Russia in October 2017 ( update from May- June 2019)
My husband and I visited my family home during the latter part of May and first few days of June 2019. This was very much a working holiday as over the previous 18 months we have been very busy renovating and extending this home.
It is situated in the Krasnodar region of Russia right to the South of the country two hours flight south of Moscow and bordering the Black Sea.
Krasnodar is a thriving and wealthy city of well over a million people. The rate of development over the last dozen years has been phenomenal with four major shopping malls built - the largest of which is bigger and glitzier than say the Bull Ring in Birmingham. When we visited the shops one weekday evening and it took us ten minutes to find a car park slot from the thousand plus available amongst the strange admixture of Ladas and Range Rover Vogues and Porsche Cayennes. We later had a coffee in the food mall with about a dozen global brand fast food outlets - seating over 500 - completely full up and bustling.
The region is prosperous for a variety of reasons. Firstly, the area is one of the major centres for gas and oil extraction. Hence also a new and attractive regional headquarters building for Gazprom has recently joined the local skyscrapers. However, the area is also a huge holiday destination in the summer for the Black Sea and hot summers and in the winter for the winter sports in the Caucusus mountains centered on Sochi. Finally ,the area is a key centre also for Russian agriculture as the whole plain area was originally under a sea in pre historical times and the resultant very dark, rich earth combined with a warm climate make it very productive and the bread basket for the populous European sector of the Russian Federation.
Our home is on a lane overlooking the small spa town of Gorachiy Kluch about thirty miles from Krasnodar. Our home backs straight onto the scrub oak forest which then runs for thirty miles to the Black Sea coast.
The forest has Deer. Brown Bear , Lynx, Wolves, Jackals etc but the space is so vast that only in the very hardest winters do they approach any human habitation. Naturally, the woodland birds predominate and we have seen Little, Medium and Greater Spotted Woodpeckers as well as a nuthatch family who nest just behind our gate into the forest. Jays are very common and a family of Tawny Owls reside just up the hill.
The forest has Deer. Brown Bear , Lynx, Wolves, Jackals etc but the space is so vast that only in the very hardest winters do they approach any human habitation. Naturally, the woodland birds predominate and we have seen Little, Medium and Greater Spotted Woodpeckers as well as a nuthatch family who nest just behind our gate into the forest. Jays are very common and a family of Tawny Owls reside just up the hill.
My photos are thus constricted to those few birds we saw by sheer chance locally and include a Long Legged Buzzard, Nuthatch,
Greater Spotted Woodpecker, Skylark and a juvenile Blue Headed Wagtail.
This time we visited beautiful area Honey Waterfalls and ours birdwatcher list was extended by lovely Dipper, Golden eagle,Black voulchers, Griffon voulchers, Step Eagle, Eastern Imperial Eagle, Ren, Sky Larks Calender Larks, Sparrow Hawks, Swifts....
This time we visited beautiful area Honey Waterfalls and ours birdwatcher list was extended by lovely Dipper, Golden eagle,Black voulchers, Griffon voulchers, Step Eagle, Eastern Imperial Eagle, Ren, Sky Larks Calender Larks, Sparrow Hawks, Swifts....
Next year – we plan to go back for several days to the Kislovodsk area about two hundred miles to the east of Krasnodar where the vast wild steppe country populated by cowboys herding flocks of goats or wild horses is overshadowed by a sharp ridge of rocky outcrops thrust up by volcanic action in prehistory. Just like in Extremadura in Spain this creates an ideal breeding ground for raptors and on a previous visit we saw Steppe Eagle and Golden Eagles as well as Griffon and Egyptian Vultures, Bonellis and Short Toed Eagles, let alone Buzzards, Kites and Peregrines – all in two days.
However – before then we are off to Tobago in late February - early March next year which should be simply a wonderful break We are hopefully at the start of the turtle nesting season and it is quite easy too to get close up to some of the large rays which swim in the coastal waters etc etc but now with the added dimension for both my husband and I of nature photography to capture some of the beautiful humming birds, butterflies and tropical plants – this second trip should be even better. Watch this space!













No comments:
Post a Comment