Present Location: Khandyga, Siberia, Russia
Latitude: 62° 39' North
Longitude: 135° 32' East
Temperature: -57°F (-49°C)
Weather: clear and sunny
Altitude: 500 feet
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UST
NERA to KHANDYGA
February 28
In
the remote mountains of Northeastern Siberia, between the Cherskogo range
and the Verkhoyanskiy range, there are valleys which, for reasons better
explained by meteorologists, experience cold beyond imagination. As the
dry Arctic air rushes down from the Laptev Sea, temperatures can plummet
below -60° F for weeks. At least four small communities vie for the
title of "The Coldest Inhabited Place in the World". Near Oymyakon,
a monument was placed to mark the spot, but their record of -96.4°
F has been eclipsed by a low of -98° F, and rumors of -112° F
in Verkhoyansk were circulating. Ust Nera, (64° 34' N /143° 13'
E), is in the running, with a low of -97° F. Minus ninety-seven is
one hundred and twenty-nine degrees below freezing!!
Ust
Nera was a Gulag (prison labor camp) until 1956, part of Stalin's Dalstroy
organization which claimed as many as 20 million Russian lives. Now an
active gold mining town, it is situated in a wide river valley, guarded
by high peaks and ridges capped with unique jagged rock formations resembling
the backbones of dinosaurs. The whole settlement is built on permafrost,
a layer of frozen soil hundreds of feet deep which never melts. Newer
buildings were constructed on stilts so that their heat wouldn't thaw
the earth below, but older log homes have sagged and settled into the
ground at drunken angles. Since most homes are heated from a central coal-burning
power plant producing hot water, the town was crisscrossed with a web
of raised insulated pipes.
With
the help of our truck-driver friends at the "auto base" and
the Ust Nera Mining Company, it took us only three days to organize a
convoy to Khandyga (62° 39' N /135° 32' E), the next stepping
stone on our way across the Russian Far East. To travel alone across this
part of Siberia is to invite disaster. Our Russian friends wouldn't hear
of it. We were convoying with two tanker trucks going to pick up a load
of diesel for the mines. The trucks were older six-wheel drive Krazes.
The drivers, Yuri, 51, and Misha, 56, had many years of experience on
the Ust Nera-Khandyga winter route. They were excited that we would be
joining them for the two-day trip.
By
the appointed time of 8:00 AM we were ready to roll, but it was 10:30
before we left. Just outside of town we parked with Yuri to wait for Misha.
Both our main fuel tanks were empty, but Yuri assured us that as soon
as Misha arrived, we could fill up from his reserve. We were running on
fumes. I tried turning off the engine, but at this temperature, I could
watch the needle drop. Rather than use any of our 100-gallon stash of
jet fuel in the support trailer, I decided to dump in one of the jerry
cans off the back rack. We had filled it in Magadan with what we were
told was "saliarka arctic", (winter diesel). When I tipped the
can up however, nothing came out! The spout was full of what looked like
tapioca pudding. I had not added
any Red Line Anti-Gel.
Just then Misha arrived.
We filled up with his siphon hose. It was almost 2:00 PM before we actually
got underway. Shortly after leaving town, we began a steep climb into
the mountains. For the first time, we saw stands of birch mixed into the
larch and pine. The view from the pass at 4,530 ft. into the Nera Valley
and across snow-covered peaks in all directions was spectacular. Misha
had brought his own video camera, and he had a good eye for pictures.
We were able to stop frequently.
The road was a narrow single lane, with just room to pass now and then.
It was icy in spots, but a little coal ash had been spread on the worst
hills. We had to keep a constant watch for trucks. If they stopped coming
up ,
they might not have been able to start again on the slick surface. Stopping
quickly on the downhill was impossible, or at best, extremely dangerous.
As we were now accustomed,
there were detours around most bridges. On some occasions, we'd bypass
whole sections of road by driving down rivers, over islands and through
the forest. The tracks were easy to follow, but required four-wheel drive
most of the time. The gravel "worm piles" of dredge mining continued
to scar the river beds with alarming indiscretion for the natural beauty
of the land, but perhaps no worse than those in Canada's Yukon or California's
gold country.
Seventy-eight
miles out of Ust Nera we passed the entrance to a large mining operation.
The traffic, which had been two or three trucks every half hour, was
reduced to almost zero. The track from here to the junction with the road
from Magadan to Yakutsk is a winter road. Though some sections were under
construction, locals said it would be years before it could be driven
year-round.
Our late start again
forced us to travel after dark. In the beams of our PIAA 80 PROs, the
trail looked like a two-lane bobsled run of gray glare-ice. The surface
was very rough with irregular dips and holes. Our support trailer yanked
at the back of the truck like a mad pit bull lunging at its chain as it
leaped in and out of the track.
The inky vacuum of
night swallowed everything but the path of our lights as we traversed
a narrow berm across a frozen marsh for several miles. In the black void,
an 8-foot drop-off on each side waited hungrily for a mistake. Two trucks
had slid off and overturned. They would stay there until the end of Winter.
Leaving
the berm, the track dropped down into a gully and made a hard right up
a steep hill. I stayed to the right out of habit. When I felt the wheels
slipping, it was too late. A 6x6 Kamaz truck blasted by us out of nowhere,
blocking my escape to the left. With all four wheels locked, the truck
and trailer began a slow helpless slide backwards and sideways down the
hill. The trailer's inertia brakes were useless, and it began to jackknife.
After several feet, the truck found some snow and stuttered to a stop.
By locking up only the front differential, I was able to spin/crab the
wheels sideways enough to straighten out the trailer and back down for
a second try.
The treacherous
track continued to roller-coaster through the trees. Eerie shadows played
in the forest as we climbed slowly to a pass at 4,470 ft. and descended
gradually to the town of Kyubyume (63° 26' N /140° 30' E), parking
on the ice of the Kyubyume River to camp for the night. Kyubyume was the
junction of The Road of Bones, the normal route from Susuman to
Khandyga.
Following
what would become a standard procedure, we stopped, waited five minutes,
moved forward a foot, waited another five, and moved a second time, allowing
the tires to cool and prevent them from freezing to the ground overnight.
Though we had far exceeded the official minimum temperature rating for
our BFGoodrich T/A Mud-Terrain tires, (their glass transition point is
-40° F), we saw no signs of cracking or loss of pressure. Perhaps
the special natural rubber racing inner tubes we had installed at the
advice of the BFGoodrich engineering department were working, or perhaps
they had not been necessary. Who would take a chance? We had no concern
for our Alcoa hot-forged one-piece aluminum rims. They become stronger
in sub-zero temperatures.
We crawled into our
camper and whipped up a one-pot meal using canned meat, canned butter,
instant rice and Alpine Aire freeze dried vegetable mix. The temperature
when we stopped was -64° F. By morning, it would drop to -87°
F!!
We had planned to
keep the engine block and oil warm using 110-volt heaters powered by our
Coleman Power Mate diesel generator, which consumed a fraction of fuel
the truck would if left running all night. In Ust Nera however, we had
noticed that while the engine started easily in the morning, the power
steering whined and pulled as the pump struggled to move the thick jelled
mass through the lines. The gear shift lever was stiff. After a ten minute
warm up, there was a tell-tale spot of power steering fluid on the snow;
not a good sign. The Zerostart block, oil and battery warmers were not
keeping the belts and other external parts of the engine warm.
Following
the Russians' practice, at anything below -40° F (-40° C), we
now left the engine running 24-hours a day, and the Deflecta Shield Wintershield
on the grill completely closed. This allowed us to keep the camper warm
by using only the Hunter HW-6 12V hot water heater which is plumbed to
the engine's cooling system. Set on medium, with the camper's top down,
the inside air temperature remained at 65° F to 75° F, making
our Cascade Design R-0° sleeping bags almost too warm. Nevertheless,
hot water or coffee spilled on the floor would freeze instantly. Snow
melting off our LaCrosse Ice Man winter boots created a small glacier
by the door.
The next morning was clear and bitter cold. Despite our precautions, we
still needed low-range to break the tires loose. The road was better now.
Daylight helped. For the first ten minutes, we crept along at three or
four mph, allowing gear oil and transmission fluid to liquefy. This section
was part of a proposed all-year route from Magadan to Khandyga but it
is perpetually under repair or construction. As we wound our way up the
drainage of the Kyubyume River over a low pass and down into the valley
of the Vostochnaya (East) Khandyga River, open trucks stacked with frozen
quarters of beef passed us. At -70° F the meat was not likely to spoil.
We wondered morbidly if this was how they transported the victims of the
Gulags to their final resting place, now under the wheels of our truck!
Was this really "The Road of Bones"?
Stopping for lunch,
drivers boiled up a pot of tea on a kerosene stove and ate bread and sausage
or frozen fish. At night, they slept across their front seat. There are
no plush sleeper cabs, and no Flying J or Texaco Truck Centers in this
part of the world.
The
main track here had been cut along the cliff above the river, but since
we were headed towards Khandyga, and therefore presumably empty, we were
diverted onto the river bed itself. The next few miles were fascinating
as we drove downstream. This was a small tributary of the Vostochnaya
Khandyga river, perhaps only fifteen yards across in places with a fast
drop. We could see the frozen boils where the rushing water had heaved
up over rocks as we "ran the rapids". Cracks in the blue ice
had formed miniature crevasses several feet deep.
Crossing an old wooden trestle, we waited at the bottom of the Tchorny
PrishiÎm grade while two fuel trucks inched their way down the one-lane
ledge carved into the rock cliffs. On-coming truck drivers, always in
convoy, would hold up one finger to their eye, indicating the need to
watch for others coming behind them. Snowy peaks towered ominously above
our heads. A thousand feet below, a wide river with many islands meandered
down a beautiful valley. Walls of snow from earlier avalanches reached
higher than the camper. In the dead of Winter, it was a picture off an
old Christmas card, the snow piled high like globs of shaving cream. You
know it could never look like that, but it did.
Three
hundred miles from Ust Nera we dropped into the flat land leading to Khandyga.
The peaks of the Sordoginskiy range crowded in from the north. The road
straightened out and was slightly faster. There were short hills, and
about halfway up each grade, a small sign marked a pile of coal ash or
dirt buried under the snow. If trucks got stuck on the ice, it was a do-it-yourself-with-your-own-shovel
road maintenance program.
Darkness had fallen
when we stopped just out of Khandyga for the night. The four of us squeezed
into the cab of Misha's Kraz and ate frozen raw fish, dark Russian bread,
Velveeta cheese & dried fruit from sunny California, all washed down
with Ukrainian vodka. It had been a great two days. We are starting to
get used to temperatures which seldom rise above -40°F (-40°C).
Mileage from Ust Nera
to Khandyga: 357 (575 km).
Total driving time was 20 hours.
Average speed: 17.8 mph.
Road condition: Mixed, from reasonably good packed snow to one-lane ice
to one lane with deep drifts and high center berm. Volleyball-size rocks
on river gravel bars present a clearance problem even for a pick-up. High
clearance and four-wheel drive was mandatory on steep icy passes and areas
with deep snow. Holes in river ice can be dangerous. This is not a drive
for anyone afraid of narrow icy mountain roads with steep, deep drop-offs
and no guard rails. There is no fuel along this two-day route, and engines
must be left running all night.
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