Welcome to Moscow!
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Blog Note 1: My purpose in reposting this series of blogs about our travels in Eastern Europe in 1990, shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Soviet Union is to show the joy of the Eastern European peoples as they emerged from the Marxist system into freedom. My hope is that at least a few Americans will be warned as our present government seeks to lead us into that darkness.
Blog Note 2: Sorry this post is late. The wretched wifi system in this otherwise lovely campground is unusable much of the time. We are working on alternatives.
The customs line at the Moscow airport was long
and slow, as the inspectors were going through a succession of very large
suitcases piece by piece. We however, were waved on through with hardly a
glance, even though we were carrying bags of photo and video equipment. Our
taxi was a Volga, which somewhat resembled a '62 Chevy Nova, and we were
shortly deposited at the Intourist Hotel, only three blocks from Red Square. We
learned that all foreigners were parked at the Intourist so they could more
easily keep an eye on us.
Three Russian soldiers, going off duty, probably
from guarding Lenin's Tomb, head across
Red Square toward
the GUM department Store.
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The
temperature was in the
mid-fifties, very warm for March in Moscow, and there was still some
daylight, so we went over to Red Square and through the GUM department
store. Back at
the hotel we ate an unidentifiable substance purported to be beef and
went to
bed.
The next morning I was out early
to photograph. We met Paul Lauster at 9 a.m. for a breakfast which was at least
identifiable as boiled eggs. The breakfast is included in the price of the
room. Instant coffee (all that's available) is an extra 25 kopecks. Paul's lost jar of Instant Nescafe was sadly missed.
A hundred kopecks make a ruble, and the average worker's salary is 200-300 rubles a month. Rubles are six to a dollar at the official rate, but 13 to a dollar on the black market. Any taxi driver can supply black market rubles for dollars, but it's risky. You never know who might be an informer.
A hundred kopecks make a ruble, and the average worker's salary is 200-300 rubles a month. Rubles are six to a dollar at the official rate, but 13 to a dollar on the black market. Any taxi driver can supply black market rubles for dollars, but it's risky. You never know who might be an informer.
Standing in line for the basic necessities was
a normal way of life in Soviet Russia,
as in all the Iron Curtain countries.
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In the afternoon, Louise and I went out and photographed around Red Square. Later, Paul joined us and we took a cab to the new McDonald's. The line was two blocks long, with people two and three abreast. We didn't stay. Instead, we got hot beef sausage sandwiches and Pepsis at a little booth near the hotel. Best food we'd had so far!
The new Moscow
McDonald's. The line
was more than two blocks long.
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In
the late afternoon we went to a place Paul had
told us about, a street called the Arpatskaya (Arpat Street), which has
been converted
to a pedestrian mall about three-quarters of a mile long and lined with
artists selling their work and little booths selling ice cream and
other goodies. There were also many Russian young people hanging out. We
had some ice cream and it was good.
An artist displays his paintings for sale in the
Arpatskaya.
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I'm proud to say that photographers appear to be in the vanguard of free enterprise in Russia. They were everywhere, making and selling photographs of people at various attractions. Red Square, with the Kremlin and Lenin's Tomb, is apparently quite the tourist mecca for Russians, and photographers were busy making photographs of tour groups in front of the tomb with the Kremlin in the background.
Photographers were busy photographing
tour groups in Red Square.
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It was nearly dark by the time we worked our way to the end of the Arpatskaya. Louise decided to do a bit of shopping, and I went to Red Square to make some night photos of the Kremlin and St. Peter's Basilica. It had been a long day, and when I came back to the hotel Louise was already asleep. She is a great travel companion and a real trouper, always ready for the next challenge.
Red Square and the
Kremlin at night.
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Photographs made with Olympus OM
and Leica M cameras and lenses plus a Tamron 100-300mm f4 zoom lens, Fujichrome
100D and 400D films. Photographs and text copyright 2021, David B.Jenkins
I post Monday, Wednesday, and Friday each week.
Soli Gloria Deo
For the glory of God alone
Tags: photography, Dave Jenkins, David B. Jenkins Eastern Europe, Russia, Moscow, the Kremlin, Red Square, St. Peter's Basilica, Soviet Russia, McDonald's, the Arpatskaya, GUM, Olympus OM cameras, Leica M cameras, Tamron lenses, Fujichrome film, film cameras
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