Sunday, May 30, 2010

Snowing again in Kharkiv

G'day Readers.
Before you start reading the blog, please take some time to look at the updated header pics. Thanks to Mishka updating them for me, your the IS man that every one should have!

Yep.... Woke up this morning, looked out the window & it just looked like it was snowing ! But before I get to that, last week I went to the park beside Freedom Square  & as I was walking through the park, there was lots of what looked like cotton wool flying through the air. I looked up & some of the trees were dropping this cotton wool. It was thick & fluffy with little seeds. So this morning when I saw this "snow", I knew exactly where it was coming from.... the trees & unfortunately they are right outside my apartment! I can see the vacuum cleaner is going to get used alot until all this stuff drops! Goodness help those people who get hayfever during Spring, this stuff is everywhere. The other thing I have noticed is that this stuff is highly flammible, more so than dry Aussie bushland on a 45 degree day. I have seen locals put a flame to puddles of this stuff and it is just like gas burning! 

It really doesnt show the volume of the stuff, but it was quite thick!





I left my washing on the balcony with the
windows open. The snow made itself welcome !























Spring snow on the
streets of Kharkiv and
some more painted
trees!









Speaking of trees, the locals love their gardens and greenery second only to ice cream. The parks are all full of trees & now that spring has arrived, everyone is out planting annuals and making the public gardens bloom with colour.











What a difference a couple
of months make !My neighbours
verandah during winter & now


By the way, this is where
the big black dog lives
I cut the mans head off
but it was the dog I was
trying to capture. He is
huge, & the only exercise
he gets it a very slow
walk out to the kids
playground. Very sad!















On the way to work, there are a few fields where people plant their own vegetables for home consumption. Everything is done manually. They plough the ground, mark off their own little patches of soil and plant the seedlings. Speaking to one girl at work, this has been going on for about 10 years. Aparently life 10 years ago was a bit tough & so people began growing their own food. The tradition continues today & everyday, you see people out there tending to their plots. They walk from their village to the growing fields with all their tools and most of them look to be elderly. I guess at least they know the food is fresh and where it has come from & the soil looks quite healthy & very dark brown.


I meant to put this pic in last weeks blog.
Eee, this is a local "high speed" persuit car !




Hehehe... maybe they could use some of our Commodores !






A couple of the local churches










 






















I am seeing a lot more motorbikes / mopeds these days. However, here in Ukraine, you dont need a licence to ride them, nor do they wear helmets! Very dangerous & sort of reminds me of Malaysia a little bit. I have seen three people on one bike speeding though the traffic on the pot holed roads.  No one wears seat belts in cars either. I saw a 4x4 smash into a pole today, all airbags deployed, but someone hit the windscreen! Shows you the value of seat belts.


Opps... how did this beautiful baby get in the blog ?

My Middy

 

And yes the other baby, Bella
Thanks Catnap cattery, they look
happy and healthy & I cant
wait to have a cuddle on my
return.

















Andrey  ( Maryna's Andrey, picture, above, for mums sake) called me the other night & asked if I wanted go to Svyatogorsk where there were beautiful Monasteries set on chalk hills (Holy mountains). Still on the tail end of a cold, being run down & feeling zapped of energy I almost said no, but as Andrey said, the fresh county air will make me feel better ! So I accepted my first car trip out of Kharkiv! It was about a two hour (depending on the road surfaces) drive East of Kharkiv into the Donetsk region.














One thing I noticed immediately when we left the Kharkiv region, was that the roads surfaces improved immidiately once we crossed the boarder. They were like chalk and cheese & it was so nice not to have to ride the bumps! The countryside was relatively flat, a few hills but nothing like Crimea. Most of the fields had been recently ploughed and had seeds laid. One of the fields had sunflowers in it & Andrey said that in July it would be completely yellow. That would be a nice sight!

As Andrey promised, we arrived in Svyatogorsk in about two hours & there set in the hill behind the river was the monastary. There are three of them actually & the monks actually live there & maintain the chalk caves .The hills  are called Holy Mountains and a monastery was founded here in 1844. The monks discovered the ancient caves, continued the underground corridors and built cave churches there. Svyatogorsk monastery deteriorated in Soviet times. It was used as a coalminers’ sanatorium for 70 years. In 1992 all the buildings were returned to the church and the monastery was opened again. It became a Lavra (merited monastery) in 2003.













The rules are that if you are female, you must cover your head & if you are wearing trousers, you must also cover them. So the girls, Christina, Paola and I covered up. Men were walking around in singlet tops and shorts, but that didnt matter. !!!!!



 click on the pics to
enlarge them. The covered
walkway leads up from
the caves.






There are two ways to get up to the top. Via the road or via the caves. Yep thats right, there are chalk caves that you can travel through, but you have to book a tour and from the research I did after we got back, there are only two or three per day. We missed out, but I got a pic from my research.... later.


This is Artiom Monument















Artiom was a Communist party functionary Fiodor Sergeyev (1883-1921). He was the Prime-Minister of DKSR (Donetsk-Kryvyi Rih Socialist Republic) in 1918-1920.
The huge monument was commissioned by the Prime Minister of the Ukrainian Socialist Republic Grigory Petrovsky and created by the Soviet sculptor Ivan Cavaleridze. This huge monument is a monolith designed in a cubism manner. Its height is 22 meters and along with the foundation its height comprises about 28 meters.


Christina and Andrey
overlooking the river
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
A little place by the river
where the hold baptism
ceremonies
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
Holy Assumption Cathederal
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
Cathedral of the Protecting
Veil of Mother of God
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    
 
 
The colours were truely
magic














Ringing the bells











A pic of inside the caves
from research!














Church inside the caves










An old style church made of wood












Andrey & the Ukraine
countryside







The monestary at the top
great views










Me with my veil on!












You can see how it is
built into the chalk


























































Paola, Filepe, Christina
and Andrey








A great day in the Donetsk countryside! Thank you as always Andrey, for giving up your time to take us to this beautiful place. We really did appreciate it & hope that one day, we can return the favour.

Getting close to hometime! 33 days is all I have left.......

xm


Sunday, May 16, 2010

Paintball & Victory Day Celebrations

The first part of our project is complete and as a celebration, the bosses took the team out for a few games of paintball. For those of you who don't know what paintball is, it is basically a war game against two teams and you have guns loaded with balls of paint & you try & shoot each  other ! I didn't partake in festivities as we were going away to Crimea that weekend and I wanted my knee to be as good as possible. Knowing my luck, if I had played, I would have fallen over & hurt something!

Sasha and Maryna, looking a little unsure !









Nice gear Maryna..... Promod?







Maryna & Sasha

Mishka and Sasha preparing to do battle against the red team.














The breifing... Aim low, not for the face !
Yeah... right !







One very brave.... Russian Soldier!













Dima, ready for battle








The battle field !











Who won? I think it was a draw! Its not much of a spectator sport and looked to me like a lot of running around. Some of the games only lasted a short time & I'm not sure I would pay for it myself..... but still, It got us out of the office for a few hours which was nice. Food followed !












Maryna, Dima










There is that brave Russian Soldier
again..... Surrendering !!








The Polish Lads... Jozef & Mishka









Maryna & Lech find a friend








Sasha (Sulim), Wim, Maryna & Lech









Yevgeniy














Sasha











Christina & Sigi








Dima, Alina,Maryna, Behzat









 Iv'e never seen Iurii so happy !















Victory day in Ukraine is celebrated on the 9th of May and it commemorates the capitulation of Nazi Germany to the Soviet Union in the Second World War (also known as the Great Patriotic War in the Soviet Union and some post-Soviet states. Its a big day & this being the 65th year, the celebrations were huge throught Russia and Ukraine. Celebrations in Kharkov were held around Freedom Square and it was packed to the rafters (good name for a TV series Mez!), so we weren't able to see much. But I likened it to ANZAC day celebrations in Australia just in a bigger format..... remembering those who lost their lives and thanking those who fought and survived.


 This is the Saint George Ribbon that everyone displays, constitutes one of the most recognised and respected symbols of military valour in modern Russia. It is widely associated with the commemoration of World War II and especially with the units who were awarded the collective Guard battle honours during the conflict.



Some of the Harware on show.....New and old !
Forr those of you wondering, the sign at the back, апteka means pharmacy or chemist !












It was quite warm, the soldiers must have been hot ! Some of them are wearing blankets















































































It was a good day but as I said, very crowded & I hate crowds, so I had a bit of a walk around, & called it quits.

There is that guy again with thousands surrounding him !










I think we are all getting a little tired now. We are not going out as much as work seems to consume most of our time, even on weekends. Ive developed, over the last couple of days a bad chest cough and sore throat & I'm aching all over, so I guess I am a little run down. I'll have to ride this thing out without drugs as I cant just walk into a pharmacy and tell them what my symptoms are and get something to releive the crappiness that Im feeliing ! 

Mum reminded me the other day  that there is only 7 weeks to go ! I cant beleive it has gone so quickly! Looking back, the winter months really seemed to drag, but now the weather is better, time is flying!..... Typical. I guess the timing of the project was not the best!

We go live in a few weeks time with the second part of the project deliverables, then we have a month of 24 hour support....which will be fun for us non Russian speaking folk !  The first of July is when I fly out of Ukraine for the last time and come home to my third winter in a row !!  Something to look forward to !

Happy birthday to Tim Clay for yesterday 15th May. George, I cant beleive he is 14 already !

Congratulations to Jessica Watson on completing her round the world journey ! She started just a few days after my journey began, so I have been following her blog. It was a good read.

Its coming up to 2pm Sunday afternoon, I'm going to post this & fall into bed & try & catch up on some sleep that I havent had over the last few days. Not much planned on the immediate horizon in terms of travel or adventure although I would still like to sneak in a trip to Prague or even spend a little more time in Vienna (rather than just see the airport)!

Until the next blog

xm