We’re on our way, we don’t know where we’re going
Today’s theme tune comes courtesy of Simon and Garfunkel (I’m not the Queen of Corona…!) and tonight’s post is being typed out as we snuggle into our seats aboard the Star (a car ferry to Estonia!).
Tone loves BBC Radio 2. He’s brought 7 whole USB sticks of
Radio 2 recordings… Each USB has about 40 hours of radio. 7 multiplied by 40…
That’s about 280 hours. If we listen to 8 hours of music a day… Basically, we
have plenty of music.
We’d spent a lot of time talking about what we’d do last
night: do we Russia or do we not Russia? Is it risky? Is it safe? By this
point, the UK Government had advised against all travel to Russia and we
considered our options thoroughly in light of the situation. We’d read about
cyber-attacks on the Belarussian train systems, the solidarity of the other
European countries and the economic climate, where Russians were struggling to
withdraw their savings from their banks. We concluded we’d head up to the
border and see how we felt.
Our taksi arrived at around 9am and we were in beautiful
Hamina by 10am. The half hour drive from Kotka to Hamina was beautiful:
snow-kissed fir trees, glistening snow and huge stalagtites from the banks of
the road, where all the snow had been cleared to. The campsite where Tony and
Teresa had left the van was even more beautiful. The owners had cleared away
the snow from around the van and after a bit of rocking, jiggerpokery, towing
and sliding on ice (the handbrake appeared to be frozen), she was running as
sweet as a nut.
We grabbed a coffee at the campsite, enjoyed a slice of scrumptious toffee cake whilst admiring the incredible views and took a toddle out across the Baltic Sea’s shoreline (this is the lake to you, Treez!), walking on top of the vast frozen water’s surface before us. Then we set off for Russia.
We ummed. We aahed. First Covid stopped Tony doing this trip
2 years ago. Then Covid stopped Tony doing this trip 1 year ago. Then Russia’s
special operation with Ukraine put some risk around things. And then the UK
government advised all UK citizens against us going to Russia. Then there was a
risk around getting money. Maybe we should give up and accept that this trip
isn’t meant to be…
Or not…
We’ve now taken the decision to mix it up and we’re headed for Tallinn in Estonia to go into Russia from the continent!
Back down to Helsinki we went and we booked onto the next
ferry heading to Estonia at 19:30. We’ll be in another country by tonight (well, within 2 hours!)!
We had just an hour to wait and we spent it repairing the
van’s screenwash pipe (we’d driven – and when I say “we”, I mean “I” – in the
low sun from Hamina to Helsinki without being able to see through the windscreen,
strategically swerving behind larger vehicles when the road got wet to wash off
the screen!). I found it a hairy drive, and central Helsinki was even more
hair-raising as there are trams that drive alongside the traffic.
Anyway, we’re safe and we’ll head a little along the route towards the Russian border at Narva tonight, when we disembark, before settling down for sleepsies in the transit hotel.
Awh wow !!!! keep the pics coming x x looks amazing and the bus still looking cool 😎 even with its overcoat of snow ⛄️. The ‘lake’ looks beautiful. Good luck with plan b phase 2
ReplyDeleteHope you get some rubble’s
Teresa
Looks a fantastic Tony, Stacey he got me and Frankie listening to Radio 2 back in 1993 !!!!
ReplyDeleteAmazing pics! What an adventure!
ReplyDeleteThank you. :-) (Who are you?)
Deletei'd suggest by now you also start to decide if you want to cover the flag :) take care guys and keep the pictures rolling!
ReplyDeleteThanks for commenting! <3 (Who are you?) We've left the British flag on for now and have made many allies thanks to this. :-)
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