Monday, April 9, 2012

Moscow, Day 1

I suppose it's a given: if you are going to travel to Russia, you can't leave without seeing Moscow!  This city of somewhere between 11-15 million people is big, especially to us li'l ole Midwesterners!  We ventured into town on Sunday with Natasha as our guide.  Our plan was to attend church at International Christian Fellowship (ICF) because it was right near the center of the city, and they had service in English!  All the Calvary Chapels around Moscow have service in Russian only. We were already feeling the effects of not being able to understand or talk to others...the greatest cultural barrier (in my mind).

Train station at Snegiri
The journey began with a 25-minute walk to the train station from the dorm.  The train ride cost about $3.50 per person (100 rub) round-trip, and took about 35 minutes each way.  The trains weren't too full on Sunday (not so on other days!).  We also began to notice that Russians typically keep to themselves.  In fact, even eye contact with strangers was scarce, and if they were "caught" looking at the Americans, they quickly looked away. 


Lady shoveling snow at McDonalds
After exiting the train, we needed to make a quick bathroom break at the McDonalds.  It was the only place in the area with a free public restroom!  It also might have been the cleanest McDonalds I've ever been too!  It was snowing out, so there was a lady clearing the sidewalk outside, and a couple more mopping up after almost every customer would walk inside with dirty snow on their shoes!  


Into the Moscow metro
A little intimidating... 
We backtracked a couple blocks and descended into the metro station.  The metro system in Moscow is amazing!  We aren't well traveled as far as larger cities around the world (or even the US for that matter), so we were pretty amazed at what we saw under the streets of Moscow.  There were giant escalators that seemed far steeper than normal, and it seemed as though they were carrying us five or six stories deeper underground.  
The longest escalator I ever saw...
Every station we saw had unique decor (different types of stone construction, different carvings in the walls, different layout and design). 
Ornate carvings inside the metro system
Everyone staring at nothing, reading or looking at smart phones on the metro
I'll post more about Moscow soon...

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