Saturday, November 25, 2017

Expo - Day 1

The main reason that Oma wanted to come and visit Kazakhstan was to visit the Expo.  She had never been to a world's fair before, and since this one was located right across the street from us, she really wanted to see it.  We had arrived back in Kazakhstan late Saturday evening, gone to church on Sunday, and had bought tickets to attend the Expo on Tuesday- August 8.

The Expo had been completely built in the three years that we were living in Astana.  It had been one of our favorite activities to watch the construction across the street and to see the way things had changed.  Everything in Kazakhstan is done at the last minute, and the Expo was not an exception.  They were finishing construction the day before it opened for the public on June 10.  

We walked to the Expo (about a mile from our house, past the new mall, and into the Expo site.  We had a bit of trouble getting in - our tickets weren't read by the machine, so we had to go to an office to get things straightened out.  We first went to the Russian pavilion - which had gotten good reviews in the articles we'd read.  The pavilion was quite interesting - focusing on Russian Arctic exploration and with a big chunk of ice.

We then visited the giant sphere - the Nur Alem - which was the Kazakhstan pavilion.  It was seven stories tall and was very impressive.  Each level of the sphere was dedicated to a different type of energy - wind, solar, water, bio, etc. and the bottom floor was about Kazakhstan's history.  The sphere was our favorite pavilion. [After the Expo they turned the sphere into a museum.  The rest of the buildings they are working to convert into different business buildings.]

The pavilions were a mix of information about future and clean energy and information about the countries themselves.  Many countries mostly had information about tourism to their countries. 

The rest of the day we visited other pavilions in the Asian pavilion building.  We ate a nice lunch at a little Thai restaurant that was near the Thai pavilion, and spent the day until about 6:00 p.m.  It was a long day of walking and looking at things, but we really enjoyed the sites. 


Right inside the Expo site with the Nur Alem in the background.

Inside the Russian pavilion - Russian icebreaker model.

Arctic ice.

Top floor of the pavilion looking out across the city.  The glass floor was very interesting... and a bit scary! 

Looking up at the glass pathway from the second floor from the top.

Art and other installations.

Yulia photographing the mirrored ceiling.

The elevator bank with futuristic elevator cars.

Space!  One of the exhibits in Nur Alem.

Oma in space!

Yulia, Babushka, and Nina taking a break.

The twins holding up the sun (solar energy floor).

Oma and Babushka holding up the sun!

Wind energy - wind patterns.

In the wind tunnel!

Looking at biomass fuels under the glass floor.

More information about biofuels.

Kids playing an interactive game.

Energy created by two teams on cycles!

Oma and Babushka relaxing and waiting for the show.

We were able to catch the show - it was very interesting and we saw another version at Cirque du soleil a few days later.

On the first floor of the sphere.

Action shot - walking at the Expo.

More of the buildings.

Taking a break for some water.

Inside the Algerian pavilion.

Chinese pavilion -  a 3-d movie experience.


Pavilions - Jordan, Thailand, Turkey, and more!

Azerbaijan pavilion - cotton bols.
Exhibit showing different heat waste from lamps.  Hot to cold.  In the Turkish Pavilion

Inside the Thai pavilion
More Thailand pavilion.
A concert outside the Thai pavilion!




A history of the Expos through the ages.

Inside the history of the expo - This was a ride from six years ago in Shanghai

The Pacific Islands Pavilion

Sisters supporting each other after a long day at the Expo.

Sunday, November 19, 2017

Trip to Utah - Part 2

On one of the days during our Utah trip we went to the Temple Square in Salt Lake City. Temple Square is beautiful all year around but we especially love to visit it during Christmas season because of all of the Christmas lights and in the summers because of all of the flowers. Generally, we try to stop by whenever we are in Utah, and this time we had a special reason. There is a wonderful sister-missionary serving on Temple Square right now. She is from Ukraine but last year she was working in Kazakhstan (she is a professional gymnast), and so we got to know her very well. When she was leaving on her mission, we promised her that we would come see her one day and bring some Ukrainian candy, a little piece of home to her. And so we did!

Svetlana, when she finally realized who is behind the camera. 

Yep, we came to see you from all the way across the world!

Oma posing with our kids under the tower of the Salt Lake Temple where she and Opa got married.

While at the Temple Square we stopped by a new exhibit at the Church History Museum.


Nativity sets from around the world
One of the days Oma took us to UVU to see a stained glass window at their library. It was very impressive! It showed a history knowledge in the world from the beginning of times to now. The window was made of several sections that went in a semi-circle and that were covered by a bullet-proof glass on the outside.

I couldn't even get the whole view. It is huge!

One of the sections

Our niece and nephews came over to spend a week at Oma’s house with us while their parents went on a mini work/vacation type of a trip. The cousins had so much fun together playing games, watching movies, annoying each other and … just being cousins!

Playing an old Russian game called "rezinochka" 

Girls' sleeping quarters. The boys were sleeping in the "basement".

One night we took the older four kids to the temple. It was Nika's first time to go inside.

Almost every summer when we are in the US, depending on our trip schedule, we sign our girls up for swimming lessons. All four of them are pretty good swimmers but we want them to develop good swimming and diving techniques and besides that it keeps them busy and they are having fun at the same time. A win-win situation for me!

Sophie is diving in.


And at the end I’d like to share some of my favorite moments from our trip.

That's how our mornings would often start.

That's how our afternoons often went... Oma was reading a book called The War That Saved My Life to the girls and got me hooked on it too.

We went to Payson Grotto in our last week. I love that hike!
We went to visit Mike and Suzette, their boys, and their dog in Brigham City. Here are the kids trying to decide what to do with themselves. Jade the dog is the only one with a clear idea!
"Would you like to play with me, Human?"
We loved spending time with family and friends and going on adventures this summer. But there's an end to every fun adventure and we had to once again come back to our ordinary lives in Kazakhstan. Oh wait, not this time. This time we were bringing Oma with us. Stay tuned for her adventures with crazy kids of hers in a far, far away land.