We are off to eat and drink around the world :)....

I definitely need to make a trip into Russia someday.

Loving your pictures! I know you were on a cruise and a package tour...but how did you find communicating with the locals?
DH and I normally prefer to do our own thing rather than taking a package.

You are not allowed to walk around by yourself in Russia, you must have a visa, the package I booked out of the cruise, (I did not use the cruise), provided a visa with the payment, so it was just easier to do this, that trying to get a visa and then walking around on my own.

I booked this private so it was just what I wanted.
 
You are not allowed to walk around by yourself in Russia, you must have a visa, the package I booked out of the cruise, (I did not use the cruise), provided a visa with the payment, so it was just easier to do this, that trying to get a visa and then walking around on my own.

I booked this private so it was just what I wanted.

Hmmm....China and Vietnam used to mandate that visa was only provided when you booked a tour/package. They didn't let you wander through the countryside by yourself. Now, you still need a visa but they aren't so strict on nomads.
 
I find it interesting how many of those buildings all have people on them, either carved on the walls or on top of the buildings. We don't get that so much in California!

That ship was kind of funny looking with all those periscope looking tubes on top of it.

I'm not very adventurous when it comes to foreign countries, or at least restrictive ones that have been known for imprisoning people! I have quite a few more places that I want to go before some of these places, although they are beautiful!
 
Hmmm....China and Vietnam used to mandate that visa was only provided when you booked a tour/package. They didn't let you wander through the countryside by yourself. Now, you still need a visa but they aren't so strict on nomads.

So let me come back for a minute to this.... You can get a visa to be a nomads in Russia but they are restrictive and costly. We were there for 2 days and 1 night. My visa costs per person were more expensive than this tour including the visa. I am sure they do that on purpose so you stick with a guide. Friends of mine adopted two girls from Russia and they had to jump through many many hoops just to go over and meet the children. The adoption process was even worse but they were way he'd in their hotel and the people are just not friendly.
 

I find it interesting how many of those buildings all have people on them, either carved on the walls or on top of the buildings. We don't get that so much in California!

That ship was kind of funny looking with all those periscope looking tubes on top of it.

I'm not very adventurous when it comes to foreign countries, or at least restrictive ones that have been known for imprisoning people! I have quite a few more places that I want to go before some of these places, although they are beautiful!

A lot of the Russian buildings are modeled after the Italian, so lots of carved statutes

I want to go China so bad, it my next major bucket list item.
 
I am just loving all the colors of the buildings. Your pictures are just so wonderful!
 
I am just loving all the colors of the buildings. Your pictures are just so wonderful!

Thanks... I love taking photos... it is just a hobby for me a way to document everything we do, my memory is so bad, so I have to document it for future references....:rotfl:
 
Alison.....

How did my reply to your comment end up before your comment in the thread?

Weird......:wizard:
 
Next is Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, we will go there later in day I will have more info on it then...

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Another of the Engineer's Castle

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Next we see the river entrance to Michael's Garden
The Michael Garden takes its name from the Michael Palace (better known to visitors as the main building of the Russian Museum) which it adjoins. Throughout its long and varied history it has been a formal French garden, a hunting reserve and nursery, and during the reign of the Empress Elizabeth it housed labyrinths and fountains. Under the Emperor Paul the Garden was used for horseback riding, and it began to acquire its present features at the beginning of the 19th century. The construction of the Michael Castle and after that the Michael Palace, both of which border the garden, fixed the Michael Garden in its present boundaries.

The Michael Castle from which the Garden takes its name was built in 1819-1825 by Carlo Rossi for Grand Duke Michael, brother of the Emperors Alexander I and Nicholas I. When construction of the Palace finished in 1825, the Garden was turned into a landscaped park.

In the north-east corner of the Garden, on the banks of the Moika River, is a small pavilion built in Empire Style by Carlo Rossi in 1825; a century earlier, this site had been occupied by a wooden palace belonging to Peter the Great's wife, Catherine. Next to the pavilion is a symbolic composition called the Tree of Freedom, made out of old oak by the sculptor Anatoly Solovyov.
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Another shot of the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood
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This is the Pushka Inn, a 5 star hotel

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At this point we are done with the River Tour and back on the bus to our next stop....
 
Alison.....

How did my reply to your comment end up before your comment in the thread?

Weird......:wizard:

The DIS was having a time warp yesterday. We notice things like that a lot more on the Last to Post thread because we are posting so much to be last.
 
You know they must either not have smog, or people wash those buildings like crazy, the colors are so vibrant. If they were in LA they would be covered in soot! I notice how many of the buildings and awnings are so dingy here, and I don't know if it's because they just don't wash them or there is nothing you can do about because of the smog in the air.

Those spires were incredibly beautiful and clean!
 
You know they must either not have smog, or people wash those buildings like crazy, the colors are so vibrant. If they were in LA they would be covered in soot! I notice how many of the buildings and awnings are so dingy here, and I don't know if it's because they just don't wash them or there is nothing you can do about because of the smog in the air.

Those spires were incredibly beautiful and clean!

There is not much industry in the city around there, and they take a lot of public transportation, so I am guessing that it is just clean air... but then again they may be cleaning them a lot too.:confused3
 
Those buildings are just fabulous and the whole city looks amazing! Must have been really special to have been there.


So let me come back for a minute to this.... You can get a visa to be a nomads in Russia but they are restrictive and costly. We were there for 2 days and 1 night. My visa costs per person were more expensive than this tour including the visa. I am sure they do that on purpose so you stick with a guide. Friends of mine adopted two girls from Russia and they had to jump through many many hoops just to go over and meet the children. The adoption process was even worse but they were way he'd in their hotel and the people are just not friendly.

Thanks. Looks like I'll be putting Russia off for a little bit more.
 
So we are finally off the boat and back on the tour bus.

Our next stop is the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood

Officially consecrated as the Church of the Resurrection of Christ, the Russian Orthodox gem more commonly known as the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood was built to honor tsar Alexander II of Russia, who was assassinated at the site where the church now sits, hence the reference to "spilled blood". The section of the street on which the assassination took place is enclosed within the walls of the church and the site of the murder is marked by a chapel in the building.
At the request of Alexander III, son of Alexander II, construction on the church began in 1883. Funding for this amazing structure was almost totally provided by the Imperial family with other donations made by private individuals. The project was completed in 1907.

The principle architect chosen for the project was Alfred Alexandrovich Parland, who was, incidentally, a non-Russian-born individual. The architecture of the church varies greatly from other buildings and religious structures in St. Petersburg, which were largely constructed in the Baroque and neo-Classical styles.

However, the era in which Church of the Savior was built was a time of resurgence of nationalism, thus the classic Russian style of the church.

Looking at both the interior and exterior, it's easy to see why the church cost about 4.6 million rubles, way over the budgeted 3.6 million. The outside was designed to mirror the magnificent St. Basil's in Moscow, the city's easily-recognizable centerpiece, and the building - both inside and outside - features about 7,000 square meters of mosaics, most of them designed by the prominent artists of the time, including Viktor Vasnetsov, Mikhail Nesterov and Mikhail Vrubel. The majority of the mosaics depict biblical scenes and saints though some are just patterns. The colorful onion domes, of which the central one reaches a height of 266 ft, are covered with bright enamels.

During the Russian Revolution of 1917, much of this amazing church was ransacked and the interior was seriously damaged. In the 1930s, the Soviets closed the church, as they did with most churches in St. Petersburg. During World War II, it was used as a storage facility for food. If suffered yet more damage during the war, and afterwards, was used for many years as storage space for a local opera company.

In 1970, St. Isaac's Cathedral assumed management of the church, and funds garnered from the cathedral (which was, at that time, a museum) were used to restore the Church of the Savior. Restoration was finally complete in 1997 and remains one of St. Petersburg's top tourist attractions.

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Now we are moving to the inside, it is so amazing....

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This is the exact spot that tsar Alexander II of Russia, was assassinated. Where the bomb went off.
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Here is a model of the church
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This is the backside of the church.
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This how everything looked after the war and before the restoration.
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WOW! The creativity and imagination of the architects is just amazing, not to mention the beautiful artwork inside. I think might get stimulation overload with everything to look at.

Is that a new picture I see in your signature? Lovely bags :)
 
WOW! The creativity and imagination of the architects is just amazing, not to mention the beautiful artwork inside. I think might get stimulation overload with everything to look at.

Is that a new picture I see in your signature? Lovely bags :)

It really was stimulation overload. Everything was beautiful and amazing and over the top. The main thing to remember is this is all still in day one of the two days we are here. These were some long days.

The bags are my Disney Dooney and Bourke's. They have become my new "thing".
 
I had my eye on a D&B last year, was waiting for it to be less expensive, and while waiting it sold out. I was so upset at myself. I saw somebody with one while at a restaurant and was so pleased to see a fellow Disney lover out and about :)

Wow, all that one day one! I hope you had a sea day after day two to recuperate!
 
I had my eye on a D&B last year, was waiting for it to be less expensive, and while waiting it sold out. I was so upset at myself. I saw somebody with one while at a restaurant and was so pleased to see a fellow Disney lover out and about :)

Wow, all that one day one! I hope you had a sea day after day two to recuperate!

You will have to tune again to get the rest of the story. Ha-ha.

Which pattern were you looking at in the D&B?
 
That church is absolutely stunning! I can see how you would have been on sensory overload!
 















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