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Off to a Foreign Land

this blog Captures the sights and stories as we
​venture off to saudi arabia

September 2019 - Ukraine and Ireland

10/5/2019

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Hello again!  
​
We are back from a nice getaway to the Ukraine.  We spent our time in Kiev doing some tours but also did a day trip to Chernobyl, the site of the 1986 nuclear disaster.  The entire trip was interesting, as Jeff's heritage is Ukrainian and he got to see this heritage, as well as taste it with the amazing food!

​After our trip, Lisa went off to Ireland for a girl's trip to celebrate our friend Anita's 50th birthday.  They visited Dublin, Cork, and Belfast in the short week they had together.

Here are some pics and stories - just scroll over the pics for captions and click on them to enlarge...

Kiev

Kiev is a beautiful city with tons of history.  There is obviously some Soviet influence, as they only split in 1991.  The city of 2.8 million has many soviet-influenced churches with beautiful gold roofs, has a very big River (Dnieper) with incredible white sand beaches all over, has many large parks, and has very nice, trendy restaurants and bars all over.  It was quite cold when we were there (compared to Saudi standards I guess)...from 18-20 Celsius during the day to about 2-4 at night.  Lisa was dying, as she's gone soft in the 40-45 weather we left behind in Saudi.

Did you know that the Kiev mayor is Vitali Klitschko, the retired professional boxer?

We stayed at the Hyatt right between Sofia square and Independence square and a big tip for tourists - be careful where you drink and eat.  Stay away from hotel dining.  Our hotel drinks were about $15US each, while the average price at bars/restaurants only a block away were $2-3 each.

We took a 3 hour driving tour to hear some of the history and see some of the sites, as shown in the pics below.

Some highlights:
  • Churches - St.Sofia, St.Andrew's Church, Lavra Monastery, St.Michael's Golden Dome Monastery, St.Volodymyr's Cathedral...all very impressive.  Almost all of them are decorated in gold.  
  • Independence Square - the large square where many protests have happened, many street vendors, a nice fountain, a huge shopping mall (Globus) underneath it
  • Andriivskyi Descent - a very scenic walk down the river bank with shops and restaurants all over that takes you to old town, Podil
  • Friendship Arch - nice walking bridge in the park that gives a great view of the beautiful river valley
  • Arena City - a round coliseum-looking like structure near the football stadium.  Has many bars, restaurants, and "Men's Clubs" - perfect spot for the boy's weekend parties!
  • Motherland Monument - a massive monument near the river that reminded us of the Cristo Rei monument we just saw in Lisbon
  • We sampled a famous cherry liqueur at Drunk Cherry.  You can try it cold or warm - very tasty
  • Every bar had sampler trays of vodka shots with various flavors- cherry, blueberry, orange, pepper, horseradish, ... pretty much whatever was in the kitchen.  Besides local-made vodka, craft beer was popular everywhere, as most places served some kind of craft beer, even in different colors.  Green beer...interesting any day other than St.Patrick's Day!
  • We bought a bulowa - this is a souvenir you can buy everywhere in Kiev.  It is a cossack weapon you swing at opponents and has large spikes on the end.  It is now given to leaders as a symbol of Ukrainian culture as well as power.  Jeff better behave!
  • Lots of incredible artwork all over Kiev - wall murals, mosaic sculptures, and the famous Peeing Colors artwork
  • The food was amazing - we could not get enough perogies (called varenyky in Ukraine), preferring the potato ones, but also trying sauerkraut, blueberry, and cherry.  The beet-based soup borscht was everywhere.  One restaurant even served it to Jeff in a cabbage bowl.

Here are some pics...
Ready to fly out of Istanbul
Mayor Klitschko
St.Sofia Square
St.Michael's Golden Domed Monastery
Independence Square
Independence Square
1st sampling of perogies
The underground and very secretive Lost Barricade restaurant - very cool!
St.Sofia at night
St.Sofia Church
True story!
Bar closes at 11:55, opens at 12:05...WTF???
Vodka shots!
Great souvenir shirt
St.Andrew's Church
Ready for more authentic Ukrainian food at Kanapa, along Andriivskyi's Descent
Local beer....interesting!
Borscht soup...in a cabbage bowl. So Ukrainian!
St.Andrew's Church from the back
Podil Square
Friendship Arch
Beautiful river view
Friendship Arch
Comrade
Drunk Cherry bar
Our Ukrainian drunk friend
Crazy bitch
St. Volodymyr's Cathedral
Inside St. Volodymyr's Cathedral
Piece of the Berlin Wall at the German embassy
Lisa and the Berlin Wall
Wall mural with a Cossack roping in Putin
Very cool artwork on a park bench
Peeing Colors artwork
House with Chimaeras
Ukrainian President's home
Lavra Monsastery
Eternal Flame monument and the entrance to the National Museum of the History of Ukraine in 2nd World War
Motherland Monument
Great Ukrainian restaurant on the river - Hutorets na Dnipri
Perogy heaven
Podil Square
Inside the "Beer Shop"
Cool Coffee shop
Cherry liqueur time
Bulawa souvenir. Jeff better behave now!
St.Sofia church from above
Arena City
Arena City

Ukrainian Cooking Class

We did a very cool excursion one day in Kiev - a Ukrainian Cooking Class.  This is special, as Jeff grew up with Ukrainian food and perogies are his favorite food.  

We were picked up at our hotel by a driver who took us about 20 minutes to a tall brick/concrete apartment with a large metal door.  Lisa was a bit worried.  The driver spoke Ukrainian through a speaker and she got even more worried.  Suddenly, the door opened and a good looking Ukrainian girl smiled and said hello and introduced herself as Olga.  We were feeling like we were in safe hands now!

We went upstairs and met her mom Svetlana, who spoke only Ukrainian but was a very friendly and welcoming host and teacher.

Svetlana quickly put Lisa to work cutting cabbage for the borscht soup.  Jeff thought he was getting off easy until Svetlana directed him to start grating carrots and beets, and then to cut some onion.  

Once the borscht soup was simmering, it was time to roll the dough and start making perogies.  Doing this reminded Jeff of the times at Grandma's helping her make perogies.  Although, he probably spent more time in the kitchen eating perogies than making them.

We finally got to sit down and enjoy the borscht soup and some homemade perogies.  We were in heaven!

Olga sent us the recipes (in the pics below) and we were off to tour around and have a few Ukrainian beers for dessert!
Arriving at the Cooking Class location
Svetlana role modelling good cabbage cutting
Lisa gets put to work
This is the look of "Jeff, are you going to help me?"
Potato cutting
Getting the perky dough ready...great teamwork!
Perogy cutting time
Jeff finally gets put to work
Borscht is almost ready
Feeding time
Borscht recipe
Perogy/Varenyky recipe

Chernobyl Day Trip

When we first booked the Kiev trip, one of the first excursions we booked was the day trip to Chernobyl.  It was an amazing experience that gave us the surreal feeling that we are in an area that many people will never get to or never want to go to but also an area that has lived primarily in abandonment for over 30 years!  It was especially eerie after watching the HBO mini-series.

Chernobyl is located about 140km north of Kiev in the northern part of Ukraine, just south of the Belarus border.

The Chernobyl nuclear disaster took place April 26, 1986.  People were evacuated and not allowed back into the area, although they estimate there are about 130-150 people who have snuck their way back into the area to re-inhabit their homes illegally.  Apparently, they are 'non-believers' in radiation since they can not see it.  If we would've done the 2 or 3 day trips, we could have stopped to visit with some of these crazy fuckers.

The bus ride from Kiev to Chernobyl was about an two hours but provided lots of opportunities for the tour guide to tell the history, share some stories, answer some questions, and most importantly clarify the rules and guidelines:
  • as communicated prior to joining the tour, everyone needed proper close-toed footwear, socks, long pants, and long shirt/jacket - we needed to cover as much skin as possible
  • keep all garbage/plastic bottles in the bus - do not throw it in garbages outside the bus.  Any items thrown in garbage within the 30km exclusion zone must be buried within the exclusion zone, as it may contain radiation
  • do not eat or drink in open air within the exclusion zone
  • when on the tour outside the bus, stay on the path and don't go onto the grass or dirt.  Do not touch the grass, dirt, or leaves
  • stay out of abandoned buildings, as many of them have collapsing roofs or floors
  • be cautious of stray dogs, as well as other animals that have started to inhabit the abandoned land - deers, wolves, bears, etc. 
  • DO NOT take anything (as a souvenir) from the exclusion zone.  Most items will be contaminated and can not be removed.  Apparently, it involves prison time if caught

Our first stop was at the 30 km exclusion zone where we had to provide our full ID as evidence of who was actually visiting and this is where we received our dosimeters, the Geiger counters that would track our radiation levels at a particular moment, as well as an accumulated daily total.

Did you know that people aren't allowed to move back for 3000-20,000 years?

We received certificates saying we did the Chernobyl trip and documenting our daily radiation, which was 2 micro sieverts.  In comparison, 
  • a tooth x-ray is 5
  • a chest x-ray is 500
  • a full body x-ray is 100,000
  • 20 minutes on an airplane is 1 
So, in total for the day, we received the same amount of radiation as 40 minutes on a plane.  BUT, we were not going off the path and were not touching things or directly touching the ground.

One of the most surreal parts of the day was actually when we were back in Kiev.  We were drinking at a pub and ended up chatting with a Ukrainian guy.  He asked where we were from and what we have seen so far in Ukraine.  When we mentioned that we just returned from Chernobyl, he froze up like we said we have come back from the dead.  He said when he was only 5, his father was called from Kiev to go to Chernobyl to help.  He said his dad was a healthy man before going and now is alive but very frail, has lost all of his hair and teeth.  He said Chernobyl is a place he never wants to go to.  It put in perspective what a special place we had just visited because of the terror and pain it put people through, as well as the impact it had on the world!
Didn't realize Burton Cummings is now a Chernobyl bus driver
ZALISSYA
This abandoned town was our first stop as we ventured inside the 30km exclusion zone.  It was quite amazing to see how the homes were collapsing, the paint had peeled, and how there was such a feeling of loneliness.  It was incredible to see an old children's park with swings, slides, and merry-go-rounds - never being used in the past 30 years!  It was also interesting to see the store's old record-keeping book, as well as an old hat and newspaper still lying where they were 30 years ago.

​This was like a movie set but real life!
RADAR DUGA-1
We stopped at the soviet radar station that is now abandoned.  It was a secretive soviet missile defence system designed to protect them from the US, costing over $100B US to build.  It is now just a fancy-looking non-functioning antenna that is 100m tall by 250m long.  
KOPACHI
We stopped at this abandoned town, which was in the more heavily contaminated 10 km exclusion zone, and visited an old abandoned kindergarten building.  This suddenly got very real as we saw the kids artwork on the walls, damaged dolls all over, their beds for nap time, and a broken bike just lying there from 30 years ago.  
​Wonder where these kids are now?
CHERNOBYL NUCLEAR POWER PLANT
We spent a bit of time at the actual nuclear power plant and got to see reactor #4 where the disaster happened.  Reactor #4 had a large concrete shield called a sarcophagus built around it to contain the radiation but it started breaking down because of the radiation so they sourced the world's largest confinement unit to put over the sarcophagus.  The confinement unit should be good for the next 100 years and cost $2.3B US to build and install.  This is the large metal dome looking building in the pics.  Under this dome is where the reactor blew and where the radiation is still very strong.

We did see many stray dogs in this area and on the way to lunch, which was at a canteen about 5 minutes from the reactor.  Yep, kind of freaky!  Had to go through radiation testing before getting in for lunch.   Thank god we were OK.  And yes, the food was brought in from Kiev and wasn't grown right there!
Lunch time at Canteen #19
PRYPIAT
​We had a chance to visit Prypiat, which is the large "ghost town" city near Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant.  It was built in 1970 as a home for the plant workers and their families.  Prypiat had 50,000 people living there when it was evacuated.  People were given a couple hours to grab their families and get onto buses to take them out of the contaminated zone.  They had to leave their pets behind.  

In Prypiat, we got to see many buildings, including the pics from 1986 that compared the scene to current day.  Many trees and wildlife have now taken over the city.
​
Some interesting sights in Prypiat:
  • the abandoned supermarket (see the pics) - there are still some products, shoes, shopping carts, and store signage 
  • the famous amusement park - bumper cars, merry-go-round, and ferris wheel.  These never were used, as the disaster occurred just days before the park was scheduled to open
  • soccer stadium
  • gymnasium and swimming pool - the guide did allow us to sneak into this building although it isn't allowed
As we drove out of Prypiat, we drove past the Red Forest.  This area was downwind from the nuclear power plant and therefore a lot of the heavy radiation went that way, turning the trees red.  It was amazing to hear the Geiger counters in the bus going crazy with beeping noises as we drive through this area, still heavily contaminated.
Prypiat town sign
Abandoned supermarket
Hot spot
CHERNOBYL CITY
We drove through the town of Chernobyl on the way out of the exclusion zone.  They have a few monuments to honor those who worked to minimize the radiation effects.  There was a shrine to show some of the robots used to push graphite from the roof back into the reactor.

​There are still some people living in this town, as they are the workers still doing clean-up at the nearby power plant.  They are only allowed to be there 15 days before leaving for 15 days and they have a 9PM curfew for some reason.  
One interesting thing to see in the town Chernobyl was that all pipes that would typically be underground are above ground along the sidewalks.  Because much of the radiation seeped into the ground, it gets reactivated and into the air if dug up so they need all pipes above ground in case they need to work on them.  Looked quite interesting.

On the way out of the exclusion zone, we had to turn in our Geiger counters (or pay $200US) and also get tested one last time to ensure we didn't get excessive radiation.  We were good!
Chernobyl town sign

​Lisa's Ireland Trip

We both left Kiev within 10 minutes of each other - Jeff went back to Saudi and Lisa went to Ireland to meet Anita to celebrate her birthday with her and her rowdy friends.

Not sure if her liver will be the same after this group swept through Dublin, Cork, and Belfast leaving a trail of empties along the way.  We did do a very cool prison tour as well as the Titanic Experience in Belfast.

It was great to meet up on "this side of the world" with some Canadian friends.

And the great news - we get to do it all over again with Anita in just over a month, when she comes to visit in Dubai!

Not too many pics, as it was getting in the way of the partying, but here you go.
Lisa, Karen, and Anita
The entire gang
Guinness factory souvenirs
Men's bathroom door
Ladies bathroom door

Jeff C.'s Birthday Party

Here are a few pics from a recent trip to Bahrain to celebrate our friend Jeff's birthday.  As expected, it got a bit ugly!  Great times with some great friends!
Breakfast cocktails at Bennigans
McGettigan's brunch time
Trivago guy?
Post-brunch ride back to Saudi

Upcoming Travel

Here are some upcoming trips we have planned - would love to see you on some of these journeys...
  • October 24-26 - Jeff's birthday weekend in Abu Dhabi with an outdoor Eminem concert
  • November 7-10 - going to Oman for the weekend with a big group of friends.  Staying at a beach resort and doing a cool day trip to a wadi 
  • November 22 - doing Lisa's birthday brunch in Dubai with our friend Anita...Canadian friends - direct flights from Toronto!  Hint, hint!
  • November 25-December 5 - Anita is joining us as we do a safari in Kruger Park, just outside Johannesburg, South Africa.  We will then spend a week in Capetown and surrounding area.
  • December 30-January 5 - Phuket, Thailand
  • March 9-18 - Vietnam and Cambodia
  • May 21-June 8 - Las Vegas and Calgary (may visit Vancouver and Edmonton)
  • September 23-28 - Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany

There will be a few more vacations along the way but as always, let us know if you can join on any of these trips.

We will post our next blog update after our South Africa trip, as there should be quite a bit to share with you all.

Have a great Thanksgiving everyone and GO RIDERS!

Will leave you with some nice sunset pics from our compound.

Love, 
L&J...
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