- March 4, 2001 (Day -4)
- March 6, 2001 (Day -2)
- March 7, 2001 (Day -1)
- March 8, 2001 (Day 1)
- March 10, 2001 (Day 3)
- March 11, 2001 (Day 4)
- March 12, 2001 (Day 5)
- March 13, 2001 (Day 6)
- March 14, 2001 (Day 7)
- March 15, 2001 (Day 8)
- March 16, 2001 (Day 9)
- March 17, 2001 (Day 10)
- March 18, 2001 (Day 11)
- March 19, 2001 (Day 12)
- Time Check: Day 12
- March 20, 2001 (Day 13)
- March 21, 2001 (Day 14)
- March 22, 2001 (Day 15)
- March 23, 2001 (Day 16)
- March 24, 2001 (Day 17)
- March 25, 2001 (Day 18)
- March 26, 2001 (Day 19)
- March 27, 2001 (Day 20)
- March 28, 2001 (Day 21)
- March 29, 2001 (Day 22)
- March 30, 2001 (Day 23)
- Time Check: Day 23
- March 31, 2001 (Day 24)
- April 1, 2001 (Day 25)
- April 2, 2001 (Day 26)
- April 3, 2001 (Day 27)
- April 4, 2001 (Day 28)
- April 5, 2001 (Day 29)
- Time Check: Day 29
- April 6, 2001 (Day 30)
- April 7, 2001 (Day 31)
- April 8, 2001 (Day 32)
- April 9, 2001 (Day 33)
- April 10, 2001 (Day 34)
- April 11, 2001 (Day 35)
- Time Check: Day 35
- April 12, 2001 (Day 36)
- April 13, 2001 (Day 37)
- April 14, 2001 (Day 38)
- April 15, 2001 (Day 39)
- April 16, 2001 (Day 40)
- Time Check: Day 40
- April 17, 2001 (Day 41)
- April 18, 2001 (Day 42)
- April 19, 2001 (Day 43)
- Time Check: Day 43
- April 20, 2001 (Day 44)
- Intermission
- April 21, 2001 (Day 45)
- April 22, 2001 (Day 46)
- April 23, 2001 (Day 47)
- April 24, 2001 (Day 48)
- April 25, 2001 (Day 49)
- April 26, 2001 (Day 50)
- April 27, 2001 (Day 51)
- April 28, 2001 (Day 52)
- Time Check: Day 52
- April 29, 2001 (Day 53)
- April 30, 2001 (Day 54)
- May 1, 2001 (Day 55) – Part I
- May 1, 2001 (Day 55) – Part II
- May 2, 2001 (Day 56)
- May 3, 2001 (Day 57)
- May 4, 2001 (Day 58)
- May 5, 2001 (Day 59)
- May 6, 2001 (Day 60)
- May 7, 2001 (Day 61)
- Time Check: Day 61
- May 8, 2001 (Day 62)
- May 9, 2001 (Day 63)
- May 10, 2001 (Day 64)
- May 11, 2001 (Day 65)
- May 12, 2001 (Day 66)
- May 13, 2001 (Day 67)
- May 14, 2001 (Day 68)
- May 15, 2001 (Day 69)
- Time Check: Day 69
- May 16, 2001 (Day 70)
- Time Check: Day 70
- May 17, 2001 (Day 71)
- May 18, 2001 (Day 72)
- May 19, 2001 (Day 73)
- May 20, 2001 (Day 74)
- May 21, 2001 (Day 75)
- May 22, 2001 (Day 76)
- May 23, 2001 (Day 77)
- May 24, 2001 (Day 78)
- May 25, 2001 (Day 79)
- Intermission – Part II
- May 27, 2001 (Epilogue)
March 31, 2001 (Day 24): Naushki, Russia, on the Russia-Mongolia border – 4.30pm (Moscow time)
Border crossing procedures are underway. Our passports were collected and we were given Russian customs forms to fill out. The Russian officials just want to be sure we are leaving with less money than we entered. According to the timetable they have allocated close to three hours for this process. Our guidebook indicates it often takes longer. The train does have quite a number of carriages so three-plus hours does not seem out of the question.
Following the completion of customs, we have one more stop in Russia: the city of Dozorne, about 10 minutes from Naushki, according to the timetable. Three minutes are scheduled for this final stop, so I suspect the only thing that happens there is that the customs officials disembark.
Health: OK. Did not sleep very well last night. It was the roughest night on the train so far with frequent violent shakes of the carriage. It was like riding in a truck down a well-maintained gravel road whilst repeatedly colliding with deer. I suspect they were probably trying to make up for lost time. As a result, we were only an hour late getting into Ulan Ude. Looking out the window provided some consolation for the turbulent ride, watching cinders rush past us like a volley of shooting stars.
Lake Baikal is the deepest freshwater lake in the world with a maximum depth of 5315 ft (Superior is 1330 ft). This single lake contains about 20 percent of the world’s fresh water.World Almanac 1999
Morale: Poor. We are having exceptional difficulty in exchanging our rubles back to dollars. To further frustrate matters, we have more rubles that either of us had initially thought. I think we spent less in Moscow than we had thought; some money had been exchanged and then presumed to have been spent. We also ended up requiring less money on the train, due to our habits. We did not partake of the dining car and provisioned ourselves from the kiosks at the platforms, which was far less expensive than we had thought. Our interest in making sure we had enough rubles for the train has succeeded awfully.
The bank on the platform here (Naushki) was closed, probably due to the fact that the train is running late. It was not a mystery that this train was coming so I expected that it would have been open. In the end, we are left holding a lot of useless currency. The greatest frustration is knowing there is not much we can do. We will see if we can exchange it in China. Trying to exchange it in Mongolia seems an even worse idea.
But enough about that. In environmental news, the Monkey Man has apparently bathed in cologne. While this is not something I would normally condone, drastic situations do call for drastic measures.
On a positive note, today we saw Lake Baikal. For reasons I cannot fully explain (or even understand myself), I have always wanted to see it. I can only guess that its place in the record books combined with its remote location added to that appeal. I think it was something I never thought I would see in my lifetime. Winter had rejoined us in this part of Siberia, so the lake looked more like a vast snowfield as we traveled along the southern shore.
The area around the lake was one of the final sections of the original Trans-Siberian line to be completed. Opting not to incur the expense of running the line along the rough terrain along the southern shore, passengers and their carriages were ferried across the lake and continued their rail journey on the opposite shore. The cliffs afforded us a great view of the lake, but track is not necessarily laid for scenic reasons. What prompted the construction of the Circumbaikal Line, at great haste and at great cost, was the Russo-Japanese war, since the ferries were not able to keep the constant flow of men and materiel moving eastward and were frequently impaired by the weather. The work crews could only get to some parts of the line by boat [Bryn Thomas, Trans-Siberian Handbook, p.344].
[T]he first passengers found this section of the line particularly terrifying, not on account of the frequent derailments but because of the tunnels: there were none in European Russia at that time.Trans-Siberian Handbook, p.344
8.30pm (Moscow time) – Just across the Mongolian border
Morale has improved a bit. While we were weighing our options, I remembered that our ship is scheduled dock in Vladivostok, so we should have a chance to exchange money there. That realization helped lighten the cloud a bit. We may have other options, but that seems to be the best one. I just feel upset that we are in this situation and it weighs heavily in my mind. Anna has been very wonderful, helping to keep everything in perspective. I’m so lucky.
The border crossing is a long process. On the Russian side, we had the customs and immigrations paperwork followed by a cabin-to-cabin search for contraband. We had to pull our bags out of the overhead and underbed bins. The customs officer moved effortlessly up the ladder and scanned all the nooks and crannies with practiced efficiency – she had clearly done this once or twice before. Outside, guards searched the areas beneath the carriages. After an hour and a half our passports were returned. In place of the separate Russia visa we needed to carry with us, we found stamps had been placed in our passport pages. Then another chap came around and put an additional immigration stamp underneath our new Russian visa. At first, I thought this was a Mongolian entry stamp, but that was soon to follow. I felt the process was very efficient. The only hassle we received was when the immigration officer chuckled after comparing my passport photo to the current me. Hopefully it was because I am in dire need of a shave.
After sitting for about 2.5 hours, the train crawled about three kilometers down the track and stops again. A Mongolian official began making the rounds distributing stamps in passports.
We sat for a half-hour before the train moves a few kilometers more into a large enclosure fitted with stadium lighting. Hollywood tells me that this is what border crossings during the Cold War were like. A gentleman saluted us as he entered our cabin to distribute another round of customs and entry forms. After this, a military-looking official comes in and repeats the search of the overhead and underbed bins, adding taps on doors and walls – presumably looking for hollow spots. Their interest was more on things potentially hidden in the structure of the car since their search did not include our luggage.
Then inexplicably there was a visit from an insurance salesperson. A woman went cabin-to-cabin confirming that all passengers were insured. She reminded us that insurance is required in Ulan Bator and we would be refused entrance if we did not have it. Imagine our good fortune to discover that she represents a company that will provide us the coverage we need. We passed. This time tomorrow, gods of Mongolian rail transportation willing, we will be in China.
In my mind, I always envisioned Siberia to be vast, cold, and snowy. With this portion of the trip behind us, I can say it met expectations. Certainly the time of year we chose to travel enhanced that perspective. Considering the chill in the air, I suspect this was one instance where Anna had hoped my generalizations would be wrong.
Ten years ago today, I left the North American continent for the first time. I was bound for the UK where I was to spend nine months doing volunteer work. I departed with an army duffel bag over my shoulder with all my gear for nine months – all the more impressive since a sleeping bag and a pair of boots I wore about three times was jammed in that bag. I wonder if I have gotten better or worse at packing. I suspect worse.
Either way, I not sure I imagined where that first big journey would lead.
I might have been a dentist or a public man but for that first sight of a larger world.Robert Byron, quoted by Paul Fussell
Excerpts from Anna’s journal included
This entry was posted in Around the World