Chris
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Ch 7 Taksimo to giving up and back to Irkutsk
I bumped into the other lads at the Seaplane monument. They were heading east towards the Vitim Bridge and the real fun beyond. And Me? I needed some time sleeping in a hotel bed! I wished them bonne route.
After 2 nights and a day (most of it spent trying to fix the Shed's still leaking radiator) I set off. These 2 young chaps were coming the other way
I was regularly topping up the radiator. By now it was 33.3/33.3/33.3 swamp water/sparkling mineral water/rad-seal!
Oh joy!
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/j5cdenlPHPs" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Turning around: Wise words, or words of a demented man?
<iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/w56fWF4WHDM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
On the way back to Taksimo. Possibly in a slightly emotional state?
"Come back again another time on a little bike" I wouldn't have guessed in my wildest dreams that the "another time" would be a week later. I was expecting it to be years later.
6.30am, waiting for the train…
Back in Taksimo I tried to arrange a train for me and the bike to Tynda at the end of the western BAM and on the good Chita/Yakutsk road. No train with a baggage/post wagon for 2 weeks. Bo!!ocks! However, on Tuesday (in 2 days) a train all the way to Moscow. I actually considered going that far, but only went for the 500km option back to Severobaykalsk and the bike ride back to Irkutsk.
The shed in the baggage wagon.
Despite my 7 words of Russian and the freight lady's zero words of any language I understood, but with French/Russian translation on the phone from her mate/colleague/boss/daughter (no idea!), my Russian/English phrase book and newly downloaded translation app on my smartphone I got the ticket for me and the bike sorted. There were 60 bucks of extra "loading fees" that didn't appear on any receipt, but she did have captive audience
Her sidekick ended up with an extra 20 litres of petrol which we decanted using 2 cola bottles from the Shed's tank into his car. In fairness, he did pay me for most of it.
Other baggage being loaded
It was funny seeing the road I had ridden from the inside of a train carriage
Unceremoniously deposited on the platform at Severobaykalsk 6 hours later
The road more travelled
Somewhere before Ust Kut I met this German couple who refused to pay the (apparently) high fee for the vehicle barge to Lensk to join the Vilyuisky Trakt to Yakutsk and were intending on driving the BAM. I never met them again, but there's no way they would have made it all the way on 4 wheels
Overview sketch from when I was planning my trip in 2011 below:
The BAM sign I forgot to get a picture of when riding west-east
The forest takes back the town
Back to Zhigalovo
Kind of pretty
Guess what they're doing?
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/fj1EOlxzHrw" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Watch the video for the answer. (Clearing up litter)
I met this pleasant Russian biker when he stopped to check I was ok. I was reattaching the bash plate back onto the bike using borrowed (from a fence next to the road....) fencing wire
Still time to take in the view
Getting closer to "civilisation"
Entertainment at lunchtime
A cafe that was open and sold stuff...
Where the paved road started I meet Joe Stather a.k.a JoeDakar and his partner Corinna ( HARD WAY EAST - JOEDAKAR GMBH - THE MOTORCYCLE ADVENTURE COMPANY ) who were also attempting the BAM. On BMW (F800gs Adventure) sheds (a different variety of shed to my Honda Transalp Shed). Their sheds were also unsuitable for the terrain and they didn't make it. From Joe's description in the link above, he turned round at the same place as me and dropped his bike off the bridge where I only fell over (filmed in the second of the 3 videos above).
Myself and Felix had a really pleasant evening with Joe and Corinna a week later in Taksimo when we returned on the XCs and before Joe's mishap.
I bumped into the other lads at the Seaplane monument. They were heading east towards the Vitim Bridge and the real fun beyond. And Me? I needed some time sleeping in a hotel bed! I wished them bonne route.
After 2 nights and a day (most of it spent trying to fix the Shed's still leaking radiator) I set off. These 2 young chaps were coming the other way
I was regularly topping up the radiator. By now it was 33.3/33.3/33.3 swamp water/sparkling mineral water/rad-seal!
Oh joy!
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/j5cdenlPHPs" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Turning around: Wise words, or words of a demented man?
<iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/w56fWF4WHDM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
On the way back to Taksimo. Possibly in a slightly emotional state?
"Come back again another time on a little bike" I wouldn't have guessed in my wildest dreams that the "another time" would be a week later. I was expecting it to be years later.
6.30am, waiting for the train…
Back in Taksimo I tried to arrange a train for me and the bike to Tynda at the end of the western BAM and on the good Chita/Yakutsk road. No train with a baggage/post wagon for 2 weeks. Bo!!ocks! However, on Tuesday (in 2 days) a train all the way to Moscow. I actually considered going that far, but only went for the 500km option back to Severobaykalsk and the bike ride back to Irkutsk.
The shed in the baggage wagon.
Despite my 7 words of Russian and the freight lady's zero words of any language I understood, but with French/Russian translation on the phone from her mate/colleague/boss/daughter (no idea!), my Russian/English phrase book and newly downloaded translation app on my smartphone I got the ticket for me and the bike sorted. There were 60 bucks of extra "loading fees" that didn't appear on any receipt, but she did have captive audience
Her sidekick ended up with an extra 20 litres of petrol which we decanted using 2 cola bottles from the Shed's tank into his car. In fairness, he did pay me for most of it.
Other baggage being loaded
It was funny seeing the road I had ridden from the inside of a train carriage
Unceremoniously deposited on the platform at Severobaykalsk 6 hours later
The road more travelled
Somewhere before Ust Kut I met this German couple who refused to pay the (apparently) high fee for the vehicle barge to Lensk to join the Vilyuisky Trakt to Yakutsk and were intending on driving the BAM. I never met them again, but there's no way they would have made it all the way on 4 wheels
Overview sketch from when I was planning my trip in 2011 below:
The BAM sign I forgot to get a picture of when riding west-east
The forest takes back the town
Back to Zhigalovo
Kind of pretty
Guess what they're doing?
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/fj1EOlxzHrw" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Watch the video for the answer. (Clearing up litter)
I met this pleasant Russian biker when he stopped to check I was ok. I was reattaching the bash plate back onto the bike using borrowed (from a fence next to the road....) fencing wire
Still time to take in the view
Getting closer to "civilisation"
Entertainment at lunchtime
A cafe that was open and sold stuff...
Where the paved road started I meet Joe Stather a.k.a JoeDakar and his partner Corinna ( HARD WAY EAST - JOEDAKAR GMBH - THE MOTORCYCLE ADVENTURE COMPANY ) who were also attempting the BAM. On BMW (F800gs Adventure) sheds (a different variety of shed to my Honda Transalp Shed). Their sheds were also unsuitable for the terrain and they didn't make it. From Joe's description in the link above, he turned round at the same place as me and dropped his bike off the bridge where I only fell over (filmed in the second of the 3 videos above).
Myself and Felix had a really pleasant evening with Joe and Corinna a week later in Taksimo when we returned on the XCs and before Joe's mishap.

)
) and it wasn't feasible to tow my bike 250km to a town (back the way I'd come or to where I was heading). And why should they, on their suitable, lightweight dirtbikes tow me on my unsuitable lardy shed.