I had a school trip to Northern Russia 16.-20. September this year, now that I'm in high school. It's the first time I was in Russia, and I've never been outside of Helsinki in Finland before.
We got to Helsinki by ship (there were around 50 of us) and went off to Askola to see some typical (and beautiful, I like how rocky it is there) Finnish nature. The next stop was the Loviisa nuclear power plant and the one after that was Kotka Maretarium. After a few more stops (in Langinkoski and Imatra) we went to our shelter for the night, a hostel in Nurmes. Played cards for some time....
In the morning we started heading towards the Russian border. We spent 2 hours at the border, our passports and visas were checked three times, and our bus was searched through by a very cheerful dog. Basically Russia was very different from Finland, it looked cheap in several ways. We visited a school in some town (I only remember that it had a long name) and started heading off North. We had a long drive through the countryside, that was really pleasant. A road (sometimes it resembled a highway, sometimes it was very bumpy and didn't have any asphalt at all), in the middle of nowhere (under nowhere I mean trees, sand and dirt, not a single building in the 300 kilometres we passed). We only saw a handful of cars on the road. Kem (our destination) is about 300 km away from the border, but it took us some 9-10 hours to get there. Some of the road conditions were really bad, in these cases the bus had to move really slowly. Everyone was happy when the teacher announced that we had only 2 hours left to ride. However, I really enjoyed the bus ride, having so much time. It was relaxing, reading "2001: A Space Oddity", watching some movies like "Gran Torino" and "Invictus", talking to people I wouldn't maybe otherwise talk to and attempting to sleep, which wasn't easy.
Kem was a surprise. We slept in a local school, it felt really strange, yet somehow so typically Russian. For example, the bland food was served on plates and bowls of different shapes and sizes. Nearly every knife and fork differed from each other, and some were completely bent. The toilets were shocking, as shown below (luckily we had an alternative). There was one room which seemed out of context was the computer room, where they had brand new computers with Windows 7. But overall, I really prefered this school to any comfortable hotel (not that there were any in Kem anyway).
I'm sleepy, I'll continue later..








