Happy Travels!
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During a recent trip to Amsterdam, we decided to take in the sites of Antwerp on a loooooong daytrip. Easy, inexpensive trip by train with a transfer in Rotterdam.. Since our tickets were for any train, it just made sense to hop off at the Rotterdam Central train station and spend an afternoon exploring..
It was a little chilly and overcast but still a good decision..
It’s a newer city and that is reflected in the buildings than line the canals..and the waterfront..
Honestly I am not sure I could spend a protracted length of time here but it is well worth a daytrip from Belgium or Amsterdam..
Happy Travels!!
About 25 km northwest of Kiev, you will find the village of Irpin, Ukraine and for the adventurous, and those willing to hike a bit, you can make your way to an abandoned brick works in the center of town..
It is surrounded by a fence, of course, but there are ways in.. one way is through the glass recycle yard..
Mounds of broken glass, which appeared to be mostly liquor and medical bottles fill an abandoned bridge, where they are separated, ground up and shipped off to places unknown.
The brick works is full of interesting buildings, that are remarkably free of trash..
Possibly because the 2 existing businesses occupying the territory, the glass recycling and a working cement plant, don’t like or encourage “visitors”. Still with no visible “No Entry” signs, we decided to take our chances..
As always, when visiting abandoned places, it is important to remember the Golden Rule –
TAKE NOTHING BUT PICTURES – LEAVE NOTHING BUT FOOTPRINTS
Travel with Steve Photography as Art
Happy Travels!
For most people who have visited, or are planning to visit, Chernobyl, it means more than just a 90km drive north of Kyiv, Ukraine to see a town laid waste by a nuclear accident in 1986. While people are happy to get a glimpse of the new sarcophagus being erected around reactor number 4, the endless feilds of power line towers and the re-emerging town city…(yes it even has a hotel and cafe) and the monument to the brave fairefighters who gave their lives trying to save others, the majority of visitors go for oner reason.. The Ghost Town of Pripyat .
I visited the exclusion zone, Chernobyl and Pripyat on May 26, 2014hosted by a guide company that specialized in Chernobyl Tours . The day started at 8:30 when a car arrived at my apartment in Kyiv to take me to The 30km Exclusion zone, where I would meet my guide. The paperwork and permits were filled out well in advance and the guards gave no more than a cursury glance at passports, the forms or even the car.. Pictures of the guards or the barricades and guard house are not allowed.
Once past the formalities and back in the car, we headed into Chernobyl.. The town is occupied by “watchmen” and security, as well as the workers on the reactors and reactor housings. While not a bustling hotbed of activity, it is not exactly deserted … There are signs on residences that state ” The Owner Is Living Here” .. You can stop at the main sign coming into town for photos before continuing into the center to see the “Fireman Memorial” .
After a 10 minute stop to see the memorial, we started the 18km drive past reactor 4 to the 10km exclusion zone. We stopped again for the obligatory photo of the city sign of Pripyat.. which stood out in stark white surrounded by yellow radiation warning signs..
I asked our guide, Andrie, about the Red Forest since it was technically next on the list.. The forest had been clear cut and bulldozed in 1986, so do not expect to see a vast stand of radiation killed trees.. Now it is tall pines and scraggly undergrowth..a little disappointing actually.
At the 10km zone, again paperwork and permits were given the cursury inspection, the gate was raised and we drove slowly into Pripyat. Apartment buildings, hotels, office buildings stood above the tangled undergrowth
There are only 4 buildings that you are allowed inside of..The hospital, the school, the kindergarten and the riverfront cafe.
20 odd years of weather, radiation and vandalism have made many of the structures unsafe and the Zone authorities have placed most of them “Off Limits”. After seeing the inside of the hospital and the school, I felt it was no real loss.. water, mold, trash and generally unsavory conditions inside combined with, in my mind, staged photographic opportunities (more about that here in this Travel Rant) lessened the experience but I enjoyed walking around the town..The empty and quiet streets were spooky, even in the light of day..
The amusement park was a must see.. even though, most of the park has rusted to oblivion, the ferris wheel still stand tall ..
All in all, not a bad trip..but definetly not what I was expecting from the hype.. I would recommend it just to learn about the horrific accident and the consequences that happened in Chernobyl and the surrounding areas.. but as a photo experience, not so much.
After a pleasant lunch, included in the tour, we headed home.
Ok.. more than A shot.. but I was walking around Kyiv the other and and noticed 6 apartment buildings with these wonderful mosaics on the end facing the street.. I realized that mosaics like this are actually all over town. You can find them most prominently on apartment buildings, but also, in the metro stations, grocery stores, schools.. everywhere.. It’s awesome !
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