i booked train tickets to vinnytsia because i'd never been there...after i booked the tickets, i learned the frontrunning candidate for the ukrainian presidency came from vinnytsia...the train ride was about three hours, so i started my trip early on a saturday morning...
i walked all day, as i usually do when i travel...my first 'sight' was a big market full of clothes stalls, there was a small produce section as well...as i got to the market some of the vendors weren't there yet, and others were just starting to set up, so the atmosphere was a little different...it was a chilly morning, so nearly all the vendors had coffee or tea with them in thermoses...
while walking down the main street of vinnytsia i entered a MEAT market...it wasn't huge, but it was intense...two ends of the room, each had a ring of counters around an 'island'...next to each island were men with really strong arms who were doing all the cutting...they had what looked like small axes to make the cuts into each animal...i know that's how butchers work, but i'd never before seen anything like it...i even saw them split a couple skulls! the counters were covered with all kinds of meat, you can probably get any kind of cut you want...
i crossed a bridge over a river, i could see fishermen out for the day...i wonder how long they fish, and what time they start? near the river was a rocketship looking church...
walking further i found the water tower on one side of memorial park...it's a unique looking water tower, not at all like what we have all over the midwest in the states...across the sidewalk from the water tower was a mosaic with a soviet theme...a soviet flag, musical instruments, lots of red and yellow, a few people in 'patriotic' professions, etc...i wonder how long it has been there, im sure it was put there in the 50s or 60s...
as i've mentioned before, it seems that every city/town/village in ukraine has a memorial for WWII...most are quite large...along the other side of the part was a memorial with all the names of people from vinnytsia who fought and died...there was also a large statue of three men, and a 'sign' with the years of the war listed, and the name of the park/memorial...
back on the street i walked past the old central synagogue...(ukraine used to have a large jewish population, most of which 'disappeared' between 1937 and 1945...hitler wasn't the only evil leader)...i don't know if this synagogue is still used or not, but i found it fascinating that the sign was in ukrainian and hebrew...
walking along, i came to the 'maidan' of vinnytsia, complete with the yellow and blue painted piano...
continuing my walk, i explored a bit of the big park...i liked the areas with birdhouses perched on top of poles...very colourful, i liked the feeling of cheeriness...
from there it was a LONG walk to my next sight...much longer than i expected, made even worse when the numbers on each side of the street don't match up...the name of the street was pyrohova (a name which likely only means something to ukrainians or those in the medical community)...finally i got to the pirohova estate and museum...he was a soviet scientist in the 1800s, who lived at least 20 years in vinnytsia...he pioneered the use of anesthetic if i understand correctly...he was also a pioneer in other aspects of medicine and science, but i can't remember any specifics of what the guide told me...ooops...(i really should've written it down)
i giggled to myself when one tour guide assumed i had a basic idea of who the guy was...sorry, the history we learn in the US growing up does not cover accomplishments by soviet folks...the estate had several buildings visitors could enter, including the pharmacy, but it wasn't easy to figure out what was what...i'm pretty sure i didn't see everything i should've, oh well...
from the estate it was another 1.2km walk to a church...the church isn't anything unique or impressive, it's visited for another reason...in the mausoleum under the church, the embalmed body of pirohovo is displayed...(so i've now seem lenin, ho chi minh, kim il-sung, and pyrohovo)...
the tour guide told me he is re-embalmed every 7 years or so, (is it the same person who does this, or is it a different person every time?) he looks a lot better than lenin, who was embalmed quite a few years later...pyrohovo's body has been embalmed for more than 130 years! it was his second wife who decided to have this done...not surprisingly, there are no photos allowed in this area...
from there i walked ALL THE WAY BACK to the train station, and from there to my hotel...the hotel wasn't very homey (no tv, no wifi) but it was cheap, and it was nice to have total silence...
the next morning i walked back into town a bit, and wandered through a couple neighborhoods i hadn't seen the day before...
a lot of towns in ukraine still use well water, i saw several old folks getting water from wells as i walked along...this struck me as 'quaint' since it doesn't really work that way anymore in the states, even for families who are dependent on wells...
i saw a beautiful old church, and walked along one branch of the river...i saw a couple other big churches, and saw the old walls of a monastery...this day was more about soaking up the feeling of the town and wandering around rather than looking for specific sights...since i'm clearly a foreigner, and not afraid of wandering through non touristy areas (not that there are a huge number of touristy areas anywhere in ukraine) i am used to being stared at by locals...as long as it isn't by a creepy guy, i don't much care :)
eventually i went back to the train station and went back to kyiv...
i wouldn't mind going back to vinnytsia during warmer months, as there is a huge fountain in one bend of the river, it apparently puts on quite a show!
Showing posts with label roshen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label roshen. Show all posts
07 April 2014
ukraine: vinnytsia
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WWII memorial
06 February 2012
can't get enough
winter here is cold...apparently this is one of the coldest winters ukraine (and eastern europe in general) has had in quite some time...i've seen a number of news articles about the effects of the cold on life in general...some of the statistics in relation to the homeless are disheartening, to say the least...
that being said, i live in a warm flat, and i have appropriate clothing for this type of weather...so i love it...i can't get enough...as far as i'm concerned, if it snowed 3 out of 5 days all winter long, i'd be a happy camper...granted, i'd be happier with a few more days of blue skies, but i'll take what i can get...i love that it snows, and stays cold enough that the snow doesn't go anywhere...the city has been covered in white for three weeks or so...woo hoo...
this weekend cloe and i went out saturday afternoon to take a few photos on the river...the dniester river, which is really close to our flat...it's been below freezing for more than two weeks, sometimes dramatically so...so the river is definitely very frozen...woo hoo...when we were out on saturday, i played in the snow and had cloe take a few photos...then we walked out to the middle of the frozen river and took a few more photos...they don't really show how very white everything is, or how cold it is, or how windy it was that day...(it was snowing sideways)...i made a snow angel in the middle of the river:)...the ice statue from a couple weeks ago was still there, it hadn't melted at all...i wonder how long it will be there...
sunday afternoon i went out by myself to take a few more photos...i figured a lot of the snow from saturday afternoon probably hadn't been moved yet...i made my way to the lavra, stopping first in a park and watching people sled down an awesome hill...another time i really wish cloe and i had a sled...it's fun to sled, and quite the workout to keep climbing back up the hill...there were heaps of people out there, despite the cold...ukrainians are definitely prepared for this kind of weather, which is fantastic...they not only have the proper clothes, they get out and enjoy the weather...
the memorial to victims of the '32-'33 famine (a man made famine, stalin made it happen on purpose) was perhaps more moving with the statue of the starving girl with snow on it...
from there i kept going down the street to the lavra, the monastary complex i know i've mentioned in a couple previous posts...i only entered the lower lavra, the area where you can see the 'caves'...since it obviously didn't snow inside, i had no desire to see those again...buuuut, there is another church, graveyard, and bell tower, and i knew they'd be beautiful...and they were...the upper lavra has some renovation going on, and it's the area where you have to pay an entrance fee, which i didn't much want to do...i've already seen it twice, and will likely visit again anywho...
after the lavra i walked along a main highway to a statue/memorial i'd seen photos of, but hadn't yet seen in person...until a taxi ride to the airport with cloe during the day, i didn't actually know where it was actually located...locals will tell you it's too far to walk, but it wasn't far at all...the photos didn't turn out well, with a gray sky and dark statue...oh well...the statue/memorial is supposed to depict the founders of the city of kyiv...3 brothers and a sister...or is it 2 brothers and their sister? what i know for sure is that the city is named after the eldest brother, and the others got hills in the city named after them...i wonder how that was decided...would i ever want a city named after me? probably not...
from there i walked back up the highway, through knee deep snow...only one person had walked through there previously, so there was no easy way to walk...it's just as much a workout to walk through deep-ish snow as it is to run/walk on a beach!!
my next stop was the botanical garden in the middle of town...snow covered of course...
from there to a roshen store...roshen is a local chocolate brand, you see their stuff ALL OVER the country...in pretty much every store selling chocolate, in every little corner stand...they have chocolate bars, toffees, individual chocolates, etc...i wanted chocolate toffees, and was really excited to get them...the store didn't have them!!! total heartbreak...booooooooooo...oh well, life goes on...i got a couple other types of chocolate instead, though they in no way made up for my disappointment....boooo...
at least i got a few good photos out of the weekend:)
that being said, i live in a warm flat, and i have appropriate clothing for this type of weather...so i love it...i can't get enough...as far as i'm concerned, if it snowed 3 out of 5 days all winter long, i'd be a happy camper...granted, i'd be happier with a few more days of blue skies, but i'll take what i can get...i love that it snows, and stays cold enough that the snow doesn't go anywhere...the city has been covered in white for three weeks or so...woo hoo...
this weekend cloe and i went out saturday afternoon to take a few photos on the river...the dniester river, which is really close to our flat...it's been below freezing for more than two weeks, sometimes dramatically so...so the river is definitely very frozen...woo hoo...when we were out on saturday, i played in the snow and had cloe take a few photos...then we walked out to the middle of the frozen river and took a few more photos...they don't really show how very white everything is, or how cold it is, or how windy it was that day...(it was snowing sideways)...i made a snow angel in the middle of the river:)...the ice statue from a couple weeks ago was still there, it hadn't melted at all...i wonder how long it will be there...
sunday afternoon i went out by myself to take a few more photos...i figured a lot of the snow from saturday afternoon probably hadn't been moved yet...i made my way to the lavra, stopping first in a park and watching people sled down an awesome hill...another time i really wish cloe and i had a sled...it's fun to sled, and quite the workout to keep climbing back up the hill...there were heaps of people out there, despite the cold...ukrainians are definitely prepared for this kind of weather, which is fantastic...they not only have the proper clothes, they get out and enjoy the weather...
the memorial to victims of the '32-'33 famine (a man made famine, stalin made it happen on purpose) was perhaps more moving with the statue of the starving girl with snow on it...
from there i kept going down the street to the lavra, the monastary complex i know i've mentioned in a couple previous posts...i only entered the lower lavra, the area where you can see the 'caves'...since it obviously didn't snow inside, i had no desire to see those again...buuuut, there is another church, graveyard, and bell tower, and i knew they'd be beautiful...and they were...the upper lavra has some renovation going on, and it's the area where you have to pay an entrance fee, which i didn't much want to do...i've already seen it twice, and will likely visit again anywho...
after the lavra i walked along a main highway to a statue/memorial i'd seen photos of, but hadn't yet seen in person...until a taxi ride to the airport with cloe during the day, i didn't actually know where it was actually located...locals will tell you it's too far to walk, but it wasn't far at all...the photos didn't turn out well, with a gray sky and dark statue...oh well...the statue/memorial is supposed to depict the founders of the city of kyiv...3 brothers and a sister...or is it 2 brothers and their sister? what i know for sure is that the city is named after the eldest brother, and the others got hills in the city named after them...i wonder how that was decided...would i ever want a city named after me? probably not...
my next stop was the botanical garden in the middle of town...snow covered of course...
from there to a roshen store...roshen is a local chocolate brand, you see their stuff ALL OVER the country...in pretty much every store selling chocolate, in every little corner stand...they have chocolate bars, toffees, individual chocolates, etc...i wanted chocolate toffees, and was really excited to get them...the store didn't have them!!! total heartbreak...booooooooooo...oh well, life goes on...i got a couple other types of chocolate instead, though they in no way made up for my disappointment....boooo...
at least i got a few good photos out of the weekend:)
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