Almost a week ago now, I was sitting on a train going south. This was not one of those nice trains to St. Petersburg, but a suburban train, known as the электричка (elektrichka), and I was going to a place called Виноградовская Пойма, or Vinogradovskaya Floodplain. On this train ride, I was reading a wonderful novel we read for Diane’s class, The Kukotsky Enigma by Lyudmila Ulitskaya. I’ll try to avoid talking too much about the details of it for those who haven’t read it, but a major theme of the book relates to memory, and on this train as I read this bit about a saxophone, I couldn’t shake off the impression that a saxophone had been important earlier, but I just couldn’t recall when. The environment wasn’t ideal for concentration: the train was loud, the seat was uncomfortable, and occasionally people would come either selling something, singing, or just simply begging. But eventually I recalled, and then I had an epiphany about the novel.

I arrived after two hours on the stuffy, very brown train. I saw a sign that said, roughly “It is prohibited to jump off the platform”, which I incorrectly interpreted to mean that I shouldn’t cross the rails, and subsequently set off in the wrong direction. However, when I ended up in a town I realized my mistake and turned around. I found a singing Booted Warbler as soon as I reached the proper area, among a variety of other reed warblers. Drab little brown birds these all are, but they have nice voices. However, I shortly thereafter found the absolute antithesis of a reed warbler: two European Bee-eaters. I had always dreamed of seeing this bird; looking in my enormous 5-pound book about birds of the world in elementary school I had fantasized about the places that they lived and when I first went to Europe in 2016, I had looked at their images in the bird book wistfully, knowing that in March there was no chance to see them. Coming to Moscow, the odds of seeing one seemed low looking at eBird, and nine weeks with only two reports in the entire Oblast led me to believe I simply could not see one.


Now that I have seen one, I don’t even know how I should feel. In every respect, my seeing them was entirely common place, just like any other bird sighting: I saw a distant bird on a wire, hoped for a shrike since I always hope for a shrike, and immediately decided it wasn’t one. I got a bit closer and secured the identification, took a few bad pictures, and then it flew away. But this was a bee-eater, this was far better than a shrike, and so, what now? Ну что? I had a similar if not even more strong experience when I first saw a hoopoe in Buryatia.


I had directions from a fellow birder, and so far they were good: he had predicted the Booted warbler, and in the following stand of trees he had correctly predicted that I would see multiple species of woodpeckers. Woodpeckers had been something of a nemesis for me before I met this particular person, who helped me, and after seeing all of these I was sated. A bit further up I turned into the actual floodplain, where I found the two desired tern species, White-winged and Whiskered, right where they were supposed to be, as well as some other water birds. I had regrettably come a bit too late for shorebirds, which I consistently failed to see many of on this entire trip to Russia, but I did find at least one, and by luck it was a new one. I looked for a purported Barred Warbler without success, and listened to the chorus of Sedge and Marsh Warblers all around me. Terns loudly screeched, and the guttural wail of a Spotted Crake could be heard coming from deep in the reeds. Then I was supposed to turn. I couldn’t find the spot, but I saw what looked like could be a trail through some grasses, and I headed down there.

This turned out to be a mistake. I stepped over a log to get to the trail and fell straight into muddy water. Deep muddy water, probably three feet at least. I had prepared for such a situation where my shoes got wet by bringing an extra pair, but not for this. Only my backpack avoided to cold touch of the murky depths, as I fell forward, meaning that my copy of the Kukotsky Enigma and my extra pair of shoes survived. Everything else got wet. I frantically checked my passport, but it was ok thank goodness. I then tried to turn my camera on. No response. I dried it some, still nothing. It was ruined. I then tried my phone. Also completely unresponsive. For this reason, some of the pictures on this post are not my own: as of writing, I haven’t been able to recover any data from my phone, on which all of my pictures of the floodplain were taken. Fortunately, Google had backed up all of my Siberia pictures from my phone, so those were saved; also, the SD card in my camera remained functional, so I was able to retrieve my bird pictures.

But this all happened later; at this moment, my entire body was soaking wet, I had walked about four miles from any sort of transportation home, and my map, which had been on my phone, was no more. Somehow, I managed not to panic. I calmly tried to dry anything I could and began to return. The trip was arduous, as weighing on me more than my fifteen pound backpack was the broken camera around my neck and the broken phone on my pocket. But in the end I was sitting on a sofa in the MSU lounge, recalling this whole story, and now here I am typing it up.

The process of repairing what was lost is still ongoing. After a week of trying I finally bought a new phone, an experience that could make its own blog. The fate of the camera is still up in the air. I have tried several programs for extracting data from a dead phone, but none have worked. There still may be a few more to try when I get home. But more prescient for this post is the memory left. The excursion was a bizarre mix of emotions, from ecstasy to panic and fear to calm resolve, and coming to terms with them all immediately afterwards was difficult. Now, I more or less have accepted what happened, but I am too close to the event to understand how I will remember it going forward. In The Kukotsky Enigma, there is a character with dementia who can only remember fragments of ideas about herself, but memory can be a strange thing sometimes even for healthy people. And I can only wonder what will be remembered thirty years from now about the Vinogradovskaya floodplain.

Source 1:
Зубакин, В. “Приглашаем на орнитологическую экскурсию в Виноградовскую пойму”. Союз Охраны Птиц России. Retrieved from http://www.rbcu.ru/news/29909/. Accessed 7 June, 2019.
Source 2:
Rumiantseva, Nadezhda. “Ст. Хлыстуновка”. My Life: Путешествия Железной Дороги. 6 August, 2012. Retrieved from https://tokatema.livejournal.com/33144.html. Accessed 7 June, 2019. Note that this is absolutely not a picture of the train I was on, as it is not even a Moscow train. That said, it looks very similar.
Source 3:
Retrieved from: https://ebird.org/map/eubeat1?neg=true&env.minX=&env.minY=&env.maxX=&env.maxY=&zh=false&gp=false&ev=Z&mr=1-12&bmo=1&emo=12&yr=cur