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									One Week in Armenia - Armenia				            </title>
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                        <title>One Week in Armenia</title>
                        <link>https://eurasia.travel/forum/reviews-armenia/one-week-in-armenia/#post-2852</link>
                        <pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 09:04:06 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[We spent a week getting to know Armenia — had a great time and learned a lot about the country. We’re leaving with tons of impressions and a few extra kilos of live weight &#x1f605;&#x1f602;...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p data-start="107" data-end="300">We spent a week getting to know Armenia — had a great time and learned a lot about the country. We’re leaving with tons of impressions and a few extra kilos of live weight &#x1f605;&#x1f602;</p>
<p data-start="302" data-end="398">I’ll write a bit about the things I didn’t find in the chat when I was preparing for the trip.</p>
<p data-start="400" data-end="978"><strong data-start="400" data-end="406">1.</strong> At the Matenadaran, you definitely need to take a guided tour, otherwise nothing is clear. There’s no need to book in advance. When buying tickets, just say that you want a tour. They immediately check which guides are available, and you go on the tour. We had an amazing woman, Lina Pirogova — she must be about 100 years old. But she tells the stories brilliantly! Two hours in one breath! She immediately asked how to present it: longer or shorter. There are no audio guides in the museum itself. People were listening to audio tours downloaded from the internet.</p>
<p data-start="980" data-end="1403"><strong data-start="980" data-end="986">2.</strong> The Sergei Parajanov House-Museum. A guided tour is a must. We arrived at 13:00 (just happened that way) and joined a tour with Stepan Stepanyants. He explains everything excellently: lots of stories, anecdotes related to Parajanov, and overall a great command of the material — you can see that the person isn’t just working as a guide but is truly inspired by Parajanov. Audio guides are available in the museum.</p>
<p data-start="1405" data-end="1550"><strong data-start="1405" data-end="1411">3.</strong> The Art Gallery on Republic Square — 7 floors, Aivazovsky is on the 5th floor, not many paintings. A good collection of Russian artists.</p>
<p data-start="1552" data-end="1857"><strong data-start="1552" data-end="1558">4.</strong> We went on excursions with a group, the company Hyur on Nalbandyan 96. I studied everything at home, booked and paid from home as well. Good tours. Two out of three were in two languages, as the groups were mixed (Russian- and English-speaking), which wasn’t an issue.</p>
<p data-start="1859" data-end="2385"><strong data-start="1859" data-end="1865">5.</strong> We spent a long time thinking about how to get to Gyumri (transport). In the end, we ordered a Yandex intercity ride. One way costs 11,000–12,000 drams (≈ 2,600–2,900 RUB / ≈ $28–$32), depending on the time of booking. The driver turned out to be from Gyumri and happily told us everything, took us to the fortress, and recommended the café Ponchik-Monchik on Vardanants Square. Very tasty! You can have an inexpensive lunch there or drink coffee with amazing doughnuts. The café is packed, but seats free up quickly.</p>
<p data-start="2387" data-end="2532" data-is-last-node="" data-is-only-node=""><strong data-start="2387" data-end="2393">6.</strong> For walking around the center of Yerevan, we liked a free audio tour (download to your phone) called “Yerevan Kaleidoscope” on izi.Travel.</p>]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://eurasia.travel/forum/reviews-armenia/">Armenia</category>                        <dc:creator>Seva</dc:creator>
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