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4 Jan 2009
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Perth, Australia
Posts: 102
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Magadan then what ?
Hi guys,
happy 2009 to all
Still planning my route for the "long way home" (from Melbourne to Brussels, back home in six months). So far I used GoogleMap and got to pretty much everywhere I needed... Until I reached Magadan.
So I'm stuck there, and I need to push further. How do you get out of there once you've done the Kolyma from Yakutsk ? There seems to be NO roads at all further east ?
To give you an idea, check my itinerary : Google Maps
Has anyone found a way east from Magadan ? Is the only option a ferry or a plane ?
thanks guys.
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4 Jan 2009
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Registered Users
HUBB regular
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Moscow
Posts: 86
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houston we have a problem
the most stupid road map i've ever seen
russian part i mean
sorry
all the roads in syberia are perfectly seen in google
if you don't see one - there is no any road
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4 Jan 2009
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Dreaming of travelling and riding bikes in general..
Posts: 445
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not brilliant BUT....
Try this...
http://reissner.ucd.ie/estiu2006.htm
This is very interesting but probably a bit out of date.
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4 Jan 2009
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Canada
Posts: 738
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Hey Boags,
Planning is half the fun
It's a bit tough to go further east from Magadan as there are indeed no roads as that entire area is an incredibly vast expanse of rugged wilderness. (There are roads on the Kamchatka but you have to fly into the penninsula to access them.)
You have to try to fly out or catch a boat out of Magadan, all time consuming, expensive and hard to accomplish. As there is little predictable or low cost transportation from Magadan, the vast majority of bikers in these last few years ride to Vladivostok along Trans Siberian and then from there usually hop a ferry to Korea, etc.
Have fun.
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4 Jan 2009
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Perth, Australia
Posts: 102
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Thanks guys
yeah planning is actually fun
The more I read the more I see that driving in summer is next to impossible so it's actually easier to drive on the rivers in winter as snow is easier than mud.
Yes it will be -40 on a good day but did I mention I'm in a landcruiser ? I can't ride bikes anymore after my last accident, so I gotta do it on 4 wheels... Still fun I reckon.
Anyone done it in winter ?
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5 Jan 2009
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Anchorage, Alaska
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If you are going to do it in winter I would suggest late March, not this time of year. It was -97 F. (-72 C.) somewhere in Siberia (Kajlastuj) yesterday. No matter what vehicle you are in, those kind of temperatures will lead quickly to the demise of the vehicle and then your demise. In late March you might get -40 but probably not colder. Even that is very cold, too cold to start a "cold-soaked" vehicle, perhaps even with a Webasto pre-heater.
Two Australian vehicles (Isuzu and Mits.) with campers did it about 2 summers ago. There were some water crossings, a bit of winching, sketchy wooden bridges and tire problems for the guy that was unlucky enough to use 18" Mickey Thompsons, none for the vehicle with 255/100R16 Michelins.
It would probably be more prudent to have at least one accompanying vehicle.
Charlie
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