Accompanied by many traveling students we made our way through border control (no photos allowed) and then found our tour-guide (a requirement of visa-free travel).
We arrived to thick fog, and even Tanya, our English-speaking guide, was surprised and impressed by its density. Undeterred, we settled in to our seats in the van for a 3-hour personal tour of the city.
| It was remarkably "western" in appearance (except for all of those palaces). Cars dominated the transportation scene and we benefited from a skilled, local driver. |
| The Winter Palace - now part of the Hermitage, Russia's State Museum of Art |
| The Bronze Horseman |
| The Cathedral of the Resurrection (and the ubiquitous tour buses) |
| The Tombs of Peter the Great and other rulers of Russia are there. |
The interior of the St.Peter & St. Paul Cathedral was steeped in Russian history (of which I know very little). Tombs of many of Russia's rulers were there, including Peter the Great, Catherine the Great, and Nicholas II and family, who were not interred until 1998, following the retrival and confirmation of their remains from a mass grave.
Pictured to the left is the pulpit from which Tolstoy was excommunicated from the Russian Orthodox Church in 1901.
After a lovely lunch at a restuarant that James spotted from the street, we headed to St. Issac's Cathedral for tickets to tour the interior and visit the catwalk around the Collonade. Both were well worth it.
We climbed more than 200 stairs to the colonnade of St. Issac's Cathedral just as the sun appeared for the first time that day.

Inside was no less spectacular.
James spotted a low boat in the canal by our hotel. There were many such canals and many more such boats. St. Petersburg is one of many cities with the nickname of "Venice of the North" - so named for all of the canals. We took advantage of a nearby boat to see St. Petersburg from an entirely new perspective.

| Domina Prestige - the hotel in which we stayed for the night. |
After our boat tour we took in a bit more of the city at night. St. Issac's Cathedral was beautifully lit in the evening fog.
. . . and the Bronze Horseman again for the sake of seeing it upclose without a car window between us.
We enjoyed more views of the canals (from the street) and wound our way back to The Cathedral of the Resurrection.
Having done our best to see as much of St. Petersburg as possible in our two short days, we made it back to the boat terminal, through border control, and onto our boat with time to spare. We enjoyed our "cruise" back to Helsinki and our return "home" to Kuopio. None of us will forget our trip - it was simply fantastic.

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