Few would dispute that the Trans-Siberian is the supreme
king of all things straddling two rails – a leviathan of a railway journey,
traversing distances big enough to bring on a headache just thinking about
them. By the time passengers step off at the last stop, chances are that their
train will have clanked and jolted its way round a fifth of the circumference
of planet Earth. It’s less well known that there’s not just one Trans-Siberian
route, but rather a number of sub-species.
The original Trans-Siberian route takes passengers from
Moscow to the seaport of Vladivostok, but one of the most colourful
alternatives is the Trans-Mongolian route – a trip connecting three capital
cities and a world of changing landscapes. Beginning in the Russian capital, trains
trundle their way through birch forests across the Ural Mountains to the town
of Yekaterinburg. Within a few days, services swing round the brilliant blue
waters of Lake Baikal, before plunging southward into the gently sloping
grasslands of the Mongolian steppe, dotted with yurts and grazing horses. The
last leg from the Mongolian capital Ulaanbaatar to Beijing is a fitting finale,
quickly skipping between the arid expanse of the Gobi Desert, industrial sprawl
and green mountains – squint and you may even glimpse the Great Wall itself.