealing wi-fi from Starbucks so we could find out if there was any way we could get to Zurich on Saturday morning in time for a 9am flight. There wasn’t. So we unfortunately had to cut our time with Koco short by a night and caught a train to Zurich the next day.

Zurich is like an upmarket Basel, we strolled along the river until it opened up into a lake, stole some lunch from the Co-Op (accidentally but woohoo!), then strolled back again. Its a gorgeous city and somewhere we’d like to come back to with some disposable cash.

Straight after this some Korean women came along and demanded a photo with us!

Anyway, we fly to Russia tomorrow…so Moscow. (sorry, couldn’t resist!)