Medely logo

Freedom to work anytime, anywhere with Medely

Trusted by over 4000+ healthcare facilities, medely helps you cut costs, save time, and improve quality by giving you direct access to highly qualified medical professionals..

trusted-by-facilities

Outpatient Facilities

Surgery, Imaging, and Urgent Care centers use Medely to tap into our marketplace of local Nurses and Allied professionals. Balance staffing schedules with a constantly changing case volume.

Our platform provides a flexible, scalable enterprise model that meets the changing demands for your organization. Whether you need per diem, float pool, or travel assignments, Medely delivers the widest range of Nursing and Allied staffing solutions.

Skilled Nursing Facilities

Our on-demand workforce marketplace of LVNs, CNAs, and RNs provides you with a scalable, cost-effective local labor solution. Used by post-acute care providers across the country, from skilled nursing facilities to rehabilitation centers.

Medely Career Advisor

Career Advisors

We're medical professionals just like you. our career advisors are here to assist and empower you to find work that fits your life., no recruiters.

Our career advisors are not incentivised by commissions. That means they have your best interest at heart.

Nurse waiting a bus

Work-life balance

Only work when it works for you. that means you’ll always start and stop on your time – because with medely, you’re in charge..

If you like the freedom to decide where and when you want to work — while earning great pay — then per diem is for you.

ASSIGNMENTS

Choose your preferences and get matched automatically to ideal jobs. Select assignments from 4-13+ weeks.

Medely premium pay

Earn Premium Pay

Increase your earnings through medely by booking jobs directly on our marketplace, eliminating the agency and recruiter fees, and passing the savings directly to you., get paid fast.

Your earnings are deposited into your account multiple times per week.

Joint Commission

Medely Has Earned the Joint Commission’s Gold Seal of Approval

The Joint Commission’s certification demonstrates Medely's commitment to providing qualified professionals to healthcare facilities.

- - BROOKE B., RN

I have a full time job and work with Medely to supplement my income. It's better than working another 12 hour shift at the hospital.

Change location

  • Visit Audley Website

Audley careers video

Explore our current vacancies and apply now to join our award-winning team

Which? Recommended Provider December 2023

Which? Recommended Provider for Tailor-made Holidays

Living Wage Employer Logo

Audley is accredited as a Living Wage Employer

Luxury Travel Workplace of the Year winner — 2024

Luxury Travel Workplace of the Year winner

Magellan Gold Award Winner 2018

Magellan Awards Gold Winner

Wanderlust Gold Winner 2022

Wanderlust Travel Awards — Top Tour Operator

Condé Nast Traveller Readers' Award 2023

Condé Nast Traveller Readers' Choice Awards

Best Travel Specialists 2020

The Sunday Times Travel Magazine’s Best Travel Specialists

Travel Media Awards 2020 Winner

Travel Media Awards

Our core values, everything we do is lead by our core values.

Giant tortoise, Seychelles

Employee feedback

  • “Great office and ever-changing environment. Always seeking to improve and provide great experiences for clients. Listens to feedback from employees, and genuinely cares about their wellbeing. Great team of people working here.”
  • “Unlike any other company I've worked for before, they actually listen to what employees are saying and action feedback. Very forward thinking and highly client orientated.”

Our locations

Audley's New MIll offices in Oxfordshire

Witney, Oxfordshire

Audley, London office in the Yellow Building

Shepherd's Bush, London

Boston reception

Boston, Massachusetts

  • Tour Account ›
  • Travel Forum ›
  • Travel Forum
  • Independent Trave...

Independent Travel to Moscow and St. Petersburg

My wife and I have traveled independently to many European countries and, after reading many of the comments in this forum, feel like we may be able to do so in Moscow and St. Petersburg as well, although we feel somewhat less comfortable than the other countries where we have traveled in Europe.

My biggest question is how much we will miss by visiting the main sites without a tour guide. In the other European countries we have visited on our own we have been comfortable and satisfied with the level of knowledge we have gained by studying and visiting on our own, although we believe a tour guide or tour company in any country would normally be able to provide greater insight than visiting a site on our own, but about in Moscow and St. Petersburg?

Any thoughts would be appreciated.

Unless you speak at least some Russian and read the alphabet it would be difficult without a guide. Very few signs in English especially in Moscow. Also not too many people speak English there.

I visited St Petersburg last Autumn for a protracted period , and did not find it anymore daunting than any other European city . As Ilja says , learning the Cyrillic alphabet is a big plus . I also found that it was fairly easy to grasp . It will , among other things , enable you to read signs with relative ease . I would answer the main part or your question ( about tour guides ) thus - I am not enamored of tour guides or tours. While I only use a tour under duress ( A sites rules prohibiting an independent visit - ie Glasgow School of Art , Municipal House in Prague , etc ) . Doing your own preparation and homework is the best way , in my opinion . My wife and I ventured through St Petersburg with nary a concern ,and made two day trips outside of the central district ( one was twenty five miles away , and no English speakers in sight ) Figuring out the logistical details , did not present any difficulties . While I never use tours , I am an inveterate eavesdropper , have done so many times , and find , that on balance , the information that they impart is fairly elementary . If you want greater detail , they are unlikely to supply it . I also prefer to go at my own pace , not being rushed and being able to dwell on things that most other visitors barely give a passing glance . If you are interested , let me know . I would be happy to provide you with information that will enable you to travel independently

Thank you, Steven. I am encouraged by your comments and feel the same way you do about tour groups. We are very much willing to prepare in advance and learn the basics of the Cyrillic alphabet to help us have a better experience.

I would be very interested in learning more about your experience in Russia and receiving any additional information you can provide on independent travel there, starting perhaps with obtaining the visa.

I am not opposed to hiring a private or small group guide for a specific site or for a day trip outside St Petersburg and Moscow, but, like you said, I much prefer the freedom of staying at places as long or short as I want and seeing the sites that interest me most. For example, neither my wife nor I are big into shopping, yet most tour itineraries leave afternoon time for just that. Not interested!

Please provide whatever you may feel would be helpful for us.

Russ , I see you are quite near San Francisco - you can start by looking at the VISA procedure , it's fairly straightforward . Since there is a consulate in San Francisco - look here http://www.consulrussia.org/eng/visa-sub1.html

And here - http://ils-usa.com/main.php

Having always traveled independently, we thought we could do a better job than any tour. How misguided (pun intended) we were. Now that we have had the experience of having someone native to the area walk us around and explain things through a personal perspective we realize how much we missed. For St. Petersburg I highly recommend http://www.peterswalk.com/tours.html . This is not a traditional guided tour, but an opportunity to receive some orientation to the area as well as insight into the "Russian soul". I think if you did this upon arrival the rest of your time would be much more meaningful. We really liked the http://www.pushka-inn.com . The location is superb (just around the corner from the Hermitage square), the rooms lovely, the included breakfast at the restaurant next door ample and overall an excellent value. We used this company to get our visa: https://www.passportvisasexpress.com/site/san_francisco_customer_service Note that it costs about the same for a 3-year visa as a one-year, and you never know if you might want to return within that more extended window of time. It is not cheap, so factor that into your planning.

If you like traveling without a guide in other countries and find this satisfying, the same will be true in Moscow and St. Petersburg. Of course it's not either/or - you can certainly take a guided walk or boat tour, for instance.

I cannot emphasize enough the importance of learning Cyrillic if you're going on your own. The book I used was Teach Yourself Beginner's Russian Script, which was great. It breaks down the alphabet into letters that are the same as English, letters that look the same but are pronounced differently, etc. It's out of print, but you can get used copies on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Teach-Yourself-Beginners-Russian-Script/dp/0071419861/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1459701143&sr=8-2&keywords=teach+yourself+russian+script

Russia is indeed a bit more "foreign" than say, Italy. However, in Moscow and St. Petersburg, I found enough English to be able to get by. Many restaurants had English menus and/or English speaking staff, for instance. This was most emphatically not true in Vladimir and Suzdal (two cities in the Golden Ring outside Moscow). I went with my sister, a Russian speaker, and if she hadn't been there, I would have been in big trouble. So, if you want to see places outside these two big cities, use a guided tour (even if just for that part). Also, Moscow and St. Petersburg are huge cities. Coming from New York, I wasn't intimidated, but those not used to a megacity may not be so cavalier (even I found them overwhelming at times, especially Moscow).

I found both Lonely Planet and Rough Guide to be helpful, and both to have various errors. Look at both, buy whichever one has a more recent edition, and then be prepared to have to discard some of the advice therein. Also, these places change more quickly than places in Western Europe. Be very careful of outdated advice. For instance, I was there in 2001 and 2010, so I won't give you any specifics on getting a visa - that changes constantly.

Just as a teaser, two things I saw and loved that I doubt would be included in any escorted tour are the Gorky House in Moscow (an Art Nouveau wonder) and the Sheremyetov Palace in St. Petersburg (it's now a museum of musical instruments, and the decor is amazing, particularly in the Etruscan Room).

Thanks for all the good advice. Any additional thoughts are welcomed.

One of history's seminal works pertaining to Russian history and culture and a MUST for anyone contemplating a visit or simply interested , is this fine work from 1980 - http://www.amazon.com/Land-Firebird-The-Beauty-Russia/dp/096441841X

This is about you and not about Petersburg. Do you like guided tours? We don't and didn't find that a guide added to our experience in China where we did hire private guides mostly for the logistics; it was easy to have someone drive us places. But once at a site, we didn't need the guide. I felt the same way about our 9 nights in Petersburg. We did hire a guide for the trip to the Catherine Palace again for the ease of logistics for us Olds. Here is our visit: https://janettravels.wordpress.com/2016/01/23/an-easy-trip-to-the-catherine-palace/ There are also snapshots of the Church on Spilled Blood in this photo journal. Having someone pick us up at the apartment and get us in without line ups and shepherd us through the palace steering clear of the tour groups was lovely. But we didn't need commentary because we can read and prepare.

You certainly don't need a guide for the Hermitage (we spent 4 days there), the Russian Museum, the Kazan Cathedral or Church on Spilled Blood or the Faberge Museum. We enjoyed a number of self guided walking tours including a couple from Rick Steves guidebooks. We took the canal cruise suggested by RS that had an English commentator. I would not take one without that as you will be totally clueless. The commentator was not all that good but at least we had some idea what we were seeing. So for people like us who like to do our own thing and can read a guidebook and don't particularly like to be led about, a tour is not needed. If you enjoy tour groups, then go for it. Petersburg is easy to negotiate. It helps if you can read the cyrillic alphabet and it is also useful to have the google translate ap on your phone. We found ourselves translating packages in grocery stores with it and the occasional museum sign or menu. I have one food I need to avoid and so it was handy to have the translator to talk with waiters (I could either show them the sentence, or play it for them or play it to myself and then repeat it to the waiter -- that all worked well)

Dear Russ, I cannot help you with Moscow, but about four years ago, my husband and I went to St Petersburg on our own. But, we did use a private guide for 4 half days. We both feel that our guide absolutely made our trip (we stayed 6 or 7 nights). We used a company owned by Tatyana Chiurikova, www.tour-stpetersburg.com I cannot say enough good things about her and our experience. I emailed her and we worked out a schedule/ sights that was tailored to our interests. She also offered some recommendations, which we took. The guide will meet you at your hotel. And frequently, at certain places, with the guide, we were able to skip the long entrance lines. We had an half day driving tour of the city (car, driver, & guide). You are taken to & go in places such as Peter & Paul Fortress, some of the cathedrals, etc. We had a half day with the guide at the Hermitage which ensured that we would see the major sights there. And, of course, you can stay after your guide leaves or return another day. Also, we had the guide for Peterhof (a must & go by boat) and Catherine's Palace. I hope that you will go to the website. As I said, our guide made our trip. I am positive that we would have missed quite a bit on our own everyday. And I'm sure we would have wasted a lot of time trying to get to various place.This was the best of both worlds, a guide where needed and plenty of time on our own. Whatever you do, I'm sure that you will love St Petersburg! Ashley

I am curious about the lines as we encountered no lines on our trip -- but it was in September. We got tickets for the Hermitage at machines and skipped those lines and our guide for the Catherine Palace which was our only guided experience (as noted before, chosen for the logistics of getting there) had arranged tickets and we didn't have a line, but then we also didn't see lines. We did not find lines at any other site.

Both Moscow and St Petersburg I've done on my own, that is together with the Dear Partner. I can't remember any problem getting where we wanted to go. The Metro systems are well signed, and with a little exercise and patience you can recognize the station names. With a good map and a good guide - we had the Rough Guides - that part of the logistics is solved. The language is a major problem, but the usual tricks of pointing, looking helpless, and making a joke of it all do wonders. I would hate to be led by a guide, but for others it is a comfortable thought.

We also did both cities on our own. I found the DK Eyewitness guide for Moscow has the best map. I used the one from our library (kept the book at home). Took the smaller RS book for St. Petersburg ( his book on northern cities). His map and restaurant ideas were all good. We also downloaded the Google maps in our Android Samsung tablets/phones for both cities and then could get directions to any place we typed in. The blue ball guided us everywhere. I'm sure we missed somethings by not having a guide, but we just enjoy walking around and getting a sense of a place. If you like art, The Hermitage is great. We went 3 times and still missed alot. In St. Peterburg we stayed at the 3 Mosta which we loved (quite and not far from the Church of Spilled Blood.) We also loved the Georgian food in both cities. There's a great Georgian restaurant near the 3 Mosta hotel. We're now in Belarus- very scenic. Enjoy your trip!!

This topic has been automatically closed due to a period of inactivity.

  • Share full article

Advertisement

Supported by

TRAVEL ADVISORY

TRAVEL ADVISORY; New Clinic Serves Visitors to Moscow

TRAVEL ADVISORY; New Clinic Serves Visitors to Moscow

A new private clinic has opened in Moscow to serve travelers as well as residents. The service is provided by U.S. Global Health, a members-only joint venture of Columbia-Presbyterian Health Services; the Fund for Large Enterprises in Russia, a private investment company, and Pepsico World Trading, which helps develop businesses for its parent company, Pepsico.

Four American-trained, board-certified doctors and their assistants prescribe medications and provide diagnostic outpatient services and lab work. Doctors are on 24-hour call and in emergencies will make house calls, according to Sherrie Dulworth, Global's director of sales and marketing. The clinic will also arrange for emergency hospitalization at the Kuntsevo Central Clinical Hospital.

A 10-day "tourist" membership is $39, with separate charges for medical services, which are comparable to those charged in the United States. Global honors most major American insurance policies. A one-year family membership is $950, $475 for an individual and $90 for business travelers. A trial 30-day membership costs $90 for individuals and $150 for families. U.S. Global Health is at Fourth Dobryninsky Lane; telephone (7-095) 974-2332, fax (7-095) 974-2400. In the United States, (800) 335-9068.

IMAGES

  1. 30 Best Travel Jobs: Make Money Traveling the World! (2023)

    medley travel jobs

  2. 23 Jobs with Travel

    medley travel jobs

  3. 23 Jobs with Travel

    medley travel jobs

  4. The 15 best-paying careers that allow you to travel

    medley travel jobs

  5. 15 High Paying Travel Jobs [2023]

    medley travel jobs

  6. 40 Best Travel Jobs To Make Money Traveling (They Really Exist!)

    medley travel jobs

VIDEO

  1. Couples Travel Goals! What destination is number 1 on your bucket list?

COMMENTS

  1. Get the most from travel assignments with Medely

    Access per diem and local assignments. With the help of its affiliate, Frontline Health, Medely is one of the only solutions out there that offers per diem, local assignments, and travel assignments. Pick up per diem shifts anytime to maximize your earnings or make extra cash between travel assignments. .

  2. Medely

    Medely empowers nurses and allied health professionals to find and book per diem shifts and travel assignments on their schedules, earn more, and get paid fast. Join us at SCA's Annual Leadership Meeting, April 29-30 in Aurora, CO at Booth #110

  3. Medely

    Find and book per diem and travel assignments instantly at thousands of healthcare facilities nationwide with Medely. The best way to earn more on your schedule. Only Medely gives Nurses and Allied Pros the flexibility to book jobs and assignments on-demand. Sign up to Work. I'm Looking for Staff. How it works.

  4. Medely Careers and Employment

    Jobs. We were not able to detect your location. You can browse through all 775 jobs Medely has to offer. Job Card. Part-time. Certified Nurse Assistant CNA - PRN Per Diem. Clarkson Valley, MO. $19 - $22 an hour. 30+ days ago.

  5. Medely

    Login. Find and book per diem and travel assignments instantly at thousands of healthcare facilities nationwide with Medely.

  6. Per Diem Jobs and Travel Assignments for Nurses

    Whether you need per diem, float pool, or travel assignments, Medely delivers the widest range of Nursing and Allied staffing solutions. Skilled Nursing Facilities Our on-demand workforce marketplace of LVNs, CNAs, and RNs provides you with a scalable, cost-effective local labor solution.

  7. Medely Inc :: TravelNurseSource.com

    About Medely Inc. Medely is the leading digital marketplace for nurses and allied healthcare professionals. Partnerships with facilities in over 50 cities from coast to coast connect Medely professionals with more opportunities than a traditional staffing firm and allow them to book per diem jobs and travel assignments directly on the platform ...

  8. Medely Jobs and Careers

    561 Medely jobs. Apply to the latest jobs near you. Learn about salary, employee reviews, interviews, benefits, and work-life balance

  9. Travel Nursing Jobs

    The average salary for a Registered Nurse is $2,104 per week. Last updated on April 23, 2024. Based on 126,989 active jobs on Vivian.com in the last 7 days. Explore all travel Registered Nurse salary insights.

  10. Medley Travel Jobs, Employment

    73 Medley Travel jobs available on Indeed.com. Apply to Low Voltage Technician, Customer Service Representative, Forklift Operator and more!

  11. Careers

    Recommended Provider for Tailor-made Holidays. Audley is accredited as a Living Wage Employer. Luxury Travel Workplace of the Year winner. Magellan Awards Gold Winner. Wanderlust Travel Awards — Top Tour Operator. Condé Nast Traveller Readers' Choice Awards. The Sunday Times Travel Magazine's Best Travel Specialists. Travel Media Awards.

  12. Moscow Nights at the Ritz Medley

    An accordion medley of some favourites. Moscow Nights (Midnight in Moscow), Puttin´on the Ritz, Kalinka, Tumbalalaika, Minor Swing and some improv.Arranged ...

  13. Working at Medely: 236 Reviews

    236 reviews from Medely employees about Medely culture, salaries, benefits, work-life balance, management, job security, and more.

  14. Independent Travel to Moscow and St. Petersburg

    2487 posts. Both Moscow and St Petersburg I've done on my own, that is together with the Dear Partner. I can't remember any problem getting where we wanted to go. The Metro systems are well signed, and with a little exercise and patience you can recognize the station names.

  15. TRAVEL ADVISORY; New Clinic Serves Visitors to Moscow

    A new private clinic has opened in Moscow to serve travelers as well as residents. The service is provided by U.S. Global Health, a members-only joint venture of Columbia-Presbyterian Health ...

  16. About Medely

    Medely helps nurses and health professionals build lives with freedom and flexibility. We partner with healthcare facilities to quickly connect with health professionals and deliver tools to manage their workforce, track time, billing, and credentials. We're an all-in-one, on-demand talent marketplace and extended workforce solution.

  17. Login

    Nurses and allied health professionals. I'm a nurse or allied health professional. Facilities. I represent a facility, looking for staffing.

  18. Job Search

    We would like to show you a description here but the site won't allow us.