Hadn’t imagined that a train trip of 30 hours could go so fast. 30 hours is nothing when you consider the size of the whole country. The famous Transiberian express can carry one in days and 7 nights from Moscow to Vladivostok (vostok means east). Somewhere in the middle is Novosibirsk, Siberia’s capital since the middle of the 1920s. The city is only a 115 years old, new and modern in its architecture. Certainly when you compare it to Irkutsk, Siberia’s former capital. Irkutsk shows a ‘typical Siberian’ style, many wooden houses, classical coloured buildings and old orthodox churches (who are much lighter from the inside than the once I visited in Romania).
An hour ‘marchroetka’-drive from Irkutsk lies Lake Baikal, the world’s deepest lake, and a shore of 650 km long (from Amsterdam to Paris and a bit further). The lake divides hills with trees that are rapidly loosing there leaves and mountains covered by snow. The sun is shining and the temperature rises to 15 degrees. Perfect autumn weather. Boats make their tours on the lake, though without any know destination, everyone seems to deny that (tourist) boats still run during off-season. The lake and the area is rich of minerals and fish. The villages around the lake give a friendly and peaceful impression. The barking dogs don’t bite when we pass the many gates and coloured wooden houses. A lost squirrel is preparing itself for the winter next to the local church, other than that there is very little wildlife. No dear, no foxes, no (Siberian) tiger, no bears….this country is so huge, why would these animals hang around people while there is so much space?
After another 30 hours through the steps and plains of Siberia, going through areas with 5 cm of snow, stopping at stations where small lobsters are offered next to the usual homemade breads, pancakes, the sausages, the beer, cigarettes and instant noodles we get back in chaotic and modern Novosibirsk, the chilly wind blows in my face and it almost feels like coming home…
An hour ‘marchroetka’-drive from Irkutsk lies Lake Baikal, the world’s deepest lake, and a shore of 650 km long (from Amsterdam to Paris and a bit further). The lake divides hills with trees that are rapidly loosing there leaves and mountains covered by snow. The sun is shining and the temperature rises to 15 degrees. Perfect autumn weather. Boats make their tours on the lake, though without any know destination, everyone seems to deny that (tourist) boats still run during off-season. The lake and the area is rich of minerals and fish. The villages around the lake give a friendly and peaceful impression. The barking dogs don’t bite when we pass the many gates and coloured wooden houses. A lost squirrel is preparing itself for the winter next to the local church, other than that there is very little wildlife. No dear, no foxes, no (Siberian) tiger, no bears….this country is so huge, why would these animals hang around people while there is so much space?
After another 30 hours through the steps and plains of Siberia, going through areas with 5 cm of snow, stopping at stations where small lobsters are offered next to the usual homemade breads, pancakes, the sausages, the beer, cigarettes and instant noodles we get back in chaotic and modern Novosibirsk, the chilly wind blows in my face and it almost feels like coming home…




