Friday, June 24, 2011

Classes, sightseeing, sickness

Hello all-

Apologies for my lack of updates in the last week. We started classes which keeps all of us very busy. On top of that I caught a bit of a cold, which I have been trying desperately to get rid of.

We have five classes: Grammar (which is actually my favorite), Conversation, Audio-Visual Course (we watch Russian movies), Phonetics (my least favorite), and an Elective - mine is Syntax/Phraseology. I'm not quite sure what my elective is, actually. We haven't done a whole lot in that class besides watch винни пух, the Russian version of Winnie-the-Pooh, and last class we went to a market. It has essentially been conversation part 2, which is helpful because my spoken Russian is quite atrocious. Besides all the frustration and seemingly constant humiliation from all the mistakes I make, I do feel like I'm learning a lot. And that's the point, right? You have to make mistakes to learn the right way to speak the language, so bring on the frustration! I want desperately to improve, and this is the way to do it.

Despite all the work for school, I've been attempting to make time to go out sightseeing. Last Saturday, my suitemate and I went to see храм спас на крови, or the Church on the Spilled Blood. It was built as a monument on the spot where Tsar Alexander II was assassinated - there's actually a little shrine on the exact spot of his assassination. Being a lover of Russian history myself, I was so thrilled to see this. The cathedral itself is spectacular. The outside is so ornate and colorful. I must have taken 100 pictures of it. It's my favorite, clearly! The inside is COVERED in mosaics, which are breathtaking.

The next day, I met up with my tutor - a Russian girl named Natasha. She is also a big fan of walking around the city and seeing the sights so we took a long walk over to the Peter and Paul Fortress. She is extremely knowledgeable about St. Petersburg, and it was like having my own personal tour guide. We didn't get a chance to go inside the cathedral where many of the Romanovs are buried, but we're planning on going back another day.


Today, my suitemate (Alissa) and I went on a bit of an adventure after class to see the медный всадник, or the Bronze Horseman (a statue of Peter the Great built by Catherine the Great) and St. Issac's Cathedral, which is the biggest cathedral in Petersburg. The outside is not nearly as beautiful as спас, but the interior is gorgeous. The huge chandeliers are particularly impressive. The Bronze Horseman is also way more impressive than what I had seen in photos. I also didn't know his horse was standing on a snake. I figured that the snake was a symbol of Peter's victory over the Swedes (most things related to Peter are dedicated to this  triumph, but I'm not 100% sure about the snake).

Anyway, please enjoy some of my pictures below and join me in the hope that I will soon be back to feeling like my normal self!



Church on the Spilled Blood

 Me!


 Some of the mosaics inside the Church on the Spilled Blood



 Statue of Pushkin
 The Hermitage - we're going to visit it for the first time tomorrow.
 The Alexander Column

 Bridge over the Neva river
The Bronze Horseman


St. Issac's Cathedral

 Inside St. Issac's Cathedral




Sunday, June 12, 2011

White Nights, Big City

Hello all!

After a ton of traveling and some minor jetlag, I've arrived in St. Petersburg! It was quite overwhelming at first, but I'm settling in rather nicely now. The city is absolutely gorgeous! It feels similar to New York, but without that underlying tension that I always feel when I'm there. Haven't done a whole lot of traveling just yet - we're holding off on going to museums until we get our student ids which get you in for free or for a discount. I'm staying at the dorms rather than a homestay, and I'm really glad I did. I live LITERALLY right down the road from the Kazan cathedral, which is spectacular. Nevsky Prospekt is only about a 3-5 minute walk away. The building where our classes are held is a little farther - a 35 minute walk, or even shorter if you take the metro (which is insanely cheap by the way - 25 roubles aka under a dollar). We road the metro yesterday for practice and it's so simple. However, I do not envy some of my groupmates staying with Russian families that have to commute over an hour on the metro just to get to class.

I think my roomate and I are going to have some dinner out tonight and maybe buy some groceries. I also want to get some studying in since my Russian is quite rusty. Since we're only allowed to speak Russian on campus, I definitely need the review! I think everyone in my dorm suite is going to switch over to Russian full-time here in a few days. It's hard not to get better at a language when you're using it all the time!

I hope to have more to tell in the coming days!

-Olive

Our dorm.

Kazan Cathedral. I live right down the street from this. Be jealous.

Downtown St. Petersburg!