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Our Journey Path (as featured
in Pilot Guides: European Russia)
Our journey begins in Moscow, where we take the train
to St Petersburg with a stop-off at Torzhok.
From St Petersburg, we fly over to the Arctic Circle
and to the port of Murmansk, where the end of winter
is celebrated each year at 'The Festival of the North.'
On The Road
By Horse
You can get an hour long tour on horseback for just $20, located
on Tverskaya Street in Moscow.
By Tram
St Petersburg and Moscow have an excellent metro system, but
if you want to take in all the sights, then consider going
by tram. The tram journeys are very cheap. 10 cents, to anywhere
in town!
By Train
If you are travelling around Russia, the 'Square of the Three
Stations' is one place you'll definitely need to know about.
The trains connect from Moscow to everywhere else in Russia
and the rest of the world. A passport is needed to get a rail
ticket, which will cost around $10 from Moscow to St Petersburg.
It is also interesting to view the train's timetable with
Vodivostock being one of the first station stops, followed
by China-Beijing, Ulan Bator and Mongolia.
By Metro
Built in the 1930's to showcase Soviet engineering, the Metro
System in Moscow and St. Petersburg is one of the great achievements
of the Stalinist period. The people who actually built the
Metro System, had to work long hours in dangerous conditions
and often without pay.
Moscow's Kievskaya Station tells the history of the
Ukraine in a series of brilliant mosaics whilst the Mayakovskaya
Station, which was named after a famous Russian poet,
is fitted with beautiful murals & mosaics of fruits and
flowers on the roof.
The Russian Undergrounds are also very clean and there are
no signs of graffiti because of the strict policing by the
Moscow Militia, who clamp down very seriously on any signs
of rowdiness or drunken behaviour. The trains are fast &
cheap, and the stations are fitted with chandeliers, art deco
light fittings and marble floors, making them look more like
art galleries. Altogether, there are about 150 stations linked
to the Moscow Metro. |