|
The Trans-Siberian – So what’s
it really like?
By Ellen MacGregor
If international airports have killed the “romance” of travel
for you, then just get down to Yaroslavsky Station in Moscow from where
the Trans-Siberian Express departs. Passengers scurry with their belongings,
old ladies hawk Russian newspapers, Russian Eurovision-music is pumping
out, and there’s a tang of coal smoke in the air… this is
how travel used to be. No duty-free, no check-in desk, no transit bus
- you walk right up to your Siberia-bound train and get on. Phew, it’s
stifling in here! The jet-air ventilation only kicks in once the trains
in motion. Time to meet our cabin-mates for the journey- Sergey, who’s
a computer programmer, and his mother.. they’re on their way home
to Krasnoyarsk, in mid-Siberia.
“How
about a cup of tea?”. Our wagon attendant, Galina, offers to make
it for us, and it comes in glass mugs in elaborate steel cupholders…with
three spoons of sugar already stirred in! Hmm, remember to ask for biez
sagar (“no sugar”) next time! Time for bed… there’s
a hand basin in the wc, at either end of the wagon. The boys offer to
go for a stroll whilst we bed down for the night.
No-one chases you out of bed next morning-this is
the hotel that rides along with you! There’s no breakfast included
- we’ve brought some bananas and croissants from a shop in Moscow.
Mmmm, the croissants are filled with yucky jam!
Following advice in the Infopack, we’ve bought plastic mugs and
our own instant coffee - there’s constant free hot water on tap
from the boiler in each wagon. Sergey asks if we want to play chess?
We lose - what did we expect, playing against a Russian? And a computer
programmer too.. “Big city soon - train stop. Fifteen minute.”
says Sergey, so we pull on our trainers to be ready to hop off.
None of the en-route stops are long enough to go further than the platform,
but that suits our fellow passengers fine - they’re all lighting-up
and puffing away at every chance they get, because it’s strictly
no-smoking on board.
Galina’s
changed shift now with the other wagon-attendant, Marina - she’s
not so strict and more of a laugh, but she still doesn’t want
us to go missing at the stop, so she’s tapping her watch and signalling
“fifteen!” with her fingers. “Ooral!” says Marina
after we’ve been going a while. “Ooral?” Aha, it’s
the Ural Mountains! You can only really see the foothills from the train
though - they weren’t so daft when they chose this route for the
train-lines. We’d heard about the hot food you can buy from hawkers
at the stops, so we decide to get some at the next halt. But everyone
here is selling… crystal glass? “They make glass here. But
factory not pay salaries two years. These people selling.” explains
Sergey. I feel kinda sorry for the unpaid workers - but the glass things
are horrible. I buy a set of shot-glasses - they’re only $5, and
we can use them on the trip.
But we’re still hungry! So we trek four wagons
through the train to reach the Restaurant Caralways located in the middle
of the train, next door to First-Class. So of course - we take a good
old goggle at the First Class wagon on the way! But not so exciting
as we hoped - the same as ours, but without the upper berths. At last
- hot food! But the menu’s all in Russian. Wait, they have an
English translation - it looks like it was typed-out around ten years
ago, and all the prices have been corrected a dozen times in different
pens. Lucky I’m not a strict vegetarian, or it would only be the
Mushrooms in Sour Cream for me - I order them as a starter, and salmon,
while Emilia has the Greek Salad and Siberian Dumplings. The food takes
ages to come-but we’re not in a hurry anyhow, and the beer is
cold and dirt-cheap, “Siberian Crown”, while we’re
waiting. We’d planned to stay-up until 1am to see the Europe -
Asia border… but, well, it was dark, and that beer was stronger
than we thought…
OK, it’s the fourth day on board this train
now, and I still haven’t opened my book? We lost our faithful
interpreter today when Sergey and his mother got out - but he still
helped us buying extra goodies for breakfast on the platform when saying
goodbye. We’re on our own now for the last leg into Irkutsk, so
we can spread out a bit more - at last there’s space to open the
huge map we bought at the Moscow flea market? But it’s all in
Russian - Galina shows us where we are, and points out Lake Baikal:
“I live”, she says, full of pride. All of the staff on this
train are Siberians - they don’t especially like Muscovites, and
are pleased to be going home. Today we cross a huge river, over a spectacular
bridge - it’s only when you really see it with your own eyes,
you understand what a phenomenal feat it was to build this single railroad
through thousands of miles of forests and bogs? We must be getting nearer
Irkutsk-my mobile’s got a signal again. Marina helped us get it
recharged along the way, there’s a special wagon next to the restaurant
(but they took 30 roubles for doing it). They have a shower cabin for
rent there too, just 80 roubles for a hot shower! Wish we’d found
it earlier!
Next morning, though, it’s a change of pace.
After four days with nothing special to do, the train’s due in
Irkutsk in two hours - and Galina and Marina want everything tidied-up
ahead of schedule, so they can finally clock-off work and go home. They’re
collecting the bed-linen and hand-towels they handed out in Moscow –
every pillow-case has to be accounted for! They finally tot-up our bill
for tea, biscuits and snacks they’ve served us during the journey
too. Time to say goodbye - it’s a completely different train that’ll
take us on from Lake Baikal to Mongolia in a couple of days time…
but right now, I’m ready for a night spent in a stationary bed!
- Ellen MacGregor |