Tag Archives: 50europe

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From Russia with Love | Europe or Asia?

The border of Europe and Asia lies along the Ural mountains, dividing Russia into two continents. I have always considered Russia to be Europe as all Russians I know are Caucasians and so are the Russians I have seen on the news. Russia has played a key role in shaping European history and politics in the last century. Russia has participated in all major cultural European events. Blame it on Lonely Planet and all guide books which classify Russia as Eastern Europe. However, when I talked to many Russians, I often heard the phrase “going to Europe.” “But you’re in Europe,” I said. “No, we are not,” they replied. Perhaps Russians see Europe not only on geographical term but also on political and economical level. For them, I think, Europe means the European Union.

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From Russia with Love: The Monasteries at Ganina Yama – The Murder of the Tsar and the Death of a Hollywood Princess

Sorry Hollywood but Anastasia was dead.

She died along with her parents, Tsar Nicolas II, Tsarina Alexandria and her four other siblings Olga, Tatiana, Maria, and Alexi. The Romanov spent their final days in Yekaterinburg before meeting their gruesome end in the hands of the Bolsheviks who feared the White Army would rescue the former royal family and used it as the pretext to fight against the Red Army. The entire family was shot and stabbed by bayonets. Their bodies were carried away and dumped them in the mine shaft outside Yekaterinburg.

From Russia with Love: The Monasteries at Ganina Yama - The Murder of the Tsar and the Death of a Hollywood Princess

The children of the Tsar

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From Russia with Love | Moscow Prices

Many of my friends and travel guides had warned me about the stiff prices in Moscow, but somehow I failed to prepare for it because I could not associate any Russian city to the same level of priciness of Scandinavia. Right before my trip to Russia, I spent 3 weeks in the Caucasus Georgia and Armenia where prices were very low. In my budget plan, I put down about 8 euro per day for food in Moscow and less elsewhere. A Russian friend of mine took one look of my budget and dismissed with “What do plan to eat there? Bread?”; I increased my food budget to 10 euro per day and off I flew away..to the most expensive city in Europe.

From Russia with Love | It’s All Blurry in Moscow

Navigating and understanding a large city of more than 10 million was like chewing a piece of leather. Moscow has more people than the entire Czech Republic where I even got lost in my own back yard. My first day in Moscow was a complete nightmare. With an 18-kg backpack not adjusted very well, I felt the entire load on my neck and shoulder. A wind blow could tip me over. In this condition, I had to find my way in the maze of Moscow’ underground while deciphering Cyrillic.

La Fin Europe

15.7.2012 I arrived in Moscow, Russia, which effectively ended my travel project to see all 50 countries in Europe.

Anything about Europe will be tagged under the tag 50europe.

Phew! Now I swear off doing anything quantitatively for a while. What’s next?

It’s the beginning of the Trans-Siberia and beyond.

Travel Europe | #47 Poscards from Georgia

No other country in Europe, except Albania, did I hear many disheartening comments like Georgia. “People are a little strange.” “Men there are like monkeys; They will rape you.” “How about you have a kid, wait until he grows a few years then you can go.” To be fair, Georgia, as we know it–thanks to the media–isn’t a sunny beach resort where tourists go to get a tan or a cosmopolitan capital lined up with coffee bars and restaurants. It isn’t a peaceful village where cows roam on green pasture, nor it is a place where one escape to the cottage in the summer. Georgia, as we know it, is the South Ossetia four years ago with vivid images of tanks, flying rockets, and bombed buildings. When I found out the mountainous area I wanted to visit, Kazbegi and Svaneti, located in proximity with the problematic autonomous Abkhazia and Chechnya, I seriously wondered about the environment surrounding this country.

Travel Europe | #28 Postcards from Portugal

Christian Ronaldo is hot (OK I admit it.) The perfect-haired lover-boy is always seen in tight jeans, clean-shaven legs, occasionally dressed in pink and sometimes with flowers on his hairs. He is by all accounts the metrosexual icon of modern football. Adored by young football fans around the world and worshiped by many in his native country Portugal. It came as no surprise when the most recognizable face I saw in Lisbon was who else than the Ronaldo on many ads and posters.

Georgia – A Mouthful of Delicacies

I had never sampled so much new food in just one day let alone one sitting. Usually, it took an entire trip to get down only a few dishes.

Dan, my host, took me to lunch and ordered a tableful of Georgian dishes. I was still under the Central European time; that means I had lunch at 10 o’clock in the morning. I ate so much I almost fell asleep in the car after and had to pinch myself to stay awake and chit chat with Dan.

Travel Europe | #19 Postcards from Sweden

I walked behind a bus, waited until the engine roar and inhaled a deep breath. I turned to Jarda and said: “Honey, you’re right. It doesn’t smell at all.” My boyfriend told me how Sweden was environment-friendly. Their vehicles didn’t produce the stuff which turned the sky black and your face red coughing everything out. Buses’ emission didn’t pollute the environment as confirmed by my mini experiment. But come all the way to Sweden and smell the bus? Well, Whenever I visited Scandinavia, I somehow got bored and did strange things.

Travel Europe | #18 Postcards from Denmark

Say cheese! In 2007, a series of surveys about happiness ranked ranked Denmark as the happiness place on earth. Two years later in 2009, OECD – the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development agreed. Like other Scandinavia and Nordic countries, Denmark scored high on education, living standard, salary, health, etc. The one thing which set them apart was while others were a bit depressed and ‘suicidal’, The Danes were a jolly bunch. Danes called it the happiness factor.