Add to favorite
 
Editor, Contributor, Fashion and Design, Travel, Business

Trip to Samara

Samara is a modern Russian city with all advantages of a regional centre providing almost no problems with employment and disadvantages of a “province” easily seen after several days spent in the city.

Any traveler happened to visit Russian regional towns including Samara is commonly shocked by the road condition. The vast majority of motorways, street roads, avenues are terribly worn-down, which makes driving an amusement ride. In the centre of the city they are much better, but suburbs will certainly take you down to the reality.

The most popular kind of transport is a tram. A short trip through the streets can replace a traditional bus excursion and is definitely much cheaper (9 rubles per ticket). Luckily many tram tracks go apart from main roads allowing their passengers avoid traffic jams inevitable due to narrow streets. Local citizens prefer domestic cars, frequently old and having nothing in common with Euro2 standard, so the smell of exhaust gas will follow you on the road.

Another problem is clouds of dust swirling behind cars passing by. This phenomenon is common in summer after two or three sunny days. Watching dust in the air reminds of the steppe lying around Samara with its feather grass and wide spread of country.

Volga

However, tourists usually come to Samara to see its cultural and historical centre and the Volga, the biggest river in Europe. The Volga is absolutely admirable – sandy beaches, gulls and the hardly seen opposite bank produce indelible impression and let you think you are at the seaside. Only the sound of breaking waves is lacking. The bank of the Volga is a small piece of heaven, no wonder the cost of apartments here equals that of Moscow.

Beer

Not far from the river there is a famous Zhigulevsky brewery and here you can taste fresh beer, which is actually found tasty by both men and women. An interesting fact is that Iverskiy nunnery is located next to the brewery – a funny coincidence.

Beer is an exceptionally popular drink in Samara – people drink it in the afternoon, evening, at night and even early morning, no walk is possible without having a bottle of beer. Numerous summer cafés are always ready to serve a tourist for a moderate sum of money.

Chocolate

In the 1990s chocolate factory Rossiya in Samara, which was established in the 1970s, received a new chance to become a competitive participant of the Russian chocolate market due to its cooperation with Nestle. Now it’s one of the best places to work in the city, though many people living close to the factory often complain about a chocolate smell spreading around.

People

The further you are from the city centre, the more chances you have to meet a traditionally aggressive person. If you are a punk, hippie or simply like wearing long hair (concerning men) - nobody cares until you decide to leave the cultural centre. Men from the suburbs can’t stand these types of style, and if they are drunk they may be really dangerous. But on the whole they are hearty, polite and jolly people.

August 9, 2007 18:39





Comment on our site


RSS   twitter      submit


Ïàðòåð


TAGS:
Ultralight Trike Show  The Romanov Family  Ennio Morricone  Russian business  Tanara River  Vladimir Lenin  Yaroslavl Region  Karelia   Kanevskaya  Arts and Crafts  Alphaville  physics  Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Russia  Moscow  Architecture  Veronica Basharatyan  Resources  Hermitage  Russian tourism  Buryatia  Russian economy  Terrorists  Chelyabinsk Region  Russian Cinema  St. Petersburg  Novgorod Region  Exhibitions in Moscow  Patriarch Kirill  Russian social networks  Theaters of Russia  Khabarovsk  Russian science  Russian Me  Ecology in Moscow  Fashion Futurum  Writers  Fan ID  Vasily Lanovoy  Russian satellites  Chelyabinsk  Russian scientists  Russian universities  Legal Services in Russia  spring  bus tickets Russia FIFA  Sverdlovsk region  Russian holidays  Dmitry Mendeleyev  Demidov Prize  Concerts in Yekaterinburg 


Travel Blogs
Top Traveling Sites