Top 10 Best Things to do in Yuzhno Sakhalinsk, Russia
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top 10 things you have to do in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk for You. Discover Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk.
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List of Best Things to do in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, Russia
Gorny Vozduh (Mountain Air)
Museum of Local Lore
Gagarin Park
Sakhalin Zoo
Island of Sakhalin Literary and Art Museum of the a. Chekhov's Book
Sakhalin Puppet Theater
Cape Giant
Chekhov Book Museum
The Sakhalin International Theatrical Center
Lenin Square
Sakhalin Island, Russia on $200. Seafood, Skiing and Sushi
In this episode of Russia: Tips, Tricks & Travel Tim goes to the little known yet massive Russian island that used to be (partially) part of the Japanese Empire.
Tim Kirby starts his journey downtown next to one of the most regular “guests” on our program Vladimir Lenin. From there he went to the amazing Japanese-styled Sakhalin Regional Museum. History sure makes a guy hungry, so on his way to the region’s first and oldest Japanese restaurant Tim stops by the Anton Pavlovich Chekhov memorial to pay his respects to a major player in the island’s history. At the restaurant Tim speaks with its founder and philanthropist Yutaka Miyanisi who shows our host the proper way to do sushi. One hint, it does not include mayo, not even spicy mayo!
From there Tim decides that he should share the island’s amazing seafood with his family and stocks up at the Central Market (“Успех”/”Uspekh”) with all sorts of fish, crab and caviar.
From there Tim drops his stuff at the Japanese built and inspired Santa Resort Hotel to see how hotel rooms made for the Land of the Rising Sun fare in Russia. After teaching the robot Japanese toilet who is boss Tim heads out to the ski slopes of the Gorny Vosdukh Ski Resort. Thankfully our hero survives the trip down the snowy routes and heads out to the Harat’s Pub downtown to meet up with a fan after it gets dark.
Next Tim has to track down said fan and does so using the old railway still built to Japanese Imperial standards. He then gets exclusive access to the port in Korsakov. From there Tim sneaks into the boat graveyard, you’ll see whether the guard dogs bit him or not jumping over the fence.
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Special Thanks to:
ℹ️ BASK (Host’s Winter Wear) -
ℹ️ Sakhalin Regional Museum -
ℹ️ Furusato Restaurant -
ℹ️ Santa Resort Hotel -
ℹ️ “Gorny Vozdukh” Ski Resort -
ℹ️ Harat’s Pub (Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk) -
ℹ️ RZD Russian Railways -
ℹ️ Корсаковский морской торговый порт -
Vladivostok, RUSSIA
Highlights tour of Vladivostok, Russia. 04 October 2011
Travelling around the south of Russia
Nice trip with Jannis and Dasha through beautiful views of North Caukasus
The Earth As Art - #1 - Travels With Phil
Earth As Art #1. Various satellites have been taking photos of the Earth for scientific reason for decades. Often those photos use filters to highlight different features such as fire, minerals, etc. An unexpected by-product is that many of these photos are beautiful. Here are some of those pictures. - Travels with Phil copyrighted by Phil Konstantin -
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Earth As Art 1 Locations in order of appearance:
Akpatok Island, Quebec, Canada
Aleutian Island Clouds, Alaska, USA
Araca River, Brazil
Atlas Mountains, Morocco, Africa
Bolivian Deforestation, South America
Broutona, Kuril islands between Russia and Japan
Chilean Volcanoes, Chile, South America
Sierra Madre Oriental, Coahuila, Mexico
Dasht-e Kevir Desert, Iran
Demini River, Northwestern Brazil
Edrengiyn Nuruu, Southern Mongolia
Dragon Lake, Southern Siberia, Russia
Florida Everglades, USA
River Delta, India and Bangladesh
Garden City, Kansas, USA
Ghadamis River, Libya
Greenland Coast, Baffin Bay
Guinea-Bissau, Western Africa
Iraqi Emplacement, Southern Iraq
Karman Vortices, Alexander Selkirk Island, Chile
Mt. Kilimanjaro, Kenya and Tanzania, Africa
Zagros Mountains, Konari, Iran
Lake Carnegie, Western Australia
Lambert Glacier, Antarctica
Lena Delta, Siberia, Russia
MacDonnell Ranges, Australia
Malaspina Glacier, Alaska, USA
Mayn River, Northeastern Siberia, Russia
Namaqualand, South Africa
Namib Desert, Namibia, Africa
The Optimist, Kalahari Desert, Namibia, Africa
Parana River Delta, Argentina
Richat Structure, Mauritania, Africa
Great Sandy Desert, Western Australia
Great Sandy Scars, Australia
Sulaiman Mountains, Pakistan
Terkezi Oasis, Chad, Africa
Volga River Delta, Russia
West Fjords, Iceland
Whirlpool in the Air, Greenland
Yellowknife Wetlands, Northwest Territories, Canada
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The photos are from the USGS. The music is from Pond5's Public Domain collection.
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Cities in Far East Russia
Buried Secrets (Tom Canning)
Fishing for Herself. A fisherwoman’s lonely life on Sakhalin Island
Sometimes we all feel like keeping a distance from everyone else, retreating to a remote corner of the world and living like a hermit. Few of us ever actually do it though. This young fisherwoman from the icy island of Sakhalin has opted for a life of solitude but was it really a choice?
Anna was born on the remote and icy Sakhalin island. She grew up in a children’s home and when she left, decided that fishing would be her livelihood. It is hard work but Anna strives to be independent and rely on no one but herself. She wants to be equal to men in everything she does and refuses to be seen as a weak woman in need of anyone’s help. She works all day and in her free time plays ice hockey for an otherwise all-men team.
Anna loves her cats and takes care of her new-found relatives, but still doesn’t believe she needs anyone else in her life and thinks she’s better off living alone. She still bears a grudge against the people, mainly women, who caused her harm in her childhood and teens. It’s hard to let go of her past. Perhaps that’s why she has never fully embraced her present reality, still looking and behaving like a child, despite her age. It seems as though Anna lives in a world of her own, carefully guarded against intruders, refusing to get close to anyone, in case she might have to change her ways.
Sometimes, she thinks she might like to try and start her own family but as she’s never had a positive example to follow, she admits she has no idea where to begin or even what a real family should be like. So she sticks to the life she knows; ensuring her own survival, never trusting anyone completely and fishing, for herself, in the icy lakes of Sakhalin Island.
However, even a loner like Anna can harbour dreams of a very different life, no matter how improbable that may seem at the moment.
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Russia's rough Norwegian sea coast
Murmansk, the metropolis on the Barents Sea, is anything but Russia's cold north. There's always something going on here, for example the Olympic Polar Games. Ice surfing and ice swimming, reindeer racing, the first atom ice breaker in the history of the world, a corner shop in ice and snow, endearing village school lessons and the singing Norwegian Sea Fleet - arctic lifestyle far away, north of the polar circle.
Discover the world's most attractive tourist attractions - LNBP 08
Discover the world's most attractive tourist attractions - LNBP 08
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Let discover the world's most attractive tourist attractions:
1. Iguazu Falls:
The Iguazu Falls are waterfalls of the Iguazu River on the border of the Argentine province of Misiones and the Brazilian state of Paraná. They are the largest waterfalls system in the world.
2. Geysers in Iceland:
A favorite stop along the Golden Circle is the highly active Geysir Hot Spring Area with boiling mud pits, exploding geysers and the lively Strokkur which spouts water 30 metres (100 ft) into the air every few minutes.
3.Kuril Islands:
The Kuril Islands or Kurile Islands in Russia's Sakhalin Oblast region ...
4.Komodo national park
5.Great Barrier Reef
6.Lake Baikal
7.Canadian Rockies Mountains
8.Bora Bora Island
9.National Park Torres Del Paine
10.The Forbidden City
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Kamchatka: The far side of the world
The Kamchatka Peninsula is a 1,250-kilometre (780 mi) peninsula in the Russian Far East, with an area of 472,300 km2 (182,400 sq mi). It lies between the Pacific Ocean to the east and the Sea of Okhotsk to the west. Immediately offshore along the Pacific coast of the peninsula runs the 10,500-metre (34,400 ft) deep Kuril-Kamchatka Trench
Kamchatka receives up to 2,700 mm (110 in) of precipitation per year. The summers are moderately cool, and the winters tend to be rather stormy with rare amounts of lightning.
The climate is colder in the north of the peninsula, but is continental, with cool winters and relatively warm summers. The summer months are popular with tourists when maximum temperatures range from 15ºC (59F) to 30ºC (86F), but a growing trend in winter sports keeps tourism pulsing year-round. The Volcanoes and glaciers play a role in forming of the Kamchatka's climate, and hot springs have also kept alive dozens of species decimated during the last ice age
Although the peninsula lies at similar latitudes to Great Britain, the cold arctic winds from Siberia combined with the cold Oya-Shio sea current result in the peninsula being covered in snow from October to late May.
The Kamchatka River and the surrounding central side valley are flanked by large volcanic belts containing around 160 volcanoes, 29 of them still active. The peninsula has a high density of volcanoes and associated volcanic phenomena, with 19 active volcanoes being included in the six UNESCO World Heritage List sites in the Volcanoes of Kamchatka group, most of them on the Kamchatka Peninsula
The highest volcano is Klyuchevskaya Sopka (4,750 m or 15,584 ft), the largest active volcano in the Northern Hemisphere, while the most striking is Kronotsky, whose perfect cone was said by celebrated volcanologists Robert and Barbara Decker to be a prime candidate for the world's most beautiful volcano. Somewhat more accessible are the three volcanoes visible from Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky: Koryaksky, Avachinsky, and Kozelsky. In the center of Kamchatka is Eurasia's world famous Geyser Valley which was partly destroyed by a massive mudslide in June 2007
Owing to the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, deep-focus seismic events and tsunamis are fairly common. A pair of megathrust earthquakes occurred off the coast on October 16, 1737, and on November 4, 1952, in the magnitude of ~9.3 and 8.2 respectively. A chain of more shallow earthquakes were recorded as recently as April 2006
Kamchatka boasts abundant flora. The variable climate promotes different flora zones where tundra and muskeg are dominant succeeded by grasses, flowering shrubs and forests of pine, birch, alder and willow.
The wide variety of plant forms spread throughout the Peninsula promotes just as wide a variation in animal species that feed off them. Although Kamchatka is mostly tundra, deciduous and coniferous trees are abundant and forests can be found throughout the peninsula.