The Colors of Russia – Telegram
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The Kuperlya Waterfall💦, in the Republic of Bashkortostan

This waterfall is located on the territory of the vast ‘Bashkiria’ national park, not far from the Nugush water reservoir. It is one of the most beautiful waterfalls in the republic.

The waterfall has several cascades and steps. The height of the peak part of this bubbling stream is an impressive 15 metres.

It is located in a rugged mountainside, so you will have to get there by off-road vehicle. But you will be generously rewarded with gorgeous views from the observation decks!

#ILoveRussia ❤️

#BeautifulRussia
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1️⃣Russian Biosatellite "Bion-M" Returns to Earth 🚀

Russia's Bion-M biosatellite has returned to Earth after a 30-day mission in space, landing in the Orenburg region.

The spacecraft carried a wide array of living organisms of 75 rodents, 1,500 fruit flies, as well as seeds, fungi, lichens, and cell cultures. This mission continues a long-standing Soviet and Russian project: between 1973 and 1996, eleven satellites were launched for biological research.

Studying these organisms helps scientists understand the effects of weightlessness and space radiation on living creatures. This research is crucial for preparing humans for long-duration flights into deep space.

#GoodNews@TCofRus
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2️⃣. A Rare Dolphin is Born at Moscow's Oceanography Center

A rare Black Sea bottlenose dolphin, a protected species listed in the Red Book, has been born at the Moskvarium Oceanography and Marine Biology Center at VDNKh.
The calf was born to a dolphin named Nota, who became a mother for the second time after giving birth to another calf, Loki, in 2023. The newborn is in excellent health, feeding actively on its mother's milk and already playing with her. Its health is being monitored around the clock. However, the little one still doesn't venture far from its mother's side.

📝 #GoodNews@TCofRus
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3️⃣. Russia Emerges as a Leader in Medical Tourism🩺

Russia is rapidly becoming a global leader in inbound medical tourism. Between 2019 and 2024, over 21.5 million foreign citizens visited the country for medical treatment, including 5 million in 2024 alone. According to the Imarc Group, the value of Russia's exported medical services reached $2.36 billion in 2024.

The most popular medical fields are oncology, orthopedics, neurosurgery, and cardiology. Moscow and St. Petersburg are the top competing destinations for patients seeking treatment and wellness.

Deputy Health Minister Yevgeniya Kotova highlighted that foreigners are attracted by the high quality of medical education, the well-developed healthcare infrastructure, and the cost of services, which are significantly lower for many procedures compared to other countries.

💊 #GoodNews@TCofRus
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🌏🇷🇺Lenticular clouds during sunset in the Beloretsk region of Bashkortostan

Photo: ilnur_nikolaevka, dom_lesoruba

I love Russia!❤️
#BeautifulRussia
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🤞 Zhiharka (Animation series - “Mountain of Gems”)

♥️ A fox is trying to steal a little girl named Zhiharka and to eat her. She managed to steal the girl, but failed to eat her.


#RussiaForKids@TCofRus
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🇷🇺Multi-Russia: Bashkortostan

This series of short cartoons is brought to you by the Russian Geographical Society. Each clip introduces one of Russia’s 89 regions.Today’s issue is about Bashkortostan (or Bashkiria): a republic in the Urals, very rich in oil and other natural resources.

#BeautifulRussia@TCofRus
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🇷🇺🖋In Russia, the school literature program includes a short poem by Fyodor Ivanovich Tyutchev, literally one quatrain. Here it is:

You don't grasp Russia with one's mind.
No measure to this foreign place.
She is one off. One of a kind.
With Russia -- one's reduced to faith.


It is easy for teenagers to learn it, recite it by heart in front of the whiteboard and get a good mark. But now, suppose, we have grown up and gained our own life experience, so we can observe and compare facts and phenomena. So what's behind this polished wording? Behind it is a story.
Continues below ⬇️⬇️⬇️

#RussianCulture@TCofRus
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Tyutchev, born in 1803, wrote these lines in 1866. Clearly, he was witness to many events that took place in the 19th century. For example, the Patriotic War of 1812. His parents, affluent people, evacuated from Moscow to Yaroslavl. Recall that Napoleon entered Moscow. Foreign troops - the French, Germans, Poles, Austrians and the like - reached the walls of the Kremlin. Is it conceivable to cope with such a force, poured out of the "European Union" of those days? Who and what can oppose it? Is it at all possible to overcome it? But the Russians began to cope, first by forcing Napoleon to withdraw from Moscow. What did Tyutchev see when he returned there? A city looted and two thirds destroyed by fire. Is it possible to recover after a disaster like this? And not just recover, but actually finish the war in France itself? But the Russians indeed managed to get to Paris in a couple of years. The French capital, by the way, remained intact (draw your own conclusions about one party being "civilized" and the other being "barbarians").

Tyutchev was also witness to the Crimean War of 1853-1856, in which Russia was defeated. And what do you want, when we were attacked from several sides by France, Great Britain and Turkey? And if they couldn't break through our defenses, they stepped back or to the side and engaged in bombarding weakly defended non-military targets (familiar tactics, isn't it?). As a result, Russia lost its right to have a navy or fortresses on the Black Sea, among other things. By the way, Turkey was also prohibited from having its own fleet there, and the Sultan's treasury was declared bankrupt in 1858 after it had taken a loan of 7 million pounds sterling from Great Britain. (So, what was the point for the Turks of fighting for the "European Union", financing this war with the latter's money?) 

And then in 1871 Russia got its Black Sea fleet back via negotiations, without firing a single shot! Can anyone in his right mind expect that a country would go from a military defeat to a diplomatic victory in fifteen years? Russia did.

What are we trying to say with this story? One thing: if you are dealing with Russia, forget your rules and metrics. More generally, forget your logic! Principles that work perfectly well elsewhere surprisingly cease to work in Russia. How this happens, we do not know ourselves, but time after time we make it happen. Our faith-- the faith in Russia--is not blind; it is based on previous generations' experience. We know why we believe in our homeland.

And what about today, are there any parallels? Yes, of course there are! For example, on June 21, the European Union agreed on the 11th(!) package of economic sanctions against Russia. European officials probably proceed from logical assumptions: they plan to undermine the Russian economy with sanctions, weaken the country as a whole, and force it to accept their terms. In theory it all looks very reasonable, but in practice... Oh, they'd better read Tyutchev at school!

#RussianCulture@TCofRus
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🌏🇷🇺Galitsky Park at night, Krasnodar

#ILoveRussia! ❤️
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🌏🇷🇺The Kuril Islands, Shikotan Island. Sakhalin

#ILoveRussia!♥️
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🕰️ Born on October 13, 1829, in an ancient noble family, Pyotr Bartenev emerged as one of Russia’s most influential historians and bibliophiles.

From 1841 to 1847, he studied at the Ryazan Gymnasium, graduating with a gold medal. Between 1847 and 1851, Bartenev attended Moscow University, where he listened to lectures by renowned scholars such as Timofey Granovsky, Mikhail Pogodin, and Sergey Solovyov. During this period, he authored his first historical works, earning the praise of Mikhail Pogodin and establishing himself as a promising young researcher.

A man of remarkable linguistic talents, Bartenev mastered French, German, English, Polish, Latin, Greek, and read Sanskrit fluently. After the University, he served as a private tutor to the grandchildren of Count Dmitry Bludov, gaining invaluable insights into the eras of Tsars Paul I and Alexander I. His collaboration with various journals and his collection of materials on Alexander Pushkin earned him an outstanding reputation among scholars—"among Pushkinists, there was no one equal to him," as Soviet literary critic Mstislav Tsyavlovsky noted almost a century later.

From 1854 to 1858, Bartenev worked at the Moscow Archive of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, gaining an in-depth understanding of Russia’s political history. In 1859, he became the head of Moscow’s largest private library—Chertkov’s Library. It was there, in 1864, that he met Leo Tolstoy, assisting the great writer by gathering historical materials for his epic novel War and Peace.

A staunch advocate for factual accuracy, Bartenev rejected vague historical generalizations, asserting that "true historical science must lead to an understanding of the present." Over a span of fifty years, he was the founder and editor of Russia’s first historical journal, The Russian Archive, which published 598 volumes. The journal became an essential resource for studying Russian history of the 18th and 19th centuries.

A passionate supporter of press freedom, Bartenev fought against censorship, advocating for the publication of all documents. His prolific publishing included The Collection of Letters of Tsar Alexis Mikhailovich, four volumes noscriptd The Eighteenth Century, two books on The Nineteenth Century, and forty volumes of The Vorontsov Archive. His works continue to hold scientific value, cementing his legacy as one of Russia’s most distinguished historians and bibliophiles.

#ThisDayInHistory@TCofRus
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