Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Yalta

The narrow strip of sea coast on the south side of the Crimean peninsula has the warmest weather in all of Ukraine with a Mediterranean climate.  But they do get snow occasionally, and that was our weather in January, 2012!  This is the view from the road as we came into the greater Yalta area.
The coast land rises from the sea shore quite steeply to a parallel mountain range about 2000 feet high.  The main highway ranges along the foothills and the small cities are below with small narrow streets and sloping properties.   Those who don’t want to lounge on the beach (when it is sunny and warm!) are happy to hike in the mountains!  

This is the tourist "icon" for the Crimea--the "Swallow's Nest". It was built in 1912 by a German oil baron as a gift to his mistress.  Construction was stopped by war, it was ruined by an earthquake in 1927, and rebuilt in the 1970’s.  We hopped off the bus to take photos.  We didn’t walk down because there are just more souvenir shops and an expensive Italian restaurant in the building.  I bought a couple of items in a roadside souvenir shop and we had some soup in a nice restaurant while waiting for the next bus!
This mountain is said to look like a bear taking a drink from the Black Sea!  (The angle of the photo could have been better to see the "head" properly)
In the 19th century, Yalta became a fashionable resort for the Russian aristocracy and gentry.  In 1898 Anton Chekhov bought a plot of land on the outskirts of Yalta and built a villa there, into which he moved with his mother and sister the following year. He planted trees and flowers in his large garden area, kept dogs and tame cranes, and received guests such as Leo Tolstoy and Maxim Gorky. Yalta is the setting for Chekhov's short story, "The Lady with the Dog", and such prominent plays as The Three Sisters were written in Yalta, which he loved.  This is a model of the property.  We saw the area all in snow!

Rachmaninoff was a friend and guest and played on this piano! 
This is one of the cozy guest sitting/bedrooms.
This is Checkov's study with his desk (under glass) at the left.  There is an alcove behind it where he sat so there were no drafts to chill him (he was suffering with tuberculosis).  The fireplace is directly across from his  writing desk.
Checkov was a trained doctor and these are some of his medical books.  Chekhov practiced as a doctor throughout most of his literary career though he made little money from it and treated the poor free: "Medicine is my lawful wife", he once said, "and literature is my mistress."  Actually, he made his money as a writer of short stories and plays.
Yalta is a seaport. 
 Here are men spending a snowy day trying to catch fish!
Others were undecorating the holiday tree!
We enjoyed a visit to the nearby Nikita Botanical Gardens that were established in 1812!
Much of the snow had melted and flowers were trying to survive, having bloomed in mild weather before the winter storm.  There was even the sweet smell of blossoms in some places.
We wandered through acres of trees and foliage.
And finally found the Cedar of Lebanon trees we particularly wanted to see.  This is what the needles look like, and then a tree
We saw other interesting old trees like this Oriental Plane tree with large maple-like leaves
And a Cork Oak tree--you can see where some cork has been pried out of the thick bark.

We also enjoyed the orchid greenhouse with beautiful species of orchids and bromeliads.

We're leaving the parking area in our little Skoda rental car
These are views in Alushta, the last place we stayed, on the evening we arrived.
Daybreak the following morning from our hotel room
The snow was mostly melted but the wind was creating waves.
We began the drive away from the coast and back "up" to Simferopol.
And rode the overnight train back to Kyiv.






Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Sevastopol

Unusual snowy Winter weather made our visit to Sevastopol more interesting!  It was still the extended holiday season and felt like it!
After Russia annexed the Crimea, in 1783 Catherine the Great ordered a port city and a Black Sea fleet built.  This is a photo of model ships of that period.

In the 1850's with the Ottomon Empire declining, Russia on the east and European powers on the west tested each other, until the Crimean War broke out, with most battles surrounding the Black Sea.  When the European Allies (Britain, France, Sardonia, and Turkey) moved naval assets into the Black Sea and attacked Sevastopol, it was the beginning of one of the most notable events involving the city: the Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855) . Despite its efforts, the Russian army had to leave its stronghold and evacuate over a pontoon bridge to the north shore of the inlet. The Russians had to sink their entire fleet to prevent it from falling into the hands of the enemy and at the same time to block the entrance of the Allied ships into the inlet. When enemy troops entered Sevastopol, they were faced with the ruins of a formerly glorious city.  This is the famous Monument to the Scuttled Ships looking across the bay to the north shore.
The Russians retreated to the interior but did not give up.  They advanced on the hills surrounding Balaclava, an Allied supply port.  
The British were afraid they would come down into the port and defended with a "thin red line" of Highlanders. In an attempt to push the advancing Russians back, a brigade of cavalry was ordered to advance in the valley above.  Though surrounded by Russian 
infantry, artillery, and cavalry, 673 mounted their horses and rode courageously to their deaths (fewer than 200 survived) as memorialized by Tennyson in his “Charge of the Light Brigade”  This photo was taken from the hill where the ill-advised British commander directed the battle.

The siege of Sevastopol lasted 349 days, with continued battles and no one gaining advantage.  The war ended with no victory for anyone, only a peace treaty that left political questions and tensions that lead to WW I.

In World War II  Sevastopol withstood intensive bombardment by the Germans in 1941–1942, during the Axis siege which lasted for 250 days before it fell in July 1942. It was liberated by the Red Army on May 9, 1944 and was awarded with the Hero City title a year later.  This giant concrete Soviet monument honors the World War II (known in the former-Soviet Union as the Great Patriotic War) defenders of Sevastopol from the years 1941-42. Below the giant stylized fighting man is the eternal flame as well as a giant marble wall with the name of every sea, air and land unit of the Black Sea Fleet that defended Sevastopol from the Nazi onslaught.
To the left of the eternal flame is a park with a marble marker for every city declared a “hero city” during WWII.

After World War II, Sevastopol was entirely rebuilt, which was mostly finished by the mid-1950s.  Because it continued to be the base of the Black Sea Fleet, it was a "closed city" meaning that any non-residents had to apply to the authorities for a temporary permit to visit the city and it was directly subordinate to the central Russian authorities.  Balaclava was incorporated into Sevastopol in 1957

BALACLAVA
Homer’s Odyssey mentions this port as a sheltered pirate hideout where ships were lured (3000 years ago!).  A tight fitting silly-looking full hood hat was knitted by British women to keep soldiers in Balaclava wam in the Crimean war.  In 1854 the British navy was sheltering too many ships in the bay, and a bad November storm sank many. 


An underwater cave was the beginning of a secret submarine base the Soviets created in 1957-61 to repair (one dry dock area) and resupply submarines as well as shelter nuclear missiles, 7 middle sized and 9 small sized submarines, and necessary personnel (3000 people for 30 days!) against a bomb 10X size of Hiroshima!  This shows the facility's layout.
The entrance tunnel
The dry dock area to the left (water not pumped out) and a small model submarine of the type serviced displayed up in front.  The main tunnel waterway is to the right under the supports.
Tight heavy doors to protect against blasts
After the fall of the USSR, Ukraine declared independance.  There followed years of disagreements and negotiations until 1997 when Russia finally allow the Crimea to be an autonomous republic in the Ukraine.  The Black Sea Fleet was divided among the two nations and all nuclear capabilities were removed.  New submarines did not fit into the tight quarters and this site was turned over to Ukraine and into a museum.  This photo (under glass) of a joint Russian/Ukrainian navy parade in Sevastopol shows the two differing flags.  The Russian navy kept the St Andrew's cross.  The Ukrainian navy uses the St George cross with the Ukrainian yellow and blue in the upper left corner.
Here are photos of other naval flags on display at the museums of the two navies starting with the old USSR naval flags with star and sickle and a blue base