2500-year-old Siberian ‘princess’ beauty secrets revealed


Fashion and beauty secrets of a Siberian ‘princess’ who died 2,500 years ago have been revealed from her ice-clad burial chamber in the Altai Mountains. Last month, remarkable modern-looking tattoos on the mummy of a 25-year-old woman were revealed, which were preserved in the permafrost on the Ukok Plateau, some 2,300 metres above sea level. Now details have been disclosed on the findings of Russian scientists, which show the ancient tattooed princess’s fashion sense, love of make-up and exotic headwear, the Daily Mail reported. According to the Siberian Times, the ice - a natural time capsule - also preserved her elegant clothing, enabling a reconstruction to show exactly how she looked “some 500 years before the birth of Jesus Christ.” “Archeologists even found items from her ‘cosmetics bag’, which lay inside her coffin next to her left hip, notably a face brush made from horse hair, and a fragment of an ‘eyeliner pencil.’ This was made from iron rings, inside which was vivianite, giving a deep blue-green colour on the skin. There was also vivianite powder, derived from an iron phosphate mineral, to be applied to the face,” the paper reported. The analysis of her clothing has led to the conclusion that the Pazyryk people - though living in remote southern Siberian - had extraordinarily wide connections as far afield as China, India, Iran and the Mediterranean, picking designs or materials or dyes from different cultures’ while also establishing their own unique look. Professor Natalya Polosmak, who discovered the burialchamber and analysed the clothing in painstaking detail, said: “The exotic dress of the of the ‘princess’ also ‘proved to be far more unusual and unique than any of our guesses. “She was dressed in a long and wide woollen skirt, made from three horizontal strips of fabric. The skirt was 144 cm long, 90 cm wide on the top, and 112.5 cm at the base. “Each strip of the fabric was coloured separately: the top one was crimson, the middle very slightly pinkish-yellowish, and the third of a very rich Bordeaux colour. All pieces of fabric were manually coloured. The skirt had a woollen braided belt, which could as well change the length of the skirt by holding it either around the waist, or higher, under the breasts,” she added. Archeological detective work found that the dyes used in her skirt came from the Eastern Mediterranean or Iran - almost 2,000 miles from the Altai Mountains. Her fine silk shirts were of a Chinese design. Yet the silks themselves came either from Assam in India or south-eastern Asia. On top she wore a smart and stylish light fur kaftan-style coat. As with male clothing for the period, it had long narrow sleeves, shorter at the front “and a tail from behind” - possibly the world’s first tailcoat. She also wore above-the-knee white felt boots as protection against the fierce cold with temperatures dropping to as low as minus 35C. The Pazyryk clothing included light fabrics not best suited to the cold temperatures in which they lived, suggesting perhaps their looks were more important to them than simply being warm.’ It also meant running repairs were needed on clothing and other burial mounds on the plateau have yielded examples of darned trousers.’ “The real eye-opener for Dr Polosmak was the high and distinctive head wear,” the Siberian Times reported. The ‘crowning glory’ of the wig was a giant feather some 68.65 cm long, made from felt and covered with black woollen fabric, with a stick inside it to help it stand straight. Then there was a ‘cap’ for the wig - some 84cm tall. When she was buried, her coffin, made from a hollowed out tree, was long enough to accommodate the headgear.’ The scientists - who dug the ‘princess’ from her icy grave 19 years ago - have released information on her as her remains are to be moved from Novosibirsk back to a specially built sarcophagus in the Altai republic where the mummy will in future be on public display. Experts remain puzzled over her baldness, and say some ‘Pazyryk women - both of royal and lower status - kept plaits of their own shaved hair with horse hair extensions.’Source: Indian ExpressReference-Image: https://upload.wikimedia.org
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Siberia gets a purrfect cafe!

'Kis-kis-kis'! Stunning Siberian Amur Ezra cat poses in the snow. Picture: kot-de-azur.livejournal.com
The cat cafe is opening in Krasnoyarsk, Siberia's energy capital, promising a new 'cat-o-relax experience'. At number 40 Dictatorship of the Proletariat Street, Kis Kis Cafe ('Kis Kis' is what Russians say to attract the cat's attention) charges a flat rate entrance fee of 150 roubles, or $4.70 and guests have unlimited access to tea, snacks, table games, books, movies, wifi - and cats. Children and students pay 100 roubles - around $3.15 - per hour. 'We promise a true cat-o-relax, otherwise known as feline therapy', say the cafe owners. 'Cats are provided by our partner company called 'Khvostiki' (Tails). All of them are with perfect character, as only the most charming and non-aggressive are selected for 'work' in the cafe. They are vaccinated and sterilised'. The cats can also be bought and taken home as pets, it is understood. Cat cafes were pioneered in South Korea and have become popular in Japan. Recently, the first cat cafe opened in Paris.Siberia gets a purrfect cafe!
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Fat or sugar: what's more irresistible?

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Is it the sweet flavor or the smooth and creamy texture that our taste buds are after? The New York Times has written about a new study that suggests that what really draws people to sweet treats, and prompts them to eat much more than they should, is not the fat, but the sugar.
By Olga Yazhgunovich: While doctors often warn against fattening sodas, snacks and fast foods, the role of sugar in influencing the brain has been somehow diminished. The new research led by Dr. Stice tracked brain activity in 106 healthy teenagers — 47 male and 59 female — they were asked to sip different milkshakes as they lay in functional magnetic resonance imaging machines. As they drank chocolate-flavored milkshakes that were identical in calories but either high in sugar and low in fat, both kinds of shakes lit up pleasure centers in their brain, but those that were high in sugar did it far more effectively, firing up a food-reward network that plays a role in compulsive eating. The researchers found that sugar was even a more powerful stimulus than fat. High sugar shakes that were low in fat ramped up the reward circuitry just as strongly as the more decadent shakes that paired sugar and fat in large quantities, suggesting that fat was a runner-up to sugar, said Eric Stice, the lead author of the study, which was funded by the National Institutes of Health and published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. "We do a lot of work on the prevention of obesity, and what is really clear not only from this study but from the broader literature over all is that the more sugar you eat, the more you want to consume it," said Dr. Stice, a senior research scientist at the Oregon Research Institute. "As far as the ability to engage brain reward regions and drive compulsive intake, sugar seems to be doing a much better job than fat." The new findings add to a growing number of brain studies that are providing a more complex understanding of what drives people to overeat. Heavily processed foods loaded with fat and sugar activate and potentially alter the same reward regions in the brain that are affected by alcohol and drugs. Thus, the results may help explain why millions of people who diet and struggle to lose weight ultimately fail. Sugar itself isn't inherently evil as our body uses sugar to survive, and burns it to generate the energy necessary for life. Many healthy foods are actually broken down to sugar and glucose is a great energy source for the body. However, there are ways that sugar can do harm and cause fat storage. Excess glucose is the first problem – anytime when we fill the body with more fuel than it actually needs (which is easy when eating foods with high sugar content), our liver's sugar storage capacity is exceeded and the excess sugar is converted by the liver into fatty acids and returned to the bloodstream, where istaken throughout the body and stored as fat. Excess insulin is the second problem. Insulin is a major hormone in the body, and is released in high levels anytime we ingest simple carbohydrates that are contained in fruit juice, white bread, most "wheat" bread, white rice, baked white potato, bagels, croissants, pretzels, sugary drinks, beer, and anything that has high fructose corn syrup on the nutritional label. Two actions occur when the insulin levels are spiked. First, the body's fat burning process is shut down so that the sugar that has just been ingested can be immediately used for energy. As soon as the muscles energy stores are full, the excess sugars are converted to fat. So, it all depends on what kind of carbohydrates a person is eating. To avoid de-stabilizing blood sugar levels one should stick to carbohydrates that do not trigger such a strong insulin response and instead provide long-term, stabilized energy like apples, oranges, pears, plums, grapes, bananas, grapefruit, oatmeal, brown rice, whole wheat spaghetti, whole grains, beans, lentils, milk, yogurt (preferably low-fat or fat-free) and soy. One should definitely stay away from processed and packaged foods as much as possible, because they are highly likely to include artificial sweeteners (which have a similar effect as sugar), and watch out for ingredients that include sucrose, maltose, dextrose, fructose, galactose, glucose, arabinose, ribose and lactose, experts advise as "the obesity epidemic and the problems with overeating don't have too much to do with people overeating fruits and healthy foods. They have a lot to do with people overeating excess sugars and fats," said Nicole Avena, a faculty member at the New York Obesity Research Center at Columbia University, who was not involved in the new study. Dr. Avena said that people "can have all the willpower in the world. But if the brain reward system is being activated in a way that causes them to have a battle against their willpower, then it can be very difficult for them to control their intake." The milkshakes used in the research were all made with chocolate syrup and an ice cream base. But the fat content was manipulated by using either half and half or 2 percent milk, and the sweetness was manipulated by varying the simple syrup content. Low fat, low sugar milkshakes activated regions of the brain associated with taste and sensation, but they had no impact on reward regions. These brain regions, called the food-reward system, control our desire for food: the more active they are, the more we want to eat. The researchers found that increasing the fat content of a high sugar shake did not activate the reward region any further. Relatively high fat, low sugar milkshakes, however, did engage part of the reward circuitry. And a high sugar shake that had triple that amount of sugar but only a quarter of the fat had an even greater impact. Dr. Stice said he was surprised because he expected fat would be a stronger stimulus than sugar. But he also noted that the human brain is hardwired to prefer sweet flavors. "When we're children, we prefer high sugar foods right away, but not high fat," he said. "We develop preferences for fat, but we're basically born with a preference for sugar." Dr. Stice said the bulk of brain research on fat and sugar was pointing to the idea that addressing societal problems with overeating should start with sugar. "If you look at our American diet, most people are consuming considerably more sugar than fat," he said. "We've really ramped up the sugar in our diets, but we've backed off on fat." In her own research, Dr. Avena has found that sugar and fat influence brain chemistry and behavior when consumed in large quantities. Animals given small amounts of each do not show many changes. But when they are given unlimited access to either, those that gorge on sugar in particular show changes in their opiate receptors — which help regulate pain, reward and euphoria — and when the sugar is suddenly taken away, they show signs of withdrawal. "These foods themselves are not inherently addictive through their taste per se," said Dr. Ludwig, the director of the New Balance Foundation Obesity Prevention Center at Boston Children's Hospital. "It's the effects that they have on our metabolism. If our blood sugar is stable, we can walk by a bakery and be much less tempted than if our blood sugar is crashing. Your brain knows these foods are going to rescue low blood sugar. But then this sets up the next cycle." Meanwhile, researchers from Manchester have launched a new study to determine whether blood sugar levels during pregnancy, lower than the level used to diagnose gestational diabetes, influences later levels of body fat in children and development of diabetes in mothers after giving birth. The team from The University of Manchester and Central Manchester NHS Foundation Trust are trying to trace mothers and children who took part in an earlier research project 12 years ago.The original study, the Hyperglycemia and Pregnancy Outcomes (HAPO), looked at 2400 mothers from Manchester who were part of 23,316 mother-child pairs worldwide. They found that a mother's blood sugar levels, even short of diabetes, were associated with how heavy or fat her baby was. Avni Vyas, from The University of Manchester's Institute of Human Development, said: "We know that heavy babies are more likely to become overweight as children and that mothers with poor health and early signs of diabetes in pregnancy are at increased risk of having adverse outcomes at delivery such as; shoulder dystocia, caesarean sections and babies that are overweight and possibly hyperglycaemic. These children then go on to become unhealthy in later life and the cycle is perpetuated." Some 800 mothers and their children (now aged 8 to 12 years) will have their height, weight, blood pressure, body fat, blood sugar, insulin, and blood fats measured as part of new experiment. Dr Michael Maresh, Obstetrician at St Mary's Hospital, Manchester, said: "The original study has helped us to better understand the relationship between blood sugar levels in pregnancy and whether they are related to increased risk for the mother having complications during delivery or her baby having problems. As a result of this important study, medical and public health opinion regarding healthy blood sugar levels in pregnancy is changing. It is now becoming common practice to aim to have lower blood sugar levels during pregnancy than was originally accepted." Professor Peter Clayton, Paediatric Endocrinologist at the Manchester Children's Hospital and Professor of Child Health and Paediatric Endocrinology at The University of Manchester, added: "If we can determine risk factors for obesity early in life, then we have the opportunity to do something about it. This could help to prevent some of thelater life consequences of obesity, such as heart disease and diabetes. Sugar makes you fat and fat free food isn't really free of fat. Source: http://sputniknews.com/Image: flickr.com
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Good gut bacteria may increase with exercise, protein intake

Good gut bacteria may increase with exercise, protein intake - study
Photo: RIA Novosti
Researchers seem to come up with new benefits of exercising in almost every study. The latest research found that regular exercise may encourage good bacteria diversity in the gut, while inactivity could do the opposite, Fox News cites a new study from Ireland published in the journal Gut.
By Olga Yazhgunovich: Lots of studies have previously shown that people who have "large and diverse" populations of germs in their digestive tracts tend to be less susceptible to obesity, immune problems, and other health disorders than people with low microbial diversity, so it's possible that frequent exercise may improve metabolism and overall health and help people lose weight by altering the bacteria inside of them. To prove this, researchers looked at professional rugby players attending their team's preseason training camp, as well as at 46 young Irish men who formed two comparison groups and found that the athletes had a more diverse collection of bacteria in their digestive systems than other healthy men. One comparison group included men who had a body mass index (BMI) in the normal range, (25 or less), and were generally fit (exercised lightly); the other group of men were overweight or obese, with a BMI of 28 or more, and were less fit, Live Science reports. "We chose professional athletes as a study group, because we wanted to be sure not to miss any effect of exercise and needed a group who were safely performing at the extremes of human endeavor," said Dr. Fergus Shanahan, an author of the study, professor of gastroenterology and director of the Alimentary Pharmabiotic Center at University College Cork. The scientists drew blood and collected stool samples from all of the men, asked them to complete detailed questionnaires about their exercise and diet, and spoke with a nutritionist about their typical daily food intake. Then the scientists analyzed the men's blood for markers of muscle damage and inflammation, which would indicate how much each volunteer had - or had not - been moving and exercising recently. The scientists also used sophisticated genetic sequencing techniques to identify and enumerate the particular microbes living in each man's gut. It showed that the rugby players had considerably more diversity as well as larger numbers of a particular bacterium, uneuphoniously named Akkermansiaceae that has been linked in past studies with a decreased risk for obesity and systemic inflammation, NYT reports. This may be the result of athletes eating more calories, fruits, vegetables, fat, and protein. The latter represented 22 percent of the athletes' total calories, but only 15 to 16 percent of the comparison groups'. Such nutritional differences can affect which microbes thrive in the gut. "We don't know for certain if it is the exercise per se, or the dietary changes accompanying exercise that mediate the change in microbial diversity," Dr. Shanahan said. "It may have been the combination." Although the exact mechanism remains unclear, Shanahan says he suspects both diet and exercise have a positive influence on microbial diversity, which in turn boosts the immune system while preventing the body's inflammatory response from becoming overactive. The amount of exercise needed to multiply gut bacteria is also not known, the researchers said. But it's clear that people do not need to be professional athletes to see some of the benefits. Meanwhile Dr. Shanahan and his colleagues have begun a follow-up study examining whether and how moderate exercise changes the gut environment in both men and women. The results should be available later this year. Source: http://sputniknews.com/
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How to enjoy your food and lose weight?


Photo: RIA Novosti
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Hundreds of millions of people would like to lose weight and become fitter. So what is stopping them? There is certainly no shortage of literature and information available on how to improve one’s diet. But could we be approaching this problem from the wrong point of view by trying to limit the amount of food we eat rather than by changing what we eat? Victor Michaelson, Managing Partner of Consulting Group Slow Food Ulitka shared with the Voice of Russia's Eco Plus his different point of view, and he is worth listening to.

Read more: http://sputniknews.com/voiceofrussia/radio_broadcast/47136388/273262229/
By: John Harrison Can people like me change our eating habits? 
  • Victor Michaelson: First and foremost, you have to change your mindset and don’t preach, on the one hand, and defend yourself that things that you do are because of your stressful life, because of the inability of good food around and so on. There is always a way to carry life that you are satisfied with. And I would say that there are two basic things. First is diversity, your food has to be diverse. You don’t have to stick to something specific, should it be Coca Cola, which I stress out completely, or chocolate, which is not so bad in limited quantities. The second thing is just to limit yourself, not to eat too much. We all know that we eat too much. And the first task that I would give to everyone who turns to me for an advice, is to try to limit the quantity of food you eat. But is it possible for people like me, who’ve been eating the way we eat?
  • Victor Michaelson: I need to turn to my own personal story. I started looking at what I'm eating at the age of 45, which is not exactly the teenager or a toddler age. And my eating habits changed drastically, as well as the functioning of my body, my look, my health level and so on. And it wasn’t a revolutionary change, it was evolutional. I started to look what I'm eating, first. And started to try to eat less, especially in the second half of the day. It is not like you’d have to finish eating 6 hours before you go to sleep. And after the last eat for three hours you are fine, and then in the last three hours before you go to bed you are hungry and you struggling with it. It is not a good thing. You have to eat whenever you want to eat, just to eat less. Ideally, is eating six times a day. Is there a way that a layman like me can know where to get, let’s talk about dried fruit, which hasn’t got sugar in it?
  • Victor Michaelson: I'm not a professional, I'm not a specialist, I'm just within this movement and spent a lot of time, even years in it, so I have some understanding. I visit markets. There are plenty of markets in Moscow, for example, and everywhere in the country. And in Moscow, we have these weekend markets. Pretty much every district would have one. There should be someone who is selling dried fruits. And you should go to this person and ask him what exactly you have sugar free. And you will be surprised how happy this person will be to show a real stuff. He would pull something and say – this is a real kuraga (dried apricots)from my mountains or brought by my friend. It looks ugly, it looks like brownish stones and you would never buy it in the supermarket, because it is not shining with the colour and so on. But if you take it home and put in a hot water for several minutes, you will have the most delicious thing in this period of your life. Do you need to become a health food fanatic?
  • Victor Michaelson: Slow food is about enjoying life and enjoying food. You have to be a hedonist, but you have to be an enlightened hedonist, educated hedonist. You listen to your intuition, you listen to the general attitude and what people are saying, what people are writing about it.
You go to the market with someone who is more profound in this issue who would show that this is a good thing, this is not. You talk to the people who sell it, because at least half of them are pretty honest people who really want you to buy good stuff. And also, when you limit the quantity of food, you save money. And when you save money, you are able to buy something more expensive on the same budget. Source: http://sputniknews.com/
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The secrets of Siberia’s frozen snow brides revealed

Stunning winter brides. Picture: Vera Salnitskaya
By Anna Liesowska, What do you do if you have no option but to get married in the harsh and cold Russian winters? We find out… The secrets behind keeping Siberia’s brides happy - and warm - in the midst of our harsh winter have been revealed by one of the region’s top photographers. Novosibirsk-based Vera Salnitskaya knows exactly what it takes to help women realise their dream of becoming real-life snow queens for the day. From recommending footwear and hiding thermals under dresses, to covering up reddening cold noses and lacing tea with brandy, the 30-year-old has perfected the art of making her wedding parties forget that temperatures outside might well be -37C. She tells The Siberian Times: 'Why do couples choose to marry in winter here? Well, what choice do they have in a place where winter may last for nine months? 'The first couple I ever took pictures of were called Ekaterina and Sergey. It was December and it wasn’t very cold, only about -20C perhaps, but still when the bride was taking her coat off to pose with her naked arms and shoulders I was shaking my head and hurrying her to get dressed. 'I told her, 'You’ll get cold’'but she answered back, 'Never mind that – I want to look beautiful'. 'Oh that brides’ desire to be beautiful! The thing is, the coats that are offered in wedding dress shops are made from teddy bear skin. They are pure synthetics and, frankly, I think that it would be warmer without them than in them. The coats are usually short with the neck open to every wind. And no, you can’t put an ordinary coat above the ‘princess dress’, and it is often too expensive to buy a luxurious real fur coat'.
What do you do if you have no option but to get married in harsh Siberian winter? Picture: Vera Salnitskaya
Born in a village near Novosibirsk, Vera graduated from the electromechanical faculty at Novosibirsk Technical University before starting her working life as a designer. She is now one of the Siberian city’s top photographers, working with a number of local newspapers. With long winters, many brides have no option but to get married in snowy conditions and Vera often has to give out impromptu fashion, and weather, advice to her couples. She says: 'I am always asking my brides to be take something warm with them. It doesn’t matter what it us, just as long as they can have it when we are walking from the car to the area where they’ll pose for me. 'I also ask them to wrap something around their necks. I think the person that invented the typical style of wedding coats have only seen real snow in American Christmas movies. 'On their legs you can put warm thick tights or thermals under the dress. I am very strict with my brides in saying that they can choose anything they like – as long as their legs and feet are warm. So traditional Russian Valenki or Uggs or other warm boots. 'Typically the wedding dress is long and it is more important to keep their legs warm than to get sick after posing in high heel shoes in the middle of a snow drift. 
'Oh that brides’ desire to be beautiful...!' Picture: Vera Salnitskaya
'They do usually listen to me, but sometimes that desire to be beautiful wins over common sense. I remember a bride called Natasha whose wedding was in January, when it was -30C. I spoke to her a day before the wedding day about warm shoes, and as we left the house I asked her again if she had taken the boots. 'She said 'yes' but when we come to the park she jumps out of the car in her delicate shoes and thin white tights into the snow. I’m standing with my camera, in warm valenkis, thermals, three pair of trousers above the thermals, a thick coat, gloves and a very warm hat. 'The absurdity of it is that the dress is so long the pictures don’t even show what kind of footwear the bride has on'.
'I tell them to take good hats as their ears go bright red within seconds of being outside'. Pictures: Vera Salnitskaya
Vera says she is surprised by the fact so many people in Siberia forget how cold the weather might be on their big day. 'I think often winter weddings are planned in the house, without going out and feeling what it would be like to pose barely dressed', she says. 'Of course when discussing their ideal images all couples promise that they will be ready to run around in the snow, make snowmen, go ice skating, you name it'. 'But you are lucky if you can take them for longer than ten minutes out of the car. 'They get immediately cold and start shivering, and their noses, ears and hands get bright red. And then naturally there is no point in taking pictures'.
Siberian snow brides. Pictures: Vera Salnitskaya
Surprisingly Vera says the grooms do not fare any better than their brides. 'Unlike the brides they have to wear shoes', she explains. 'I remember one wedding, of Anastasia and Anatoly, on February 15th. She is happily jumping about in her comfortable Uggs, and he is turning into an icicle in his fashionable shoes. 'He says to me, 'She is lucky, she’s got her feet warm. But I am getting frozen here'. Vera says she now has to pass on tips to the grooms just as much as the brides before they get their photographs taken, down to even giving fashion and make-up advice. She says: 'I tell them to take good hats as their ears go bright red within seconds of being outside. Also the make-up shouldn’t only be about the brides, grooms too should put some tone on their noses and ears. 'We also take tea with brandy, or tea with ginger and lemon - it helps, but not for long'. The best way to protect yourself against the freezing temperature is a beautiful skiing costume…But a rare bride would go for that'. Source: Article
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World's largest coffee bean painting


Coffee beans are usually ground for making everyone's favorite morning drink. But they can also be put to other uses. In Russia, one million coffee beans are being used to make a giant painting. The art piece has even been registered in the Russia's Book of Records as the world's biggest. The picture, showing a face of a woman and a cup of coffee, was exhibited in Russia's Gorky Park in Moscow. The artist together withThe several assistants worked 10 days to create the picture measuring 30 square meters. editor-in-chief of Russia's Book of Records measured the painting and registered it as the biggest in the world. The previous one was made in Albania, which was 25 square meters. The creators of the painting said they had already applied to the Guinness Book of Records to register their achievement. Source; Sam Daily Times
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International Aeronautics Festival: Ballooning over an ancient Russian city

The International Aeronautics Festival of balloonists started in Pereslavl-Zalessky on Thursday. The Voice of Russia correspondent Margarita Oshun flew on board a balloon, and she was amazed by the landscape of the ancient Russian city below.
The residents of the ancient Russian city of Pereslavl-Zalessky have already got used to enjoying the parade of large balloons flying in the sky. Ballooning fans are happy that they get an opportunity get a bird’s-eye view of the city, and they spend millions of rubles to buy cloth, gas cylinders and the trailers
that transport the basket, burners, fans and other things. In fact, almost one kilometer-long fire-proof piece of cloth is necessary to tailor one aerostat. Eleven experienced pilots are taking part in the festival, says its organizer Anna Grushevich. They take from 3 to 4 people on board. We fly only during the safe period
of time, from 6.00 am to 8.00 pm. The altitude is limited to 800 meters. We meet and contact each other, and watch the spectacular performances, 11 balloons in flight. While passengers on board at an altitude of 80 to 800 meters, pilots don’t have time to relax. They must land as close as they can to the target, a white cross set by the first balloon that started the flight 3 minutes ahead of others. The ballooners
describe this as “hare hunting” in their sport-slang. The possibility for manoeuvers is quite restricted because the craft flies downwind. In short, the pilot watches the target with one eye and the altitude indicator with the other. Using this indicator, the pilot avoids a possible collision with the neighboring balloons. If a balloon touches a cupola, it’s not dangerous, says President of the Aeronautics Federation
of the Yaroslavl region, Dmitry Koryakin, explaining the safety measures. But it’s very dangerous if the basket of the balloon collides with a cupola and the cloth tears. Then the craft can rapidly fall, he adds. Once a burner went out of order, says another pilot Pavel Kholod. As a result the balloon ceased to get
hot air. And I started losing altitude swiftly. ground, I did not lose self-control, and managed to land safely, he added. Once I landed in a fir tree, Dmitry Koryakin said. My friend landed in a pasture. I fly in the sky
to relax my mind from everything earthy, says to Dmitry Koryakin, explaining his hobby. Everything means the fuss on the while peace, calm and tranquility - in the sky, he says. After the flight a ceremonyof inaugurating newcomers ballooning is held. A Champaign according bottle is opened and a title of Nikolai Pereslavl-Zalessky is presented, to the place where they landed. Margarita OshunSource: Voice Of Russia
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Sotheby's brings Picasso, Miro to Moscow for 'priciest ever' show

Sotheby's brings Picasso, Miro to Moscow for 'priciest ever' show
Sotheby's on Thursday brought paintings by Picasso and Miro to Moscow for what it called its most valuable show ever in Russia, seeking wealthy buyers ahead of sales next month. The two-day exhibition at a gallery in central Moscow shows paintings including Picasso's "Tete de Femme" with an estimate of $20 to $30 million (14 to 22 million euros), and Catalan master Joan Miro's "Bonheur d'aimer ma brune". The auction house said the paintings on view in Moscow were valued at a total of more than $140 million. Moscow has joined a circuit of major world cities such as New York and Hong Kong where the top London auction houses Sotheby's and Christie's bring works for a preview ahead of sales for the convenience of wealthy clients. The Picasso and Miro paintings will be sold in New York on November 6.Paintings by Russian artists Semyon Faibisovich and Robert Falk will be sold on November 25 at a specialised sale in London, which Sotheby's said attracts mainly Russian buyers. The auction house is targeting Russian collectors who are growing in number and are the main purchasers of their national art, said Joanna Vickery, the head of Sotheby's Russian department. "The reason we're bringing them here to Moscow is that most of our buyers today are mostly based in Russia. And they're very busy. They don't always have time to travel to London for the sales," she said. "We see time and time again there's love for their own art," Vickery said of Russian art collectors, specifying that 90 percent of them came from Russia or other ex-Soviet countries. Voice of Russia, AFP.  Source: The Voice of Russia
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Yoga: how we do it in Russia

Photo: RIA Novosti
Today yoga is a must-activity for every Moscow yuppie. However, this trend took years to settle in Russia, though some progressive intellectuals showed interest in the practice long before the Revolution of 1917. Russian artists and creative people were well familiar with Indian philosophy and yoga already in the late 19th century. In the article about yoga in Russia, Russia Beyond the Headlines writes that theatre director Constantin Stanislavski incorporated several yoga exercises and spiritual techniques into his Stanislavski’s System to stimulate actors' attention and concentration on stage. In the early 20th century, books on yoga begin to appear in Russia, like those by American writer William Atkinson, including his Yoga Series and The Science of Psychic Healing. Among other published books were Swami Vivekananda’s Raja Yoga, Yoga Sutras by Patanjali and Bhagavad Gita. Amazing fact: Bhagavad Gita first appeared in Russia under the reign of Ivan the Terrible; its manuscript was sent to the tsar as a gift from one of the Great Moghuls. Today, this manuscript is being kept in Moscow archives of the Foreign Ministry. However, yoga development in Russia was interrupted by the Revolution, and the following Civil War. Though yoga existed in the Stalin era, not that many dared to practice it. Some of the then-yogis were prisoners of numerous labor camps, which spread across the vast country. Russia Beyond the Headlines writes that one of the most well-known inmate-yogis was philosopher and writer Dmitry Panin, who became a character of Solzhenitsyn’s novel In The First Circle, and the famous diva Tatyana Okunevskaya, who told journalists that she had survived in GULAG camps only due to “fresh carrots and yoga”. Okunevskaya practiced yoga every day, and kept up the routine for the rest of her life. At that time there was one brave man who promoted yoga in the repressions-fear-gripped Russia, Boris Smirnov – a surgeon, who was arrested and sent to a camp in the Central Asian city of Ashgabat. In the camp Smirnov studied Sanskrit and in 1939 started his work to translate the Indian epos Mahabharata into Russian. After years of work he translated eight volumes. Stalin died in 1953, and the Khrushchev Thaw brought new hopes for at least some freedom. Then peaceful Brezhnev’s era of stagnation followed and people calmed down, their life settled and they could finally do something for their spiritual growth. It was the beginning of the second birth for Russian yoga. In 1963, Ivan Efremov's Razor's Edge novel was published, where the writer explained the basic principles of yoga in a simple and clear way. At the same time, articles about the therapeutic effect of yoga began to appear in magazines. They were authored by expert in Indian studies Anatoly Zubkov, the first certified teacher of yoga in the USSR, who spent many years in India and met yoga gurus there. They showed him the basics and later Zubkov promoted the activity all across the USSR. In the 1970s, Zubkov wrote a script for the first Soviet documentary about yoga. In the 1970s, the Soviet government invited the iconic yoga mentor Dhirendra Brahmachari to the USSR. Some rumors had it that it was done to apply yoga techniques in cosmonaut training. In the 1980s, first yoga groups appeared, its members practiced mainly in one another’s apartments, but things became legal in the late 1980s, when yoga was a subject for research by scientists who dealt with alternative healing methods. In 1989, the first Conference on Yoga was held in the USSR. After the Soviet Union collapse, yoga, which was officially taboo in the Soviet times, has been welcomed by Russia’s trendy and wealthy. Russians rushed to catch up with the trend for everything Indian. Goa became a top vacation and downshifting spot, while Indian clothes, furniture and food were a must have. In 2010, Russia had its first Yoga Week and guru Sri Sri Ravi Shankar visited St. Petersburg, Moscow, Kazan, Irkutsk; Sochi and the site of a new ashram in nearby Black Sea town of Tuapse. At a seminar called "Ethics in Business" at the Ritz-Carlton posh hotel in Moscow, Shankar spoke about Vedic philosophy and the spiritual subtext of corruption. "Corruption begins outside the purview of belongingness,” he said, in response to a question about how to battle corruption. The only way to overcome corruption, he said, was "to reorient people, educate them," adding "the governments, religious bodies, NGO’s, business, all of them have to work together." According to NYT, Shankar's Art of Living Foundation, which was started with the vision of creating a stress-free society, has its Russian headquarters in a Moscow business center. The organization sent instructors to North Ossetia to work with victims of the school hostage-taking in Beslan in 2002, and to Tskhinvali in South Ossetia after the Georgian aggression in 2008, and it has also worked with the Russian military. In 2007, shortly before he became president, Dmitry Medvedev told reporters that he was “mastering yoga,” as the activity helps him deal with the stress of political duties. That immediately led to speculation that yoga would become a national number one sports, as judo has under Vladimir Putin, or tennis under Boris Yeltsin. Though the Russian Orthodox Church regards some forms of yoga as dangerous sects, yoga studios began to appear in Moscow and finally could have been found in almost every health club or gym. Today, more and more Russians get involved with this Indian practice of physical and spiritual self-discipline as well as a lifestyle linked to it. There are at now at least 100,000 people who practice yoga regularly in Moscow and St Petersburg alone, according to the Russian version of Yoga Journal. Source: Voice Of Russia
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Girl has her beloved fiance’s name tattooed on her face

Girl has her beloved fiance’s name tattooed on her face
A girl in love has allowed her beloved fiancé to tattoo his name in 12cm Gothic script across her face. “It’s a symbol of our eternal devotion,” she said.
Lesya Toumaniantz said she decided to have a tattoo on her face the day she met her future fiancé Ruslan Toumaniantz. “I’d like him to tattoo every inch of my body,” she added, showing the words “all for love” inked above her eyebrow. The couple got engaged last month. They met in Moscow, where they are going to get married. This is not the first controversial tattoo made by tattooist Ruslan Toumaniantz. He used to have a tattoo parlour in Belgium, where he had tattooed 56 stars on the face of Kimberley Vlaeminck, while she was sleeping. The girl had then claimed he had misunderstood her request, as she had wanted only three stars tattooed on her face. Later the young girl withdrew her complaint. Voice of Russia, Metro.co.uk  Source:  The Voice of Russia
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Mariinsky presents extensive program in Spain

балет Чайковский Лебединое озеро Мариинский театр Санкт-Петербург
Photo: RIA Novosti
St.Petersburg’s Mariinsky Theatre presented the concert version of the opera Iolanthe at the Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona on Thursday. The title part was performed by Russian operatic soprano Anna Netrebko. The itinerary of the Mariinsky Threatre’s current tour of Spain includes five more cities, the last one being Santa Cruz de Tenerife, the capital of the Canary Islands. The Mariinsky company will perform Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto and Shostakovich’s Tenth Symphony, and will present the world premiere of Clarinet Concerto No.2 by Nino Diaz. Source: Voice of Russia
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Yekaterinburg hosts world festival of clowns

The 5th World Festival of Clowns opens in Russia’s city of Yekaterinburg in the Urals to welcome the most successful clowns from Germany, Switzerland, Italy, France, Belgium and Israel.
Russia is represented by Sergei Prosvirin, a clown with a saxophone. Prosvirin is a successor of one of Russia`s most popular clowns, Yuri Nikulin. The festival has no jury and no competition, with the clowns simply gathering to send people joy. Source; Voice of RussiaImage: flickr.com
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Picasso’s 'Woman Sitting Near a Window' sold for $ 45 million

Picasso’s 'Woman Sitting Near a Window' sold for $ 45 million
A canvas by Pablo Picasso Woman Sitting Near a Window has been sold at London’s Sotheby's auction house for 45.76 million dollars.
The original estimated cost of the painting, dated 1932 and depicting the artist's muse, Marie-Therese Walter, had been between £25 million and £35 million. "We are delighted that this stunning and monumental portrait, which is part of the defining series that introduced his 'golden muse' to the public eye, fetched such a strong price," said a representative of the auction house, Helena Newman. "This particular portrait is a striking and notably modern-looking work from one of the artist's most celebrated periods.” Voice of Russia, TASS, Source: Voice of Russia
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Russian fairy-tale at Viennese Ball

The Russian ball in Vienna appointed on the 7th of February promises a fairy-tale to its guests. This festive night at the formerly imperial and now presidential residence of Hofburg is, on the one hand, part of the traditional Viennese ball season and, on the other, a beautiful introduction to an exchange of cultural seasons planned between Russia and Austria for the next three years.
By Karina Ivashko: This  will  be  the  seventh  Russian  ball  in  the  Austrian  capital.  It  always attracts attention, and not only of Austrians interested in Russian history and culture. This time, for example, guests are expected to arrive from 13 countries, the hostess of the ball Nathalie Holzmueller said in her interview with The Voice of Russia. “Just imagine the imperial palace which is called one of the most elegant palaces in Europe. Imagine the room with chandeliers given by Russian Emperor Alexander I to the Austrian monarchy. It was at the time of the Congress of Vienna 1814-1815, which is known to have determined the fate of Europe. Alexander I lived in Vienna for a long time and took part in that congress which came down in history as a ‘dancing congress’. Three is a suite of rooms in Hofburg that bears Emperor Alexander’s name.” The figure of Johann Strauss Jr., the Waltz King, became the symbol of cultural relations between Russia and Austria in the 19th century. He spent 11 summer seasons in Russia performing with his orchestra and also Russian musicians in the palaces of St. Petersburg and its environs, such as the Czar’s Village, Pavlovsk and Peterhof. At present residents of St. Petersburg hold and international festival called The Great Waltz in memory of those seasons. At the turn of the 21st century Russian musician and conductor Vladimir Fedoseyev had an impact on the Viennese musical environment. He was the main conductor of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra for 8 years. The Russian ball in Vienna did not emerge out of the blue either but was evoked by impressions of today’s cultural life in Russia. Nathalie Holzmueller, a native of Russia and a graduate of St. Petersburg Conservatory, says: “Several times I was a guest at the Mariinsky Theatre balls called White Nights Balls in the Catherine Palace in the Czar’s Village. I was stupefied with the splendour of the throne room, smart and elegant guests, wonderful ornaments, delightful tables, flowers and the Mariinsky Theatre orchestra with Maestro Gergiev and the best soloists. The fireworks and ballet on the ponds were mind-boggling. As a child I always dreamed of being invited to a real ball, so I developed a passionate desire to organize something similar and persuaded Valery Gergiev to throw a ball in Vienna, the European ball capital.” Maestro Gergiev liked the idea. The first three Russian balls were under the auspices of the Mariinsky Theatre which showed its young talents in Vienna. With time the circle of performers grew wider and balls started to be dedicated to a certain theme. This year’s theme is The Russian Fairy-Tale. It is a fairy-tale and also a dream come true. The hostess will play the part of a fairy and wonders of performing art will be demonstrated by the Bolshoi Theatre soprano Dinara Alieva, The Indian Summer vocal group from Moscow and The Merry-Go-Round children’s dancing workshop from Vienna. The sponsors’ aim is not only to make people happy but also to show the Russia which they know and love, without stereotypes and primitive iconic images. Austrian journalists call the Russian Ball a symbol of Russian culture abroad. Its hostess Nathalie Holzmueller assures that most Austrians are delighted with Russia and interested in it. Source: Voice of Russia
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Kremlin treasures on display in Germany

оружейная палата экспонат оружейная палата кремль музей
A unique exhibition of treasures from Moscow’s Kremlin “Between East and West” has opened in Residenzchloss palace in Dresden, Germany.
The exhibition is one of the key events of Russia-Germany cross cultural year. More than 140 works of Russian craftsmen, including parade arms and rare clothes are on display. The exhibition covers the period between 1547 when Ivan the Terrible ascended the throne and 1712 when Peter the Great declared St. Petersburg Russia’s new capital. Many of the masterpieces represented at the exhibition have never been taken outside the Kremlin walls before. The exhibition will last till March 4, 2013. Source: Voice of Russia
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Spectacular 'iceworks' shine in Japan Snow Fest

The 64th Sapporo Snow Festival has opened in Japan featuring 216 snow statues and ice sculptures which were built with the assistance of army units.
The spectacular 15-meter-tall snow compositions represent scenes from Japanese mythology, cartoon and fairytale characters, and famous sportsmen. The exhibits include a full-size building of the Kabuki Theatre in Tokyo. More than 32 tons of snow went into the creation of the ‘iceworks’. The snow and ice sculptures glitter with numerous lights at nighttime. The festival will come to a close on February 11th Source: Voice of Russia
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2 winning tickets to share $580 mln lottery jackpot

 Powerball лотерея  сша
Organizers of US Powerball lottery have said two winning tickets brought in Arizona and Missouri will share a huge jackpot of $580 million. No one has claimed the sweet prize yet.
The lucky numbers were 5, 16, 22, 23, 29 and 6. They were drawn Wednesday night, after 16 consecutive draws failed to produce a winner. The jackpot is the biggest in Powerball history. Some 160 lottery tickets participated in the game. The money heap will be either handed out to this year’s winners in full or paid in installments over the span of 29 years. Mega Millions still holds the record for the biggest win of $656 million, which was divided between three lucky winners in March of 2012. Voice of Russia, RIA, Source: Voice of Russia
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Miami art gallery exhibits paintings of Michael Jackson’s chimpanzee

The sculpture "Michael jackson and Bubbles" of US artist Jeff Koons. Photo: AFP
Art Basel Miami Beach is exhibiting paintings of Bubbles, Michael Jackson’s chimpanzee companion. Bubbles’ works are displayed side by side with paintings of modern artists. Anyone can buy the chimpanzee’s two abstract paintings, priced at $1,500 each. All the funds raised during ‘Endangered’ exhibition will be transferred to the Center for Great Apes, the place where Bubbles has lived for the last 8 years. The Center is a sanctuary for 29 chimpanzees and 15 orangutans, some of them confiscated from illegal exotic pet traders, others having come from biomedical research labs and showbiz. Voice of Russia, Gazeta.ru, Source: Voice of Russia
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The treasures of European antiques presented in Moscow

© Photo: Armen Apresyan
From Rembrandt to Picasso and Marc Chagall, from Pieter Bruegel the Younger to Fernando Botero... European, American and Russian art from the 16th century to now are presented at the first Russian exhibition of antique art at the Volkhonka Fine Arts Center. 
The first Russian Antiques fair organised jointly by the Volkhonka Fine Arts Center and several foreign galleries and museums has opened in Moscow. Strictly speaking, there are more than antiques at the fair: the works of 16th and 17th century German and Dutch masters are exhibited next to some avant-garde stars of the 20th century, such as famous modern Colombian figurative artist, Fernando Botero.
Tarkhov, 'Breton women' © Photo: Armen Apresyan
Galina Churak is an Art historian and heads the section of paintings from the late 19th - to early 20th century at the State Tretyakov Gallery. She shares with the Voice of Russia her impressions of the show. "It is very good that a wide spectrum of works spanning art from the 16th century to our days are on display for a mass audience. It is important that works of Russian painters are included in this international context. It is taking place not for the first time, but unfortunately, so far it has been not a widespread practice".  According to Marina Churak, Russian art is not sufficiently known in the West, a historic situation that was shaped a long time ago by many factors. "One of the main causes was the notorious Iron Curtain, which blocked people as well as works of art from moving around openly", says Galina Churak, "we are now witnessing how people can freely move around the world, art now travels freely as well. And Russian art is gradually starting to open up to Western viewers, despite the fact that in this exhibition, the section on Russian art is quite modest, both in terms of quantity and quality of the selected works". Works of practically all styles and genres are presented in the halls of the Fine Arts
Cranach, 'The Virgin and Child with St. Catherine' © Photo: Armen Apresyan
"Old masters produce a very pleasant impression," Galina Churak points out. "As a person who specialises in classic art, I intentionally or unintentionally prefer the old masters. There are quite a few Dutch painters of the 16th and 17th centuries on show here. Pieter Bruegel the Younger, the wonderful work of Lucas Cranach, 'The Virgin and Child with St. Catherine' are examples of the highest standard. I don't think every museum has works of such quality. Besides that, one can see works by Alexey Yavlensky, an artist of Russian origin who belongs equally to the Russian and European schools of early 20th century art. Also on show are sculptures by Alexander Arkhipenko and Paolo Trubetskoy... Those artists, whose lives were connected to European art, helped reveal to the modern world the standard and
Rembradt, 'Joseph Telling His Dreams' © Photo: Armen Apresyan
quality of the Russian masters". The works of Fernando Botero are one of the star features of the fair. At present, Botero is the most famous and one of the most expensive Latin American artists of his generation. His art, deeply rooted in Colombian culture, is extremely popular all over the world. Leading world museums fight to own his paintings and sculptures, so full of sunny expression and good-natured humour. His sculptures decorate many European cities. Botero's works are very popular at art auctions and their prices often exceed a million dollars. There is only one work by Botero in a Russian museum; 'Still Life with Watermelon', which the artist himself presented to the State Hermitage and is on show in the hall of European and American 20th century art. Source: Voice of Russia
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