Wednesday, September 4, 2013

The Odessa file


The Odessa File

Odessa is a delightful city to walk around with its diversity of architecture without too many communist era structures.  There are old palaces, churches, parks and monuments.

We caught a shuttle bus to the top of the town and wended our way back downhill back to the Potemkin Steps and our ship.

Along the way we visited the Archaeological and Ethnographic Museums, the cathedral, the spectacular opera and ballet theatre, several palaces and public buildings.

We took photos of several statues including the Duke de Richelieu, Pushkin and a few others but we don’t know who they were.

As all the signs are in Cyrillic script, it was hard to work out what things were, including artefacts in the museums.

Our final leg was to walk down the Potemkin Steps to return to the ship.  There is an optical illusion in the steps.  When viewed from the top, you can only see the landings but when viewed from the bottom, you can only see the steps.  Yes there were a lot of steps!  It was hard to get a good photo of the steps because yesterday was Odessa’s birthday and there had been a performance where the audience sat on the steps and there was a stage and scaffolding in front.  As we were leaving, the scaffolding was coming down.

Shipboard life continues to be fabulous – good company and excellent food.

 

 

2 comments:

Amanda said...

as long as they weren't like Escher steps - exhausting, those never ending stairs.

Anonymous said...

I immediately thought of war crimes even though the book has nothing to do with the town!

xo

Di