Immigration in Moscow
Due to delays, we arrived in Moscow after 5 o’clock.
If you decide to take advantage of the long waiting time to see the night view and go out into the city to relax
You have to go towards entry (arrival) and not transit.
I walked into the uncrowded immigration checkpoint, where I was told, I was given my passport with the back cover off at the counter (along with the receipt of the ticket that arrived and the ticket that is leaving tomorrow), and I didn’t know what the staff was talking about, but after waiting for a long time, I got my passport back and finally entered Russia.

RED SQUARE
Take the Aero Express from the airport to see the Red Square (35 minutes)
They said that if you just look at the red arrow and follow them, you can get on, so I just checked the first arrow and then went somewhere else and came back. You have to make sure that MOSCOW is correct.
TAKE THE METRO FROM BELORUSSKY TO TEATRALNAYA, WHERE YOU CAN GET WHERE YOU WANT TO GO.
I remember that this is the same station, but there were three names depending on the route.
Aeroexpress Timetable (Airport to Moscow)

The temperature is similar to that in Korea, but it was a little cold due to the blowing snow, and the floor of the square was slippery, so I almost fell down a few times.
Even though it was late, the lights were bright and there were many tourists, so there was nothing inconvenient to look around.
It’s just a shame… I didn’t think I would come to Russia on purpose, so I stopped by briefly, but it’s always a pity that it’s like this.


Currency exchange
I exchanged about 50,000 won at the first ATM I saw because it was only rubles, but I almost didn’t have to do that. I can’t find Citibank, which everyone else is looking for.
Aero Express tickets accept credit cards (900 rubles round trip) and dinner is a snack in the square, so I don’t need it that much other than when I buy a train ticket. How much do you use up at the duty-free shop when you return home?
and
It was a scary and comical image of Russians on TV who fight bears and pull axes out of their trunks when they get angry, and it seems that this is really the case, which is funny.
I don’t think Koreans are quick temperament, but it’s funny that they did it even more here.
As soon as the seat belt is turned off, they are ready to get off quickly, and when I see people in my country rushing out, they say that it is really fast, but here, before the lights are turned off, the speed slows down as soon as the wheels are touched, and when the lights are turned off, they start to get up, and when the lights are turned off, they are already lined up in the aisle. I can’t even get off, but I’m still standing. Well, I don’t really hold back.
Workers shoveling snow with their bare hands in the cold weather… After all, it’s Russian people~, and it’s kind of funny, but it’s also touching and affectionate, but I don’t know what kind of emotion it is.
I can’t tell everything from a brief glance, but I feel that Russians are not unkind, they are just a bit blunt and shy. When I held the door for a middle-aged man who was dragging a suitcase, he greeted me with “Tsuba-shiba” in a low, low-pitched voice while passing by, the airport staff who eagerly explained things to me in Russian that I didn’t understand, and the shuttle man who didn’t respond to me even though he didn’t say “thank you”, but when I said “Tsuba-shiba”, sentences flew out. The weather was cold but I felt warm.