Train schedule: Kanevskaya. Stanitsa Kanevskaya - the largest village in Russia Train schedule at Kanevskaya station

The train schedule for Kanevskaya station displayed on this page is for informational purposes only and does not contain operational changes related to repair work and other circumstances. When planning a trip, it is recommended to check the schedule at the station information desk.

Trains at Kanevskaya station

Today, the train schedule at Kanevskaya station includes 123 long-distance railway flights, of which 4 operate daily. The minimum train stopping time is 0 hours 1 m (train on the route Rostov-Glavny - Novorossiysk), and the maximum is 0 hours 5 m (flight on the route Moscow-Kazanskaya - Novorossiysk). Most trains on the schedule arrive from the following settlements: Adler, Moscow, Anapa, Rostov-on-Don at 10:21, 02:32, 18:51, 08:28 respectively. Trains departing from Kanevskaya station follow the following routes - Kanevskaya - Moscow, Kanevskaya - Adler, Kanevskaya - Anapa, Kanevskaya - Novorossiysk departing at 18:53, 05:13, 02:34, 08:29 respectively. When planning a trip, it is worth considering , that the schedule of some trains, such as 268С Novorossiysk - Sosnogorsk (station) (arrival - 00:28, departure - 00:30), 283С Anapa - Cherepovets 1 (00:28, 00:30), 593С Anapa - Syktyvkar (00 :28, 00:30), 593С Anapa - Usinsk (00:28, 00:30) have a special schedule, so it is recommended to check the schedule for a specific date.

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In fairness, it should be noted that the village of Kanevskaya (emphasis on the penultimate syllable), which is located halfway between Rostov-on-Don and Krasnodar, is still only the 2nd largest village in Russia, and its population is “only” 45 thousand people .
But there are a number of caveats:
1. The largest village in the Russian Federation - the village of Ordzhonikidzevskaya (formerly Sleptsovskaya) with a population of 60 thousand people - is located in Ingushetia, that is, out of reach.
2. Kanevskaya has a “suburb” - the village of Staroderevyankovskaya, and their total population is approaching the same 60 thousand.
3. Ordzhonikidzevskaya has merged with other villages of lowland Ingushetia, and are part of the agglomeration, while Kanevskaya is completely separate.
4. Kanevskaya has many “metropolitan” features: the huge Intercession Cathedral and the Sports Palace, several business centers and even its own VDNKh.

Kanevskaya is located very advantageously: 180 km south of Rostov-on-Don and 120 km north of Krasnodar, on the railway and federal highway. This situation, as well as very successful agriculture (the local grain harvests are considered one of the highest in Russia), became the reason for the enormous size of Kanevskaya. I don’t know exactly when it reached such proportions, but the village was founded in 1794 - among the first 40 villages that arose after Taman (1792) and Ekaterinodar (1793). Although the village is reachable from Moscow without transfers, only unbranded trains stop there - for example, the poor No. 420 Moscow - Anapa.
Having got off the platform at 4 o'clock in the morning, I waited for dawn and went on foot to the center of the village. It takes about half an hour to walk from the station to the main square, and that’s not even half the length of Kanevskaya. The village has internal transport and signs. But at 6 am it was empty here, and only the crowing of roosters, of which there were probably tens of thousands in the village, came in powerful waves.

This is what Lenin Square, the center of the village, looks like:

Tiles, a capital administration building - it’s hard to believe that you are in a village. Opposite the administration there is a park with blooming southern trees, a cinema and a cultural center.

On the right (if you stand with your back to the administration) there will be three schools:

Keep in mind that in the Russian South photo paranoia is much higher than anywhere else, and people react especially nervously to photographing schools. I photographed carefully, and also early in the morning, while schools were still closed. But I’ve heard a lot of stories about how a person ended up in a police department for such a shot.
In the courtyard of the last school (actually the closest to the square) there is the Bugreevs’ house (at least that’s what it’s called on Wikipedia) - a family Cossack kuren of the late 18th - early 19th centuries. I photographed him with the kind permission of the security guard.

The Kuban Cossacks lived quite poorly in those years. As you know, the Kuban people are actually Cossacks: after the defeat of the Zaporozhye Sich by Catherine, the latter lived for about 20 years under the Turks in the Transdanubian Sich, and then, at the invitation of the same Catherine, they returned to Russia, to the new border that ran along the Kuban. Until the 1860s (the end of the Caucasian War), the Kuban Cossacks led a paramilitary lifestyle, and did not have the opportunity to acquire a strong economy (unlike the Don Cossacks). Therefore, the kuren looks poorer than the peasant huts of Central Russia.

The school also uses the Bugreevs' house as a utility room - and therefore it does not look like a museum exhibit. There is a complete feeling that Cossacks really live here.

If you go left from the district administration, you will come to an even more amazing place: VDNKh.

Its buildings surround a public garden where the Victory Memorial is located:

They were built under Stalin, in imitation of the Moscow Exhibition of Economic Achievements, but only on a regional scale. After all, at the All-Russian Exhibition Center there is a whole group of agricultural pavilions - a similar function was performed by the pavilions of the Kanevsky VDNKh. Nowadays they are occupied by shops.

If you go in the direction where the schools are located, a little further, you will come out in the huge building of the Sports Palace - I remind you once again that this is in the village!

A little further behind this building is the Intercession Cathedral, built in the 1840s, one of the most beautiful in Kuban:

In the distance, behind the cathedral, the Kanevskaya radio mast is visible - the highest in the Southern Federal District (420 meters), the undisputed dominant of the surrounding area, especially spectacular in the dark:

The village itself is huge: its houses and streets stretch somewhere into infinity, it really has “no end in sight.” In the center of the village there are city district houses:

And very large new buildings:

Near the latter there is an interesting fountain-monument to the 200th anniversary of the village:

And here are the streets and views of the unostentatious Kanevskaya - huts, cottages, fences, trees, flowers:

From the photographs you may get the impression that people live here in poverty, but this is not the case: I specifically photographed the poorest huts, since they are the most authentic. I had to look for them among the numerous cottages. There are also huts here that are very similar to the Bugreevs’ house. But I took photographs here carefully - you never know how the residents will react.

Some houses are decorated with beautiful wrought iron gutters:

A separate topic is the flora and fauna of Kanevskaya. The richness of the nature of the Russian South is very well felt here. As elsewhere in the south, there is a lot of acacia; this tree was brought here by the Cossacks, and they grew acacia specifically for firewood: it grows quickly, burns hot, and one mature tree was enough to light the stove all winter (luckily, winter here is short). But over time, the “wood tree” turned into a landscape decoration.
In addition to acacia, there are also southern conifers - thuja, yew, and large trees like elms. The vegetation forms dense arches over the streets:

Flowers. However, now there are few flowers in the south - they bloomed there earlier:

And the question probably arises: why is this not a city?
The answer is more than banal, and in this case “de facto” and “de jure” coincide. A city or urban-type settlement in Russia is considered a settlement in which no more than 30% of the inhabitants are employed in agriculture. In Kanevskaya, it seems, all 90% are engaged in agriculture. There is no industry at all in the village (except perhaps the processing of local raw materials), vegetable gardens are located even in the courtyards of five-story buildings, and in the morning many residents go to work with agricultural tools in their hands.

Well, besides, we should not forget that “stanitsa” and “village” are not at all the same thing. After all, the Cossacks had a completely different hierarchy of settlements than the Russians. Stanitsas were essentially Cossack cities, Cossack villages were called hamlets and kurens, and the Cossacks had only one “city” in each army: Cherkassk for the Don, Ekaterinodar for the Kuban, Uralsk for the Ural, Omsk for the Siberian, etc.
From Kanevskaya I went further south - to Krasnodar.