Why Russia? This was the consistent response from my patients and friends when I was aked about these holidays. Admittedly my primary interest in this country is trekking in Kamchatka but there was no way that I would neglect the rest of such a fascinating country.
Everyone knows all about Russia. It has always been there as the “yin” to the west’s “yang”. As I grew up in my childhood it was the “evil empire”, the premier Communist nation on the planet. The antithesis of the capitalist west, the “good guys”. With a finger on the nuclear button our side felt it had to build bigger and better nuclear weapons to protect us all. I. A closed society it created the iron curtain. Very few people from the west got in and even less information about their society came back out. I always found the air of mystery to be particularly alluring.
When communism fell in the late 1980s and we all expelled a collective sigh of relief. This enigmatic nation’s political system convulsed and morphed into a “wild west” corrupt version of capitalism all the while maintaining a pretext of being socialist. Now the nuclear threat has been replaced with a cyber threat and that somehow seems a lot less deadly than nuclear war.
When I looked further into Russia I realised how little I really knew. This is the biggest country on the planet (even after the loss of the Soviet satellite states in 1991) and the runner up does not even come close at only half the size of Russia. From side to side there is room for 8 time zones (Australia only has 3). It has a population of 142 million but, worryingly, its one of the few where the population is decreasing. The ethnicity of the people is diverse and in this county that straddles both Europe and Asia it is interesting to see that reflected in the differing visages on those walking the streets.
My adventure begins in Moscow where I will see the heart of Russian power and what remains of the Soviet times. Then onto St Petersburg, the ornate and very European side to Russia. The middle 2 weeks sees me on the trans Siberian train to Vladivostok. At over 9000km and seven days travel time it is one of the great railway journeys of the world.and also the longest. The conclusion will be 2 weeks trekking through the magnificent Siberian wilderness of Kamchatka.