Kuzomen: The Village
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  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
  • Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village
Kuzomen: The Village

Kuzomen: The Village

We keep keeping on: the second part of our photo cycle about Kuzomen is dedicated to the village itself.

All in all, it’s a fairly ordinary settlement in the Russian North and on the Kola Peninsula: there are some old wooden houses, but also substantial modern architectural вмешательство, which we deliberately chose not to show in order to preserve visual authenticity.

Unfortunately, we didn’t manage to take decent photos of the local attraction—wild horses, or rather horses abandoned by people and only условно gone feral. So they are not included in this publication. Well—maybe next time.

The village stands on the bank of the majestic Varzuga River, and the streets are filled with sand, although—unlike the surrounding landscape—there is some greenery here.

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