Chlidonias Goes To Asia, part three: 2013-2014

I was going to put some photos on there but forgot. As follows, a Steller's sea cow; the view from the hostel (it's on the fourth floor so actually gets a very nice sea breeze to keep things cool); and - no joke - the entrance to the hostel. Welcoming indeed.
 

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Forget about smiles in Russia, in private yes, but smiling in public is as forbidden as promoting homosexuality!! And you should manage the Baikal seal.
 
Baikal Seals are a neat species I'd love to see and very much hope you do. I wouldn't imagine it being too difficult to spot one considering that they seems to have over populated their lake. You'll probably find a bunch trying to squeeze onto one little rock to bask. Do you plan on trying to spot any other wildlife in the Baikal Lake area while you're there? And what was the only Mammal you've seen so far?

~Thylo:cool:
 
Baikal Seals are a neat species I'd love to see and very much hope you do. I wouldn't imagine it being too difficult to spot one considering that they seems to have over populated their lake. You'll probably find a bunch trying to squeeze onto one little rock to bask. Do you plan on trying to spot any other wildlife in the Baikal Lake area while you're there? And what was the only Mammal you've seen so far?
I don't know why you keep saying that Baikal seals have "over-populated" the lake. If anything, overfishing of the lake would be having the opposite effect on the seal population. They are still a common species but only in parts of the lake (not over the entire area).

I do intend on trying to find other mammals in the area. The region is home to most of the big Palaearctic mammals such as brown bears, lynx, wolves, wolverines, etc. Hopefully I can see at least one or two of those. But I don't know how easy it is going to be trying to get around on my own.

The mammal I've seen is Siberian chipmunk in South Korea.
 
I don't know why you keep saying that Baikal seals have "over-populated" the lake. If anything, overfishing of the lake would be having the opposite effect on the seal population. They are still a common species but only in parts of the lake (not over the entire area).

I do intend on trying to find other mammals in the area. The region is home to most of the big Palaearctic mammals such as brown bears, lynx, wolves, wolverines, etc. Hopefully I can see at least one or two of those. But I don't know how easy it is going to be trying to get around on my own.

The mammal I've seen is Siberian chipmunk in South Korea.

Keep saying? Have I said it before? I said that because I once saw a documentary saying that the seals have become over populated. I guess I misheard it, though. Best of luck seeing it, though.

Well I hope you certainly do get to see some of those species, though Wolverine is quite unlikely.

Well that's certainly a Mammal I'd like to see and hopefully will one day.

~Thylo:cool:
 
Keep saying? Have I said it before? I said that because I once saw a documentary saying that the seals have become over populated. I guess I misheard it, though. Best of luck seeing it, though.
yes you have said it in a previous instance. I suspect that you didn't mishear the documentary, simply that the documentary was bollocks as they so often are. I don't anticipate any trouble seeing the seals (there are boat trips from the village I'll be staying at to a regular haul-out site) -- which makes a change from looking for animals which are impossible to find!
 
I believe the documentary was Wild Russia, too.....

Well I'm glad that you'll finally get a break and see the seals.

So do you plan on visiting any more zoos in Russia (like Moscow perhaps)? I'm sure you'd have a chance of seeing Amur Tigers and Leopards if you do.

~Thylo:cool:
 
I have been reading about the baikal seal. How fascinating that a seal would end up in a lake, hundreds of km from the ocean.

The hostel entrance looks like it leads to a torture chamber. Where would you have stayed if it was full, given that it was the only one in town??
 
The hostel entrance looks like it leads to a torture chamber. Where would you have stayed if it was full, given that it was the only one in town??

Someone's been watching too much Tarantino! :rolleyes:
 
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The hostel entrance looks like it leads to a torture chamber. Where would you have stayed if it was full, given that it was the only one in town??
Russian visa requirements for NZers need full day-by-day itineraries with all acommodations etc booked in advance so they know exactly where you're going to be; the hostel was therefore booked long ago. Russia's not the sort of place where a NZer can just turn up with an air-ticket and some cash and nothing else, as in a lot of other countries. I found out there actually is another hostel in town but it is someone's apartment and they don't speak any English.
 
On my last full day in Vladivostok I went back to Russky Island and found a couple more new birds. One of them popped up on to the top of a bush while I was trying to re-find a shrike (it turned out to be a brown shrike and not a bull-headed shrike as I hoped) and my immediate thought was “reed warbler” but of course there were no reeds anywhere for miles around. It was actually a thick-billed warbler, which is in the same genus as reed warblers but lives atypically in woodland and scrub. I don't know if it's considered a “good bird” to get (all new birds are good to me) but I was pleased with it. The other bird was more surprising to me. I was hanging round the beach waiting for cormorants to fly by to see if I could tell a Temminck's cormorant from a great cormorant, and a pelagic cormorant flew past. Twice. I had seen what was probably a pelagic cormorant the day before from a cliff-top but it was too far down to be 100% sure of, but this one was so close inshore that there was no mistaking it for any other species. The thing is though that from the field guide text I don't think there should be pelagic cormorants here at this time of year. Or maybe I'm just reading it wrong. None of the Temminck's/great cormorants came close enough at all for ID purposes.

So that's my time in Vladivostok up. I have quite liked the Russian part of the trip so far, despite the glumness of the city. If I hadn't found my bird spot on Russky Island it may have been a different story though! It was a bit frustrating not being able to get anywhere else. Winging it certainly doesn't work here! I tried to find out at the information centre if there were any one or two day tours to nature reserves or something that I could do. My question didn't register very well, so I found a promotional booklet on the shelves and pointed at photos of mountains and deer and birds. “No, very price” was the response, with nothing further forthcoming. I tried some internet searches and any tours were well outside my price range. If I was doing Russia as a one-off shorter trip then I would arrange some tours in advance, but for a longer trip where budgeting matters I can't afford that.

However, my main animal reason for coming to Russia wasn’t in Vladivostok anyway, it instead lies three days by train to the west. So today I am off to the station to catch a little train by the name of the Trans-Siberian.

Just as an aside, I found out today that US Americans can get a three year tourist visa for Russia now! They are the only nationality that can do so (because America and Russia have always been such good friends of course). The three year visa only costs US$20 or so more than the standard 30 day visa but it allows you to stay in Russia for up to six months at a stretch and return as many times as you like within the three year period.
 
Just as an aside, I found out today that US Americans can get a three year tourist visa for Russia now! They are the only nationality that can do so (because America and Russia have always been such good friends of course). The three year visa only costs US$20 or so more than the standard 30 day visa but it allows you to stay in Russia for up to six months at a stretch and return as many times as you like within the three year period.

Well that's good news for us Americans who want to visit Russia one day!:D

Besides the actually city part, it seems you had a good time and saw a few new species which is always a good thing!

So how does the three-day train journey work? Do you stop once or twice a day or just at night or do you ride for three days straight?

~Thylo:cool:
 
Well that's good news for us Americans who want to visit Russia one day!:D

Besides the actually city part, it seems you had a good time and saw a few new species which is always a good thing!

So how does the three-day train journey work? Do you stop once or twice a day or just at night or do you ride for three days straight?
it's three days straight (I think seven days if you go the whole way between Vladivostok and Moscow in one go), but it stops at stations all along the way for short periods, basically to pick up and drop off passengers. There are three types of sleeping carriages: first class has two-bed cabins and is very expensive; second-class has four-bed cabins (i.e. imagine two bunks inside a wardrobe and that's about right); cheapest is third class which has thirty-odd sleeping platforms, like a prison ship. I'm in second class.

I'm hoping for some attractive Russian female room-mates (even better if they have the ability to smile); but I'm anticipating smelly drunk Russian male room-mates, probably carrying knives between their teeth.
 
I heard that there are no showers on the train so make sure you have a clip for your nose. I recommend putting some Vicks in your nostrils.
 
If you put a knife between your teeth, I'm sure none of the smelly drunk men will come anywhere near you. And absolutely nobody will smile at you.

If you get attractive Russian females, however, then you may find that by the time you reach Lake Baikal you have three wives. To avoid that I recommend putting the knife between your teeth.

:p

Hix
 
If you put a knife between your teeth, I'm sure none of the smelly drunk men will come anywhere near you. And absolutely nobody will smile at you.

If you get attractive Russian females, however, then you may find that by the time you reach Lake Baikal you have three wives. To avoid that I recommend putting the knife between your teeth.

:p

Hix

hehe

Will you be off-line for the next three days? If you reply back in three days then I'll know the answer:p

~Thylo:cool:
 
I hope that you can start seeing some animals. Can you just tell the wildlife authorities that you are Putin's long lost New Zealand cousin? They will probably drive you to the tigers in a limo.

Maybe they'll let him "save" a TV crew from tigers as well!
 
I heard that there are no showers on the train so make sure you have a clip for your nose. I recommend putting some Vicks in your nostrils.


Or as he will not be able to shower as well, he should take clips for the noses of his cabin-mates :).
 
Did the floods in the Far East of Russia cause you any dramas? From the map it looks like your train may have had to pass through there.
 
Did the floods in the Far East of Russia cause you any dramas? From the map it looks like your train may have had to pass through there.
you know I was wondering if they were big enough to make world news. I knew about them in advance because some stupid American woman in the hostel in Vladivostok was complaining that she had "been screwed over" in some town she'd just come from because her booked room had been given to relief workers and she'd ended up sleeping on a sofa. And all I was thinking was, if it comes to providing beds for relief workers there to save peoples' lives and livelihoods or a bed for a tourist, then I'd be like "here, take my bed"! Some people can't see past their own nose.

The train did pass many very flooded areas, but all the roads and railways are on raised embankments so they must be regular. It looked pretty bad though, at some points the power poles showed the water depth to be at least 15 or 20 feet. There are no problems where I am now though (Ulan Ude).
 
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