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Terms and Conditions

PLEASE READ THIS NOTICE IN ITS ENTIRETY. IT CONSTITUTES PART OF YOUR BOOKING CONTRACT FOR YOUR TRIP AND ANY RELATED  SERVICES. PLEASE CALL US IMMEDIATELY IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS.

Please thoroughly review these terms and conditions of DeeBest Travel Zone, LLC and   http://www.deebesttravelzone.com . The lead reservation passenger will be the only  recipient of this booking receipt and terms and conditions. It is the sole responsibility of  the lead passenger to inform all other parties traveling of the contents of these terms  and conditions. The lead passenger, by accepting this receipt and making payment to  DeeBest Travel Zone and/or its suppliers, ac- knowledges that they have been advised  of, reviewed, and hereby accept these terms and conditions and contract for all travel  related services. 

DeeBest Travel Zone acts only as an independent agent for suppliers in selling travel  related services, or in accepting reservations or bookings for services that are not  directly supplied by this travel agency (such as air and ground transportation, hotel  accommodations, meals, tours, cruises, etc.). This travel agency, therefore, shall not be  responsible for breach of contract or any intentional or careless actions or omissions on  part of such suppliers, which result in any loss, damage, delay, or injury to you or your  travel companions or group members. Unless the term “guaranteed” is specifically  stated in writing on your ticket, invoice, or reservation itinerary, we do not guarantee any  of such suppliers’ rates, bookings, reservations, connections, scheduling, or handling of  personal effects. This travel agency shall not be responsible for any injuries, damages,  or losses caused to any traveler in connection with terrorist activities, social, or labor  unrest, mechanical or construction failures or difficulties, diseases, local laws, climatic  conditions, criminal acts or abnormal conditions or developments, or any other actions,  omissions, or conditions outside the travel agent’s control. Please note that DeeBest Travel Zone has an allegiance to their clients and not any particular vendor. We quote  the trip which we feel will best suited to our client’s preferences, budget, and lifestyle.  That being said, we do have preferred vendors who we know offer an excellent  experience for our travelers. Rates are subject to change without notice until a deposit  is made on reservation for rates to be locked in.  

Valid US Passport BOOKS are required for all travelers for international air travel,  regardless of age, including infants. Traveler assumes complete and full responsibility  for, and hereby releases this travel agency from any duty of, checking and verifying any 

and all passport, visa, vaccination, or other entry requirements of each destination, and  all safety or security conditions at such destinations, during the length of the proposed  travel. 

Traveler assumes full responsibility for obtaining these documents prior to dates of  travel. Traveler understands that for a passport to be considered valid it must have 6  months validity remaining on it after projected travel return date. 

Travelers also are responsible to be aware if any past criminal activity will impede them  boarding an airplane or leaving the United States, which may include, but not limited to  unpaid federal loans, declared incompetence, owed large sum of child support,  convicted drug trafficking, under federal arrest or subpoena, forbidden by court order,  parole, or probation. Canada will not allow entrance if you have ever had a drunken  driving conviction. Travelers are recommended to contact their attorney for legal advice  should any of these apply to them. By embarking upon his/her travel, the travelers  voluntarily assume all risks involved in such travel, whether expected or unexpected.  Travel- er is hereby warned of such risks, and is advised to obtain appropriate insurance  coverage against them. For more information regarding passports, please visit: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/pass-ports.html 

DeeBest Travel Zone does have a vendor who can assist with passport expediting  should this service be necessary to complete travel. It is also the traveler’s responsibility  to contact their cell phone provider and determine if their plan allows for use outside the  US and if so what additional fees apply. It is important to note that if you continue to use  your cell/data package while outside the US without adding an international plan, you  may incur huge charges for phone and data plan usage outside the US. It should be noted that children under age 18 and not traveling with both parents or legal  guardians may need to present a notarized letter from the absent or non-custodial  parent/guardian granting permission for the child to travel outside the United States and  provide emergency medical care if necessary. This would apply to grandparents, only  one parent traveling, or a divorced parent traveling. Travelers should confer with their  attorney to get the correct paperwork in order, or you can find information here: https:// www.dhs.gov/how-do-i/travel-overseas Click here for our parental consent forms.  

Traveler’s retention of tickets, reservations, or bookings after issuance shall constitute a  consent to the above, and an agreement on his/her part to convey the contents hereto  to his/her travel companions or group members.  

Please be advised that air schedules are subject to change at any time prior to travel.  DeeBest Travel Zone accepts no responsibility for air schedule changes, delays or  cancellations by any air carrier. Each airline has its own baggage policies and  associated fees, it is the sole responsibility of the traveler to confirm with the airline in  advance of travel to determine the airline’s baggage policy and any associated fees  which are subject to change at any time. 

INSURANCE 

DeeBest Travel Zone sells travel insurance and has provided you detailed information  and the opportunity to purchase travel insurance. Many insurance companies require  the policy to be purchased and written within a certain timeframe in order to cover things  such as pre- existing medical conditions and supplier default. DeeBest Travel Zone has  informed you of this deadline, and highly recommends the purchase of travel insurance  to protect your vacation investment. If charges for travel insurance are not listed on your  booking statement, you have not paid for insurance within the required timeframe or an  insurance policy number is not noted on your final invoice, you have elected to  DECLINE Travel Insurance even if you initially checked “accept” on your original  invoice. Insurance claim approval is determined by the travel insurance company, and  Travel with Sparkle accepts absolutely no responsibility for any denied claims. The  purchase of travel insurance to cover your vacation investment is HIGHLY RECOM MENDED for unexpected circumstances that neither the travel agent nor the client can  control. It is to be noted that if you do not add travel insurance, your entire trip  investment may be at risk. It is also important to note that your personal US medical  coverage may not cover you outside the US and each traveler should consult their  benefits department for full disclosure of those details.  

SPECIAL REQUESTS 

Special Requests, (i.e. room views, location, bedding preference, ad- joining rooms,  seat requests, etc.) cannot be guaranteed by the travel agency/tour operator/airline.  While every attempt will be made to accommodate such special requests, the travel  agency/tour operator/air- line will not be held responsible if such requests cannot be  fulfilled. Airline seat requests also cannot be guaranteed even if we note preferences. If  a  schedule change occurs, it is possible to be moved to a different flight and existing  seat assignments may no longer be honored. The travel agency does not have control  over the airline nor their seating policies.

PAYMENTS 

Payments by credit or debit card are preferred, and by authorizing charges to your card  you expressly waive the right to chargebacks as a means to mediate disputes. Please note that checks are accepted for final payments (within 4 weeks of final  payment date) and for initial deposits or airline only tickets. These must be made by  credit or debit card only. Bounced checks are subject to a $35 returned check fee, and  future payments by check will no longer be accepted. If a credit card is declined, agent  will attempt to contact client to remedy the situation. It is important to note that the  package price may increase while the details are trying to be corrected in the matter of  a credit card decline.

CLIENTS SHOULD NOTE THAT EVEN THOUGH THEY HAVE PAID FOR A VACATION  PACKAGE OR SEGMENTS IN ADVANCE, HOTE- LIERS, AIRLINES, RENTAL CAR  COMPANIES AND OTHER VEN- DORS WILL ASK FOR A CREDIT CARD TO BE  USED DURING TRAVEL FOR INCIDENTAL CHARGES, BAGGAGES FEES, RENTAL  CAR GUARANTEE, ETC. NEVER TRAVEL WITHOUT A CREDIT CARD WHICH CAN  BE USED FOR THESE PURPOSES! IF YOU ARE USING A DEBIT CARD FOR  DURING TRAVEL CHARGES, YOU SHOULD EXPECT THAT POSSIBLE HOLDS CAN  BE PLACED ON YOUR ACCOUNT FOR SEVERAL DAYS AND THAT MIGHT AF FECT YOUR SPENDING CASH.  

Always check with your bank to see if your card incurs foreign transaction fees if you  plan to travel outside the US. Monthly payments are required on all group trips to keep  your reservation current.  '

CANCELLATIONS, CHANGES & REFUNDS 

Once payment is applied to a booking, cancellation/change penalties will apply.  Cancellation policies vary from supplier to supplier. Cancellation requests MUST BE  RECEIVED IN WRITING prior to your departure date, and you must receive a written  reply from us confirming cancellation has been made. No refund is made for unused  travel services or any portion thereof, nor is the price or value of unused travel services  exchangeable for alternative arrangements. Changes to the current booking are subject  to the terms and conditions of the tour operator/airline and may result in penalties or  change fees. Due to strict contractual obligations, any and all payments on customized  group trips are non-refundable non-transferable to another trip.  

PHOTOGRAPHY & VIDEOGRAPHY 

DeeBest Travel Zone reserves the right to use any photograph/video taken at any event  or during any travel activity, without the express written permission of those included  within the photograph/video. DeeBest Travel Zone may use the photograph/video in  publications or other media material produced, used or contracted by DeeBest Travel  Zone, including but not limited to: brochures, invitations, books, news- papers,  magazines, television, websites, etc.  

AIRPORT CHECK IN & FLIGHT RECONFIRMATION

All passengers should arrive at  the airport at least 2 (or 3 for international) hours prior to flight departure, view  documents for definite recommendation. Charter flights may have different requirements  than commercial flights.  

DeeBest Travel Zone will make every attempt to assign seats in advance, however if we  are unable to assign seats on your flight for any reason, seats will be assigned upon  check-in at the airport and are on a first come, first served basis. While seat  assignments are made by the airline, we are unable to guarantee that clients will be  seated with their traveling companions. For security reasons, all passengers must be  present identification for check-in. You will not be allowed to board, nor will you be  entitled to a refund, if you have not checked in by the required time. Please ensure you  contact your airline at least 24 hours prior to departure and on the day of departure, as it  is your responsibility to reconfirm all your flight details before departure. A customer’s  failure to contact the airline in regards to reconfirming the airline times and details may  result in a flight being missed.  

DeeBest Travel Zone does not accept legal responsibility or liability if any customer  misses a flight due to a failure to reconfirm flight times as advised, or to other  circumstances beyond our control. If our agency is aware of any schedule changes in 

advance of your departure, every effort will be made to advise you directly. Clients  should understand that being a no show for a flight, may result in the other leg of your  flight being cancelled by the airline without notice. ALL air- lines charge baggage fees  and you should visit the airline website to determine what charges are applicable to your  flight and destination. Some seats assignments also have a service fee associated and  all seats booked may not be upgradeable. Again, client has responsibility to visit airline’s  website or contact customer service with said airline to determine exact parameters as  applicable to your ticket.  

HONEYMOONERS & ANNIVERSARY TRAVELERS

You MUST bring a copy of your  marriage certificate (or wedding invitation) to qualify for any complimentary honeymoon/ anniversary packages offered by the resort. A photo copy is recommended. Failure to  have such proof of marriage may result in the resort denying these complimentary  privileges (if applicable). Please notify your Travel with Sparkle advisor if you are  celebrating a Honeymoon or Anniversary so that they can annotate this in your  reservation. Typically resort will honor these packages up to 30 days before or after  your honeymoon/ anniversary date.  

INSECTICIDE DISCLOSURE 

The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) requires that travel agents refer  consumers to a page on the Department’s website that lists countries that require  airlines to treat passenger cabins with insecticide. The DOT requirement applies only to  airline travel to a country listed on that website. You may access the U.S. DOT website  page by clicking on the following link: https://www.transportation.gov/ air-consumer/spray  

TRAVEL WARNINGS 

Clients have the responsibility to visit these sites for the most updated information  regarding travel warnings and travel health warnings: https://travel.state.gov/content/ passports/en/alerts warnings.html , https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel   

MODIFICATION OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS 

The Terms and Conditions may be amended or modified by DeeBest Travel Zone at any  time without notice. It is therefore essential that you consult the Terms and Conditions prior to making each and every booking. Only those who have accepted the Terms and  Conditions and affirmatively indicated their consent to be bound by the Terms and  Conditions may make a booking with DeeBest Travel Zone Without this acceptance any  booking is subject to cancellation at any time. The failure of DeeBest Travel Zone to act  with respect to a breach of these Terms and Conditions by you, or others, does not waive its right to act with respect to subsequent or similar breaches. DeeBest Travel  Zone does not guarantee it will take action against all breaches of this these Terms and Conditions.  

SEVERABILITY  

If any provision of this agreement shall be unlawful, void, or for any reason  unenforceable, then that provision shall be deemed severable from this agreement and  shall not affect the validity and enforceability of any remaining provisions.

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M-F: 9am - 6pm Sat: 9am-2pm Sun: CLOSED

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DeeBest Travel Zone, LLC

[email protected]

(973) 204-6140

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dee best travel zone

Hidden gems of the world: Tigre de Cristal Hotel and Resort, Artyom, Primorsky Krai in Russia

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Marking the start of ‘a new history of entertainment in the Far East’, the Tigre de Crystal Hotel and Resort , in Russia’s Primorsky Krai on the south-eastern tip of the country, is the flagship luxury destination set to turn this region into the new go-to casino hub.

Opened in 2015, the five-star resort near to Vladivostok boasts a spacious casino, 121 upscale rooms and suites, two fine-dining restaurants and a bar and is the first phase in the process of building a total of 12 casino resorts in the Primorye Gambling Zone in the next three years alone.

The experts at Planet Perplex, the leading online destination for online casino codes such as Genting Bet promo code , predict that Primorye will be one of the big players in the gaming world.

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Tom Edgar of the online hub said: “With a rapid expansion like this planned we can certainly see this becoming the next Vegas or Macau. I’m aware that the second, Shambhala, was due to open this summer but faced setbacks caused by Covid, but watch this space, as when this is open it will surely open the door for the remaining luxury casino resorts in the region’s bid to be the top gambling destination.”

So, what can visitors to the Tigre de Crystal expect to find when they set foot through the doors? We find out.

First of all, any guest will want to drop off their luggage and freshen up before hitting the gaming tables and if you’re the type who truly treats themselves then you’ll want to head straight for the Presidential Suite.

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Certainly not doing anything by halves – this is Russia , after all – this is luxury accommodation at its finest. With a warm, contemporary, minimalist feel throughout, the stylish 207 sqm suite can be extended to 250 sqm by combing with a neighbouring deluxe king room and boasts an array of amenities to make a stay fit for royalty.

A living room features a large window with views of Ussuriysky Bay in the Sea of Japan, which is best enjoyed from the large corner sofa with homemade coffee in hand, of course. A dining room boasts a table for eight and a stocked bar, while a fully equipped kitchen is available for use. A bedroom is joined to the state-of-the-art bathroom via a walk-in closet and there’s a sauna, Jacuzzi hot tub and massage waiting for your spa needs.

But you certainly won’t be spending your days in your suite – as pleasant as it may be – for you are surely here for a flutter in the casino. With 40 gaming tables, more than 300 slot machines and a premium hall for the high rollers, any gaming enthusiast will be pleased with options here. Experienced players who want to play in a private atmosphere with higher stakes will head to the aforementioned premium hall and table games include Russian Poker, Casino Texas, Roulette, Blackjack, Sic Bo and Baccarat, while slot games, including those on the popular Spielo and Novomatic machines, are available to all.

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In the midst of all this fun it is often easy to forget the time, so when mealtimes come around, you will be pleased to find Cascade (nouvelle cuisine), 88 (a pan-Asian restaurant) and Whiskers Bar. From fresh seafood to succulent steaks and well-chosen wines to mouth-watering desserts, Cascade, headed up by chef Pavlo Tirhas , serves up a great selection of victuals to devour in the elegant and rich red setting. 88 boasts a unique and exotic atmosphere with diverse pan-Asian dishes being prepared by chefs from the northern provinces of China, while Whiskers is situated in the heart of the casino and serves up a selection of juicy cocktails and tasty international bar dishes to please.

Address: Bukhta Muravyinaya 73, 692751 Artem, Russia Phone: +7 423 246-88-88

All images used in this article credit: Tigre de Cristal Hotel and Resort

Please gamble responsibly (18+ UK) – check age restrictions before participating

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Pee Dee Tourism

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  • Shop Darlington County
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  • VISITORS GUIDE

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Welcome to the Pee Dee Region

Experience the beauty….

This seven-county region, named for the original Native America Pee Dee Indians who inhabited it long ago and subsequently the Pee Dee Rivers, still offers the natural wonders that attracted the Native Americans and early settlers. A sparkling gem of nature’s best, Pee Dee Country has a unique combination of scenic parks and natural areas as well as a history spanning both Revolutionary and Civil War times, reflected in its wonderfully preserved historic homes, plantations and buildings.

About Each County…

  • Williamsburg

dee best travel zone

EXPLORE THE PEE DEE REGION

Attractions, arts & culture, scenic & natural.

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THE PEE DEE REGION IN THE MEDIA

VIP-Bucket-List-Article-Pee-Dee

VIP Magazine Features the Pee Dee Region as a Bucket List Trip

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Southern Flavor Magazine Features the Pee Dee Region – Read More!

8 of the most charming towns in South Carolina article featured in worldatlas.com

8 of the Most Charming Towns in South Carolina – Read More

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Pee Dee Tourism Commission

Stop in the Dillon Welcome Center to stretch your legs and get the scoop from locals on top attractions, restaurants, shops, and more in the Pee Dee Region. This SC interstate Welcome Center is just a few miles south of the NC/SC border on I-95 and is open daily from 9am-5pm. The friendly staff is ready to assist you with hotel reservations, travel itineraries, translation services, and more. peedeetourism.com/hamer-sc-welcome-cent ... See More See Less

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It’s National Peach Day! 🍑🍑🍑 Did you know that South Carolina produces the most peaches of any state in the South? Get your fill of the state’s best from local farms and farmer’s markets in the Pee Dee! 🧺 Pee Dee State Farmers Market – Florence | Open year-round 🧺 Darlington Farmers Market | Thursday from 3-7pm 🧺 McArthur Farms – Bennettsville | Open year-round 🧺 Marion Farmers Market | First & third Saturday 10am-1pm 🧺 Kingstree Farmers Market | Second Saturday 9am-12pm 🧺 Bay Branch Farm – Timmonsville | Call for info: (843) 621-8654 🧺 Dillon County Pop-Up Farmers Market – Dillon | Every second Monday 🧺 City Center Farmers Market – Florence | Saturdays 9am-1pm 📷: McArthur Farms, Bennettsville ... See More See Less

Shell-abrate the weekend over Town Halls new scallop dish! 😋 If scallops aren’t your thing, you’re sure to find something right up your alley from this farm-driven, Southern-inspired eatery in Florence.

Shell-abrate the weekend over Town Hall 's new scallop dish! 😋 If scallops aren’t your thing, you’re sure to find something right up your alley from this farm-driven, Southern-inspired eatery in Florence. ... See More See Less

  • Comments: 1

1 Comment Comment on Facebook

Beautiful and I'm sure delicious!

When planning a trip to the Pee Dee, our blog is a fantastic place to start. Here, you’ll find top spots to include in your trip itinerary and learn about our region’s fascinating history and the people and places that make it the unique destination that it is. peedeetourism.com/blog/ ... See More See Less

For more than 25 years, Gifts and More in downtown Bennettsville has been a go-to for locals and visitors alike. Whether you’re shopping for a souvenir to take home from your Pee Dee visit or scoping out a gift for a loved one, we think you’ll love their lineup of clothing, bath & body products, accessories, and home decor! 🛍

For more than 25 years, Gifts and More in downtown Bennettsville has been a go-to for locals and visitors alike. Whether you’re shopping for a souvenir to take home from your Pee Dee visit or scoping out a gift for a loved one, we think you’ll love their lineup of clothing, bath & body products, accessories, and home decor! 🛍 ... See More See Less

Did you hear? It’s National Relaxation Day! 😎 Whether you’re visiting our region today or sometime in the near future, here are some places for you to enjoy some good ol’ R&R during your Pee Dee visit. ⬇️ 🌻 Take a leisurely stroll along Florence Rotary Beauty Trail and through Kalmia Gardens and Moore Farms Botanical Garden 🧖‍♀️ Enjoy a day of pampering at a Pee Dee spa, like Forum Spa, The Spa at Hotel Florence, and Spa De Vie Salon & Day Spa 🍸 Sip on a tasty cocktail at the area’s rooftop bars—The Mantissa Hotel and Rooftop Bar in Hartsville and The Dispensary in Florence 🥃 Kick back and make new friends at The Humidor - Cigar, Wine & Jazz Lounge in Bennettsville and Docs Humidor, Cigar, Wine and Jazz Lounge, Hartsville 🎶 Listen to some jazz music over tapas and cocktails at Jazz on Dargan in Florence 🕯️ Pick out calming scents at Woodhaven Candle & Salt Therapy in Marion 🌳 Get back to nature with a visit to local and state parks in the area 🏌️‍♀️ Tee off at one of the many great golf courses in the Pee Dee; favorites in the area include The Country Club of South Carolina, Traces Golf Club, Wellman Golf Club, and City of Dillon Vivian Johnson Memorial Golf Course 🎭 Watch a stellar performance at one of Pee Dee’s theatres peedeetourism.com/arts-and-culture/ 🍓 Pick your own produce and hang out with farm animals at Pee Dee agritourism farms peedeetourism.com/agritourism-farms/ What are some of your favorite ways to wind down while visiting the Pee Dee? Let us know in the comments! ... See More See Less

🍑🍑🍑 It’s National Peach Day! Did you know that South Carolina produces the most peaches of any state in the South? Get your fill of the state’s best from local farms and farmer’s markets in the Pee Dee! 🧺 Pee Dee State Farmers Market – Florence | Open year-round 🧺 Darlington Farmers Market | Thursday from 3-7pm 🧺 McArthur Farms – Bennettsville | Open year-round 🧺 Marion Farmers Market | First & third Saturday 10am-1pm 🧺 Kingstree Farmers Market | Second Saturday 9am-12pm 🧺 Bay Branch Farm – Timmonsville | Call for info: (843) 621-8654 🧺 Dillon County Pop-Up Farmers Market – Dillon | Every second Monday 🧺 City Center Farmers Market – Florence | Saturdays 9am-1pm 📷: McArthur Farms, Bennettsville @mcarthurfarmssc — #NationalPeachDay #Peaches #Peachy #PeachyKeen #ExploreThePeeDee #DiscoverPeeDee #PeeDeeSC #VisitPeeDeeSC #PeeDeeSouthCarolina #PeeDeeCountry #PeeDeeCountrySC #VisitPeeDee #SouthCarolina #ExploreSouthCarolina #DiscoverSouthCarolina #Travel #InspireMyInstagram

dee best travel zone

Town Hall’s new scallop dish is so pretty you almost don’t want to eat it (keyword: almost 😉). If scallops aren’t your thing, you’re sure to find something right up your alley from this farm-driven, Southern-inspired eatery in Florence. @townhallflorence — #Scallops #AtlanticFresh #FreshSeafood #PeeDeeEats #TownHallFlorence #FlorenceSC #LocalFood #ExploreThePeeDee #DiscoverPeeDee #PeeDeeSC #VisitPeeDeeSC #PeeDeeSouthCarolina #PeeDeeCountry #PeeDeeCountrySC #VisitPeeDee #SouthCarolina #ExploreSouthCarolina #DiscoverSouthCarolina #Travel #InspireMyInstagram

When planning a trip to the Pee Dee, our blog is a fantastic place to start. Here, you’ll find top spots to include in your trip itinerary and learn about our region’s fascinating history and the people and places that make it the unique destination that it is. ➡️ PeeDeeTourism.com/blog — #ExploreThePeeDee #DiscoverThePeeDee #PeeDeeSC #VisitPeeDeeSC #PeeDeeSouthCarolina #PeeDeeCountry #PeeDeeCountrySC #VisitPeeDee #SouthCarolina #ExploreSouthCarolina #DiscoverSouthCarolina #Travel #InspireMyInstagram

🛍 For more than 25 years, Gifts and More in downtown Bennettsville has been a go-to for locals and visitors alike. Whether you’re shopping for a souvenir to take home from your Pee Dee visit or scoping out a gift for a loved one, we think you’ll love their lineup of clothing, bath & body products, accessories, and home decor! — #GiftsAndMore #GiftsAndMoreBennettsville #ShopLocal #PeeDeeShops #ShopThePeeDee #ExploreThePeeDee #DiscoverPeeDee #PeeDeeSC #VisitPeeDeeSC #PeeDeeSouthCarolina #PeeDeeCountry #PeeDeeCountrySC #VisitPeeDee #SouthCarolina #ExploreSouthCarolina #DiscoverSouthCarolina #Travel #InspireMyInstagram

Cheers to National Relaxation Day! 😎 Whether you’re visiting our region today or sometime in the near future, here are some places for you to enjoy some good ol’ R&R during your Pee Dee visit. ⬇️ 🌻 Take a leisurely stroll along Florence Rotary Beauty Trail and through Kalmia Gardens and Moore Farms Botanical Garden 🧖‍♀️ Enjoy a day of pampering at a Pee Dee spa, like Forum Spa, The Spa at Hotel Florence, and Spa De Vie Salon & Day Spa 🍸 Sip on a tasty cocktail at the area’s rooftop bars—The Mantissa Hotel and Rooftop Bar in Hartsville and The Dispensary in Florence 🥃 Kick back and make new friends at The Humidor - Cigar, Wine & Jazz Lounge in Bennettsville and Docs Humidor, Cigar, Wine and Jazz Lounge, Hartsville 🎶 Listen to some jazz music over tapas and cocktails at Jazz on Dargan in Florence 🕯️ Pick out calming scents at Woodhaven Candle & Salt Therapy in Marion 🌳 Get back to nature with a visit to local and state parks in the area 🏌️‍♀️ Tee off at one of the many great golf courses in the Pee Dee; favorites in the area include The Country Club of South Carolina, Traces Golf Club, Wellman Golf Club, and City of Dillon Vivian Johnson Memorial Golf Course 🎭 Watch a stellar performance at one of Pee Dee’s theatres 🍓 Pick your own produce and hang out with farm animals at Pee Dee agritourism farms What are some of your favorite ways to wind down while visiting the Pee Dee? Let us know in the comments! — #NationalRelaxationDay #RelaxationDay #Relax #InhaleExhale #RandR #ExploreThePeeDee #DiscoverPeeDee #PeeDeeSC #VisitPeeDeeSC #PeeDeeSouthCarolina #PeeDeeCountry #PeeDeeCountrySC #VisitPeeDee #SouthCarolina #ExploreSouthCarolina #DiscoverSouthCarolina #Travel #InspireMyInstagram

Lunch plans? Head over to Wylie’s on Main in Hemingway for their delicious selection of unique sandwiches, homemade desserts, garden-fresh salads, and tasty drinks. 😋 — #WyliesOnMain #HemingwaySC #LunchTime #PeeDeeEats #LocalFood #ExploreThePeeDee #DiscoverPeeDee #PeeDeeSC #VisitPeeDeeSC #PeeDeeSouthCarolina #PeeDeeCountry #PeeDeeCountrySC #VisitPeeDee #SouthCarolina #ExploreSouthCarolina #DiscoverSouthCarolina #Travel #InspireMyInstagram

Beautiful gardens and parks, striking architecture, fascinating museums, and humbling military & veterans monuments—you’ll find it all in Lee County. Discover the slower pace and organic beauty of days gone by at Lee County’s attractions, arts & culture locales, historic sites & museums, and outdoor areas. Elevate your experience by browsing the local shops and dining at the local eateries that also make these small towns so special. — #LeeCountySC #BishopvilleSC #LynchburgSC #AmericanHistory #SouthCarolina #SmallTownUSA #Mayberry #ExploreThePeeDee #DiscoverPeeDee #PeeDeeSC #VisitPeeDeeSC #PeeDeeSouthCarolina #PeeDeeCountry #PeeDeeCountrySC #VisitPeeDee #SouthCarolina #ExploreSouthCarolina #DiscoverSouthCarolina

“Home away from home”—that’s how visitors describe The Loft at 109 in Marion. This Pee Dee gem is located in a historic building above The Groundout Coffee Bar in downtown Marion, one of the best local coffee shops in the region. Rest your head at this classically styled loft featuring all the modern amenities you could want, and wake up to the smell of freshly brewed coffee and homemade treats from Groundout! 😴☕️ @the_groundout — #PeeDeeEats #PeeDeeLodging #WhereToStayInThePeeDee #ExploreThePeeDee #DiscoverPeeDee #PeeDeeSC #VisitPeeDeeSC #PeeDeeSouthCarolina #PeeDeeCountry #PeeDeeCountrySC #VisitPeeDee #SouthCarolina #ExploreSouthCarolina #DiscoverSouthCarolina

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  • Places - Siberia and the Russian Far East

Russian Far East

The Russian Far East is a region in eastern Russia that includes the territories that run along the Pacific coast and the Amur River, the Kamchatka Peninsula, Sakhalin island and the Kuril Islands. It is a cold, inhospitable and sparsely populated area with stunning scenery, rich fisheries, virgin forest, remote towns, Siberian tigers and Aumur leopards. Sometimes the Russian Far East is regarded as part of Siberia.

Rachel Dickinson wrote in The Atlantic: Russia’s Far Eastern Federal District is huge — 2.4 million square miles, roughly twice the size of India — and takes up one-third of the country, but only 6.7 million people populate that vast space. (The district’s biggest city is Vladivostok — best known for being the last stop on the Trans-Siberian Railroad and home to the Russian Pacific fleet.) Provideniya was once a thriving military town with a population as high as 10,000; today the population is about 2,000. Most of the ethnic Russians have left, ceding the city to the region’s indigenous people. Now the government is struggling to stem the tide of people leaving the desolate Far East. [Source: Rachel Dickinson, The Atlantic, July/August 2009]

The entire Russian Pacific coastline extends for almost 16,000 kilometers (10,000 miles). The formal dividing line between Siberia and the Far East are the borders of the Khabarovsk territory and Magadan region, which extends between 160 kilometers (100 miles) to 1,600 kilometers (1,000 miles) inland from the Russia's east coast. Siberia, the Russian Far East and Kamchatka were largely covered by glaciers during the last Ice Age, which ended about 10,000 years ago. In the Soviet era, the Far East had its share of gulags and labor camps, Maksim Gorky called it " land of chains and ice." Since the break up of the Soviet Union, its people have largely been forgotten. The whole region would probably be forgotten if it weren't so rich in resources.

The Far East only has 6.7 million people and its population is falling. There used to be around 8 million people there. Eighty percent of the people live in the cities but have a strong ties to the land: hunting, fishing or picking berries and mushrooms whenever they get the chance. Some places only exist because the government subsidizes them, providing the people with shipped-in food and cheap energy for heat. In the early 2000s, the government has decided it has spent too much supporting these people and told them they have to move. In some places the people refused to move and the government cut off their water and heat and they still stayed. In recent years thing have stabilized somewhat as more money has flowed in from oil, natural gas, minerals, fishing and timber.

What the Russian Far East lacks in historical sites, old cities and museums — compared to the European parts of Russia and even Siberia — it makes up for with a wide variety of beautiful scenery and adventures. The Amur Rive boast sturgeons the size of whales. In the Primorskiy territory you can find rocky islands, steep cliffs, Siberian tigers and Amur leopards. There are isolated beaches on rivers and the see. If you like taiga, there lots of that along with wild mountains and many places to go hiking, fishing, hunting and camping. On Kamchatka there are dozens of very active 's volcanoes. Further north are some of the best places in the world to see walruses, polar bears and whales. Khabarovsk and Vladivostok are two major cities that define the eastern end of the Trans-Siberian Railway and have plenty of urban activities.

The Far Eastern Federal District is the largest of the eight federal districts of Russia but the least populated. The 11 federal subjects are: 1) Amur Oblast: 361,900 square kilometers, 830,103 people, capital: Blagoveshchensk 2) Republic of Buryatia: 351,300 square kilometers,, 971,021 people, capital: Ulan-Ude 3) Jewish Autonomous Oblast: 36,300 square kilometers, 176,558 people, capital: Birobidzhan 4) Zabaykalsky Krai: 431,900 square kilometers, 1,107,107 people, capital: Chita 5) Kamchatka Krai: 464,300 square kilometers, 322,079 people, capital: Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky 6) Magadan Oblast: 462,500 square kilometers, 156,996 people, capital: Magadan 7) Primorsky Krai: 164,700 square kilometers, 1,956,497 people, capital: Vladivostok 8) Sakha Republic: 3,083,500 square kilometers, 958,528, people capital: Yakutsk 9) Sakhalin Oblast: 87,100 square kilometers, 497,973 people, capital: Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk 10) Khabarovsk Krai: 787,600 square kilometers, 1,343,869 people, capital: Khabarovsk 11) Chukotka Autonomous Okrug: 721,500 square kilometers, 50,526 people, capital: Anadyr

Traveling in the Far East is troublesome. There are few roads, and they are in poor conditions. Many places can’t be reached by road anyway. Rivers are frozen much of the year. Helicopters can cost as much as US$500 an hour to rent. Corruption is rampant and it seems like everyone wants a cut. Even if paperwork is in order customs officials, police an other authorities demand, sometimes, huge outrageous "fees."

Economics of the Far East

The Far East is rich in gold, diamonds, oil, natural gas, minerals, timber and fish. It accounts for more than 60 percent of Russia's total sea harvest and fishing is the region’s leading industry, providing jobs for more than 150,000 people. People in the Far East should be rich from the wealth generated from fishing, timber and minerals but that is not necessarily the case. In the case of timber, in the early 2000s, local communities were supposed to get 30 percent of the profits but in reality Moscow took 80 percent and local officials took the rest.

In the early 2000s, gas and oil companies could not pay their workers and utility companies couldn’t pay the oil and gas companies and as a result electricity was only on for a few hours a day. Workers were among the last to receive their wages, factories were cannibalized of scrap metal and parts, students studied in sub-freezing classrooms, and people died at early ages. Those that could afford it moved away.

Many foreign companies were equally frustrated. The U.S. wood product giant Weyerhaueser, Korea's Hyundai conglomerate and Australian mining companies arrived in east Russia with high hopes but after some time there either packed up and left or scaled down their staff down to a skeletal crew.

Ussuri River

The Ussuri River forms the border between Russia and China in southern Khabarovsk Krai and . Primorsky Karia. A right tributary of the Amur, it is 897 kilometers long, with a basin area of more than 193,000 square kilometers. The Ussuri River originates in the spurs of the central Sikhote-Alin. Once it descends into it the valley, the river becomes flat and gentle but has a steep rocky coast. In many area there are meandering channels.

Among the tributaries of the Ussuri are: 1) the upper river: Izvilinka, Sokolovka, Matveyevka and Pavlivka. 2) the left tributaries: Arsen'evka, Muling, Naoli River and Songacha River; 3) and the right tributaries: Pavlovka, Zhuravlovka, Big Ussurka, Bikin and Khor.

In Khabarovsk Krai, near the village of Kazakevichevo, Ussuri River flows into the shallow Kazakevichevo channel and after that the confluence of the Ussuri is called the Amur channel. The Amur channel empties into the Amur River in the center of the city of Khabarovsk. The Ussuri is a full-flowing river from May to August. In the summer and when the ice breaks there are frequent floods. Ice on the Ussuri breaks up in April and forms in November. The water is used for water supply. Above Lesozavodsk the river is navigable. Previously it was widely used for timber floating.

The Ussuri River is good for fishing and rich in fish. Gudgeon, crucian carp, common carp, trout, burbot, pike, catfish, flax and grayling are all caught as are Kaluga sturgeon, which can reach a huge size (eight meters recorded in the Amur River). The river is a spawning ground for salmon and chum salmon. In the waters of the Ussuri fish mountain rivers are found near the bottom fish. Mountain fish comes to the Ussuri in the spring to spawn.

Ussuri Taiga and Dersu Uzala

The Ussuri taiga is a forest different from the normal Russian taiga. Located between the Ussuri and Amur Rivers in the Far East and dominated by the Sikhot Alim Mountains, it is a monsoon forest filled with plants and animals found nowhere else in Siberia or Russia and instead are similar to those found in China, Korea and even the Himalayas. In the forest there is s lush undergrowth, with lianas and ferns. Wildlife include Siberian tigers, Asian black bears, Amur leopards and even tree frogs. The Siberian Tiger Project is located here. The 1970 Akira Kurosawa Oscar-winning film “Dersu Uzala,” and the book it was based on, about a Tungus trapper, was set here.

Ian Frazier wrote in The New Yorker: ““Dersu Uzala,” the memoir and narrative of exploration by Vladimir K. Arsenyev, begins in 1902, when Arsenyev is a young Army officer assigned the job of exploring and mapping the almost unknown regions east and northeast of Vladivostok, including Lake Khanka and the upper watershed of the Ussuri River. The name for the whole area is the Primorskii Krai—the By-the-Sea Region. It and much of the Khabarovskii Krai, just to the north of it, consist of a unique kind of Pacific forest in which tall hardwoods hung with vines grow beside conifers almost equally high, and the lushness of the foliage, especially along the watercourses, often becomes quite jungly. [Source: Ian Frazier, The New Yorker, August 10 and 17, 2009, Frazier is author of “Travels in Siberia” (2010) ]

“In Arsenyev’s time, this jungle-taiga was full of wildlife, with species ranging from the flying squirrel and the wild boar to the Siberian tiger. Back then (and even recently) tigers could also be seen on the outskirts of Vladivostok, where they sometimes made forays to kill and carry off dogs. Arsenyev describes how tigers in the forest sometimes bellowed like red deer to attract the deer during mating season; the tiger’s imitation betrayed itself only at the end of the bellow, when it trailed off into a purr.

“The humans one was likely to meet in this nearly trackless forest were Chinese medicine hunters, bandits, inhabitants of little Korean settlements, and hunter-trappers of wild game. Dersu Uzala, a trapper whom Arsenyev and his men come upon early in their 1902 journey, is a Siberian native of the Nanai tribe whose wife and children have died of smallpox and who now is alone. After their meeting, Dersu becomes the party’s guide. The book is about Arsenyev’s adventures with Dersu on this journey and others, their friendship, and Dersu’s decline and end.

“In the nineteen-seventies, a Soviet film studio produced a movie of “Dersu Uzala,” directed by Akira Kurosawa. It won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film of 1975. The movie is long and slow-paced, like a passage through the forest, and wonderfully evokes the Primorskii country. I own a cassette of the movie and in my many viewings of it even picked up some useful fractured Russian from the distinctive way Dersu talks.

Udegeh: People Who Live with Siberian Tigers

The Udegeh live around the Sikhotealin Mountains in the Far East, also home to many Siberian tigers, and traditionally survived by hunting in the forest. Their ancestors were farmers and members of the Zhurdzhen empire, which ruled parts of what is now China, Mongolia and Russia. In the 13th century, Zhurdzhen was defeated by Genghis Khan and the Mongols and survived in scattered communities in the forest, where they became nomadic hunters to survive and formed their own language and culture, called Udegeh. There are only about 2,000 Udegeh left. The largest group lives in a village called Krasnyr, about 175 miles southeast of Khabarovsk.

The Udegeh live in wooden houses that often have painted gables with images of bears, dogs, devils and pagan goddesses. Their villages are surrounded by forests, and in the winter deep snow. They primarily live on animals they hunt such as sable, mink, squirrel, deer and boar. They often earn what little money they have by collecting wild ginseng in the forest or selling furs.

About 80 Siberian tigers live in the Udegeh hunting grounds. The Udegeh worship tigers, which are considered sinful to kill. One Udegeh hunter told the Washington Post, "The tiger and the Udegeh people are the same."

In the 1920s, the Udegeh were organized into hunting cooperatives by the Soviets. They sold furs to the Soviets and were able to keep their culture alive even though the Communists frowned upon their pagan beliefs and shaman practices. Today most young Udegeh wear Russian clothes and few of them speak the old language. Intermarriage is common and there are few pure blood Udegeh left. In the early 1990s, the Udegeh were involved in a dispute with the South Korean conglomerate Hyundai, who wanted to log the Udegeh's hunting ground.

See Separate Article PEOPLE OF THE RUSSIAN FAR EAST factsanddetails.com

Ussuriisk (kilometer 9177 on the Trans-Siberian, an hour and a half drive from Vladivostok) contains a "Chinese Bazaar" that is more like a separate town. The market operates all night and approximately 2,000 Chinese traders live semi-permanently in metal freight containers near their stalls.

The Museum of History and Local Lore and the famous 800-year-old stone turtle will introduce you to the history of this city. At the end of summer, tourists come to see the city's blooming lotuses. In the winter, you can enjoy a swim in an outdoor pool, surrounded by snowy fir trees. There is a historical park of everyday life and customs of the Russian people called “Emerald Valley” located five kilometers away from the city . Various events are held here, including the celebration of Kupala Night, jousting tournaments, Christmas and Maslenitsa festivities.

Ussuriisk is located near the border with China and North Korea and stands at the confluence of the Komarovka, Rakovka and Razdolnaya. The city was founded in 1866 by Russians from Voronezh and Astrakhan province in East Russia and the Capian Sea area. The town began to grow when the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway began in the area.

Places Where the Siberian Tigers Live

Siberian tigers today are confined primarily to the Ussuri Taiga, a forest different from the normal Russian taiga. Located between the Ussuri and Amur Rivers in the Far East and dominated by the Sikhot Alim Mountains, it is a monsoon forest filled with plants and animals found nowhere else in Siberia or Russia and instead are similar to those found in China, Korea and even the Himalayas. In the forest there is s lush undergrowth, with lianas and ferns. Wildlife include Siberian tigers, Asian black bears, Amur leopards and even tree frogs. The Siberian Tiger Project is located here. The 1970 Akira Kurosawa film Dersu Uzala, about a Tungus trapper, was set here.

Sikhot Alin Reserve and Kedrovaya Pad Reserve within the Ussuri Taiga are the last homes of the Siberian tiger. The largest wildlife sanctuaries in the Far East, they embrace 1,350 square miles of forested mountains, coastline and clear rivers. Other animals found in Sikhot Alin reserve and Kedrovaya Pad reserve include brown bears, Amur leopard (of which only 20 to 30 remain), the Manchurian deer, roe deer, goral (a rare mountain goat), Asian black bears, salmon, lynx, wolf and squirrels with tassels on their ears, azure winged magpies and the emerald-colored papilio bianor maackii butterfly. Over 350 different species of bird have been sen here.

Dunishenko and Kulikov wrote: “In the 19th century, aside from the Sikhote-Alin and Malyi Khingan portions of Russia, tigers were found in southeastern Transcaucasia, in the Balkhash basin, in Iran, China and Korea. Now the Amur tiger is found only in Russia’s Primorskii and southern Khabarovskii Krais. This is all that remains of an enormous tiger population that formerly numbered in the thousands and that lived mostly in China. In the spring of 1998, one of the authors of this booklet took part in an international scientific study investigating the best tiger habitat remaining in the Chinese province of Jilin. We found three to five tigers there, mostly along the Russian border. Our general impression is that there are no more than twenty or thirty Amur tigers in all of China. [Source: “The Amur Tiger” by Yury Dunishenko and Alexander Kulikov, The Wildlife Foundation, 1999 ~~]

The general area where Siberian tigers lives is called the Primorskii or Primorye, a region of the southeast Russian Far East that embraces Vladivistok. John Vaillant wrote in “The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival”: “Primorye, which is also known as the Maritime Territory, is about the size of Washington state. Tucked into the southeast corner of Russia by the Sea of Japan, it is a thickly forested and mountainous region that combines the backwoods claustrophobia of Appalachia with the frontier roughness of the Yukon. Industry here is of the crudest kind: logging, mining, fishing, and hunting, all of which are complicated by poor wages, corrupt officials, thriving black markets — and some of the world's largest cats.” [Source: John Vaillant. “The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival” (Knopf, 2010)]

Nezhino (100 kilometers north of Vladivostok, 20 kilometers east of the Chinese border) is used as a base for people who track Siberian tigers. They are particularly easy to track in the winter, if you can initially locate some tracks, when they leave big paw prints in the snow. Tigers tracking tours began being offered in 2005.

See Separate Articles: SIBERIAN TIGERS factsanddetails.com ; PLACES WHERE THE SIBERIAN TIGERS LIVE factsanddetails.com ; HUMANS, SCIENTISTS, CENSUSES AND SIBERIAN TIGERS factsanddetails.com ; ENDANGERED SIBERIAN TIGERS factsanddetails.com ; SIBERIAN TIGERS CONSERVATION factsanddetails.com ; SIBERIAN TIGER ATTACKS factsanddetails.com .

Ussuri Nature Reserve and Lake Khanka

Ussuri Nature Reserve (100 kilometers north of Vladivostok) is specially protected natural area located in the southern Sikhote-Alina range, It is rich in virgin liana conifer-deciduous forests, which have been cut down in other parts of the Russian Far East and the neighboring countries. The reserve is named after Academician Vladimir L. Komarov, a Russian botanist who studied the flora of East Asia. He first gave a description of the area, visiting her in 1913.

The reserve was created in 1932 and since then has significantly increased its area, which now amounts to 4,040 square kilometers. The reserve embraces lowlands and mountains and foot hools formed by the the southern spurs of the Sikhote-Alin (Przewalski Mountains). The average elevation is 300-400 meters above sea level. The highest peaks are 650-700 meters high. There are also mountain rivers in canyon-like narrow valleys and small waterfalls. Summers are warm and humid. Winters are moderately severe with little snow. The coldest month is January (average temperature of -17.9 degrees C). The warmest month is August 19.7 degrees).

The flora of the reserve is composed almost entirely of forest species, mainly those found in cedar-broadleaf forests, which are are characterized by high species diversity and different from ecosystems found in Russia and elsewhere in the former U.S.S.R. A typical plot of pine forests, contains trees, shrubs and vines from 50-60 species. Among the many rare plants and ginseng, hard juniper, mountain peony and Chinese Prinsep

The fauna of the reserve is typical of coniferous and deciduous forests: wild boar, red deer, musk deer, and black bear. Among the birds are common warblers, blue nightingale, nuthatch and grouse. The reserve is home to the largest beetle fauna of Russia: It is interesting that several attempts to "diversify" the species composition of fauna — through the the introduction of sika deer and Barguzin sable — did not work as hoped. Most of the reserve is off limits to visitors. Among the places that one can visit are the rehabilitation center for the education of orphaned bear cubs. Reserve staff tell the story of each bear and describe it character and habits. There is also a nature trail and small museum.

Lake Khanka (200 kilometers from Vladivostok) has an average depth of 4.5 meters and is home to more than 300 species of bird and 75 species of fish. Trips to the lake includes stops at the villages of Kamen-Rybolov and Troitskoye on the west side of the lake and a trip to Gaivoron, near the town of Spassk-Dalniy, where there is a 10,000 square meter open air cage with a family of Siberian tigers. The cage is made of a transparent metallic net. The enclose incorporates the surrounding forest so you can see the tiger is a pretty close facsimile to how they lin nature.

Biodiversity of the Ussuriskii Taiga Forest

Siberian tigers inhabits the Ussuriskii taiga forest, a coniferous broadleaf forest that specifically favors the so-called Manchurian forest type. The Manchurian forests are located in riparian areas and are particularly high in biodiversity. John Goodrich of NPR wrote: “The most bio-diverse region in all of Russia lies on a chunk of land sandwiched between China and the Pacific Ocean. There, in Russia's Far East, subarctic animals — such as caribou and wolves — mingle with tigers and other species of the subtropics. It was very nearly a perfect habitat for the tigers — until humans showed up. The tigers that populate this region are commonly referred to as Siberian tigers, but they are more accurately known as the Amur tiger. "Imagine a creature that has the agility and appetite of the cat and the mass of an industrial refrigerator," Vaillant tells NPR's Linda Wertheimer. "The Amur tiger can weigh over 500 pounds and can be more than 10 feet long nose to tail." [Source: John Goodrich, NPR, September 14, 2010]

Dunishenko and Kulikov wrote: "The range of biodiversity experienced by the early explorers in the Ussuriskii taiga forest is hard to imagine. Read Vladimir Arsenev and Nikolai Przhevalskii and you’ll realize that the region’s present-day richness is but a sad remnant of what was once found here. The fact is, that not all that long ago there was a lot more to be found in our taiga. Old-timers can still vividly recall the herds of deer, numbering in the hundreds, that migrated the lightly snow covered regions of China, the incessant moan in the taiga when red Manchurian deer were mating, the endless waves of birds, the rivers boiling with salmon. [Source: “The Amur Tiger” by Yury Dunishenko and Alexander Kulikov, The Wildlife Foundation, 1999 ~~]

"And my lord, how many wild boar there used to be in the taiga! All winter long, the southern exposures of oak-covered hills were dug up by droves of wild pigs. Snow under the crowns of Korean pine forests was trampled to ground level as wild boar gathered pine cones throughout the winter. A symphony of squeal and moan! Mud caked wild boar racing around the taiga, rattling around in coats of frozen icycles after taking mud baths to cool passion-heated bodies. Horrible, blood caked wounds, chattering tusks, snorting, bear-like grunting, squawky squeaking, oh the life of a piglet.~~

"This was an earlier image of the Ussuriskii taiga. Just 30 years ago a professional hunter could take 60 to 80 wild boar in a season! There was more than enough game for the tiger out there among the riotous forest “swine.” Tigers strolled lazily, baron-like and important. They avoided the thick forests: why waste energy with all the boar trails around — you could roll along them sideways! It was only later on that the tigers took to following human trails.~~

"How many tigers there used to be in the wild can only be conjectured. Southern Khabarovskii Krai is a natural edge of their habitat; at one point in history there was a substantial tiger population that spilled over into surrounding regions. The tiger’s range coincided, for the most part, with Korean pine and wild boar distribution, and the number of tigers in the Russian Far East in the last century was at least one thousand. Tigers densely settled the Malyi Khingan and the Korean pine, broad leaf deciduous forests typical of southern Amurskaya Oblast. Lone animals wandered out as far as Lake Baikal and Yakutiya."~~

Sikhote Alin Reserve

Sikhote Alin Reserve (400 kilometers northeast of Vladivostok) and Kedrovaya Pad Reserve are the last homes of the Amur (Siberian) tiger. The largest wildlife sanctuary in the Far East. It embraces 3,500square kilometers (1,350 square miles) of forested mountains, coastline and clear rivers. Other animals found in reserves include brown bears, Amur leopard (of which only 40 to 50 remain), the Manchurian deer, roe deer, goral (a rare mountain goat), Asian black bears, salmon, lynx, wolf and squirrels with tassels on their ears, azure winged magpies and the emerald-colored papilio bianor maackii butterfly. Over 350 different species of bird have been seen here.

Central Sikhote-Alin was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2001. According to UNESCO: “The Sikhote-Alin mountain range contains one of the richest and most unusual temperate forests of the world. In this mixed zone between taiga and subtropics, southern species such as the tiger and Himalayan bear cohabit with northern species such as the brown bear and lynx. After its extension in 2018, the property includes the Bikin River Valley, located about 100 kilometers to the north of the existing site. It encompasses the South-Okhotsk dark coniferous forests and the East-Asian coniferous broadleaf forests. The fauna includes species of the taiga alongside southern Manchurian species. It includes notable mammals such as the Amur Tiger, Siberian Musk Deer, Wolverine and Sable. [Source: UNESCO]

Founded in 1935, Sikhote-Alin Nature Reserve covers an area of 3,902 square kilometers, plus and 2.9 square kilometers offshore. The reserve is located in the northern part of Primorsky Krai and includes the eastern slope of the Sikhote-Alin mountain range from its watershed to the coast (including one kilometer of shoreline), as well as a part of the western slope of the mountain range. The maximum elevation in the reserve is 1598 meters.

The reserve was originally established to protect sable populations that were on the verge of extinction. V.K. Arsenyev was one of the initiators of the reserve. K.G. Abramov and Y.A. Salmin substantiated the need to create the reserve. In our age when there are fewer and fewer untouched corners of nature on the globe, The profusion and diversity of the reserve’s ecosystems are attributable to the fact that the park includes different slopes of the Sikhote-Alin, range which differ in natural conditions and elevation. Availability of direct access to the sea is another important factor.

The reserve includes parts of three landscape areas: 1) Terney (cedar broad-leaved forests), 2) Samargino-Dalnegorsky (in the subzone of broad-leaved and coniferous forests) and 3) Mid-Sikhote-Alin (fir and spruce forests) in a boreal coniferous forest subzone. The flora and fauna in the reserve are strongly influenced by the presence of the Sea of Okhotsk: dark boreal coniferous forests are more strongly represented here than in other reserve in Primorye Krai. At the same time, conditions exist for the development of the Manchuria-like ecosystems. A distinctive feature of the flora and fauna in the reserve is the combination of heat-loving and cold-loving natural species. For its long-term research program and achievements in the conservation of the Amur tiger, the reserve was awarded with a CATS international certificate in 2015, becoming the only reserve in Russia (and the second in the world) to receive such recognition.

Traveling by Road Around Sikhote Alin Reserve

Ian Frazier wrote in The New Yorker: ““Rather than continue south, directly to Vladivostok, our ultimate destination, we had decided to turn east again, cross the Sikhote-Alin Mountains, and arrive at the Pacific (technically the Sea of Japan) in a less inhabited place on the mountains’ other side. The Sikhote-Alins, once we were among them, seemed more like hills, and not very forbidding, but the depth and silence of their forest made up for that. Arsenyev had described the taiga here as “virginal, primeval timberland.” From the altitude of the trees and the venerable length of the vines depending from them, I would guess that the taiga we saw was still original growth. That night, we camped above the small gorge of a river named for Arsenyev—the Arsenyevka. The sound of it was pleasant to sit beside; this was our first genuinely rushing stream. I stayed up for a while after Sergei and Volodya had gone to bed, listening to it and looking up at the stars and at the satellites tracking past. [Source: Ian Frazier, The New Yorker, August 10 and 17, 2009, Frazier is author of “Travels in Siberia” (2010) ]

“The next day, we continued winding generally eastward through the mountains. I noted villages called Uborka (Harvest), Shumnyi (Noisy), and Rudnyi (Oreville). Now we were in Arsenyev’s very footsteps. A little beyond Rudnyi, we crossed a mountain pass that hardly looked like one. This was the divide between the waters that flow roundabout to the Pacific via the Ussuri and the Amur, and those which drain down the front of the Sikhote-Alins and into the Pacific directly. At the crest of the divide, back among the roadside weeds, stood a cement obelisk on which was inscribed: “crossed over this pass: m. i. venyukov 1858*; N. M. PREZHEVALSKII* 1887*; V. K. ARSENYEV* 1906.”

Arsenyev’s passage across this divide happened during a mapping expedition guided by Dersu and described in detail in the book. The party continued from here until they came to the Pacific and the port village of Olga, where they were resupplied. Sergei said that we would also aim for Olga and camp near there.

“Often the taiga stood so close to the road that the vines almost touched the side of the car, and on the upgrades we were looking into the canopy. At one point in the movie “Dersu Uzala,” a tiger stalks Arsenyev’s party, and the Siberian tiger used for the scene was a splendid animal, all liquid motion and snarling growls. Though near extinction, the Siberian tiger has not yet been wiped out, and the thought that this Pacific forest—reminiscent in some ways of the American and Canadian Northwest—had tigers in it gave the shadows far back among the trees a new level of authority. I had been in a few forests that held grizzly bears, but a forest with tigers in it seemed even more mysterious and honorable.”

Kedrovaya Pad Reserve

Kedrovaya Pad Reserve (400 kilometers northeast of Vladivostok) is the oldest reserve in the Far East and the southernmost reserve of Primorye. Sikhote Alin Reserve and Kedrovaya Pad Reserve are the last homes of the Amur (Siberian) tiger. The largest wildlife sanctuary in the Far East. Kedrovaya (Cedar) Pad Reserve embraces 178.97 square kilometers (69.10 square miles) of forested mountains, coastline and clear rivers. Other animals found in reserves include brown bears, Amur leopard (of which only 40 to 50 remain), the Manchurian deer, roe deer, goral (a rare mountain goat), Asian black bears, salmon, lynx, wolf and squirrels with tassels on their ears, azure winged magpies and the emerald-colored papilio bianor maackii butterfly. Over 350 different species of bird have been seen here.

Kedrovaya (Cedar) Pad Reserve was one of the first officially organized reserves in Russia. The idea for establishing was raised at the beginning of the 20th century after the Trans-Siberian railway and built nearby and intensive development of the Ussuri region was accompanied by indiscriminate logging, forest fires, uncontrolled hunting. In 1908, the region created the first forest reserves, one of which was on Cedar River. Kedrovaya Pad Reserve, founded in 1916 close to the western shore of Amur Bay. Over time that status of the reserve was improved and the reserve was enlarged. In 2004 UNESCO designated the reserve as a biosphere.

Kedrovaya (Cedar) Pad Reserve is located in the Khasan district of Primorye Territory. The villages of Seaside, Perevoznaya, Cedar, Bezverkhova and Barabash located within a few kilometers of the reserve. . The reserve was established for the preservation and study of natural systems there of liana deciduous and mixed forests with hornbeam and black fir-broad-leaved forests and their animals and plants. The reserve provides shelter for two adult Amur leopard females and their offspring and one male. Among the rare species of insects found there are the excellent marshmallow beetle and Jankowski beetle.

The territory of the reserve is occupied by by two major low mountain ranges — the Gakkelevskaya and Suhorechensky — representing the extreme northeastern foothills of the Black (Changbai) Mountains, which are mainly in China and Korea. The length of the main Cedar River within the reserve is about 15 kilometers. The largest number of tributaries originating from Suhorechenskogo ridge flows into the forest, where many wild boars live. About 73.1 percent of the entire reserve is occupied by forests. The remaining area is occupied by scrub and secondary meadows resulting from logging in the past and especially forest fires.

The forest reserve contains numerous species of trees. The underbrush is represented by various bushes, that often blossom beautifully, such as early-flowering honeysuckle and Weigel, which produces fine-leaved mock orange flowers. Vines entwine tree trunks rising to a height of 30-35 meters. The diameter of the winding vines of wild grapes and the Amur Actinidia Argut reaches 10-15 centimeters. They are like giant snakes crawling from the ground and entangling shrubs and trees.

In places the reserve resembles a rainforest and it does have parallels with the temperate rain forests in coast British Columbia, Alaska and Washington state. Among the many plant species are Manchurian walnut, dimorfanta and aralia, with and velvet, spiny trunks, and several types of ferns. In the crevices of bark and crotches of trees attract epiphyte and small fern called Ussuri centipede.

Zov Tigra (“Roar of the Tiger”) National Park

Zov Tigra National Park(Near Lazo, 150 kilometers northeast of Vladivostok is a mountainous refuge for the Amur (Siberian) Tiger. Established in 2008, the park encompasses an area of 834 square difficult (322 square miles) on the southeast coast of Primorsky Krai. The park lies on both the eastern and western slopes of the southern Sikhote-Alin mountain range.,The relatively warm waters of the Sea of Japan are to the east, the Korean peninsula to the south, and China to the West. The terrain in rugged and difficult to access, with heavily forested taiga coexisting with tropical species of animals and birds. The park is relatively isolated from human development, and functions as a conservation reserve. Tourists may visit the portions of the park marked for recreation, but entry to the protected zones is only possible in the company of park rangers. The park’s name in English means "Call of the Tiger” or "Roar of the Tiger".

Zov Tigra National Park is occupied by Ussuri taiga and is located at the junction of Lazovsky, Chuguevsky, and Olginsky districts. The park covers 1,854-meter-high Oblachnaya mountain, the upper half of the Milogradovka's river basin, and sources of the Kievka River. There are more than 50 mountains more than 1000 meters high. The forest feature giant cedars, specimen trees, slender spruces entwined with gaily-coloured actinidia's lianas, emerald-green clusters of Amur grape and Schizandra brushwood.

Zov tigra was established in part as as a "source habitat" for the recovery of the Amur Tiger and its prey base. A survey in 2012 identified four Amur tigers resident in the park, and four more that visited the protected areas frequently. The base of prey consisted of 1,200 Manchurian deer, 800 Roe deer, and 99 Sika deer and 189 wild boars. These species make up some 85% of the Amur tiger's diet. Brown bears and lynx are relatively common in area. The Far Eastern Forest Cat is found in the broad-leaf and oak valleys. The critically endangered Amur Leopard has not been resident since the 1970s.

Amur Leopards

The Amur leopard inhabits an 800-mile long stretch of evergreen forest in the eastern Siberian taiga near the North Korean border. Named after the river that forms the border between Russia and China, they live in a narrow mountain chain that extends from Hanka Lake in the Russian Far East south to the borders of China and North Korea. It ranges further north than any leopard species, even the snow leopard.

Amur leopards weighs between 40 and 60 kilograms (90 and 140 pounds). They are reclusive, solitary creatures. They eat sitka deer and wild boars. Their numbers have declined as the numbers of their main food source, roe deer, have declined. They also suffer from declining numbers of sitka deer and wild boars. Leopards eat dogs of villagers to survive. Sometimes they are forced to make a single meal last for two weeks. Other times they reduced to scavenging for carrion. It’s winter coat has large spots.

Only 38 to 46 Amur leopard are believed to remain. Twenty to twenty-four in Russia. Fifteen in China and an unknown number in North Korea. They have been hurt by loss of habitat, loss of prey and poaching. Around 30 Amur leopards live in an area which borders China and is 150 kilometers long and 30 kilometers wide. At least 16 live in Nezhinkoye game reserve. This area contains many villages and is crisscrossed by roads, making survival problematic

Environmentalists have trouble securing funds to study the leopards. Most of what is known about them is based on studies conducted at Kedrovaya pad nature Reserve near Vladivostok. The Russian Academy of Science, the University of California and the International Wildlife Congress are studying the leopards using “phototraps”— motion sensitive cameras.

Land of Leopard National Park

Land of Leopard The National Park (200 kilometers west of Vladivostok) occupies 2,620 square kilometers and is located in the Khasansky, Nadezdinsky, Ussuriysky districts of Primorsky Krai as well as in the small area of Frunzenskiy district in Vladivostok. Kedrovaya Pad and Leopardovy reserves and number of other territories, with total area exceeding 2,800 square kilometers are as compounds of the National Park. The national park’s buffer zone covers about 800 square kilometers.

About 30 individual Amur leopards are thought to be living in the southwest area of Primorsky Krai. “Land of the Leopard” national park covers about 60 percent of the natural habitat occupied by the leopards and the main reason the park was set up was to preserve them. Many surviving Amur leopards live In the Nezhinkoye game reserve that is under partial protection of the Russian Pacific fleet. Hunting with dogs and hunting for fur animals is banned in the reserve. Deer and wild boars are fed. Some leopards used to follow hunters in hopes of snatching an easy meal. Work on the world’s longest pipeline — between Siberia and the Sea of Japan — was suspended in 2005 due to ecological concerns, among them the fate of the Amur leopard, whose territory would be bisected by the pipeline.

The “Land of Leopard” is divided into several zones, the smallest of which is a 230-square-kilometer conservation zone that you can’t visit without special permission. Other zones have a simplified visiting regime. Guided trips are allowed in the “specially protected” zone. The 7950-square-kilometer recreational zone allows more touristic activity. The “Leopard Trail” is the first tourist route, developed in the National Park. The 770-square-kilometer administrative zone accommodates villagers and interests of other people living in the territory of the National Park.

Leopardovy Sanctuary

Leopardovy Sanctuary (200 kilometers west of Vladivostok) embraces 1,694.29 square kilometers of the “Barsovy” and “Borisovskoe Plato” sanctuaries in the Khasansky, Ussuriysky, and Nadezhdinskiy districts. The state biological sanctuary “Barsovy” was founded in 1979 to preserve and restore not only the endangered animal species such as Siberian Tiger and Amur Leopard but also their natural habitat. The animal sanctuary “Borisovskoe Plato” was created in 1996 to conserve and increase the population number of Amur leopard; Siberian tiger and other threatened animals.

The sanctuary's natural environment is highly favorable for the forest faun's inhabitation. The low-level mountain ranges deeply dissected with the river valleys, extended rock masses, and plateau-like mountains create mosaic of forest, tree and shrubbery vegetation. Secondary broadleaved forests prevail here. Primary forests with fir trees, cedars and khingam fir remain in the west and northwest part of the sanctuary. The plateau-like mountains are covered with the leafed forest.

Amur leopard is the main protected species here.Siberian tiger, Asian black bear, leopard cat and other animals are also placed under special protection. There are six ungulates species such as Amur goral, Manchurian wapiti, wild boar, musk deer, roe deer, and deer in the sanctuary. Lot of rare vascular plants grows here, some of them such as water caltrop, stipa baicalensis, nepeta manchuriensis are not presented even in the neighboring “Kedrovaya Pad” reserve. More than 150 species of birds nest in the sanctuary and around 100 species traverse its territory or make stopover here during the migration period. It must be stressed that “Leopardovy” sanctuary is the only place of nesting for some bird species in this part of Primorsky krai. 15 of these species are threatened with extinction. Over 40 IUCN Red List insect species inhabit here, what is more some of them occur exceptionally at the sanctuary's territory.

This district has a monsoon climate. Its specific trait is the variability of the airstreams direction in the summer and winter seasons. Plenty of rivers and streams run at the sanctuary’s territory. There are no large lakes. The biggest one, Krivoe lake, covers 11 hectares. All types of hunting, commercial fishery, timber felling, resource development, ploughing the ground, and application of chemicals are prohibited here. Beyond that, public visiting, amateur fishery, and gathering wild harvest are brought under regulation. The sanctuary contains some populated places such as Barabash settlement and military firing range with total area in 3,490 squate kilometers A considerable part of the territory is the border territory separated from the rest of area by the plowed strip.

Image Sources: Wikimedia Commons

Text Sources: Federal Agency for Tourism of the Russian Federation (official Russia tourism website russiatourism.ru ), Russian government websites, UNESCO, Wikipedia, Lonely Planet guides, New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, National Geographic, The New Yorker, Bloomberg, Reuters, Associated Press, AFP, Yomiuri Shimbun and various books and other publications.

Updated in September 2020

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