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-   -   Russia road map (https://www.horizonsunlimited.com/hubb/northern-and-central-asia/russia-road-map-40667)

big ad 6 Feb 2009 20:03

Russia road map
 
Hi

Can anyone reccomend a good road map that covers east to west russia?

Cheers Adam

tnt go east 7 Feb 2009 05:02

When i went thru i found it very nessacery to have two maps..one in english and one in Russian. all the signs are in Russian so they are hard to read. and english map gives you half a chance of asking directions. The map BOOK i used was from Stanfords in London...sorry cant remeber the name but if you check the website, you will see an atlas covering all rusia and the fomer states..

Great country...police can be tough
Tim

Chris of Japan 9 Feb 2009 00:24

Unless you need one right now, you can get a Russian road atlas at many petrol stations. Since it is February now, I assume you won't be going for a few months. Use that time to learn the Cyrillic alphabet. It isn't that hard! And if you can read Cyrillic before you go, you won't have to stop and read every sign one letter at a time.

peegee 9 Feb 2009 07:48

This is ISBN number for whole map to Russia with cyrillic letters. You could try to find where to by with this number. ISBN-985-409-065-5

Pekka

motoreiter 9 Feb 2009 08:59

I totally agree with Chris, spend a few hours to learn the Russian alphabet and get a map at a gas station when you are in Russia, it is not difficult to find a road atlas, although not every gas station has them. I ended up buying a small atlas to fit in my jacket pocket for quick reference during the day, and a bigger, more detailed atlas to pack away in my bag for planning purposes.

colebatch 10 Feb 2009 12:43

Agree with the others above .... going to Russia without learning the Cyrillic alphabet is madness. Its only 32 letters, many are the same as our latin alphabet anyway. It takes less than half a day and will be the best piece of preparation you can do.

If you are passing thru Moscow, there are two places that I have found particularly useful for maps and road atlases over the years. The Moscow book store on Tverskaya is NOT one of them.

(1) Globes, Maps and Atlases, is a little run down old soviet style store in the centre of the city at 9 Kuznetsky Most, 2 mins walk from Kuznetsky Most metro. They have a wide assortment of city maps and provincial maps .... I have found them very useful for maps of individual provinces. There are a number of provinces where the supply of maps is restricted, so you will NOT get a specific map of Sakha / Yakutia ... and maps of Kamchatka and Chukhotka are similarly hard to come by.

(2) best place I have found for the widest selection of ROAD atlases and maps is in an underground bookstore near Krasnye Vorota metro. Walk west along the south side of the Sadovoye Koltso towards Sukharevskaya metro. I cant remember how far you have to walk but you will come to a small modern "shopping centre" (looks like a 4 story modern office block) which when you enter thru the glass doors has an small arcade round to the right and a set of stairs on the left. Go down the stairs and you will find the bookshop. There are few if any signs outside the shopping centre referring to the bookstore down below, but their selection of russian road maps and atlases is around 10 times as large as the Moscow Book Store on Tverskaya. I was in extasy when I stumbled across this place (but maybe I just like maps more than the next man)

Martini 12 Feb 2009 20:33

Hello!
Most of Russian road maps to tell lie. One of better choice for good information is a Regional map. Often roads (especially secondary roads, but main roads too) at the borders of districts in bad condition.
Good map collection - Novij Atlas avtomobilnih dorog (The new selection of automobile roads)- it cover all Russia in suitable scale. Publisher - Trivium (Byelarusia) e-mail trivium@mail.ru
Good maps you can by in Riga (Latvia) in map store "Jana Seta" Stabu street, 119 e-mail: kartografi@kartes.lv

Good grip
Martins

James Rothwell 18 Feb 2009 17:06

Does anyone have any advice or know of a website that I can use to help learn the alphabet?

Martini 18 Feb 2009 17:40

Russian alphabet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Learn the Russian Alphabet

Chris of Japan 18 Feb 2009 23:28

Quote:

Originally Posted by James Rothwell (Post 229431)
Does anyone have any advice or know of a website that I can use to help learn the alphabet?

Get a Russian phrasebook instead of just looking at the transliteration of the alphabet. They usually have phrases written in cyrillic and latin alphabet, plus a chart for just the cyrillic alphabet. You can see full words that way, and you can take it with you to help you with purchases of all-important supplies like gasoline and beer.

motoreiter 19 Feb 2009 04:46

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chris in Tokyo (Post 229512)
Get a Russian phrasebook instead of just looking at the transliteration of the alphabet.

+1. It will be very difficult to know how to pronounce anything just by learning the individual letters--much easier to learn the letters, then seen how some basic words are pronounced. Even better if your phrasebook gives pronunciation for city names, but not sure if I've seen one like that.

jopos 20 Feb 2009 11:52

Perhaps vito smartmap will help you.

It is simpel and cheap (4$) software for PDA/GSM.

VITO Technology - Windows Mobile & iPhone Software

If this website is not updated try google with "Vito smartmap".

Good luck.

sashadidi 22 Feb 2009 09:26

Quote:

Originally Posted by jopos (Post 229847)
Perhaps vito smartmap will help you.

It is simpel and cheap (4$) software for PDA/GSM.

VITO Technology - Windows Mobile & iPhone Software

If this website is not updated try google with "Vito smartmap".

Good luck.

try this link: Free GPS Maps & Software For TomTom, iGO, Garmin | THE source for BitTorrent & P2P Tips, Tricks and Info. | FileShareFreak
not sure if any good


you can buy maps anywhere very cheap of varying scales and details for $5 upwards and you will need a russian language map as when you ask directions not many people can speak or read english so you need to be able to point where you want to go to get help!!!!

Learn the alphabet, its very easy and phonetic (much more than english)
Plenty in vlad or moscow, People will help you espically of you try to speak
we helped a few people last year in russia ourselves by translating for them
Do not worry about police, just act dumb and no speak russian etc etc
read this very amusing and you can get drunk with russian police and get their guns, you cannot do that in the west!!!
The Wunderlust Logs

Henn 20 Mar 2009 16:34

I also agree that buying a map from a Russian petrol station when you arrive is the way to go. The one I had also covered all of the former Soviet republics in usable detail too (was about A4, a maroon colour and had a big picture of a new, but very Soviet looking car on the front).

The Cyrillic alphabet takes all of a week to learn when you are looking at it every day, so don't stress about it.

Hen

Skorpion660 20 Mar 2009 20:49

I bought the Reise maps but can't remember if it was from Stanfords or Amazon.co.uk but also had a Euromap (ISBN - 13: 978-3-8279-9953-5 or ISBN-10: 3-8279-9953-7) It had all the place names in Russian and English.

I also found that a phrase book (Lonely Planet I think) was invaluable although Kazhak and Ukrainian is different to Russian it still worked as most people understood it.

But the important words are:

Benzine - petrol
Peeva - beer
Cafe - coffee
Chia -tea

And for when you are hungry and can't figure out the menu or find anyone to help you decipher it then ask for Borscht or Vodka lol

Tony P 21 Mar 2009 00:44

Quote:

Originally Posted by Henn (Post 234265)
The one I had also covered all of the former Soviet republics in usable detail too (was about A4, a maroon colour and had a big picture of a new, but very Soviet looking car on the front).

It's a a Lada Priora!

Not sure about all the former republics - this one does not include Kazakhstan, Mongolia and the republics south of them, nor Armenia and southern sections of Georgia and Azerbaijan but does include all others including the Baltics. Nor the trackless tundra of very northern central and eastern Siberia.

This road atlas has very good detail, in varying scales 1:800,000 1:1,500,000 1:3,000,000 and some city plans. 277 pages of maps plus a 56 page index! It is as up to date as anything (2008 edition/printing). Quite useable for most planners and travellers - except perhaps the odd "extreme traveller" ;-)

I am returning to UK from here in about 3 weeks time and can bring a few copies back and mail them for (say) GBP12 including UK postage & packing. If anyone wants one please PM me with your details before 8 April.

First come first served - up to my baggage limit!

mosq 28 Mar 2009 15:02

1 Attachment(s)
I have many road maps for Oziexplorer and Mapsource (garmin)
they are sorted by region and take several Gb of disk space
I can either upload them all somewhere to your server, or send DVD by mail.

Henn 6 Apr 2009 23:19

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tony P (Post 234341)
Not sure about all the former republics - this one does not include Kazakhstan, Mongolia and the republics south of them, nor Armenia and southern sections of Georgia and Azerbaijan but does include all others including the Baltics. Nor the trackless tundra of very northern central and eastern Siberia.

We must have got lucky then, since ours covered Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Tajik, Uzbek and Turkmenistan. Turned out to be incredibly useful.

Ben

Capolad 27 Jul 2010 10:54

Mosq, I am in the planning stages of a trip from North to South, from NordKapp to the Nile. When I pass through Russia I would like to travel the artic highway to Murmansk and then south to St Petersburg. Can you help me out with any GPS (Garmin) mapping please. Happy to contribute towards costs.

farqhuar 28 Jul 2010 01:52

Quote:

Originally Posted by Capolad (Post 298820)
Mosq, I am in the planning stages of a trip from North to South, from NordKapp to the Nile. When I pass through Russia I would like to travel the artic highway to Murmansk and then south to St Petersburg. Can you help me out with any GPS (Garmin) mapping please. Happy to contribute towards costs.

Capolad, I suggest you PM Mosq. His post is very old and he is unlikely to spot your post unless he just happens to be reading this section - by comparison, if you PM him he will get an email alert.

Enjoy your ride. :cool4:

colebatch 28 Jul 2010 21:56

Have you looked at whats available on openstreetmap.org?

Check the mapping there as their maps are garmin compatible

mosq 8 Aug 2010 20:51

hi guys!

for those who emailed me about Garmin maps: I live now 60km from Moscow and all maps are at home in Moscow, on another computer.
But I went home yesterday and uploaded Garmin maps for you.
They are for old Garmins which communicate with MapSource (GPSMAP, 76C, 176C, etc...)

Here's a link: http://mosadventure.ru/tmp/map_garmin.zip
File is approximately 80Mb.

This file contains many litte zip arhives named with numbers: each number is official russian region number, which is printed on every car number plate.
Some of archives are in Russian letters, but when you will unzip them they will be in English.
Quality of maps are good, I give 4 of 5 stars. I used them when travelled here, but I saw that many roads have new paths which are not shown on the map. Can advice you to check needed roads with google maps to be sure they exist.

I hope this will help for your travels across the Russia.
If you will have any questions, feel free to email me to mosqua@Mail.ru or visit my website : MosAdventure.Com site

PS: I live now in village 60km from Moscow. here's a picture of the smoke around our area, forests burn everywhere..
http://nissan-4x4.ru/img/posts/28353.jpg

oothef 8 Aug 2010 21:25

Heard this on the news, looks serious!

Tirpse 15 Aug 2010 08:52

Quote:

Originally Posted by mosq (Post 300362)
hi guys!
PS: I live now in village 60km from Moscow. here's a picture of the smoke around our area, forests burn everywhere..

Oh i just travelled this week though that area as i came home to Finland from Mongolia and can say that there was some serious smoke between Yfa-Samara and Moscow. You could see about 1 km to the horizont (maxium) then all was covered to smoke cloud/haze.

Btw i would be interested of Russian maps if you have them in Oziexplorer formats.


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