Good point.
Steve Rosenberg is the Moscow correspondent for BBC News.
Twitter convoy tracking...
An update from our news desk on Putin's visit to Crimea:
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is on a two-visit to Crimea, is to meet with Russian government officials and parliament members on August 14.
The presidential press service said that Putin will deliver a speech touching on some key issues ahead of regional elections in September.
Taking part in the meeting in Yalta will be Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, State Duma Speaker Sergei Naryshkin, and a number of federal ministers.
After he arrived in Crimea on August 13, Putin chaired a meeting with his top security chiefs in Sevastopol.
Ukrainian officials have denounced Putin's visit to Crimea as unacceptable, after Moscow annexed the peninsula from Ukraine in March.
With Strelkov's fate uncertain, things just got even more complicated for the separatists:
The leader of pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine's Luhansk region says he is stepping down, the second senior separatist figure to resign in a week.
Valery Bolotov said on August 14 that he was suspending his work as leader of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic, citing a wound that he said was hampering his efforts in the job.
He said the rebel "defense minister," Ihor Plotnitsky, would be asked to take his place.
Bolotov's announcement came seven days after Aleksander Borodai, the leader of separatists in the neighboring Donetsk region, said he was resigning his post as prime minister of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic.
It also followed conflicting statements by separatists on August 13 about the status of the military chief of the Donetsk separatists, Igor Strelkov, who some reports said had been wounded.
Lots of these going about. Here's a Transformers one.
Our news desk has wrapped together everything we know about the convoy:
A Russian aid convoy has resumed its travel toward Ukraine, with at least part of the convoy heading south toward the rebel-held Luhansk region.
Russian officials have not said where the convoy of nearly 300 trucks is headed. Russia initially said the convoy would cross into the government-controlled Kharkiv region.
Reports on August 14 said the convoy was now in Russia's southern Rostov region, neighboring Luhansk.
Moscow has dismissed claims the convoy is a pretext to send military aid to the separatists fighting government forces in eastern Ukraine.
Meanwhile, Ukraine said it was sending its own aid convoys to the east, with dozens of trucks leaving Kyiv, Dnipropetrovsk, and Kharkiv for a government-held town near Luhansk on August 14.
Local officials said Luhansk came under shelling on August 14, causing civilian casualties.
BREAKING: Russian President Vladmir Putin, speaking in Yalta, said Moscow will do its utmost to stop bloodshed in Ukraine and that the situation in Ukraine's southeast is becoming more dramatic with each passing day.