You hungry dude?

Alisha with her Winter Palace
We settle down on the beach in front of the fortress to enjoy the slow sunset with the view across the Neva River of the Winter Palace and surrounding buildings. Yes, there really is a beach in the middle of St Petersburg and it’s quite crowded now. Elena produces a series of beers from her bag and we have one or two as we chat. As I sit on the beach enjoying the feel of the sand in my fingers and the constantly shifting golden light reflecting on the calm river waters, I wish this feeling could last forever. Utterly content to merge into the sand I feel the weight of the world slip away from me. The beers are certainly helping this, but here I am sitting on a beach in northern Russia sipping beers with a couple of locals and two old friends. The beauty of the scene mixes with the feeling of friendship to create an afternoon of warm happiness in St Petersburg.Beachy Goodness
Everyone is herded off the beach around eleven o’clock as they close down the fortress for the evening. We amble around the edge of the park towards a Metro station, enjoying the very last of the sunlight. Elena wants to know if we’d like to stay out and go to clubs and see the bridges rise in the early morning. A few other couchsurfers have already said they’ll be out tomorrow, Saturday, night and we’re planning to join them. Don is still tired from the train trip from Moscow as well, so we make use of the Russian people’s taxi service to get home with Alisha before the bridges rise.“If I lived in St Petersburg”, I begin once we’re all at home enjoying a nightcap,
”I would have to take up painting to try and capture the ebbs and flows of the city’s moods.”
Indeed, it’s quite a common sight to see people all over the city with easels arranged and brushes at work doing exactly that.
“I like to draw scenes here myself”, Alisha reveals.
“Really, do you have some you’ve done here now?” I ask, fascinated at a new part of my host’s already delightful character.
“yes…oh..in here”, she mumbles; searching her desk for the scrapbook.
It is filled with an array of scenes of people and places, facades of buildings and faces captured in time. She has a straightforward but emotive style I enjoy and we spend time turning through the pages as she explains pictures to me with the self-conscious reservation of a nervous artist revealing their work.
“These are great; you should be doing more of them!”, I finally entreat.
“Maybe….. I like to do them. I’ll make you one before you go, maybe I will have time”, she offers wistfully.
I decide not to push her anymore and hope she really will have time to make one.
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