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Old Posted Jan 4, 2007, 3:38 PM
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Kama Sutra and feral cats: The Economist on Russian Airports

An interesting read! Quite funny in certain parts, but after reading it, the thought of flying anywhere to Russia makes me pause.


Russian airports

Kama Sutra and feral cats
Dec 19th 2006 | MOSCOW
From The Economist print edition





To understand contemporary Russia, consider its airports

WORKING as a journalist in Russia, with its eleven time zones, its endless steppe and perpetual taiga, means spending a lot of time in the air. It involves flying in planes so creaky that landing in one piece is a pleasant surprise —then disembarking in airports so inhospitable that some visitors may want to take off again immediately.

But, if he has the strength, beyond the whine of the Tupolev engines and the cracked runways, a frequent flyer can find in Russia's airports a useful encapsulation of the country's problems and oddities. In their family resemblances, Russia's airports show how far the Soviet system squeezed the variety from the vast Russian continent; in their idiosyncrasies, they suggest how far it failed to. They illustrate how much of that system, and the mindset it created, live on, 15 years after the old empire nominally collapsed. Russia's awful, grimy, gaudy airports reveal how much hasn't changed in the world's biggest country—but also, on closer inspection, how much is beginning to.

Sheremetyevo: Landing at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport, first-time visitors may be unnerved to see their more experienced co-passengers limbering up, as if for a football match or gladiatorial combat. When the plane stops taxiing, or before, the Sheremetyevo regular begins to run.

Sheremetyevo is war. The international terminal was built for the 1980 Olympics, to showcase the Soviet Union's modernity; now it recalls the old regime's everyday callousness (the anarchic domestic terminal is even worse). On a bad day, the queue at passport control stretches almost to the runway.

The Sheremetyevo virgin soon meets the various species of Moscow queue-jumper: the brazen hoodlum; the incremental babushka; the queue-surfing clans who relocate in groups when one of their number reaches the front. The immigration officer—usually sporting peroxide blond hair, six-inch heels and an abbreviated skirt—offers an early insight into Russian notions of customer service. Reflecting the country's neo-imperialist confidence, the immigration form was for most of this year available only in Russian (“distributed free”, it says, in case anyone is tempted to pay).

As with most Russian problems, cash can mitigate the Sheremetyevo ordeal: beautiful girls meet VIPs at the gate and escort them straight to the counter. If he passes customs unmolested, the visitor emerges into a crush of criminal-looking taxi drivers. If, as it will be, the traffic is bad on Leningradskoe Shosse, the road into town, the driver may try to ingratiate himself by driving on the pavement; a 50-rouble backhander will settle things if the police pull him over. On his return to Sheremetyevo, to reach his departure gate the visitor must negotiate a bewildering series of queues, starting with one to get into the building: if he is unassertive, he will still be standing in one of them when his plane takes off. There is nowhere to sit. Forlorn African students camp out in the upstairs corridors. The attendants in the overpriced food kiosks are proof incarnate that the profit motive is not yet universal—though stewardesses on Russian carriers offer unofficial upgrades on reasonable terms. For a small consideration, they sometimes oblige smokers on long-haul flights by turning off the smoke alarms in the toilets.

Mineralnye Vody: To reach this airport, in the north Caucasus, passengers pass through a series of military roadblocks, where documents and the boots of cars are checked by slouching policemen, looking for weapons or terrorists. But a sensible terrorist would leave his weapons at home and buy new ones at the airport, where a wide selection of enormous knives and ornamental Caucasian swords is on sale. There are also embossed Caucasian drinking horns, and a large number of Brezhnev-era copies of the Kama Sutra.

Mineralnye Vody airport is a lower circle of hell. In Soviet times, before the region that the airport serves was desolated by separatist insurgencies, blood feuds and government brutality, the nearby mineral spas were popular holiday resorts. The building is incongruously large for a part of Russia that today, for all its macho hospitality and merriment, feels more African than European in its violence, poverty and corruption. It is weirdly cold inside. Feral cats have been sighted. The floor has not been cleaned since perestroika; the toilets are hauntingly squalid. On the wall there are arrival and departure boards that no longer work, and a big, proud map of the Soviet Union.

Vladikavkaz: Roughly meaning “to rule the Caucasus”, this city, south of Mineralnye Vody, is an old tsarist garrison and the capital of North Ossetia, one of the semi-autonomous ethnic republics of the north Caucasus. Backed by the Caucasus mountains and bisected by the rugged Terek river, Vladikavkaz might be pleasant, were it not for the occasional terrorist eruption and internecine gangster bombing. The Ossetians are Christians, give or take some residual animism, and are Moscow's traditional allies against the restive Muslims of the other republics. Like several other local peoples, the neighbouring Ingush were deported by Stalin in 1944; the Ossetians took part of their territory, and the two fought a war in 1992.

Vladikavkaz airport is actually closer to another, smaller town, obscure and unremarkable until September 2004: Beslan. The road to the airport leads past the auxiliary cemetery that was used to bury the hostages slain in the terrorist atrocity at a Beslan school; toys and drinks (because the dead children were denied water by their captors) are scattered on the graves. The airport ought to be hyper-sensitive to security risks.

It seems not to be. When your correspondent passed through, he noticed a couple of shady characters and their hulking bodyguard talking to an airport official. The official took their documents to the security desk. “Who are they?” asked the security officer. “They are businessmen,” replied the official, as the documents were stamped. The party appeared to reach the runway via a side door, with a large hold-all seemingly unexamined.

Kaliningrad: This airport has a sort of holding pen in which passengers are kept before being released onto the tarmac. Surveying the assembled crew, with their standard-issue gangster coats and tattoos, it becomes obvious why Kaliningrad has a reputation as a smugglers' haven.

It used to be Königsberg, city of Kant and celebrated Prussian architecture. By the time the Nazis, British bombers and the Red Army had finished with it, little of pre-war Königsberg was left. Then Stalin took a shine to it, deported the remaining Germans and incorporated the region into the Soviet Union. It is now an island of Russia in a sea of European Union—an anomaly that is profitable for a certain class of businessmen. As well as contraband, the exclave boasts most of the world's amber and Russia's ageing Baltic fleet.

The Kremlin worries that the Poles or the Germans might try to take Kaliningrad back; but, in truth, no one else really wants it. As the aromas of vodka and Dagestani cognac waft around the airport holding pen, the consolation for the nervous traveller is that if one group of dodgy passengers starts something nasty on the flight, another one will probably finish it.

Vladivostok (“to rule the east”): At the other end of the Russian empire, near China and on the Sea of Japan, Vladivostok is the terminus of the Trans-Siberian railway. It became famous during the Russian civil war as a wild eastern entrepot of refugees and interventionists; nowadays it is described (mostly by people who haven't been there) as Russia's Hong Kong or San Francisco. Here you face a classic Russian-airport dilemma.

You have clambered around the tsarist fort, and inside the decommissioned Soviet submarine. You have seen the children riding reindeer on the cigarette-ash beach, and peered at the disconsolate alligator in the aquarium. You have also met the mayor, known in the city, not altogether affectionately, as “Winnie the Pooh”, or “Vinnie Pookh”. He acquired his nickname during his fabled reign as a gangland boss. The mayor has ridden the post-Soviet escalator from crime to business and on into politics, securing his office after his main election rival was wounded in a grenade attack. In response to questions about his past, the mayor inquires whether you yourself have ever been in prison. You are not sure whether the mayor is asking or offering.


A dubious car arrives to take you to Vladivostok airport, about an hour's drive from the city, along a road lined with the forests that, like crab and salmon, are one of the great but fragile prizes of far-eastern Russian power struggles. Your driver is keener on talking than driving. “The Chinese are too cunning for us,” he says, decelerating with every fresh lament. “We are giving away our natural resources”. The factories are all closed; there is no place for anyone over 40 in the new Russia. It becomes clear that this driver is not entirely sober. You are running perilously late for your flight out of Vladivostok. Should you or shouldn't you ask him to go faster?


Murmansk: Well into the month of May, the runway at Murmansk is still fringed with snow; it dusts the pine trees over which incoming planes descend, along with still-frozen ponds and rivers. In the airport's VIP lounge there is a set of sofas of daunting tastelessness. The main terminal is mostly empty, save for a bar, a pool table and some fruit machines. Downstairs, outside the toilets, there is a strange drawing of a man wearing a trilby hat, silhouetted against the sun. But upstairs there is a lovely metallic relief on the wall, depicting everything that is produced in the Murmansk region, or that was once produced.

The biggest city anywhere inside the Arctic Circle, Murmansk was built for and shaped by war. It was founded during the first world war, and was a destination for the famous allied sea convoys during the second, when it was utterly destroyed. When the Kursk submarine was raised from the floor of the Barents Sea in 2000, the corpse-laden wreck was towed back to the nearby dry docks; nuclear icebreakers are their regular customers. A church was built in memory of the dead sailors, and stands amid the other monuments to deceased warriors. Otherwise, Murmansk is cluttered with the usual post-Soviet paraphernalia: a Lenin statue; shabby kiosks; gambling halls; pavements that seem to dissolve into the road.

For all that, the Arctic setting has its own appeal. Icy it may still be, but from late spring the Murmansk girls don their short skirts, and it is light around the clock. In the small hours, down at the port, seagulls wheel around the cranes resting motionless, like giant, paralysed insects, against the illuminated pink clouds. A Ferris wheel rotates on a hill above the town.

Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk: In tsarist times, Sakhalin island was a giant prison camp. Visiting in 1890, Chekhov considered it the most depressing of the many depressing places in Russia. From 1905, when Russia lost its war with Japan, the southern part of Sakhalin was ruled by the Japanese; it was taken back in 1945, along with four smaller islands that the two countries still bicker over. Traces of Japanese architecture are still visible; so are the descendants of the Korean slave labourers whom the Japanese imported. The Soviet experiment bequeathed sparse squares and omnipresent Lenins. After the experiment failed, many of Sakhalin's inhabitants fled its wasting beauty. Salmon can still be scooped by hand from its rivers in the spawning season, but much of the fishing fleet is rusting in the bays.

Yet Siberia and Russia's far east have always been lands of opportunity, as well as exile. On Sakhalin, today's opportunities are mostly in oil and gas, which foreign consortia are extracting from beneath the frigid Sea of Okhotsk, off the island's northern shore. New pipelines cut through forests, and up and down mountains, to an export terminal in the south. A stone's throw away, there are elderly Russians living on what they can fish and find in the forest; the few remaining indigenous reindeer-herders survive on even less. But in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, the capital, there are new hotels, bars and jobs.


The primitive domestic terminal at the airport has a tannoy system, but the announcements are inaudible, and their main effect is to spread fear. Destination names are put up, taken down and put up again above the check-in desks. The upper floor is appointed with weirdly ornate Soviet chandeliers. Last year a family of bears wandered onto the runway: the airport authorities hunted them in vain. But there is also a new international terminal to serve the flights from Japan and South Korea. The staff there speak English, and do not regard checking in as an unforgivable insolence.

Irkutsk: Five hours ahead of Moscow, in eastern Siberia, Irkutsk is the nearest city to Lake Baikal, the world's largest body of fresh water—water so clear that it induces vertigo in many of its visitors. The drive to the lake leads through vast forests, past the roadside shamanistic altars of the indigenous Buryats, under an enormous Siberian sky. In the 19th century Irkutsk was home to many of the so-called Decembrists, and the wives who followed them into exile after their 1825 revolt against the tsar: men and events that might have changed Russia's history, and the world's. Alexander Kolchak, a diehard White commander, was shot in Irkutsk in 1920; his body was thrown into the icy Angara river.

Planes descend into the city's airport over identikit Soviet apartment blocks and rickety Siberian dachas. The current arrivals terminal is a hut on the apron of the tarmac. Passengers wait in the street until the baggage-handlers feel inclined to pass their bags through a hole in the hut's wall. The bags then circulate on a terrifying metal device apparently borrowed from a medieval torture chamber. The nearby departure terminal is chaos, though by ascending an obscure staircase passengers can find an interesting photographic display on “minerals of eastern Siberia”.

The staff speak English, and do not regard checking in as an unforgivable insolenceThe hut, however, is only temporary: a new, modern terminal is being built. It will be needed if the local authorities attract all the tourists they are hoping for. Lake Baikal, the awesomely beautiful main draw, was threatened by a new oil pipeline—until Vladimir Putin ordered its route moved away from the shores of what Buryats call the “Sacred Sea”.

Yekaterinburg: Long-term residents of this city in the Urals shudder when they recall the state of its airport in the 1990s: never any taxis, they say, and very often no luggage. The arrivals hall still has a faint abattoir feel. But, next to it, a colonnaded Soviet edifice has been turned into a business terminal. And there is a new, glass-walled international terminal of positively Scandinavian gleam and efficiency, erected recently using private money. It has a swanky bar that serves edible food. There is an internet café where the internet connections work. “An airport”, says one of its managers proudly, “is a city's visiting card.”

It is not too fanciful to see the contrasting parts of Yekaterinburg's airport as a metaphor for the city's development. It was in Yekaterinburg that the Bolsheviks murdered the last tsar in 1918. Outside town, close to the border between Europe and Asia, there is a memorial to the local victims of Stalin's purges—a rare and moving place in a generally amnesiac nation.

In a nearby cemetery stand what wry locals describe as memorials to the victims of early capitalism: life-size statues (complete with car keys) of the dead gangsters who earned the city its 1990s sobriquet, the Chicago of the Urals. Because of the military industries that moved there during the war, Yekaterinburg was closed to foreigners until 1990. But these days most of the surviving crooks have gone straight, or into politics. Hoteliers are parlaying the city's infamy into a tourist attraction, foreign consulates are being opened, and businessmen and tourists can fly directly to the new airport.

Sheremetyevo: Ignore the snarling waitresses and look again at Sheremetyevo: something is happening. Its operators have come under pressure from Domodedovo, Moscow's other main airport, which was reconstructed a few years ago, and to which airlines have migrated in such numbers that its spacious facilities are often overrun. Sheremetyevo is getting a makeover (as are several of the other airports mentioned in this article).

There is a new café. There are now electric screens on the baggage carousels, displaying the numbers and origins of incoming flights (even if they do not, as yet, always correspond to the baggage circulating on them, much of which is still wrapped in clingfilm to keep out thieves). The nightmarish domestic terminal is being replaced, and a third terminal is going up. A new train service will one day replace the agony of Leningradskoe Shosse. Haltingly, frustratingly but undeniably, Sheremetyevo has started to change—much like Russia itself.


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Old Posted Jan 5, 2007, 3:13 AM
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Russian airports, British railroads...whats the big difference?:?
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Old Posted Jan 5, 2007, 3:37 AM
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Very entertaining read. Remind me to wait a few years before making the trip!
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Old Posted Jan 5, 2007, 4:23 AM
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Very entertaining read. Remind me to wait a few years before making the trip!
But remember, it's just an editorial. I been there, done that all, seen it all, hauled bags that weigh half my weight across the snow in 10 degree F weather to that "anarchic domestic Sheremetyevo airport", and can attest that many things the author wrote about are true. However, he drew them in a very negative light, more negative then they actually are, and left out many good things, much like a nimby editor that would describe a new highrise proposal as an ultratall urban monstrocity that would block sunlight and invite various vices into the city. Fir instance, even though the plane on which I felw from Moscow to Rostov had its table thing broken so I had to eat on my lap, the plane itself, no matter how creaky it looked, was designed better than a typical Boeing in terms of aerodynamics and maneuverability, making the flight much safer than it may seem. Long story short, you'll be fine as long as you have someone with you as a guide and as long as you don't go ape-shit over every nuisance and suck up some little things for a short while. Many aspects of Russian airports are indeed frustrating, yet there are many redeeming factors and, after all, it's just an airport. A place where you go with the sole purpose to get the hell out of there.
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Old Posted Jan 7, 2007, 3:48 AM
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I've flown in to the Yekaterinburg airport...when we were flying in it felt like we were going in to north korea or a war zone--the lights were out(it was pitch black outside mind you), everyone was whispering and the attendants were behaving quite panic-y and telling us to fill out the custom forms as quickly as possible. The landing was a bit rough and to top it off everyone clapped when the plane landed thats usually not a good thing. In the arrivals area everyone was dead quiet. That said, russia is an amazing place and i would go back there in a heartbeat. Such a different place but the people are great and i love the atmosphere. On the bright side the departure area was the total opposite, warm bright and quite nice. Oh, i miss you russia
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Old Posted Jan 7, 2007, 5:01 AM
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I've been through Sheremet'yevo plenty of times and it's never seemed *that* bad. Yes, the taxi drivers out front tend to mob you, but, being a student, or at least fairly poor at the time, it didn't take much to fend them off (on my way to the city bus). Other than that, the customs people seemed reasonable and even fairly efficient. Well anyway, we'll see. If everything goes according to plan, I'll be there in April.
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Old Posted Jan 10, 2007, 6:43 PM
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I hope that things are not as bad as depicted in the Economist. I would really love to visit Russia, but those airports sound frightful!
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Old Posted Jan 16, 2007, 9:37 PM
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IMO the tone of the article is a bit too smart/sarcastic... However, fact-wise the article is more or less correct. Moscow airports are being brought up to world standards, while most other are way behind, frequently not been upgraded from Soviet times.

To those, who consider travelling to Russia: if all you plan is flying to Moscow - you will not find it that bad, or maybe not bad at all. Domodedovo is one of the best airports in Eastern Europe, Vnukovo has just been rebuilt, Sheremetjevo has new internatinal terminal U/C and the current one, although not spectacular is not scary either. Restrooms are clean, at least this has been my experience. Domodedovo and Vnukovo have train service to the city, Sheremetjevo train is U/C.
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Old Posted Jan 16, 2007, 11:28 PM
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IMO the tone of the article is a bit too smart/sarcastic...
Not surprising, given after all that we are dealing with The Economist....

Quote:
Originally Posted by anm View Post
To those, who consider travelling to Russia: if all you plan is flying to Moscow - you will not find it that bad, or maybe not bad at all. Domodedovo is one of the best airports in Eastern Europe, Vnukovo has just been rebuilt, Sheremetjevo has new internatinal terminal U/C and the current one, although not spectacular is not scary either.
The prof in my Russian language class raised that point during one of our lab exercises. When I proposed landing at Domodedevo as part of a travel planning simulation, given that British Airways had moved their Moscow operations there, he noted that Russian governments historically had preferred to have international flights land at Sheremet'evo for security reasons. Had a bit of an "a-ha" moment after I chipped in with my forty kopeks about the new terminal under construction at Sheremet'evo....
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Old Posted Jan 16, 2007, 11:47 PM
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Originally Posted by anm
Sheremetjevo has new internatinal terminal U/C and the current one, although not spectacular is not scary either. Restrooms are clean, at least this has been my experience. Domodedovo and Vnukovo have train service to the city, Sheremetjevo train is U/C.
I haven't been to any of these airports but I remember some remarks by my close friends who traveled to South East Asia via Moscow Sheremetyavo. They were horrified and said it was beyound any nightmare... and these guys weren't exactly admirers of luxury, more like regular hitch-hikers and backpackers.
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Old Posted Jan 17, 2007, 11:40 PM
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I have been through both Vladivostok and Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk airports a number of times, and can attest to the fact that most of what is written in this article is true.

My first Russian airport adventure was landing in Vladivostok on a flight from Seoul in the dead of winter. The airport is miles and miles from the city, and all I could see from my plane window were trees. Right up until just before we touched down and I could finally see the runway, I was convinced that we were crash landing in a birch forest. After landing, we taxied down a runway past a row of derelict Soviet military equipment. For security reasons, passengers aren't allowed on the tarmac, but since the airport has no jetways, two rows of opposite facing armed police formed a path through which we could walk the 50 yards from the plane door to the terminal. Once inside, the customs process was about as unfriendly and cumbersome as you could ever imagine.

On another domestice flight from Vladivostok to Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, I realized while passing through security that I had accidentally brought a pocket knife with me. I informed the guard, who simply told me to remember to leave it at home next time and keep it in my pocket during the flight. After hauling my own luggage up a ladder and stowing it myself at the back of the plane, I found and unfolded my seat, and got settled in for the flight. As they fired up the twin engines on the Antonov An-24 the plane shook and vibrated loudly and a cockroack scuttled across my window between the panes of glass. At least we were ready to take off, but as my luck should have it, the Russian boy-band SMASH were to fly with us and were running late so we were forced to wait until they arrived. They finally showed up nearly an hour late, and were so unruly that the flight crew were forced to give them all of their attention throughout the flight. We finally landed on Sakhalin and as the only non-Russian on board, I was greeted on the plane with a personal armed immigration official who refused to allow me to deplane until she was convinced that my documents were in order.

Russia is certainly an interesting place, but once you get through all of the bureaucracy and hassles, you'll find that the people are wonderful. I can't wait to go back.
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Old Posted Jan 19, 2007, 4:51 PM
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^thanks for sharing your experiences!
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Old Posted Mar 30, 2007, 9:37 PM
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Another Russian airports story!

Great read...sure rings true!

Here's another saga...back in 1992 (so allow 15 years for overall improvements!), I took the Trans-Siberian across much of Russia to Beijing. Those who have taken this route know that the train is generally punctual, and - unlike our dismal Amtrak - stops at stations for 15-30 minutes, allowing plenty of time for a welcome and leisurely stretch. Well, I figured I would walk into the various towns at these stops for (X/2)-1 minutes, meaning a turnaround on the dot and 2 minutes leeway round trip. This worked superbly from Moscow to Tyumen; at the latter, X turned out to be 1/2 X and the train was gone when I got back! On the train, fortunately along with two new-found aquaintances, was everything I had, save for my camera and a few rubles!

Well, after some language challenges, the railroad folks were most helpful, and smilingly/knowingly put me on the "next train" east. However, there was no way to catch my train, so they wired Intourist to have the group guide make flight arrangements at Novosibirsk.

On arrival the next day, amazingly, there he was on the Novosibirsk platform - along with my retrieved passport, travelers checks, and $15!

So what does this have to do with Russian airports? Well, he noted that I would have to fly to Irkutsk to catch the original train. Off we went to the Novosibirsk airport, where I was told that the ticket would be $200. Great...exactly two travelers checks.

Only they didn't accept them, and no bank east of Moscow could apparently exchange them! So I advised the staff that I would be their guest for the indefinite future. That sparked a Russian-initiated alternative: I could pay the Russsian price. Would you believe $6.25, including the bribe/tip/payment of gratitude!

There was enough pre-flight time to even take a bus back to town, ride the subway, and return to the airport, with change to spare.

Even having paid the Russian price, I was ushered into the VIP lounge, where a most-intoxicated Buryatian offical was being hosted by U.S. financial types (enabling me to find out who he was). This motley group of us awaited the flight departure - until snow closed the airport.

We finally took off at 2AM, not 10PM. I was personally escorted to the plane, which was some 10 degrees below zero inside; they had left the door open. Only when all of the other passengers arrived and their body heat cut the cold inflight was one able to breathe without letting out clouds of steam.

The flight got to Irkustsk at 5:15 AM. I was one of the first down the gangway, but the terminal was padlocked shut! Fortunately, I zipped around the building, found an unlocked fence gate, and got the sole taxi waiting on the other side. Making choo choo noises, I communicated my intended destination, at which we arrived minutes before "my" train arrived.

Not only were my "friends" guarding my luggage intact, $2,000 cash in the attache case had gone unnoticed and was also safe and sound.

An unforgettable adventure for less than $20 additional cost!

Would I go back? I have - many times - but those are train and ship stories, not airplane ones!
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Old Posted Mar 30, 2007, 10:38 PM
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Excellent article. I didn't find it particularly negative either, just somewhat satirical.

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Fir instance, even though the plane on which I felw from Moscow to Rostov had its table thing broken so I had to eat on my lap, the plane itself, no matter how creaky it looked, was designed better than a typical Boeing in terms of aerodynamics and maneuverability, making the flight much safer than it may seem.
Just out of curiosity, what are you basing that on? The design standards of Boeing aircraft are VERY high in terms of safety. From what I've heard, Russian certification is only now attempting to meet FAR standards. And maintenance is a very important part of airworthiness, regardless of how well a design is on paper.
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Old Posted Apr 8, 2007, 3:17 AM
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Originally Posted by arkhitektor View Post
My first Russian airport adventure was landing in Vladivostok on a flight from Seoul in the dead of winter. The airport is miles and miles from the city, and all I could see from my plane window were trees. Right up until just before we touched down and I could finally see the runway, I was convinced that we were crash landing in a birch forest.
You know, I had similar feeling in the US a few times, with the difference that I anticipated crash landing in the middle of a city... in San Diego and NYC LaGuardia for instance. Having come from Russsia, where airports are often located in the middle of a forest, I felt uncomfortable landing right over rooftops.
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Old Posted Apr 8, 2007, 3:21 AM
anm anm is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2005
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@ Alan Hogenauer

thanks for sharing... your saga is very Russian indeed
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"In times of universal deceit, telling the truth will be a revolutionary act." George Orwell
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