Dispatches

2005-05-24
Final report from Sweden


2005-05-01
Moscow - stress and tiredness


2005-04-27
No plane arrived today!


2005-04-25
The return trip


2005-04-23
We made it


2005-04-19
Freedom


2005-04-17
Serious thoughts regarding...


2005-04-14
The son of two murdered...


2005-04-12
Conversations in a Siberian...


2005-04-10
We´ve made it to Chersky!


2005-04-07
How to stay married...


2005-04-05
Enjoying life in the tent


2005-04-03
Goodbye Kolymskaya


2005-04-01
The last stretch coming up


2005-03-30
A visit to nomadic Chukchi...


2005-03-28
The art of getting close...


2005-03-27
The Chukchi


2005-03-24
The life of a young trapper...


2005-03-20
The village of Kolymskaya


2005-03-18
Looking back on...


2005-03-16
What a spectacular welcome


2005-03-14
Elena - the first female...


2005-03-10
There´s no easy days...


2005-03-08
Tired after eight months...


2005-03-06
The scenery along Kolyma


2005-03-03
Living in a tent...


2005-03-01
Staying another day for 5 kg:s


2005-02-27
A frostbite and a hard slog


2005-02-24
On the move again


2005-02-22
Still in Chirkovo


2005-02-20
Great humanity shown at Chirko


2005-02-18
The life of a Taiga hunter


2005-02-15
Staying put


2005-02-14
Complications


2005-02-11
Minor problems


2005-02-08
Rough start


2005-02-06
What a difference!


2005-02-05
Worries regarding failure


2005-02-01
Lost in translation


2005-01-31
Final preparations


2005-01-27
A small note on worshipping...


2005-01-25
Making a documentary


2005-01-23
Helpful Yakuts


2005-01-20
The Yakuts - part 2


2005-01-20
The Yakuts - part 1


2005-01-17
The Second World War


2005-01-16
The Even babuschka


2005-01-12
Total lack of motivation


2005-01-10
The reality of buying food


2005-01-07
Conversations


2005-01-05
Traveling on a Winter road


2005-01-03
Regarding the equipment


2005-01-02
The true Siberians


2004-12-29
What does you parents think?


2004-12-27
Nasha and Dima, part 2


2004-12-26
A visit to Nasha and Dima


2004-12-23
The yakut Valodja


2004-12-21
Local cuisine & thoughts a pro


2004-12-19
Alexei in Ambar


2004-12-16
We´ve made it to Srednekolymsk


2004-12-13
-57°F!


2004-12-13
We´re closing in


2004-12-11
Tired - but positive!


2004-12-08
The dark side of Kolyma


2004-12-07
Don´t worry, be happy!


2004-12-06
Problems in -43,6°F


2004-12-02
Fatigue


2004-12-02
Sleeping in a tent at -43°C


2004-11-29
The Russian word normal


2004-11-25
A terrible day


2004-11-25
I´ve never been this cold befo


2004-11-23
Almost unbearably cold


2004-11-23
First frost bite!


2004-11-16
It´s time to face the cold!


2004-11-14
True Siberians!


2004-11-11
Dogs along the Kolyma


2004-11-09
A Siberian settlement of today


2004-11-07
The yugahirs as told by Ljuba


2004-11-04
Meeting with a yugahir shaman?


2004-11-02
The youth in Zyryanka


2004-10-31
Violetta and her son Krilli


2004-10-28
What do people in Zyryanka do?


2004-10-26
Rat hunting


2004-10-24
Accused of terrorism


2004-10-21
Visit to a yakut family


2004-10-19
Reflections


2004-10-17
En iblick från Olga och Vadim


2004-10-14
The technical equipment


2004-10-12
We made it to Zyryanka


2004-10-10
Will we make it?


2004-10-07
Self contemplation


2004-10-05
Cold paddling


2004-10-03
Vodka


2004-09-30
Sighting of a Siberian wolf


2004-09-28
Worries!


2004-09-26
A hunting story from our camp


2004-09-23
Winter is on it´s way


2004-09-22
Johan´s two month summary


2004-09-20
Tale about Andre & Valentin


2004-09-16
Primitive living


2004-09-14
Close and dangerous encounter


2004-09-13
The worst of prisonercamps


2004-09-09
Ruslan


2004-09-08
Great scenery


2004-09-05
A hunters tale


2004-09-02
The settlement of Seimchan


2004-08-28
Gnats and molded bread.


2004-08-28
Gnats


2004-08-28
Problem 2


2004-08-28
Problem


2004-08-26
Great fishing


2004-08-24
Johans Impressions


2004-08-24
500 km!


2004-08-22
Autumn


2004-08-19
Freezing day


2004-08-18
Sasha


2004-08-18
Arrival at civilization


2004-08-18
Time thriller


2004-08-18
Getting closer to civilization


2004-08-14
The worst moment of life?


2004-08-14
A day of Siberian civilization


2004-08-12
Beach camp


2004-08-11
Amazing encounter!


2004-08-11
A extremely sunny day


2004-08-10
Rest day at the Grayling River


2004-08-10
Highlight of life


2004-08-10
Beautiful weather


2004-08-10
The cyclon has arived!


2004-08-06
Finally Kolyma!


2004-08-05
Back and going strong!


2004-08-02
Stuck in the Kulu River


2004-08-01
Sunny, 6.7 m/s southerly wind


2004-07-31
Kulu River 14 degrees, raining


2004-07-30
Between heaven and hell


2004-07-29
Last day in Magadan


2004-07-28
Another sunny day


2004-07-27
A sunny and very hot day


2004-07-26
Sunny, but emotionally chaotic


2004-07-26
Everything at once


2004-07-26
A big shock have hit the Exped


2004-07-23
Tired but very satisfied


2004-07-22
The Arctic Institute, Magadan


2004-07-21
Magadan, the Russian Far East


2004-07-19
Nice people & too much stress


2004-07-17
Mosquitos, noise and pollution


2004-07-17
Cloudy, the odd rainfall, warm


2004-07-17
Adventure Club of Russia


2004-07-06
A week before leaving!


2004-04-13
Second report from Särna


2004-04-12
Johans second report!


2003-11-30
1:st report from Särna


2003-11-28
Johans first report from home



 
2004-09-02 - The settlement of Seimchan

The settlement of Seimchan, 2nd of September, overcast and cold, with a smell of snow in the air at N 62 degrees 53´11.7 E 152 degrees 24´56.8.
We´re staying in a small guesthouse, the only one in the settlement, at what is called Upper Seimchan.

I am dying to tell you this!

Our visit here in the tiny settlement of Seimchan, hasn´t only given us a lot of answers on matters we haven´t properly understood regarding present day Siberia, and the frightful past by the way, but it has once again offered us uncountable meetings with truly good people, great experiences and lots of heat. We´ve experienced so much, that beginning today, I will tell you about it in four different dispatches and episodes. The one today regarding our first day in Seimchan, the second is called The Ruslan Way to understanding present day Seimchan, art 3 is called A hunters tale and the fourth, The Story about our visit to three of the worst concentration camps Stalin built- his awful Gulags.

Time for today´s story:

Seimchan as such doesn´t differ much from the other tiny settlements we´ve passed along the Kolyma, (ok then, in reality only one, Sinegorje, the two others we floated passed very slowly, but we still saw a lot!) an outer area dominated by abandoned and ruined industries, rusty machinery, lots of small unstable cottages in wood, with windows covered by plastic or wooden boards, all of them with small tidy gardens and often, a bunch of ducks or chicken, a few scared, aggressively barking dogs, people who stroll around seemingly without direction, ainly young people with crew cuts, an abandoned airfield, half constructed living blocks surrounded by rusted machinery. Once one gets into the center of the settlement, one meets the communal blocks in white, two- or three storied, all of them close to falling apart, plenty already empty, most of them with plastic or wooden boards covering the windows, garbage in every corner and car wreckages spread all over the place and there´s o definite center. Maybe around the Administration Building where the local bosses find ways to survive and plan for a healthier future. This is where you find most of the local shops, to be found in run down buildings, but once inside they´re modern and the shelves are full of products to buy. It´s around the shops where you meet people. Most of them avoid looking at you initially, even though it stinks foreigner of us, up until that moment when you stop one of them to ask a question and suddenly you have a friend! People change dramatically and uickly become helpful, generous, funny and warm, just as we have become accustomed to how they are. With the best of people I´ve come across, no doubt. They´re cold and hard on the outside, but soft and warm on the inside. Pretty much like back home in Sweden. This is the way it all started during our visit, I stopped a police guy when we arrived at the almost abandoned harbor, 6 km:s from the center.
I stopped one of these guys that I had been warned about before eaving,
a policeman. They were supposed to be corrupt, difficult to do ith and only interested in giving us uncountable problems. So far, they´ve been just like the rest, great. The same applied to Konstantin. He took a break in his work, drove me into Seimchan and the administrative building, where he called all people of power in the settlement until he eventually found one of the three top names, Ruslan. He was dressed in a business mans suit, slightly overweight, in his early thirties and he drove me back to the harbor in a dodgy Lada. He was initially slightly reserved, but once back at the harbor he found the owner and is sons and then we all together carried all our weight up to the boardinghouse he had fixed for us. Then he explained:
´´I know you have come to help us and that you´re friends of hparo. (Dmitry Shparo is our great contact here in Russia, visit his website at www.shparo.com ) Get ready, we´ve fixed you a car with driver who´s going to drive you to three of Stalin´s Gulags, which are located not far from here. The chief of the Tourist department will take care of you.´´
It wouldn´t surprise if the Tourism Department was fairly ew.The chief, Mikhailov, turned out to be a few years older than young Johan, he was kind and humorous, careful with his image, dressed and camouflage, like most men here on their free time, he carried a loaded Kalashnikov with a very sensitive trigger, since he was a hunter he explained and added that the area we would visit, was infested with brown bear. He would do well in a contest regarding who´s most macho! The driver, Sasha, was typical of the men in the area. Solidly built, with well used and big hands, a weather bitten face and a cautious manner until you became his friend. He had brought his son, also named Sasha, he was supposed to be an expert in English. He started off immediately in English: ´´I am Sasha.´´
One of two sentences in English he used on our excursion. The ther one was Goodbye.
´´Do you want vodka?´´ asked the Chief of Tourism, when we et of in a
high speed in the jeep that dominates the vehicles of the region, the OAS.
We said no. Therefore he bought 4 bears instead, to relish during our drive. First we visited the local museum, which they had opened just for us. Once inside, Ruslan turned up again, to translate. He spoke 22 words of English and 13 in German and since our Russian probably is on the same level, we understood quite a lot of what was told. This was our second visit to a Museum during our visit in the region. They´re all quite similar. Definitely worth a visit, even though they´ve got a long way to go, if they´re going to inspire the local youth to visit. One part is dedicated to the local history, described with photos and statues, remembering local heroes from the past. Another part is dedicated to showing off a bunch of badly stuffed animals, the ocal fauna, than another, unfortunately always the smallest section, the one regarding the native people of the region. In this case they had some great objects showing the yugahirs, which are part of our mission to find. On top of that, a major part is dedicated to the local history regarding its industrialisation. I have to say, all things summed up, it gave us a lot of important background to the area and its history. And two cups of sweet and hot Russian cups of tea! The local history is quite dark, though, which we realized a couple of hours later when we´ve made our way through an overgrown road to three remains of talin´s work camps, the Gulags. Terrible, inhuman places where the mad dictator killed at least 3.5 million people in the most brutal ways. More about this in the Gulag-dispatch to come.
The guide Mikhail, was more interested in talking about hunting and fishing and therefore he rushed us through the remains. It was extremely important for him to show us some fresh bear pooh we´ve passed on the way. On top of that, he´d been ordered to return us back to Seimchan before 6 p.m. when we´d been invited to have a sauna together with the people in charge of Seimchan. Still, even though we where stressed for time, he managed to serve us a meal to be remembered forever. Smoked fish, meat, fresh vegetables, vodka and a lot of other delicious he´d hunted or caught himself. That is the way people are here. Incredibly generous, one never feels that it is done to gain favors, but due to that they´re proud to be able to be generous. We got picked up at 7 p.m. sharp to have a banja, not a sauna. A major difference is that the banja is much hotter! The banja is important in peoples life. It isn´t only one of few places where you can get steaming hot water, it is also the place we´re people socialize and gossip. There´s two types of banjas, the communal ones and the private ones. We visited a communal one in Magadan. A gigantic institution full of showers for lots of people at the same time, a variety of tempered baths and a big, extremely hot sauna. Average temperature 120 degrees Celsius! In Seimchan we visited a private one, owned by one of the local hotshots, Victor. You can imagine the sensation we felt, not aving
enjoyed hot water for a month! What I liked the best though, hat
differs from the saunas we have back home, is that little room eople have just outside the sauna where they socialize. They bring good food, drinks and snacks, and then you sit there for many hours, talking about matters one wouldn´t talk about generally. We learned a lot about the present Russia seen out of the eyes of young, intelligent Siberians. Another thing I noticed, was that they didn´t only use birch to whip themselves their blood to move, but also pine. Gee, how nice! And, when the temperature had reached maximum, one could stick a felt hat on e head to avoid melting ones brain halves.
One thing is for sure, I am going to turn our sauna at home into a
banja! (Well, if my wife Titti will allow me.last time a tried turning
it into a banja, I melted a plastic ventilation hole.and I haven´t been allowed in there myself since then..)

Ruslan, our generous host


visit to the museum of Seimchan


Våra guiderna till gulagerna.



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