

Lake Baikal is the world's oldest and deepest freshwater lake. Depending of on which Russian you talk to, it contains 15, 20, or 25% of the world's freshwater. It is supposedly true that if the world's drinking supply were to suddenly vanish, the entire world's population could drink the water from Lake Baikal for, like, 15 years. Beyond that, being in remote Siberia, the lake is cold. While the rest of Irkutsk is boiling, a 30-minute drive to the Lake will bring substantially cooler temperatures and downright chilly weather next to the shore. We both saw our breaths there on a sunny day in July!

Andy took advantage of the 9 degree celisius (and supposedly healing) crystal clear water and took a dip. The result? Numbness, with a slight aftershock of tingling, shortness of breath and headache. The oddest sensation, however, was to drink the very water you were swimming in and having it taste as cold as anything you've ever had with ice in it.


We visited the smoked fish market, pounding out bargains for scrumptious local catches, took some hikes in some quite beautiful mountains and landscape and generally enjoyed the "non-trainness" of it all.



Then of course, before we knew it, it was back to Irkutsk to board the Trans Mongolian to Mongolia. More specifically the capital, Ulan Bataar.
The train left on time on Sunday night and was crusing quite nicely through our first substantial change in scenery. Now we could see the view more --- rolling hills and evergreens around every turn. Most importantly, this train had windows. glorious windows -- which made it a little rough when stopped (no a/c on this leg), but heaven when moving. Fresh air filled
the carriage and we toasted each other as we cruised around Lake Baikal. Also, the podvinistas on this train also actually seemed to have a sense of humor.
There was one stop (Ilyanskaya) where it was reported you could get out and actually run to the lake shore which we tried to do, but it was dark and after the first two streets we crossed came to a marshy spot that we could see no way around to get to the lake watter which was only 70 more feet away. 20 minute stop or no, we got freaked out that the train could
pull away (the guidebook's not recommending this had also stoked our fears) so we ran back to the train only to realize we
had still about 10 minutes to spare. Oh well, better this, we thought, than be stranded in Siberia with our bags on their way to Mongolia.
So while open windows on the train were welcome, at the same time they made it friggin' cold in the middle of the night. Coupled with the repeated full-volumed, intercom warnings at 2am (we must have been at the main junction) to confirm that you were in fact traveling on the Trans Mongolian line, and no longer the Trans Siberian line, made it a little rougher night's sleep.
But if that seemed bad, nothing yet would compare with the slow, withering agony of the border crossing on the Russian side the next day. Perhaps it was the diesel fumes filling the cabin that was to serve as the omen (they had replaced our electric locomotive in the the night with a diesel one).
We arrived at the Russian border town around noon and were told to disembark (which was odd because we had heard that our passports should have been taken first.) After a couple of hours, we go back and discover that our enitre train had kind of, sort of entirely disappeared. Turns out it was a set of carriages that had been moved around so, after poking around and looking for familiar faces we found it, and thought we might as well board. Even though it was hot, it was still a place to sit (and we wouldn't lose it again).

Another hour goes by -- by this time, mid-day in a carraige with no A/C is no fun. Passport Control boards and takes another couple of hours to make sure no one illegally 'escapes' (we assumed) the country and thouroughly checks storage compartments to make sure no one is smuggling drugs OUT.

After being cleared, you'd think everything was in order to leave. Wrong. For some reason, we waited almost three hours MORE. No A/C, and now, with Passport Control on board, no getting off, and the kicker: the toilets are locked the entire time. The reason for the delay? Absolutely none given. And why should we expect anything different at this point? So we tried to read/play cards/sleep, but ultimately all were impossibile -- being so hard to concentrate in the heat -- the only thing it seemed we could do was have our skin stick to our seats or and form damp pools on on bunks. Later, (after we discovered people on the train behind us who mysteriously appeared on ours) the growing theory was that the Russians simply
wanted to wait for the later train, so they could make more money by pulling more cars with the same locomotive. Nice. As well as a very appropriate final, "how's your father?" Russian send off --- It finally took over 6 hours for
something in every other country we would visit would usually take about 15 minutes and NEVER more than one hour.