Just near the canal, you can visit the Winter Palace nearby. The surrounding area is full of old buildings, some remodeled youth hostels, similar to the dilapidated residential buildings in old Guangzhou, the corridors are broken, but fortunately the internal environment is quite clean and comfortable. Located in the small courtyard of the residential building, warm and quiet, it feels like home.
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Just near the canal, you can visit the Winter Palace nearby. The surrounding area is full of old buildings, some remodeled youth hostels, similar to the dilapidated residential buildings in old Guangzhou, the corridors are broken, but fortunately the internal environment is quite clean and comfortable. Located in the small courtyard of the residential building, warm and quiet, it feels like home.
Looking at the sparkling river and the ancient and majestic buildings around, I really want to stop at this moment, there is no trouble, only the beauty of the dream. There were also three or two old fishermen on the riverside, as for whether I could catch fish I don't know, at least I saw ten minutes of movement.
In the gap between the ships, we leaned on the Neva River and quietly enjoyed the blue water and the cruise ships. In 1703, Peter the Great built a new capital of St. Petersburg at the mouth of the Neva River.
St. Petersburg is also known as Vienna, Russia, because his city also has crisscrossing rivers, which are composed of the Old Ladoga and the New Ladoga Canal. There are also many cruise ships in St. Petersburg for tourists to sit on boats and shuttle through the canals. All kinds of old buildings can be seen along the way, we took a boat that was Russian, so I couldn't understand, but the scenery along the way was excellent.
This is an important water main linking the Baltic Sea with the Volga River, which runs through the entire city of St. Petersburg. The historic buildings and attractions on both sides of the river are an important route to water tour St. Petersburg.
Lake Ladoga, 70 km northeast of St. Petersburg, was once the "path to life" of St. Petersburg (Leningrad) during the Patriotic War. During the Soviet Patriotic War, St. Petersburg was besieged for more than 900 days, and the canal was used to supply the wounded and transport the wounded, and the victory of the defense was won by steel. The ring-shaped steel gap is the life passage of Lake Ladoga, in memory of those who died and starved to death.