Category Archives: Sibirsky Extreme

A message from Tony

SIBIRSKYEXTREME IS OVER

I now head west with in my –
– Head, a million images and memories of an incredible 3 months.
– Eyes, tears of emotion with the pleasure of the past and regret that this has ended.
– Heart, absolute gratitude and warmth to every single person I met along the way, all hundreds and hundreds of them without exception. The World would be richer if it ignored politics and politicians and start to learn from all the Russian peoples who, irrespective of their own personal lives and circumstances were, without exception, interested, interesting and extended warmth and generosity in immeasurable quantities.

Finally – one name and one word –
WALTER. THANKS.

Sadly the word is nowhere big enough, but it is the only one I know.

SIBIRSKYEXTREME CONTINUES

The project continues on its travels and I will follow its progess as many have followed it here.

God speed, Mate.
Catch you…

Tony

Polar Express

29.08.09

Tony and Terry checked into the Lena Hotel in downtown ust Kut.  I had ridden ahead of them to get to Ust Kut in time to sort out a boat trip back to Lensk.

I still harboured a burning ambition to get to the Arctic Circle in Asia.  Tony and Terry were short on time and had to head back to the UK, but I thought I just had enough time before the seasons changed to try one more time to get North from Udachny.

A few handshakes and hugs could never be enough to say farewell to the two guys who have partnered me along this BAM Road odyssey.  Tony has been with me for almost 3 months … initially just planning to ride Altai, Tuva and Lake Baikal with me over 3 weeks, but that grew into 3 months across some of the wildest roads in Siberia.  I am unsure how it will feel to be riding without Tony.  It was in Central Asia the last time I set out on a day’s ride without waking up Tony first.  I dont think I have met a guy with such understated determination.  No matter how tough things got, Tony just put his head down and got the job done.  What he lacked in technique he made up for in abundance with balls.  The guy is all about balls.  If you see him, offer to shake his balls!

Terry has been a different asset on the BAM road.  Apart from his ability to have a laugh, his vast off road riding experience going back about as long as I have been alive, was put to good effect on the tough BAM road.  When the going got really tough it was great to send in Terry up front to show the best line though.  I learned a lot about line picking from watching Terry carve up the toughest tracks.  Terry was the first person we turned to if anything mechanical or technical was amiss.  ‘Terry, what do you reckon?’.  Terry and I rode at similar tempos and for long stretches it was just Terry and I riding together, followed by a wait for Tony.

I will really miss those guys.  In 2 weeks or so, they will be back in England, and I will be where they are now.  Maybe I am mad to head up to Udachny again.

I loaded the bike onto the boat for Lensk at another obscure loading point.  As it happened, the boat had to dock briefly at the main river port anyway, next to the Lena Hotel.  I called the guys and told them to bring a few beers down to the river.  We clinked beer bottles for the last time down on the shores of the Lena, and my boat pulled away into the darkness, set for 1000 km on the Lena.

– – –

30.08 – 31.08 – 01.09.09

I shared a 4 berth room on the boat with Valeri, and old truck driver from Lensk.  He was clean, didnt drink or smoke, and was about as good a companion as I could have hoped for.

I had been told the ride to Lensk would be two days,  Valeri had been told a day and a half.  A couple of hours out of Ust Kut and it was apparent that was not going to happen.  The engines shut down and the boot moored in the river about midnight.  When I awoke in the morning, we had not moved.  We were still just 45km from Ust Kut.  It was almost midday before the engines fired up again.  We had thought the boat had stopped due to fog last night, but there had be no fog since early in the morning. It was apparent there was a bit of engine repair and maintenance going on.  I noted only one propeller was turning and when the boat was moving we were making about 17-20 km/h … about the same as the barge had done two months earlier.  So I assumed we would also take about 3 days for the journey.

The boat had warm showers for a few hours each day and a galley, where hot meals were prepared 3 times a day.  That was a big improvement on the barge.  In theory the barge could have cost us about 9000 rubles each back in July … the price for vehicles was 4000 rubles per metre of length.  But they didnt know how to account for motorcycles as they are not full width vehicles.  I guess they could have charged us half the regular price per metre, but in the end they charged us nothing, and we took the barge from Ust Kut to Lensk for free.  The boat I was on now, the ‘Moskovsky 11’ charged 8000 rubles (180 EUR) per passenger for the journey (which included a cabin) … and 6000 for the motorcycle, which was fitting neatly on the front deck of the boat.

I have been in touch with Arnaud, the Frenchman we met in Vladivostok.  Arnaud went up to Magadan and rode to Yakutsk.  He is planning to ride to Lensk and we will probably try and take the return ferry together from Lensk to Ust Kut in about a week.

while beached in Kirensk to pick up a few passengers, I briefly fired up the laptop internet connection and had a chat with Mac Swinarski.  He is back in Poland after his epic ride to Anadyr.

This year is a turning into a great year for horizon widening in Siberia.  All sorts of new possibilities have opened up.  Routes have been mapped and documented.  Mac was telling me even the  locals in Anadyr know nothing about the perfectly decent new roads he found to their city.  Only a handful of people know anything about the roads – usually the truck drivers that regularly drive them in their 6WD trucks – and they typically dont have internet.  We found the same with the BAM road and Vilyuisky Trakt … There was only one guy who could tell us the Vilyuisky Trakt was definately do-able in its entirity, and that was Andrei the mechanic in Mirny.

Most of the locals you ask en route don’t have a clue and know only about the area within about an hour or two’s drive away from where they are. The two Moscow guys we met adventuing across the country in their wazzik (Road of Bones) had expressed great surprise that we had done the Vilyuisky Trakt.  They had been been researching Russian 4WD sites for months, and found nothing to suggest it was possible.

– – –

Back to life on the river … A day later, and our boat docked in Vitim, where the Vitim River joins the Lena.  Vitim is a real boom town around here.  There is a big plan to develop oil and gas fields about 170 km ‘inland’ and Vitim will be the centre of logistics for that.  The next few years will see the town grow from a small service port to one of the key cities on the Lena, the same way Lensk grew dramatically to service the diamond towns of Mirny, Almazny, Aikhal, Udachny and Anabar several decades ago.

Valeri my cabin mate was telling me that if it werent for the crisis they would have started building the planned road between Lensk and Vitim already.  Watch out for that one in the next few years.  Already there is a road from the BAM town of Nebel to Kirensk on the Lena, so in a couple of years you would need a boat only from Kirensk to Vitim.  In about 6-7 years, you wont need the boat at all to go from Ust Kut to Lensk as there should be a road all the way.  (Actually you dont need a boat now – you can go all the way the long way round via Tynda and Yakutsk.)  Plans are to link Ust Kut with the new oil and gas fields by road, which will already be linked to Lensk via Vitim.

– – –

02.09.09

About 10am, after 3.5 days on the river, the boat docked in Lensk and I unloaded my bags and then the bike.  I had a big day ahead of me.  I was going to try and get to Udachny, 770km away, all on dirt roads, by the end of the day.  If I made it, it would be the biggest day of the trip in terms of mileage.  I had wasted enough time on the boat and had itchy feet.  Too much time sitting and thinking, without any doing.

I found a fuel station and hit the road.  It was 10:20 when I left Lensk.  I’d had plenty to eat on the boat over the last few days so breakfast was not required.  I would go straight through to Mirny 240 km away.

The road from Lensk to Mirny was in truly excellent condition.  Its one of the finest dirt roads I have ever ridden.  I sat on 110 km/h the whole way, but if I didnt have mousse in my front tyre and gearing for low speed via my front sprocket, I would have done most of the road at 130.  I stopped on for photographs.  The seasons were changing up here already and the trees were bursting with colour.

I fuelled up again on the southern edge of Mirny.  I didnt need to – I would fuel up at Chernyshevsky 100 km further up the road too, but there the price would be a lot higher and the quality less reliable.  Better to get as much as possible while in Mirny.  I sped on to Andrei’s workshop, our trusty mechanic from 2 months ago, arriving at 12:45.  I had texted him I was on my way as I left Lensk, but it was a quiet day in the workshop and he was away.  I stripped the bags off the bike and just took a couple of much lightened bags – leaving two bags at Andrei’s to collect on my return.

I stopped at the Mirny market place to pick up some Samsa’s for the trip North.  Andrei had shown me this little shop, a personal favorite, 2 months ago, and remembered the samsa’s were the best I had eaten in Russia.  I took the liberty with time of eating one.  I pulled out of Mirny just before 2pm.  It would be a 6-7 hour ride to Udachny, 530 km away, assuming I stopped only for fuel along the way.

The road from Mirny to Chernyshevsky is not as good as the Lensk – Mirny section of the Anabar Road, and party out of respect for the road and partly because I wanted to get accustomed to riding at 90 km/h for the section North of Chernyshevsky to conserve fuel, I slowed to 90 km/h for the 105km to Chernyshevsky.  I topped up with 5 litres of fuel there.  Now I was maxxed out on fuel.  Both tanks dripping fuel onto the pavement.  22 litres ready to burn.

Last time we went up from Chernyshevsky, both Tony and I had both burned more fuel than expected … we had a strong headwind the whole way and rode at 110 km/h … which probably explains it.  But I ran out before Aikhal, which is still 65 km short of Udachny, and relied on Tony going ahead to get me 5 litres.  This time I wanted to go straight thru to Udachny. There wasnt too much wind about and I was going to try and stick to the more economical speed of 90 km/h by the GPS … which is about 96 km/h on my speedo.

The usual collection of ‘Jacksons’ (terminology courtesy of the brothers Vince) stopped me to ask the usual question in Chernyshevsky when I refuelled and then stopped at the shop for a litre of liquid refreshment, but I brushed them aside.  I was on a mission.  I had now done about 350 km and had 420 still to go – non stop.  I didnt know when it got dark this far North at this time of year, but I was only 3 weeks from the equinox … I guessed it would be about 8pm.  I had no time to spare if I wanted to not risk riding in the dark.

Headphones were blaring and I just concentrated on the surface of the road ahead.  There had clearly been rain around and some patches of the road were moist, tho so far no rain had touched me today.  The first point of interest would be the village of Morkoka.  It’s the only inhabited place between Aikhal and Chernyshevsky.  It has about half a dozen buildings, a fuel station that seems to only sell diesel (though I would try again to buy petrol when I got there) and I have been told a cafe with rooms.

When I got there, I asked a stopped truck driver where the cafe was.  It seems a silly question for someone in the west, but in the more remote parts of Russia, every building and every door looks the same.  None offer a hint of what is behind each one.  Places like Morkoka dont even bother with signs.  There are no visitors here – Just the regular truck drivers who know where everything is. I marked the location of the cafe on my GPS and moved on to the fuel station.

I am compiling a list of waypoints of all the cafes, fuel stations, hotels, water hazards etc I have used, crossed or even seen in off the beaten track Siberia.  I think that would be useful.  No one needs a guide or guide book if you already know where the fuel, cafes and hotels are.

As I suspected, the fuel station refused to sell me fuel – mentioned something about needing paperwork, coupons or something like that to buy here.  I looked inside my tanks to guess how much fuel I had left.  My economy looked good.  I estimated at current consumption I would get to Udachny with 2-3 litres to spare.

It was always a risk, now that I was travelling alone.  When I was with Tony we could take these risks.  If one person ran out of fuel, the other could go ahead with the fuel canister.  Tony had been Tsar of the spare fuel canister … mainly from necessity.  Terry and I both had 22 litres of capacity, due to modifications, but Tony had just the stock 17 litre tank.  This was however, compensated with a old 5 litre oil container found by the side of the road, at a cost of zero rubles / dollars / euro / sterling. By strap

BAM 4, Postscript

28.08.09

Terry had asked to take a day off to have a bit of a look around Lake Baikal and I was in no mood to disagree. We decided to take a ride down to the seal hunting village of Baikalskoye 40km to the south, sort out anything that needed sorting and generally have a relaxed day. The weather was awesome. Sure it was bloody cold prior to about 11am, but clear blue cloudless skies cheered us up. It was the first cloudless day since meeting Terry … he must be bad luck!

My bike wouldnt start, so Tony went into the centre of Severobaikalsk to sort out breakfast, while Terry and I started the time old process of checking if we are getting spark, if so, are we getting fuel? It turned out we were not getting fuel. A connection was loose to the fuel pump. Once diagnosed, and the connection jiggled around a bit, all was well and the bike reassembled just in time to enjoy a greasy take away breakfast.

We rode about 10km out of town and found a deserted stretch of lakeshore to chill out on. There was plenty of deserted beach, but we chose a nice grassy spot. Mosquito free, midge free, ant free … it was heavenly and the boys both soon drifted off to sleep. Must be an age thing. I began to daydream about everything from changes taking place back at home in London to people we met or crossed paths with on our recent travels.

I have since heard (see feedback in various blogs) from two other bikers I had sought … one was the mystery solo biker that passed through the Kyubeme fuel dump about a week before Tony and me … he indeed was a Pole, as we suspected. Marek Grzywna – his blog is at http://syberianexpress-majopl.blogspot.com.

And of course the two Poles whose route (and accomodation) we echoed from Vanino to Fevralsk with uncanny commonality – even sleeping in the same room (totally unintentional) for about 3 different evenings – I have since heard from Robert ‘Movistar’ Mamzer, who was one of those guys. We had such common experiences that its now my duty to have a beer with him!

I wondered what happened to the American on the red bike (Olyokma River Bridge) … by way of an update on this one, I had also spoken to the security guy at the Kuanda River Bridge. That was another bridge that anyone taking the BAM road must cross. He remembered the Americans (plural … 2 of them he recalled), but they had taken a flatbed train at least as far as Chara. So they hadnt ridden the whole road to Tynda? and maybe he/they had also skipped the mighty Vitim River Bridge – that cradle of manliness! I still need to learn more. Its the only loose end in terms of contacts. Does anyone know who this guy is?

In Baikalskoye, we grabbed an ice-cream each and headed down to the jetty, taking in the cloudless blue sky and crystal clear waters of Lake Baikal. Eventually it was time to head back to Severobaikalsk. I needed to find a place to upload some long overdue pictures for the blog and Tony hadnt checked his email in weeks. Terry is a bit of a luddite, so no problem for him. He just sat out sunning himself in Severobaikalsk’s central square.

When all was done, we stopped off at the market for a huge and tasty dinner of shashlik – long one of my favorites, and now one of Terry’s favorites too, before grabbing a few beers and heading back to the hotel to pack.

With the hard riding all behind us now, we re-arranged the loads. We would soon be parting ways and now as as good a time as any to make sure the right stuff was on the right bike.

– – –

29.08.09

Another nice sleep in and warm shower to start the day. This civilisation stuff can really grow on you – makes us wonder why we ever headed out into the real wilds of Siberia. Today would be a relatively short ride – 340km on prepared roads. A mere 6 hours or so. We left Severobaikalsk around 10:30. By 1pm we were passing the point where the Zhigalovo Road meets the BAM road … a point Tony and I got to exactly 2 months ago to the day, on our way up to Yakutia.

It was strange to ride a road that felt familiar. Almost every point in the road gave me flashbacks to 2 months ago. Its incredible how much data can be stored in the brain … all HD quality video replays from 2 months ago came flooding back. We stopped in at the same railway canteen at Magistralny for lunch.

Tony had been complaining of a soggy rear end … I pointed out he was of pensionable age so it was par for the course. He however wanted to look at his tyre pressures and wheel bearings … before realising his rear wheel axle nut was loose. Phew!, at least thats easy to fix.

Onwards and upwards to Ust Kut … about 3:30pm we passed the spot that was total and utter muddy bog 2 months ago. In the cloudless blue sunny skies of today, riding it now was a doddle. It was almost dry. But it was still easy to imagine how it would look after a days rain!

In the final few dozen kilometres into Ust Kut, Tony had flashbacks to Yakutia and his 15 punctures. He had two rear wheel punctures, to add to one he scored last night. All up he is now up to 18 punctures. I think there is a good chance he can get 20 by the time he gets back to Denham Village in west London. I had already arrived in Ust Kut and sat in front of the hotel eating shashlik in the sun. Eventually the two stragglers arrived and checked into the hotel.

There was only 700km of the 4280km BAM road to go. Just over a days ride to Taishet and the end of the line.

BAM 4 – To Baikal

22.08.09

At 7:30 am my alarm went off. We had an agreement to meet the young chaps who rented us the apartment and the garage on the other side of town at 8am. We had a few things to sort out before we hit the road; Tony his battery, and my rear mousse had just died, so I needed to get it out and get a tube in the back wheel.

But 8am came and went… as did 8:30, 9:00 and 9:30. I repeatedly called the only number I had for the guys but the number was not answering. This was a bit wierd, but finally at 9:45 someone came to get us. So much for getting an early start. We grabbed all our things and jumped in the car, which took us back to the garage. We got our bikes out and the driver then took me round the corner to the one guy in town who sold petrol. There is no petrol station in Yuktali, a town of 2500 people, but there is a guy who sells it from his yard.

We went back and packed up the bikes, said goodbye to our lift for the morning and then rode the bikes round to the petrol man, Yura. I had been given his number the previous night and tried to call him but ended up having a difficult conversation so thought I would leave it till the morning. The guy, Yura, remembered me from the strange phone conversation and was very apologetic. He asked what grade of fuel we required and then began pouring fuel into the bikes from 20 litre canisters.

While this was going on, Yura’s lady friend Tatiana took a shine to Terry and was showering him with presents for the road. Tatiana spoke a little english and caome out to the region in the 70s when the BAM was being built. She gave us homemade blueberry jam, and some other little souvenirs. She also bandaged up a raw burn on my finger.

After all the fuelling and fussing, we said farewell to Yura and Tatiana and headed back to the centre of town, as Tony needed to buy water for his battery, and the concrete slabs around there would help me get the bike up and the back wheel off.

Terry gave me a hand and we pulled out the rear mousse. I saw why it was knackered. It was ripped open. I didnt realise it by there is actually a tube of air inside the mousse. I assumed it was a solid aerated rubber mass, but it actually is hollow, though the mousse is an inch thick. The ripped mousse meant there was no air pressure in the central tube and the mousse wasnt functioning properly. We put in a tube and got the show back on the road.

It was 12:30 by the time we left Yuktali … hardly ideal and Terry in particular was keen to get the miles done. Barely an hour out of Yuktali and with 27km done, we ran iinto a brick wall. The path crossed the Olyokma River and the river was huge – 500+ metres wide, deep and fast flowing. There was only one bridge, the rail bridge. There was clearly no option so we backtracked a few hundred yards where a track led up to a signalman’s hut by the side of the track.

To our pleasant surprise, the signalman indicated we should use the bridge, but that he had to get permission from his boss first. He called but the boss wasnt around. It was a saturday and he was probably at his dacha picking potatoes. We had no choice but to wait.

I spoke to the old guy about people who came by and he said that there had been another person across recently by motorcycle: An american guy who spoke ok Russian, but with a thick accent, alone, riding a red motorcycle came over from the other side (riding west to east) a week – week and a half ago.

Who is this man?

Eventually, about 3pm, we got the permission from the boss man and we began to go across … Tony went first. But the rail man was not happy tho. He wanted us across and out of the way as soon as possible. Tony, who had earlier carried his panniers over, was riding cautionsly and slowly and missed seeing the old rail man waving his arms to hurry up. After Tony made it over, the rail man stopped Terry and I, saying we cant be so slow. He made us wait while he called a nearby signaller to check for trains, before telling us to go quickly, as there was a train in 5 minutes or so. Terry and I zoomed over the narrow walkway as fast as we dared, clipping the odd pylons with our soft luggage. Eventually we were all over, Tony put his bike back together and we got on with the riding.

By now we were riding mostly along the rail embankment. Often there was fresh areas of ballast neatly spread over the full width of the embankment and we had to do plenty of ballast riding, sometimes skimming the surface of more compackted ballast, and sinking in like sand on newer ballast. On the newer ballast, there was curiously only one mark in the fresh flat surface … another motorcycle trail. Was this our mysterious solo American on the red bike?

There were two more rail bridges we needed to take today. Each one takes time as we need to work out what side of the bridge we need to cross on to end up on the embankment on the other side. We need to find a path up to the embankment, and Tony needs to remove his metal panniers and carry them across.

On the first of these additional rail bridge crossings, Terry and I had gone over while Tony carried his bags over. Then we waited for Tony. he took 10 minutes to climb onto his bike and wwe were wondering what the hell he was doing over there. When Tony finally crossed on his bike, he got barely a third of the way over when we heard a train coming. Terry and I jumped out and began yelling and waving at Tony that a train was coming. But Tony was 200 yards away, didnt understand us and just waved back. The train came and Terry and I just closed our eyes and hoped Tony would be OK.

It was a big long freight train and made one hell of a noise as it thundered past for several minutes. I didnt hear any crashing or smashing sound so assumed Tony was OK. After the train had passed we saw his headlight peeking out from one of the many parapets along the walkway. He gingerly continued his way over the bridge again and we all expressed countless expletives. Terry and I wondering why he had taken so long to cross. (boot adjustment)

We again hit the road and got barely 15 km more down the road before we needed another rail bridge. We turned round to find a track to the embankment. Tony had been slower turning round and must have missed where we turned off the road to make our way to the embankment. We lost contact and it took over an hour for the threesome to find each other and re-unite. By now it was almost 7pm and we decided to get across this rail bridge and begin looking for a place to spend the night.

We made good time after crossing the bridge and quickly racked up 25 more kilometres on the railway embankment. I stopped at kilometre post 1969 (the year of my birth) for a few fotos and noticed my headstock, the Touratech frame and fairing for the front of the bike that held a lot of my electrics, headlights etc was barely still on. It had cracked through on one side completely and was flapping from side to side on the one small piece of metal still holding it on. Ironically Touratech include a strengthening bracket in the kit for heavy duty use, but I didnt use it as I didnt think my needs were heavy duty enough … apparently they are!.

I caught up with the guys and we bodged a temporary fix with cable ties. Without the fix I suspect I could have gone no more than one or two kilometres before the front of the bike snapped off.

We did another half a dozen kilometres before spotting an ideal railway hut not far from the 1962 KM post and we decided to call it a night there.

The hut was neater than similar ones we had seen and we settled in for our second evening in a BAM railway maintenance workers hut. The huts near here are every 2 or 3 km apart, have a fireplace and a table in them. This one also had some dry newspaper and a small axe for chopping wood. Dinner was powdered mash potato, Tatiana’s blueberry jam and coffee. It was simple and primitive, but we didnt exactly have a lot of choice. At least with a fire going, it was warm.

– – –

23.08.09

The earliest start since Terry joined the program saw the Sibirsky Extreme Project hit the road by about 8:30. We were in an obstacle overcoming mood (since we were already filthy) and we plunged through the rivers, and freezing fog reaching Olyokma 30km later. The last few kilometres into Olyokma was in reasonable condition and even sported a large, non-rotting road bridge. A rarity in these parts!. We stopped for almost an hour while we stocked up on food, drink, warmth and phone charging sockets. When we emerged from the shop to continue the journey, the sun had just burnt through the cold fog and we could continue in sunshine. It was now 11am.

From Olyokma to Khani the road was a different beast. It had been tamed, civilised. On this 55km stretch, all bridgees were in place and serviceable. Our feet didnt need to get wet – or rather didnt need to get any wetter than they already were.

We had done so many water crossings by now, hundreds in fact – many involving pre wading, that
the boots were now permanently wet. Seal skin socks now had holes in them and Terry was concerned we would soon get ‘trenchfoot’. Tony’s waterproof non-stitched boots had delaminated, and his soles flapped about like slippers. Every rush through water split them further. They were now taped up with duct tape.

Khani came up about 1pm. It was a fresh looking town, compared to others we had seen and we agreed to stop and do some repairs. Incredibly, the bodge on my headstock had lasted, but it was on borrowed time. I needed to fix that with metal, and Terry needed to change his front sprocket. He still had his standard issue one one and kept on putting off changing it on the grounds that things should get easier ahead. It was time to save what was left of the standard sprocket for the asphalt roads on the ride home. For now, he needed the lower gearing.

I set about asking some youngsters gathered in the centre of town where I might find an argon welder to weld the alloy headstock. Sadly there was no argon welder in Khani, but they directed me to a chap doing some steel welding. He took a look at it, refused to listen to me that the headstock was alloy (insisting it was steel) and tried to weld it. 10 unsuccessful minutes later, and now with big pits of metal missing from my alloywork, he shrugged his shoulders and gave up.

A local guy who had come to the centre of town to buy beer agreed with my idea of a solution, a steel bracing piece and told me to follow him to his premises. Rim was a local handyman type guy who lived on a dacha on the edge of town. He had been working there with his son sorting out a second hand car. Both dropped everything to tackle this exciting new project … securing my front fairing and framework.

Rim and his son Slava worked for a good couple of hours, and had almost finished a very comprehensive bandage job by 4pm when it was time to send for Tony and Terry. Rim had obviously by now decided that this foreigner wasnt just an interesting metalwork project, he was also a decent enough guy. Might as well invite him and his mates to stay overnight. Tony and Terry arrived and were greeted with home made Pizza and an offer of a hot shower.

A little space is required here to explain the luxury of a hot shower in extreme Siberia. Rim had cold water at his dacha piped from the towns water supply. Into the shower house went the cold water. A branch of it fed through a home made wood fired boiler, made from a gas cylinder, with a small fire underneath it. It was home made, it was simple and it worked perfectly. You cant even imagine things like this in Europe, where regulations stifle everything, but in Siberia, home-made solutions rule. All three of us showered and came out for beer and pizza, while Rim and Slava finished up the metalwork. Slava had to shoot off to work on the railway, and we spent a lovely evening with a truly lovely family from Khani.

It has become increasingly apparent as this BAM leg of the project continues on, that this leg above all is about the amazing hospitality and interactions we have had with local people. The leg has been almost alternating nights of utter harshness, deserted railway cabins, soaking wet miserable evenings, broken with fantastic hospitality when we reach a town. I think back to the fantastic guys in Komsomolsk, Igor and Noi in Gerbi, the dudes of Etyrken, the forest guys at Isa, and now Rim and family in Khani … people who have not just taken us in, but showered us with food, hospitality, and donated time in abundance to help with motorcycle repairs when necessary.

– – –

24.08.09

We left Khani refreshed, knowing the bikes were as good as they were going to be. My front end was now rock solid and Terry had his smaller gearing on the bike. What we didnt know was the condition of the road to Chara. In typical Russian style, questions about the road ahead are met with very vague answers with lots of swearing and talk that its very very bad. We kinda know its very bad, we have ridden thousands of kilometres of it already. What we need to know is; is it better or worse than the bit we have just done.

Sadly it was worse. The bit we had done had all bridges in tact. Less than an hour and 30km out of Khani and we came a cross a large bridge out. There was only one solution for it, a long trek along a shallow but very rocky river. The boots, socks and pants we had dried out meticulously at Rim’s were all going to get wet.

Riverbeds in Siberia had almost always been rocky. It meant getting bogged was less of an issue, but losing balance and falling into the water was high on the list of probabilities. There is an optimum speed for each size of rocks, but occasionally there are nasty surprises … large boulders punctuating a riverbed of otherwise fist sized stones. Crossing was always a risk of getting wet. Terry and I typically tried to blast through, using momentum and power as allies, while Tony picked his way through stone by stone. Different strokes for different folks.

The road to Chara was about 140km but we knocked it off in three and a half hours … pretty good going considering the state of the bridges in this section. Before heading into New Chara for lunch, we had to fuel up, and the regional fuel depot is at Stary (old) Chara, 17km away by asphalt road.

One thing that had been apparent on the more challenging roads, was the fuel economy of the BMWs. As it was with Tadjikistan, when the going got tough and more and more time was spent in low gears, the more advanced fuel injection on the Beemers stood out a mile. There was probably 5-10% better fuel economy out on normal roads compared with Terry’s Yamaha, but on the miserable stuff, with several days tough riding between fuel stops, the BMWs were using 20% less fuel. When Terry bought 17 litres, we bought 14. When Terry bought 21 litres, we bought 17. Its not a question of the economics of it out here, its a question of range and weight. We were putting in 3-4 kgs less weight into the bike each stop, and could go for 80-100km further, when we all had a total fuel capacity of 22 litres. The Yamaha is also a 650cc ish fuel injected single engine (same as the Tenere) with the same sort of horsepower, and overall including luggage, Terry’s bike is 30-40 kgs lighter than Tony’s, yet the economy of the BMW/Rotax engine comes out as the mutts nuts.

We returned to Novy (new) Chara and found a superb cafe opposite the station. it wasnt the setting of course – they are all dark and dingy – but the food. The best stolovaya (canteen) food I have had in months.

By 2:15 we were ready to move, having eaten our fill. It was too early to pull up stumps for the night so we prepared to head on down the road. Only the next town was Kuanda, 150km down the road. It was a gamble, a risk we would nott make it and get caught in the middle of nowhere, but we had to take it.

The scenery after Chara was particularly easy on the eyes. In fact ever since Khani the scenery had been really spectacular. Here we entered a particularly sandy stretch with impressive mountain ranges on the north side of the road / track. About 75km west of Chara we reached a lake district of sorts. Steep green mountainsides, littered with waterfalls that led down to picturesque lakes was where we found ourselves. the air and water were crystal clean. If this was Europe, the land would be worth squillions, but it was Siberia and was deserted.

Bridges were dodgy and again it was an afternoon of considerable water crossings. Each water crossing added to delays. I have long ago lost count of how many pretty bridges, complete or broken we have crossed or skirted on this BAM road … several hundred. I probably take the time to photograph 1 in 7 or 8. The difficult crossings and bogs never get photographed as I am always totally focussed on just getting through.

Rain began pouring down as we approached the golden spike where the BAM tracks first were joined in 1984. We sheltered in a railway hut for half an hour while the storm blew over, then took off again alongside the railway tracks down a very steep hill. We past a train really huffing and puffing on its way up. Our railside track down was smooth and fast, but at the bottom we hit another mile or so of ballast riding. Tony had not adapted to riding in loose scree and struggled, just as the rain came down. Terry and I ran for shelter in a nearby station (Barvukha) for rail staff only and the rain bucketed down.

Tony finally approached the station as the rains eased, but within sight of the station, veered off the good line and up onto the edge of the track, bobbing up and down as he rode on the edge of the sleepers, ultimately falling onto the track. Terry and I mounted our bikes and zoomed down to help Tony clear his bike from the track before a train cleaned it up and then I returned to talk to the station mistress who had some advice for the road ahead to Kuanda. We needed to take the road rather than the rail embankment she felt and then 8km before Kuanda we get to a river where there is no road crossing … only the rail bridge. The rail bridge has security, so we would need to talk to the security to see if we can get let across.

It was still 40km to Kuanda and was by now slowing getting dark, and of course still raining. I wanted to press on to a Hotel as I was totally saturated through and through, but Tony and Terry did not want to ride in the dark, so we agreed to look for a hut. We rode on down the rail embankment till we saw a suitable crossing point, crossed the tracks and then continued up the potholed road in now near darkness. After 10km or so we came across an abandoned building jammed into the 8 yards between the road and the rail track and in darkness decided that this would be our home for the night.

The building was a concrete place that seemed to have been built for the railway, but had now been trashed. Every square inch of floor was covered in broken bits of timber and plasterboard. We lit up a fire, cleared some space to sleep and cook and feasted while the rain poured down outside, and the BAM freight trains thundered by just 2-3 metres from the building.

We had slept in some dodgy, dirty, tiny buildings on this BAM journey, but this one takes the biscuit. It was the first wreck of a building and had obviously been used by train drivers as a place to take a dump from time to time. Fortunately no time recently. We got to sleep about 1am.

– – –

25.08.09

the day started with a fire. The fire last night had gone some way to drying our saturated clothing, but more was needed. Besides, the siberian nights were beginning to get cold indeed. Daytimes were still fine, but the early mornings were very chilly. The fire helped sort all of the above issues. Thanks to the fire and the need to warm up, (and the difficulty packing up and getting dressed in a shell of a building with broken plasterboard everywhere) we didnt get going until 10:30.

The first stop, and it came up within 20 km, was the Kuanda River Bridge. We had been told by the lady in the station late yesterday that its the onyl way across the river, as the river is too deep, and the road bridge is out. Well we could now see the road bridge was totally out, so all we had to do was get permission from the bridge security guy.

This chap was not a happy camper. He was angry that we had even walked across his bridge to talk to him. I explained our plight and he said he needed to talk to the boss. It was now 11:30.

I waited, and waited and waited ….. and waited and waited … and waited and finally at 14:45, the promised big cheese from Kuanda, had a few words with us and let us cross the bridge in exchange for a present for the bosses wife. It was almost 3pm before we were underway. We had done just 20km so far today. I wanted to get to Taksimo. We had some miles to do. 8km later and we arrived on asphalt. This was the road around the edge of Kuanda. It has asphalt because Kuanda was tarted up for the celebration of the completion of the BAM rail laying in 1984.

We didnt stop in Kuanda, they dont have fuel there anyway and we needed to do the 100 km to Taksimo ASAP … the biggest obstacle ahead was the Vitim River – the biggest river we will have crossed since the Amur. The Vitim was just under 40 km from Kuanda and we made to the beast about 4:10.

I was immediatelly awestruck. The sight before me was enough to make grown men go weak at the knees. The muddy trail we had been following suddenly crested out and ahead of us was a bone chilling sight – the Vitim River Bridge. The Vitim river here was over half a kilometre wide. It was flowing at a ferocious rate of knots. Never in my life have I seen such a huge body of water moving so fast. The water temperature was probably about 2 degrees C. The sight of this awesome river itself could make a man’s jaw drop.

And then there was the bridge … or rather THE bridge. There can be few if any bridges anywhere in the world to compare with this one for terrifying intimidation and fear generation.  Fifteen metres (50 feet) above the freezing swirling Vitim was a very narrow strip of roadway made of railway sleepers and odd strips of timber. The roadway was barely 2 metres wide, very uneven, and 15 metres above certain death. There was perhaps one chance in 100 that you would survive a fall into that river, laden down in motorcycle gear.

It was clear that we cant ride it. One slip on the controls, one tyre catching the side of a plank and its curtains. The only option was to push the bikes over. Terry didnt want to think about it and just started walking his bike across the bridge without looking down. I am a hard man to faze, but I was weak at the knees and my whole upper body was tense. I tried not to look at anything but the edge-less roadway and also began pushing. With almost twice the luggage as Terry, my bike was more top heavy, but a similar overall weight due to the lighter basic bike. But Tony had the combined weight of the heaviest bike and the heaviest luggage. This, having to push a bike over half a kilometre over a narrow frightening platform, was the wages of heavy steel boxes.

Terry was flying across. Perhaps 15 minutes was all it took him. I was still only about 60% of the way over when I saw Terry’s bike park off to the side of the embankment. I looked behind me and saw Tony struggling perhaps only 20% of the way across. ‘Those damn boxes could kill him’ I thought. I was in no position to do anything. My upper arms were burning and I was beginning to feel light headed. I stopped for a minute or two. This was no place to feel faint. The uneven sleepers made it impossible to put my sidestand down and even as I rested I needed to balance the bike. I continued on, over a raised expansion hump. I fired the bike up and power walked it over the 30 cm rise. The energy to push it up the hump wasnt there.

I stopped to take in the view and see where I was. I should nt have taken in the view. I was still very high above the icy swirling waters on a rickety platform of wet, oily timber. I was now 80% of the way. I saw Terry smiling 120 metres ahead, and Tony still just a faint dot hundreds and hundreds of metres behind. I wondered if he had even moved since I last looked.

Finally, with triceps about to give up on me, I was just 20 yards from the west bank and Terry came out brandishing a camera to take a few snaps and then help push me the last few yards. I parked up the bike and looked back at the bridge. I felt an amazing sense of achievement just for having made it across that bridge. Anyone who has crossed that bridge is worthy, truly worthy. I want to shake the hand of anyone who has pushed a bike (or ridden) across that bridge. That bridge is truly Sibirsky Extreme.

I was humbled and exhausted by that crossing. The scale and power of the river was so intimidating. I cant put it into words, the sense of relief at having made it over. I almost collapsed with exhaustion, as much from nervous tension as the physical effort I imagine. Before I had much of a chance to take stock of where Tony was, Terry yelled out to grab my clothes, which I had strewn over my bike so I could cool down, as a storm was on the way.

I grabbed my things and we ran under the bridge as the storm moved in at 50 km/h. The rainfront sped across the river and drenched me as I ran to join Terry beneath the bridge. Within 30 seconds we had gone from good light and high cloud to low cloud dumping rain. More of nature humiliating us. The skies were almost black within another minute or so and in the near black skies I saw a huge bolt of lightning smash into the railway bridge. 3 seconds later probably the loudest thunder crash I had ever heard. I hoped Tony was OK up there somewhere half way across the bridge. movement was impossible in this. We could only hope had had laid the bike down and had braced himself. The wind picked up faster and faster until it must have been a 80 – 100 km/h wind. Poor Tony. It was freezing cold and super windy where we were, on the shore under the bridge, he was out there, 10 metres above a 600 metre wide river in and incredible burst of wind that lasted at least 3 minutes. As the wind died down it started hailing. Nature was making us look like idiots and imbeciles. We could hardly have looked smaller. After about 15 minutes the extremes died down and it settled into just a rain storm. No more lighting, no more thunder, no more hail and no more gale force winds – just rain.

Terry and I waited for the rain to die down before we came out to search for Tony but before we could emerge from our meagre shelter, I heard noises coming from the bridge above. Terry ran around and up and there was Tony. Drenched from head to toe, but his bike and himself had made it across the Vitim.

I have seen balls in my time, but never anything like that. That river, that bridge, that storm, and Tony made it across by himself. The guy has nuts of tungsten.

It was now 5pm … we needed to regroup fast and push on. There was no more than 3 hours of daylight and we had over 60km to go to Taksimo. The last 600 metres had taken us almost an hour. the road leading on from the Vitim towards Taksimo was terrible. It was difficult to get out of first gear. I wanted to get up on the rail embankment but Tony was still keen to stay on the road. Terry was neutral. Out of respect for his amazing storm crossing of the Vitim, I stayed with the road. The final straw came 45 minutes after the bridge with just 8 km done when Tony’s back wheel became entangled in wire halfway across a deep water puddle across the whole road. It took us another 45 minutes to get the wire out and I insisted we take the first good chance to get on the embankment.

That chance came after a surprisingly long 30 minutes at a level crossing. I sped off down the embankment at 60km/h and we soon had done as much distance (15km) on the embankment in 20-25 minutes as we had in the previous 2 hours on the road. There was barely an hour of daylight left and we were 30km from Taksimo when we turned back onto the road. Here the road joined a road to nearby Ust Muya and was in much better condition. We kept zooming along at 60 km/h determined to reach Taksimo, me with one hand holding my malfunctioning key.

We arrived in Taksimo just after 8:30. Oh the joy!. Taksimo was a big town ! A lady stopped us on seeing our bikes and asked what we needed. “a hotel” I replied … and she replied that she would lead us there. We followed through the streets of Taksimo, drawn out over 5km between an old town going back hundreds of years, and a new town, built by the Soviets for the BAM.

The hotel was full, and the other one suggested wouldnt take foreigners. By now the traffic police had taken an interest in us, but in a good way. The Policeman knew a small hotel near the station and led us there. With the police opening doors, we got a room. The place was simple but had hot shower, and a cafe … and food was ready and waiting when we emerged from the shower.

Taksimo was being good to us!

– – –

26.08.09

The day started with a small breakfast in the hotel, in which I cheekily asked the staff if getting some laundry done was out of the question. It was definately not. So after breakfast and a wash we left a pile of stinky mildewy clothes in the bathroom and went out to get our bikes. The little lady who had been taking us to hotels yesterday re-appeared and took us searching for what we needed today; oil for Terry, a mechanic for me and a shoe repairer for Tony. We got Terry’s oil and I was shown the repairer and told to return at 2pm. Tony’s boots were unfixable by the local chaps and he was told to buy a new pair!

It began to warm up and we were by now dry after our morning in Taksimo. We went to look at another problem, Tony’s malfunctioning immobiliser. IF this couldnt be fixed it was a ‘stick it on a train to the nearest BMW dealer – Krasnoyarsk’ job. A lot of head scratching was followed by Terry’s suggestion that we check the batteries on both zappers. Neither could operate the immobiliser. On opening the remote transmitters it was clear this wasa probably the problem. Both were wet and showing signs of corrosion inside, particularly round the battery terminals. A couple of new batteries and that problem was solved.

Terry found a fetching new italian style black roll neck sweater, as he is lacking a little in the warm clothes department. Then we fuelled up and went down to the mechanic, Sasha, about 2pm. Tony returned to the hotel to change his rear brake pads, Terry borrowed an oil pan and began changing his oil, and Sasha pulled apart my ignition barrel to try and sort out my ignition switch problem.

The last 30 km into Taksimo last night I had ridden with one hand on the key. The contacts seem to have rotated slightly, so that there was no connection when the key was in the ‘on’ position and I needed to try and balance the key part way between the on and off position….only every time I hit bump, the key jerked off and onto the ‘on’position, which had no contact.

After an hour and a half, all was done. Terry had new oil in his bike and I had a functioning ignition switch. Sasha refused payment for his time, and Terry and I said our farewells and returned to the hotel to see Tony finishing up his bike.

The laundry was all done and dried. Our lazy day of rest and relaxation in Taksimo had been sorely needed but now the bikes were in good shape, we were well fed, clothes were dry for the first time in ages and we settled down to dinner and beer at our little hotel.

– – –

27.08.09

The ladies of the little hotel gave us some extra food to take with us on the road and we packed up the bikes and left Taksimo soon after 9:30am. The main road out of Taksimo heads North to Bodaibo, and the continuation of the BAM road is a small turnoff off the Bodaibo Road (another potential Siberian motorcyling target). From here we were on roads that Artyom (the guy with the Africa Twin, that we met in Irkutsk about 2 months ago) had ridden. Artyom was from the Bodaibo region.

Tony had an off early in the day. We think one of his side boxes worked loose, fell off and dragged him and the bike into the shrubs at the side of the road. A few of the russian guys who helped sort him out told us there was a river ahead we could not cross. Hmm … dont these guys know what we have been thru already! If there is a river, we will cross it.

Halfway to Severomuisk we were stopped by an oncoming 4WD. It was a guy from Bodaibo. He immediately asked us if we knew Artyom. He assumed that if were in this part of the world and had motorcycles on this road, we might know Artyom. As it happens, we did, and passed on our greetings.

The road was very much a continuation of what had been before. I did notice tho that between Taksimo and Severomuisk, the bridges were all serviceable, though several of them had partially collapsed – the road surface of the bridges was still useable, at least by motorcycles.

As we arrived in Severomuisk we were stopped again by the first foreign travellers we had seen on the BAM road since leaving Vanino … a pair of Polish (of course) 4WDs, driving to Tynda as part of an expedition. (www.syberia-mongolia.pl) For some reason, maybe because you need the language to really get off the beaten track in Siberia and its very similar language to Polish, most adventuring down by foreigners in Siberia seems to be by Poles!. I pointed this out to the guys and they countered with, ‘oh do you know about the Motosyberia guys?’ Ah yes indeed. Apparently these guys had met the original Motosyberia project 2 years ago in Kirgizia.

They asked many questions about the road ahead, and told us there was one broken bridge between here and Lake Baikal. One??? I told then there were hundreds behind us. I suspect they thought I was exaggerating, but they will see. We told them to be prepared and have the cameras rolling when you approach the Vitim River Bridge!

It was 2:15pm when we shook hands and continued on our merry way. There was still 130km to Novy Uoyan. That was the start of the official road … a road that is properly maintained and even according to rumour, asphalt as far as Lake Baikal. I wanted to get to Baikal tonight and told the guys to put the heads down and motor!.

Severomuisk is also the location of one of the longest rail tunnels in the world. It took decades to build. While it was being built the BAM used an additional line that runs up and over a pass, and the road follows that old line. The line over the pass is still in place, presumably as a backup. The tunnel passes an earthquake zone so it make sense to have a backup.

The road over the pass was in excellent condition and I really wondered how the Poles in the 4WDs would cope. They had told me the road behind them was bad. Man are they in for a shock as to what lies ahead. I told them that they will need to use a few rail bridges – there is no way around it for at least two of the river crossings – the Kuanda River and the Olyokma River.

The road on to Novy Uoyan continued much like the road had been to Severomuisk. It was poor, but far better than most of the last few weeks and importantly all bridges were serviceable for light vehicles. We found the one broken nbridge the Poles had talked about. It wasnt even broken! Just a little bent. Those boys are in for a tough few weeks. Poles are tough characters, but I bet they resort to the train! Lets see.

About 7pm we pulled into Novy Uoyan, a fuel station and the start of the ‘prepared’ road. We sniffed around for a hotel but were told there is none in town. That sealed it … it was Severobaikalsk or bust tonight. We filled up and hit the asphalt road out of town. Sadly the asphalt only lasted 30km, but the dirt road after that was a graded gravel road. We needed to do as much of it as possible while the daylight allowed. After 75 more kilometres of dirt we were back on asphalt. Soon after the town of Kichera, in the twilight, we saw Baikal, illuminated by a large glowing moon. It was a beautiful sight … something Terry had been talking about … ‘getting to Baikal’ since leaving vanino.

Half an hour hour of beauful lakeside driving later and we had arrived at the big smoke, Severobaikalsk, first little city since Tynda, and found ourself a lakeside hotel with hot showers and comfy beds! The hard road was now over. The remaining 1000km of the BAM road was all prepared road, passing through the small cities of Ust Kut and Bratsk.

BAM 3 – Through Tynda

We had arrived in the tiny BAM forestry town of Isa late on Friday afternoon. within an hour of arriving we had satiated our thirsts and hungers and met the senior chaps who ran the town’s main private business, a logging company. It seemed to me that in Isa you either worked for the railway or the logging company. There were only 300 people there in the town, and it was a pretty grim looking place.

But the logging guys took us in, and housed us in a cabin. We found out from the loggers that we would be able to take a train to Fevralsk on Monday. That gave us the weekend to consider any alternatives. Fevralsk was only 90 km away … but we had no reliable information on the road and the previous 65 km had taken us 3 days !!!.

The day was rounded off with an intensely hot sauna and wash. Nice to wash our reeking bodies after three days of sweating in the rain.

– – –

15.08.09

Saturday started with the realisation that in the night someone had taken Terry’s and Tony’s GPS units off their bikes. This was ridiculous in a town of 300 people, that effectively had no roads in or out. Someone must have been drunk or completely stupid. Within a few hours Valera, the boss of the logging company, had tracked down and returned the GPS units.

Terry needed to look at his oil. We had ridden a full day since his bike swallowed all that swamp water. We were still entertaining thoughts of riding to Fevralsk as Tony’s spirits had recovered rapidly with a few beers and a the prospect of a days rest and maybe even dry, riding gear by the end of the day.

Sadly, Terry’s water-oil emulsion had not separated. It was still milk both in his sump and his oil tank. There was no oil in Isa. There were barely any general stores. With his oil in such bad shape, the prospect of a ride to Fevralsk was shelved completely and now knowing that we would be in Isa for all of tomorrow as well, we decided to do laundry at the camp’s very basic self serve laundromat. We would have 2 nights and a day to dry the clothes out in the cabin.

In the evening we cooked up a Sibirsky Extreme Stew, from a few ingredients the kitchen had thrown our way and a few bits and pieces we had collected from the towns tiny shops. We had a tin of peas, a tin of corn, a few potatoes, a few cucumbers, some chicken stock and some pelmeni. We boiled up the potatoes then threw the rest in for one of the finest stews any of us can remember. It was a recipe that just worked!

– – –

16.08.09

The logging camp’s number 2 man, Vadim, came around early in the morning. He had arrannged a full train schedule all the way to Tynda, if we wanted it. It would be no less than 5 freight trains, and each train involved us unloading the bikes from one train and loading them onto another. Hmmm… something else to think about

The day was just spent in recovery mode and drying clothes.

– – –

17.08.09

Well after waiting two days, our train to Fevralsk was due today. We packed up the gear and were ready to go by 11am … but had to sit around till 2:30 to head down to the train station with Valera the logging boss. I spoke with Valera and the guys down at the station and it seems the Poles had stayed at the fire station here … a different lodging from us for a change. They had to wait 3 days for a train according to the locals.

By 3pm the local utility train appeared, consisting of a flat bed car and a passenger car. We pushed the bikes up a couple of wooden planks and on to the flat bed and realised we were the only people getting on the train. Surely they hadnt put on this train especially for us?

As the train pulled out of Isa we got a good view of the road to Fevralsk, as it ran alongside the track, no more than 50 yards from the train track.

The train hadnt been exclusively for us, as it stopped to pick up railway maintenance workers a number of times on the way to Fevralsk. By the time we got to Fevralsk the sole train carriage was reasonably full. Our fare for the two hour ride, including bikes, was 80 rubles each … less than 2 EUR.

As for the road from Isa to Fevralsk, for anyone mad enough to get to Isa in the future … the road onwards to Fevralsk is rideable. Its many times better than the road between Isa and Etyrken. All rivers have serviceable bridges. I could see no holes in the road. There were large waterholes covering the whole road, but all looked either navigable or able to be ridden around. As with every road in Siberia, how difficult the road is depends entirely on weather conditions over the past few days. A week of fine weather and that road could be done 2 hours. A week of rain and its a 2 day slog. As it was when we saw it, I would have estimated it as a reasonable days ride.

I had found out a bit more about this stretch of the BAM road from the old hands around Isa while we had waited there. The road appears on every atlas of Russia because once upon a time (soviet times) there was a serviceable road here. In fact it was the first serviceable road across Russia. Now the road is selectively maintained by some regional councils, but many sections such as Etyrken to Isa had seen absolutely no maintenance in 20 years. Stretches like that have deteriorated to the point that no 4WD would be able to drive them. Even my beloved Wazziks / Buhankas cannot drive these roads. They are now exclusively the preserve of the huge 6WD Urals, Zils, Kamaz and Kraz trucks – and the odd eccentrics on motorcycles.

It says something about Russian road attlases too. The better ones are very quick to update when new roads are built, but no-one drives these roads to check as to when they fall below a standard worthy of including in an atlas. It was the same with the ghost city of Kadykchan. New town are quickly added to new atlases, but old ones are not removed … as it is with the roads.

We arrived in Fevralsk, where a contact of Vadim, the number 2 man in Isa, met us at the station and helped us get the bikes down onto the platform. We were led into the office of the main man at the station who listened to us and tried to organise the succession of 4 frieght trains to take us on to Tynda. In the end I just decided it was too hard, checked with the boys to see if they were up for riding to Tynda and then left to find the petrol station, and hotel / cafe type place.

The decision was made. We would ride to Tynda via the Trans-Siberian highway, then resume on the BAM road after Tynda.

At the ‘hotel’, there was an outdoor shower, but it did feature hot water. It was the first shower we had enjoyed since Vanino! mmmm

– – –

18.08.09

Today is my son’s birthday, but no point calling him first thing in the morning, it will be midnight in Europe. I packed up my gear and headed into town to find Terry some oil. We needed to get the ‘milk’ out of his engine ASAP and get some oil in. I found 4 litres of 10W-40 mineral oil, it was for diesel engines, but it would have to do. Terry was happy to get any proper oil in there, at least to get him to Tynda where we should be able to find some good oil.

A quick oil change was done in the yard of the Hotel. Terry noticed even after the oil change and running the engine a few minutes, there were still traces of white emulsion in his engine oil, so this oil could serve as a rinse over the next few days.

We had breakfast and hit the road about 10:30. It was about 300km back to the main Trans-Siberian road. It rained on and off and the temperature was cooler today. We had to stop several times to increase the amount of clothing we were wearing, but we still made the Trans-Siberian about 2:30pm. It was asphalt. Stunning new asphalt that would not be out of place on a new autobahn.

Terry by now had gone 4 hours without food and that was beyond his limit. We pulled over for fuel and food.

It was now 3:30pm and we wanted to get as far as possible while this road surface was so immaculate. We charged on at full speed in on again – off again light rain. The road was incredibly good. Freshly laid and in many areas unpainted. Road workers were putting finishing touches on all over it. There was one section of about 30 km that detoured onto an older asphalt road alongside the Trans-Siberian Railway (full of freight trains), but soon reverted to the immaculate new road. About 7pm, and with about 350km covered on the new road, we were not far from Magdagachi. It had been my most optimistic target for the day. Here the asphalt abruptly ran out and we were on a 50km/h gravelly, potholed roadbed … awaiting asphalt.

We battled on to Magdagachi, passing cars struggling at half our speed on the poor surface. We were all cold and wet and had a team talk about what the next move was. We had enough daylight to probably make it to Never, and the start of the M56 federal road north to Tynda. Terry just wanted to get dry and warm. Tony and I were in favour of pushing on … and so we pushed on. But there had been no fuel stations immediately following Magdagachi, as there had been around many towns the road ran past, and before long all three of us had fuel reserve lights on. We decided to play it safe and return the 20 km back to Magdagachi, via the 5km mud track that linked the town with the new highway. We had done over 725km today, the second biggest day of the whole project. Considering over 350km had been on dirt roads, it is indicative of how good the new asphalt Trans-Siberian road is!. In a year or two, the whole country will be linked by asphalt and a ride across Siberia just wont be the same. People will NEED the BAM road, just to spice up trans Russian journeys 😉

– – –

19.08.09

We awoke in our hotel, the Magdagachi sports club in the centre of town, to the sound of a downpour outside. It wasnt just rain, it was a total deluge of monsoonal proportions. Tynda was less than 400 km away, a day’s ride over dirt roads, but it was impossible to even go outside, let alone contemplate riding in this nightmare. We did the only thing we could … we sat and waited.

By 10:30am there was an easing in the rain and I told the guys that we had to move. We packed up and by the time the bikes were all packed the rain had stopped. By the time we refuelled, the sun was peeking through.

We headed on down the semi asphalted road and stopped at Taldan for Terry’s breakfast.

While the Trans-Siberian road this morning had been almost all gravel, it was in the process of being asphalted. As soon as we turned onto the M56 north, we were on a proper graded gravel road. This was exactly the sort of road that ‘Chopper’ Tony loved as it was reminiscent of his rallying roads. He reads these roads particularly well and tore off at 110 km/h with Terry and I struggling to keep up.

We refuelled at Solovevsk and continued on, tho at a reduced pace. There had been one or two unexpected bumps in the road that had caught us by surprise (and potentially damaged our rims), so it was 80 km/h from Solovyesvsk to Tynda. We reached Tynda, the capital of the BAM system at 4pm and made our way to the Hotel Yunost, which we were told is the finest hotel in town. When we arrived, we were greeted by a tour group of German and Dutch tourists, pausing here on a BAM railway tour.

The Police knocked on my room soon after I checked in and offered to house the bikes just down the road in the Police garage. It was an offer too good to refuse, especially as it had come from the boss man himself. We rode the bikes to the station then returned to settle into a a night in the first proper town we had seen since Komsomolsk and the last we will see till Severobaikalsk. Tynda has about 45,000 people and the town is all about the BAM.

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20.08.09

Terry finally got the eggs sunny-side-up he had been craving for the past week, and we dropped off some clothes and riding boots that needed repairs at repair shops in the hotel building. Next, we hit the local market, just up the hill from the hotel. Tony and I bought new shoes and socks as the others had by now died.

We had some repair work to do on the bikes, tho Terry decided against changing his oil again. He was now happy with his diesel oil. Tony had to shuffle his front tyre around and I had some welding to do on my rear rack. When I stripped the gear off the bike I got a hell of a shock. The rack needed welding in a dozen places. The stresses off the BAM road had really taken a toll on my poor rack. The police decided it was too big a job for their handyman electric welder and took me down to a local argon welder who went nuts for an hour bolstering my rear rack with weld.

I was happy to get that all sorted before we hit the road again tomorrow. The team headed out for a Chinese meal to finish off our one rest and repair day in Tynda.

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21.08.09

After all that welding, I had a fair bit of work to do to put the bike back together, and the police garage didnt open until 9am. By the time I got the back together, we fuelled up, got some auto parts, filled up with enough food to last the day and hit the road it was 11:30.

The first 200 km was pretty uneventful and good graded gravel road. We arrived in Lopcha at the end of that good road about 2pm and stopped for a drink. After Lopcha the road began to get more interesting. The road was far less prepared, and in many places ran upon an embankment built for a second track, when they ever get around to putting in a second track.

Now the road and track were running alongside the Nyukzha River. Before Lopcha, all bridges had been present and serviceable. After Lopcha that was no longer the case. Some bridges were useable by all vehicles, some by light vehicles only and some were unuseable full stop … derelict.

As a result of the varying road conditions there were now often two concurrent roads; one the original BAM auto road built in the era of BAMstroi (BAM building) mostly the 1970s and 80s, and a second less used route on the unused half of the railway embankment. We alternated between the two. The proper road, when it was good was quicker, but the railway embankment was consistent in terms of maintenance.

The other difference in the BAM here compared to East of Tynda (apart from the embankment being built for two tracks) was that the bridges were a little wider and featured a bit more space for a bike to squeeze alongside the track on the walking track.

Our speed slowed down from the 80-100 km/h we had been doing before Lopcha to more like 50 km/h or less. There were a few curious pieces of infrastucture; 3 almost unused new concrete road bridges built across the Nuandzha River.

About 6pm, and getting near Yuktail, our destination for the day and my chain snapped and jammed up in my rear wheel. We were at a river crossing wondering how to get across. Some picnicing (vodkaing) truck drivers on the other side indicated the river was too deep. Tony had walked up to the rail bridge to survey the surrounding countryside, and seen a new concrete road bridge. While Terry and I tackled my chain, Tony went to explore this bridge he had seen.

The drunken truck drivers made it across the river in their trucks, just in time to help us with tools to flare the rivets on the chain joining piece (a hammer and a centre punch). The chain was pretty tired long before it gave up, but I have only one spare to get me home. That dead chain had been on the bike 12,000km, but it had been almost all dirt roads in that time. I was upset that it had died on me, but I guess I should be happy with it considering the circumstances.

Tony returned having found a route across, via an old 2.5 tonne limit bridge and we continued on.

As we got closer to Yuktali, our first scheduled fuel stop, we came to a river crossing that was not going to be fordable. As there was no other option apparent, it seemed an ideal time to try the railway bridge crossing trick. We found a path up to the railway embankment and then shut off the bikes to examine first hand how this could work.

Tony’s survey indicated he needed to remove his side boxes and carry them over. Terry and I were more optimistic with our setups. Tony carried his over while Terry made a run for it. We figured at worst, as we were slightly lower down than train level, even if a train came, we should be OK for clearance. It might be bloody hairy annd frightening to have a siberian freight train clattering along at 60 km/h next to your head, but as long as it was next to your head and bike, then there’s no real problem.

The hardest part was getting onto and off the bridge. Often concrete lips left a bit of a fall down to the bridge walking track level, and a bit of a challenge on the other side.

But we all made it across pretty much uneventfully. I lost a pannier 2/3 of the way across as I clipped a bridge frame. Terry recovered it and while Tony went back for his bike, I re-attached the pannier, securing it with large cable ties.

The sun was still shining, just, when we made it into Yuktali about 8:30pm. We headed for the centre of the new town and pulled up at a cluster of small shops. A group of young chaps clustered around asking about us and the bikes. I countered by asking where can three tired foreigners stay. One of the young chaps was enterprising enough to rent us his apartment. And guy offered a garage. All to be paid for, but we were in no mood to argue.

We went round to the apartment, unloaded the bare essentials and then drove over to the old village to park the bikes.

A lot of faffing about later and about 11pm we finally were in an apartment, wet socks off, checking phones for messages, and boiling up some noodles.

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