Note the sandbags covering the statue in front of the building (left side of pic). Most statues and outside artwork across Ukraine are similarly protected, to save them from artillery and rocket shrapnel, bullets, and tank rounds.
Sandbags protecting a public statue.
Sandbags protecting a public statue.
Zaporizhzhia
Zaporizhzhia
Hope, even during war.
The line waiting to cross the Ukraine/Poland border. These lines were usually several miles long. Sometimes people have to wait for DAYS to cross.
Interestingly, many Ukrainians cross INTO Ukraine on a daily basis for different reasons. Here are few pics of a father/husband reuniting with his wife and toddler who we drove over the border from Poland into Ukraine.
Interestingly, many Ukrainians cross INTO Ukraine on a daily basis for different reasons. Here are few pics of a father/husband reuniting with his wife and toddler who we drove over the border from Poland into Ukraine.
Interestingly, many Ukrainians cross INTO Ukraine on a daily basis for different reasons. Here are few pics of a father/husband reuniting with his wife and toddler who we drove over the border from Poland into Ukraine.
Ukrainian hot dog!
Air raid warning are numerous and an unfortunate way of life for most of Ukraine these days. In the digital age, they also come over your mobile phone, as well as over public loud speakers in all towns. Yes, there is an app for that!
Makeshift bomb shelter in a hotel parking garage in Kyiv.
Tape put over hotel room windows in most towns to reduce the effects of potential bomb blasts.
Videos
Daily Life in Wartime Ukraine
Backroad traffic jam, on the way to the front. Unless absolutely necessary, work doesn’t stop for war.
Line at the Polish/Ukrainian border
Air Raid Siren
Ukrainian Roads (a.k.a. Ukrainian milkshake machines)
Horse Cart, more common in Ukraine than one would think.
One of thousands of checkpoints throughout Ukraine.