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Happy to have Vladimir Lenin keeping a watch over us |
In the flurry of activity booking flights I also booked 3 sets of tickets for the Ukraine National Opera and made various bookings for the same hotel with different bookings sites until I thought I probably had the best deal. That exhausted my holiday arrangement energy, I was happy to go with the flow when we arrived and ignored Adrians repeated 'I think we should visit Chernobyl'.
We had a little technical hitch at Heathrow when we checked our bags for the flight when we discovered I had booked 2 seats for myself and no seat for Adrian. All I can say is its a good job we got there super early because it took a lot of head scratching and tooth sucking and pointing out that it was my mistake (why would I want two seats for myself - there is a blocked seat between them so even if I was a 250kg giant that ploy wouldn't have helped) and £40 to change the name on the ticket but finally British Airways decided we were okay to go. I still maintain that their system should have detected the error - two people with the same names is entirely possible but two people with the same names, passport numbers and dates of birth is beyond a coincidence.
So we arrived in Kiev on a dull and rainy afternoon and found our way to the taxi rank, managed to make it to the hotel in spite of the challenges of communication between people with no common language at all. I suppose its a British thing to always expect Johnny Foreigner to speak English and it comes as a surprise when he doesn't. Some, mostly younger, people in Kiev speak English but we found this only really in the hotel. Three cheers for Uber, no language required as long as you managed to get the pick up point right.
When we were eating dinner on the first night Adrian repeated the 'I think we should visit Chernobyl' comment and I have to say I was not very enthusiastic at first, it took a bit of repetition before I said 'okay you book it and I'll go too' thinking it would never happen. Who knew Adrian could make a booking online? It's all about motivation I've learned. So we went on a day trip to Chernobyl, 83 miles from Kiev. It was a very interesting and spooky experience and I am glad Adrian was so persistent.
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At the checkpoint to enter the exclusion zone |
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Under that dome is reactor No 4, the one that exploded |
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Inscription at the foot of the monument in front of reactor No 4 |
TO HEROES,
PROFESSIONALS
TO THOSE WHO
PROTECTED THE
WORLD FROM
NUCLEAR DISASTER.
IN HONOUR OF THE
20TH ANNIVERSARY
OF SHELTER OBJECT
CONSTRUCTION
30 11 2006
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Monument to the firefighters |
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Incomplete reactor No 5 |
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Chernobyl |
We survived the experience with two radiation checks for certainty.
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Pripyat, now a ghost town |
Pripyat, founded in 1970 as the 9th nuclear city in the Soviet Union and home to 50,000 people, is the town evacuated within 36 hours of the explosion and not inhabited since. Scientists disagree about when it will be inhabitable again between now and 20,000 years.
Its a eerie experience being in a town that has been abandoned and left for the planet to take back. Maturing trees grow through town squares and sports and recreation sites. It's very quiet - and then a - bus goes through (no idea from where to where) - so photographers have to be on their guard.
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Abandoned block of flats |
The ferris wheel and football stadium were due to be officially opened on 1 May 1986 but the explosion just a week earlier put and end to those plans. They have never been used and are now awaiting nature to take its course and shrug off the human intervention.
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Dodgems |
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Football stadium |
The football stadium, too dangerous to get any closer than this.
Turn through 108 degrees.....
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the pitch |
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Antenna used during the Cold War |
Chernobyl was also a listening station during the Cold War and this huge antenna was installed there unbeknown to the west.
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St Michael church |
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St Sophia cathedral |
Kiev has some lovely Eastern Orthodox churches, brightly painted and all were being actively used for worship when we visited.