[identity profile] onekatietwo.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] learn_russian
Hello, I have a few questions regarding traveling to Russia. I'm going to Moscow and Petersburg for a few weeks and I just have some questions. I think that's way too off-topic for here, so I was just wondering if anybody knows of any active-ish, english language communities that might be able to address those kinds of questions and could provide some good discussion. I'm not having much luck with live-journal's search feature.

Thanks, and feel free to delete this if even this question is too off topic. Apologies if so!

Edit:
Ok. So you guys seem plenty willing to help even if it's a tad off topic, so I'll share a few general questions here. But basically any 'from america to russia' tips will be appreciated!


So first off, I'm not overly concerned about language issues. For one, I have at least some experience with Russian. I'm pretty rusty, and very basic, but it should be enough to get me by considering the nature of my trip. Additionally, I can read Russia pretty well (again, at a very beginner level, but still,) so that should help.
Also, I am going on a kind of class trip. It was supposed to be a 3 week intensive language study, but not enough people from little town in the US were interested in putting down tons of cash for 3 weeks of basically torture in Russia. I thought it sounded awesome, though!
Anyway, it's basically been reduced to a tour trip, which I don't think is as exciting (I was really excited to actually learn the language a bit!) but still pretty awesome, considering I've never traveled. We have a member of the faculty from the Russian department at my school coming along and kind of guiding the trip. She's fluent in Russian and I've heard she doesn't even speak with an accent because she has Russian family. Additionally, a couple of the students are at a very high level of Russian speaking. With all these crutches, I think I'll be ok.


So my first question: Jogging in Russia. I've recently started jogging and I thought it would be cool to continue while I'm in Russia. We're also going to have some 'off time' where we will basically be sitting around doing nothing, or doing whatever we want to do and I thought jogging would be a cool way to kind of see a bit of the city, and also pass some time.
However, I don't know if this is safe at all. Do you think it would be safe for a lone 20-something American girl to do some jogging in the mornings in Moscow and Petersburg? Maybe if I could get another student to come with me? We're staying at a hostel, but I don't have the name or exact location right now.
This might not be important at all because I'l probably just be exhausted all the time from all the things we'll be doing.

Second: How do Russians typically drink their coffee? I mean specifically coffee from cafes and stuff. I do love my coffee and tea and I would like to know how to order it so I'll get something that I enjoy.

Third: This is a slightly academic, guided (sort of) tour trip, but we have a lot of say in what we do and wwhere we go and we have plenty of time to do our own things. We probably have a ton of the general, standard tour things scheduled in, so I'm just curious about other, less typical things I should do/visit/see while I'm there.

I'm particularly interested in things to see around Petersburg. My instructor is not as familiar with Petersburg and said she doesn't have much planned for there. I'm big into Russian literature, especially Petersburg literature, so I'm REALLY excited to go there, more so than Moscow, honestly. I'm just worried I'll end up not knowing what to do with myself and just sit around all day consequently. Any tips?

Thanks, everybody!

Date: 2010-03-25 06:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] starbax.livejournal.com
hm... maybe you should ask at first these questions?*)

Date: 2010-03-25 07:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sombreadm.livejournal.com
Try http://www.couchsurfing.org
This is international travelling community.

Date: 2010-03-25 07:10 am (UTC)
alon_68: (Default)
From: [personal profile] alon_68
It's very difficult to stay in Russia without some level of Russian. Most people don't speak English even in the tourist-oriented places and the street name plates are in Russian only, even without some transliteration.

Date: 2010-03-25 07:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] truthman.livejournal.com
Извините, но вы, наверное, давно не были ни в МСк, ни в Спб. Улицы, карта метро, там давно на двух языках. Да и молодое поколение достаточно неплохо говорит на английский.

Date: 2010-03-25 07:47 am (UTC)
alon_68: (Default)
From: [personal profile] alon_68
I was in Moscow last summer at I was wondering how a foreigner could find the right direction there. Of course you can buy map in English or possibly find it in some corner, but the plates in the Metro are definitely in Russian only and so overwhelmingly the street names.

Date: 2010-03-25 08:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] truthman.livejournal.com
не знаю, не знаю. Центр города с табличками на английском точно, допускаю, что на окраинах города таблички только на русском, карта метро точно на английском идет по умолчанию.

Date: 2010-03-25 09:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] surkova.livejournal.com
all of the direction tables in Moscow are in both English and Russian

Date: 2010-03-25 08:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wolk-off.livejournal.com
Thank you for your contribution. However, I would love to remind that the working language in this community is English, and if you decide to post or comment in Russian, you are expected to make your comment bilingual by providing exact English translation - for the sake of those learners of Russian who are in the very beginning of their study.

Date: 2010-03-25 08:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] truthman.livejournal.com
excuse me, my mistake

not that bad :)

Date: 2010-03-25 07:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] la-dy-ashley.livejournal.com
A lot of street signs in Moscow are in two languages (not the ones on the buildings but the arrows on the posts that show directions). Most Underground maps are transliterated (the ones in the trains). Petersburg is full of tourists so it shouldn't be a problem either.

Re: not that bad :)

Date: 2010-03-25 08:01 am (UTC)
alon_68: (Default)
From: [personal profile] alon_68
The problem is that when you are hurrying to catch the right train in the midst of the typical Moscow crowd you have definitely no possibility to use the map inside the train :)
(deleted comment)

Date: 2010-03-25 12:13 pm (UTC)
alon_68: (Default)
From: [personal profile] alon_68
Are you joking??
Even the beginner level is not available everywhere.
Knowing "Май нэйм из Вася" is not enough :)

Date: 2010-03-25 07:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] a1essia.livejournal.com
What are the questions?

Date: 2010-03-25 07:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-shinigami.livejournal.com
Share the questions, we'll answer.

Date: 2010-03-25 12:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] raskladu6ka.livejournal.com
I'm a guide here in Moscow and I'll be glad to help you.

Date: 2010-03-25 06:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zhp.livejournal.com
http://www.lonelyplanet.com/thorntree/forum.jspa;jsessionid=53859516A802861CFA62918D7BA75B93.app01?forumID=15&keywordid=-1

Date: 2010-03-25 09:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lady-of-the-sea.livejournal.com
I have a few answers! I didn't go to Moscow, but I was in St. Petersburg on a similar school trip.

First is jogging: It really depends on where you are staying, I think. My roommate was supposed to be doing her summer training schedule for soccer when we were in St. Petersburg, but our dorms were not in a very nice part of town. There was a park nearby but most times of day it was pretty empty, and the surrounding buildings were bordering on abandoned-looking (not sure if they actually were). She ended up running up and down the stairs a few times every day to do the running portion of her workout. This worked out well because a)We were on the top floor, 13th I think, and b) We had no hot water for showers for a week and a half, so she got nice and warm before taking hers. So you may just have to ask around when you get there, and see if there's a well-monitored and populated park for running.

As for coffee, at the little snack-bar at St. Petersburg State University where we had classes, they had little instant-coffee packet things that tasted amazingly like home. I missed overly sweetened and processed food substances, I guess? Which is not to say that they had any real coffee in them, but I didn't look hard for real cofee after a few failed attempts. We went to Кофе Хаус during a fit of Starbucks withdrawal, and it was . . . not. Not like American coffee shop food, and not like good Russian food. It was more like Russian food with all the tasty stuff removed? Alas, I can be of no help there.

If you get a St. Petersburg guidebook (Lonely Planet is good) there might be a section of literary things! There are lots of author's houses and Famous Places where Famous Things Happened. We walked to a few, but it's all hazy now.



hey...

Date: 2010-03-27 02:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] medieval-jon.livejournal.com

about coffee... in the big mall beside red square (Gum or tzum I forget...) there is a good coffe shop with wireless intenet access and tasty ice cream.

you can take coffe how you like, but usually it is smaller portions but smaller... myslef always каке сакаром с молоко' coffee with milk and suger ;) Unless of course you are with students or not in coffeeshop where you may get russian/turkish style with coffee beans in your coffee.... let them settle and enjoy the caffiene buzz.

about jogging... probably safer than many american cities... but I'm not a local to say. I'd do it but I'm 6" tall guy with martial arts training...

Finally, I would joing travellers social networking site 'couchsurfing.com' and check what events are happening... for example when i was there i stayed with on russian for free and organized a trip to MosFilm, the big film studio and it was awesome. if you join, seach my projile johnnyendeavour and i have some moscow people in my references that were great for showing me around just because I'm a cool traveller guy from canada.

And...study the subway map before you go in the subway for sure... and if you are brave - next time go to Minsk in Belarus ;) There you will find a real test of your russian! Oh... and study your russian slang before you go - it can be very useful. детка! все ништак. в москва клeва чеувак. :D

Oh finally.. make a profile on vk.com the russian facebook so you can impress all the russians that you are cool and 'ni chai-nik'

ok other finally... if you want to fit in bring your high heels and leave the jogging pants at home. Its St. Petersburg not chicago!






Re: hey...

Date: 2010-03-27 09:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hellina.livejournal.com
Now, that's just rude - And most of the slang is wrong anyway.

Re: hey...

Date: 2010-03-27 09:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hellina.livejournal.com
To clarify:
All the Russian he use in his comment is wrong
VK accounts do not impress people (Typical reaction would be like: - I have a facebook account – So what?)
Slang is NOT useful – I wouldn't recommend to use it in any conversation.
I have no idea what "ni chai-nik" means

Re: hey...

Date: 2010-03-28 01:17 am (UTC)
oryx_and_crake: (Default)
From: [personal profile] oryx_and_crake
It probably means he is not a dummy in the internet world - "не чайник".

Re: hey...

Date: 2010-03-28 02:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] medieval-jon.livejournal.com
ni goni porgu! lol

Having lived in Minsk for 14 months, taught english for nine, I stand behind everything I said with the exception of my very poor written spelling in russian. its should have been кофе. Spacibo oryx.

чаиник = slang for beginner ie newbie. I had great fun studying russian slang with my friends... mind you after being in country a year already. I'm not recommending you use it necessarily, but you will hear it on the street, on the bus and in the grocery store. It can help a lot when a taxi driver wants to charge you double or triple the fair price. knowledge, its always useful. You still have to use your head of course.

And typical reaction where I was... "что фасебук?" Maybe its different in st. peter's burg, but not for average in my experience even at the linguistic university where I was a student for 14 months in Minsk. LJ actually is surprisingly popular still in russia... most of my canadian friends stopped using it long ago.

As for yelling... the American's I knew never complained about being yelled at. The koreans, and turks, on the otherhand had lots to complain about.

For myself, I can't wait until I go back. Great times, amazing people, and I miss it a lot.

Re: hey...

Date: 2010-03-27 10:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hellina.livejournal.com
Wow, that is a little bit too extreme – No one will yell at you just for being American – The only situation I can think of is some old lady in the museum, who thinks that you are getting too close to the drawings and could unintentionally damage them.


P.S Now I am trying to imagine reasons Russian have to hate young American tourists. - And I am failing miserably :-)

Re: hey...

Date: 2010-03-28 05:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] awelon.livejournal.com
I know I'm a little late and butting into the discussion, but I thought I'd add my two cents' worth. I'm Canadian (often mistaken for American) and I've been to Russia twice, for a month each time. I can only think of two instances when I was ever yelled at - once in the metro in St Petersburg when I was trying to buy a metro pass, and once by a woman in a park trying to sell me a guinea pig. Generally speaking, I found most Russians to be extraordinarily helpful, and my neutral or positive stories definitely outnumber the negative ones. I had people take me under their wing in a banya in Moscow, and a Russian family stopped and chatted for a bit while giving me directions in Ulan-Ude. Mostly I found that they were impressed that a foreigner was there and speaking Russian! An American friend of mine was caught in a terrible rainstorm in St Petersburg, and a woman pulled over, gave him her coat and drove him back to his dorm. I wouldn't worry too much about getting angry attention. :)

Re: hey...

Date: 2010-03-28 01:16 am (UTC)
oryx_and_crake: (Default)
From: [personal profile] oryx_and_crake
"каке" is not even a word in Russian. It's either кофе (coffee) or какао (cocoa, hot chocolate), but neither of these are even close to "каке".

"сакаром с молоко" isn't very sound grammatically but here at least you got the actual words right.

from America to Russia

Date: 2010-03-29 01:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wordchick.livejournal.com
I've only spent 10 days in Russia, so you may want to take this with a grain of salt. I had a marvelous time while I was there, but later discovered that my bank account had been broken into. I would be wary of paying with a card at a restaurant or withdrawing money from a free-standing ATM (including ones from reputable banks that are not immediately connected to a branch). I'm not sure exactly when the security breach occurred, so I can't be more specific, sorry.

As to your other questions- language wasn't much of a problem, although at the time I was there, I spoke Russian pretty well. I'm not a coffee drinker myself, but you're likely to find more consistently good tea than coffee (the international natures of Moscow and St. Petersburg aside). I didn't have nearly enough time in St. Petersburg, but I really enjoyed the Hermitage (what a shock :) and the Russian Museum of Ethnography. The latter is an anthropological museum, and it documents all the cultures that rarely are mentioned when people speak of Russia.

At any rate, enjoy! I have no idea when I will visit St. Petersburg next, but I look foreward to it with great anticipation.

Date: 2010-03-31 09:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] orie.livejournal.com
1. Jogging
I would definitely do it myself without fear, but of course there are some stories that it might be unsafe. If you have doubts, take somebody with you. Unfortunately, most places in SPb and Moscow are not good for it, because the air is polluted.
2. Coffee
In SPb there are several cafe networks: Идеальная чашка, Кофе Хаус, Республика кофе, which have a wide range of coffee. They use terms: "эспрессо" for strong coffee in a small cup, "американо" for less stronger coffee, "каппучино" for coffee with milk foam, "латте" for coffee with a lot of milk (I think that's international and you might know this terms). Wide range of teas is available almost in any cafe or restaurant, and you are usually asked about the tea blend which you prefer (black or green at least, черный или зелёный, and if it's green, then с жасмином или без, with or without jasmine)

I live in SPb and I can meet you for a cup of coffee if you'd like too and answer any other questions (leave me a personal message from my Livejournal userinfo page)

Date: 2010-03-31 09:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wolk-off.livejournal.com
>I do love my coffee and tea and I would like to know how to order it

Hey, you're going to a foreign country. Don't order the stuff you know - it is NEVER the same as what you have at home :)) Try local things.

Anyway, here's a few guidelines.

Most cafes in both Moscow and St.Petersburg have both tea and coffee.
Most offer black and green tea.

Black tea, Russian way: black (no milk,) and sugar. Many Russians add lemon, and some add milk, but if you want lemon or milk, you have to specify it. It's чёрный чай с сахаром; I guess you know the words for lemon and milk :)

Green tea. In Russia, it's either Central Asian, or Chinese. Big network cafes (like Кофе Хауз or Кофемания in Moscow or Идеальная чашка in St.Pete) offer a variety of Chinese green teas. Most Russians (just like people in Central Asia and China) do not take sugar or milk with green tea, whatever its origin.

It's hard to find red tea or white tea, you have to go to very chosen specialized places (China-oriented, mostly.) If you really want to check out great teas in Moscow, go to Клуб чайной культуры in the Hermitage Garden (Сад Эрмитаж, metro Chekhovskaya, http://www.chaiclub.ru/.) They also have an affiliate place in St.Petersburg (see their Web site.)

Coffee. Most places offer, at least, capuccino and espresso (капуччино, эспрессо - they sound the same in Russian.) Some offer Americano and decaf (без кофеина). Big network cafes have more flavors and sorts. Do specify if you want milk, cream, or more sugar when you order. Specialized cofee places like Coffee Bean in Moscow offer flavors (caramel, vanilla etc.); they are normally listed on a blackboard near or over the barista area.

Coffee-to-go (tall American-style paper cups with a plastic lid) is not widely spread (except in Starbuckses, of which there's still only a few, and McDonaldses, but we are not seriously discussing McDonalds' coffee, aren't we?) -- in most places, coffee comes in small or medium-sized cups, and you are expected to consume it inside the place.
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