What You Have To Go Through Getting To Volga

Posted: October 1st, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Cruises | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

More so, after finding that Volga brochure on aboard the Alexander Pushkin, a soviet motor ship, we already knew we had a great idea in mind. Like treasure hunting, boarding the first Volga ship carrying all American tourists, was like a whole new adventure for us. With the traffic the rivers encounter on a daily basis, passing through different rivers, ships often have on board soviet workers on break, families on tour groups or mostly for other socialist states. Visit this site for further information on adventure travel russia.

 

With the capacity of 220 passengers the Alexander Pushkin is about 360 feet wide and is a smooth as the birds the swim in the waters. Our cabins would become party places as out foldable bunks left us with a big space. Through Don from Rostov was our way for 10 laid back days and 1,135 miles.

 

Many routes needed to be taken just to get to the 24 day Volga cruise. After the cruise, we were to fly on to Moscow and Leningrad. To a degree soviet tour companies want their local ships to be rented by the Americans which partly force some US agencies not to offer Volga cruises. Still, the widening of around ten new vessels allows individual passengers to take the cruise given the boat is not full yet.

 

It would cost about $1,900 for the next two to three cruises that a New York based company is tentatively planning for next year. Mingling with Soviet people and getting a tour on the shore is what comprises the $700 to $800 Volga cruise. Getting the chance to see the places the day is amazing while at night the boat moves forward to another location. As a person looking for the russian far east you should visit that site.

 

Soviet domestic and foreign policy was usually the topic when these nice professionals would start talking. The discussions on the table end up becoming lectures and speeches. The upside though is we get to be on a boat with the Russians. We see them dancing, flirting, and playing with their children. The selection of alcohol for the bars gives them more energy to take longer discussions.

 

The river makes a sweet sound as it enters our cabins. But the Volga, longest waterway in Europe, is no longer the meandering river of medieval legend because massive Soviet hydroelectric power developments have transformed the river into a series of vast lakes. Factories that pollute the world and apartment buildings are what people can see in the surroundings instead or old villages. Today, life in this place is as fast paced as any other.

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