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Right now I am in Moscow for a few days, and then I am headed over to Kamchatka for about a week and a half for work. So, I officially do not begin the Fulbright until I arrive in Vladivostok on February 10. (I decided that living for 10 months continuously in Russia on the Fulbright wasn't quite long enough, so I thought I'd tack 3 weeks on the front end of the trip.) So far I am of course sticking to my"I don't speak English in Russia" language rule, and I am really hoping to improve my Russian more while here.
The original purpose of the Moscow trip was to go cross-country skiing (better to say, learn to cross-country ski, in my case), but it has been such a warm winter here that when I arrived on Monday, there was no snow! This week, however, daytime temperatures have been a brisk minus 10-15 degrees C, and some snow fell yesterday, so there is still a chance for one day of skiing tomorrow. So, I have been spending my time here visiting some of
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Today Gennady Inozemtsev (Genna), WSC's Moscow representative, took me around the city. I finally went inside the Kremlin walls, which I rather inexcusably had not done before, saw
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Everyone seems to know somebody in Vladivostok, and I have really been touched by all the offers -- even from people who I don't know well or have just met -- to help me out when I arrive there, introduce me to people, etc. My travel agent, Debbie Chapman, who I have been in touch with since my first days of Russia and Russian back at Wellesley, has a friend in Vlad who has offered to let me stay with her when I arrive and help me to find an apartment. I called her and talked to her today. This is such a generous offer; it almost seems too good that it could work out, and I really hope that it does! I am very lucky to have the chance to come across such people.
On Monday I will leave Moscow for Kamchatka, where, among other things, I am going to get to attend a seminar on protected area management that I have been planning for a long time together with American and Russian partners. It has been a lot of work, but also really interesting, and the project has allowed me to make contact with a lot of new people in Russia, including real experts in their field. There should be some very knowledgeable people from Russia and the U.S. coming in for the seminar, and I am really looking forward to the chance to meet them. I just hope that all goes well and is beneficial!
Pictures: 1. Portland from my apartment, 2. snowfall in Portland, 3. me in front of Moscow at the Sparrow Hills, 4. me in front of the Tsar Cannon (Царь-пушка, the cannon of all cannons) inside the Kremlin