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The Trans-Mongolian Railway

2008-03-27, Ulan Bator, Mongolia

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In a five foot wide train compartment it doesn't take long to realize that your Chinese roomates are smugglers. Despite the complete language barrier, the fifteen boxes, two suitcases and eight duffel bags filled with cigarettes and who knows what else spoke for themselves. Not content to only smuggle in these paltry sums, each stop added to the collection until we had cases of cigarettes hiding behind the coat hangers and window shades. Clearly in cahoots with the train operators, goods were hiding in every secret panel of our carriage. We were riding in the Chinese Smuggling Operation wagon of the Tran-Mongolian branch of the famous Trans-Siberian railway.

Due to these circumstances, we basically had the compartment to ourselves. Our male smuggler was in such good standing with the train operators that he apparanetly warrented his own secret compartment somewhere; we never saw him. His female companion slept 18 hours out of the day thus earning the nickname "The Sleepy Smuggler."

Smuggling drama aside, you would expect a certain amount of boredom from five and a half days in a moving metal box. But having spent many hours on family road trips as a child I should have remembered, there's so much to do when there's nothing to do. The train was an epic journey disguised as pleasant convalescence. A mandatory bed rest where a quarter of the world zooms by your bed.

We read books. I learned to play bridge. We tried to list all of the countries in the world. We checked off the days and hours (in leiu of any actual responsibilities this felt like a real event). We stretched our legs at stops and danced in the wagon corridor. We ate in the Mongolian food car and argued with the waitress in the Russian one. But most of all we just looked dreamily out the window as we passed Inner and Outer Mongolia, the Gobi Desert, Lake Baikal, the small settlements of Siberia and the Ural Mountains.

It's not the kind of thing you want to do every week (like our smugglers) but it was amazing to have the chance to do it once. Another time around and our hygene may never recover.


Picture of Melissa Starts the Journey. Taken 2008-03-27 in Beijing, China by traveler Mala.
Picture of Radek Starts the Journey. Taken 2008-03-27 in Beijing, China by traveler Mala.
Picture of We've Left Beijing. Taken 2008-03-27 in Nankou, China by traveler Mala.
Picture of Folowing the route of the wall. Taken 2008-03-27 in Zhangjiakou, China by traveler Mala.
Picture of Bogie Changing. Taken 2008-03-27 in Erlian Yanchang, China by traveler Mala.
Picture of A Mongolian Town. Taken 2008-03-27 in Gobi Desert, Mongolia by traveler Mala.
Picture of In the dining car. Taken 2008-03-27 in Zuunkharaa, Mongolia by traveler Mala.
Picture of A shipment of cigs. Taken 2008-03-27 in Ulan Bator, Mongolia by traveler Mala.
Picture of More grassy steppe. Taken 2008-03-27 in Zuunkharaa, Mongolia by traveler Mala.
Picture of Mongolian Dining Car. Taken 2008-03-27 in Zuunkharaa, Mongolia by traveler Mala.
Picture of Sunset in the steppe. Taken 2008-03-27 in Darhan, Mongolia by traveler Mala.
Picture of Lake Baikal Is Frozen. Taken 2008-03-27 in Slyudyanka, Russia by traveler Mala.
Picture of Sunset in the Siberian Taiga. Taken 2008-03-27 in Zima, Russia by traveler Mala.
Picture of Getting more populated. Taken 2008-03-27 in Tyumen', Russia by traveler Mala.
Picture of Colorful Village. Taken 2008-03-27 in Oyash, Russia by traveler Mala.
Picture of Our mighty train. Taken 2008-03-27 in Novosibirsk, Russia by traveler Mala.
Picture of A village. Taken 2008-03-27 in Chaykovskaya, Russia by traveler Mala.
Picture of Sunset in the Urals. Taken 2008-03-27 in Chaykovskaya, Russia by traveler Mala.

Next entry: The Empty City

 
 

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