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Day 22. Vladivostok Once a top-secret naval base of the Soviet Union, Vladivostok was sealed off from the outside world. Now its doors are open for business and the city is booming as Russia's gateway to the Far East. For 100 years this has been the legendary eastern terminus of the Trans Siberian Railway, its historic railway station recently restored to its former grandeur. Discover the city and port at the end of the railway before we board our ferry to take us to Japan. Day 23. Ferry to Japan We mingle amongst the guests on board this ferry to Russia, often businessmen travelling between the neighbouring countries and we start to adjust to the change in culture and language allowing time to contemplate what we have already seen and wonder what is still in store on this adventure. Day 24. Arrive Kanazawa Our first tantalising destination in Japan is Kanazawa where we will visit Kenrokuen, one of the Three Great Gardens of Japan, once the outer garden of the city’s castle. We marvel at the horticultural creativity and the contrast to what we have seen in wilds of Russia and Mongolia. Days 25-26. Kyoto and day trip to Nara Kyoto, one of Japan’s oldest capitals unlocks her treasures of the Golden Temple, the Geisha district of Gion and Kiyomizudera temple set on a hillside overlooking the city. The possibilities are endless and there is never enough time to explore everything. We also journey to Nara, the first permanent capital of Japan to Todaiji Temple, reputedly the largest woodent building in the world housing the Great Buddha. We have time to explore the surrounding deer filled park before returning to Kyoto. Days 27-28. Kyoto and to Takayama After the hustle and bustle of Kyoto take the time to relax in this town of wooden houses and have the opportunity to stay in a traditional ryokan where samurai would have stayed. We wander the streets and the lattice bayed windows entice us in to sample some sake or view the wooden and Japanese handicrafts traditional of the region. You will perhaps catch a glimpse of one of the many colourful festival floats that are paraded through the streets in spring and autumn. We visit the Hida Heritage Folk Village full of hand thatched farmhouses and take a step back in time. Day 29. Tokyo We take the express train to Nagoya and from there the shinkansen whisks us away from the tranquillity of Takayama to end our adventure in the exhilarating capital city. We take in a highlights tour of Tokyo, a modern city of awe inspiring skyscrapers, an impressive modern metro system and limitless technology and take time to reflect on all that we have seen and done. Day 30. Tokyo The last day has arrived too soon. The adventure is complete, the legendary rail journey that started many days ago has taken you across Asia, through lands and cultures literally worlds apart. The Essentials Group Size 15 maximum, plus Group Leader. Accommodation Hotels - 12 nights (twin share). Mongolian Ger - 1 night (shared) Siberian Guesthouse - 1 night (shared) Trains - 11 nights (4 berth) Ferry - 2 nights (4 berth) Ryokan - 2 nights (traditional Japanese Inn dating from the Edo period (1603- 1868). Meals 19 in total. Breakfast (17), dinner (2). Travel by Train: Comfortable 4 berth sleepers. There are 5 rail sectors on this journey - St.Petersburg to Moscow to (1 night), Moscow to Irkutsk (4 nights), Irkutsk to Ulaanbaatar (2 nights), Ulaanbaatar to Ulan Ude (1 night) and Ulan Ude to Vladivostok (3 nights). Other : For ‘Scheduled Sightseeing’ we generally use a small minibus, and for ‘City Exploring’ we use local taxis, public transport, underground metro and go on foot. 2 Berth Rail (Optional) Available for a supplementary price only when two people book and travel together. Available on all rail sectors between St.Petersburg and Vladivostok. Sightseeing Scheduled Sightseeing is part of the itinerary and includes all transport, entrance fees and English speaking local guide. This journey enjoys a greater number of included sights that others within this brochure. St.Petersburg : City tour, Palace Square, Hermitage Museum. Moscow : City tour, St.Basil's Cathedral, Red Square, Kremlin, Armoury Chamber. Irkutsk (Siberia) : City tour, Museum of Wooden Architecture, Limnological Museum, Lake Baikal. Ulaanbaatar : Zaisan Memorial, National History Museum, Gandan Hiid Monastery, Terelj National Park. Ulan Ude: Ethnographical Museum, Ivolginsk Datsun. Vladivostok: City tour and museums. Kanazawa : Kenrokuen Garden. Takayama : Hida Folk Village. Nara : Todaiji. Kyoto : Kinkakuji, Sanjusangendo, Kiyomizudera, walk of Gion. Tokyo : City tour. City Exploring is further sightseeing outside the itinerary guideline but with the Group Leader. Local Payment Your Local Payment is the final balance payment of your tour price and is to be paid directly to your Group Leader at the Pre Departure Meeting on day 1 of your tour. The Local Payment is utilised by your Group Leader to pay for various locally provided services. Visas Required for Japan (depends on nationality), Mongolia & Russia. Sundowners Overland will provide all required invitation letters and full visa support including detailed visa guidelines. Trip Dossier Our trip dossier provides further information about this journey and is available on request. Call Sundowners Overland or your travel agent, or visit www.sundownersoverland.com Prices AUD - $10,330 NZD - $13,080 USD - $8,070 CAD - $8,975 GBP - £5,060 EUR - €5,750 Local Payment (See Essentials) from Tokyo USD - $400 from St.Petersburg EUR - €250 2 Berth Rail (Optional - See Essentials) 2 Berth Rail - AUD - $2,707 NZD - $3,428 USD - $2,115 CAD - $2,352 GBP - £1,325 EUR - €1,506 Dates St.Petersburg to Tokyo (code TSGS) 2009 Start Finish 14 Jun - 13 July 12 July - 10 Aug 02 Aug - 31 Aug 06 Sep - 05 Oct 2010 Start Finish 06 Jun - 05 July 04 July - 02 Aug 08 Aug - 06 Sep 12 Sep - 11 Oct Tokyo to St.Petersburg (code TSGJ) 2009 Start Finish 18 Apr - 16 May 23 May - 20 Jun 20 Jun - 18 July 25 July - 22 Aug 29 Aug - 26 Sep 26 Sep - 24 Oct 2010 Start Finish 24 Apr - 22 May 29 May - 26 Jun 26 Jun - 24 July 31 July - 28 Aug 21 Aug - 18 Sep 18 Sep - 16 Oct 13 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Grand Trans Siberian Railway 30 days MONGOLIA + RUSSIA + JAPAN Days 1-4. St.Petersburg It is the city on the water, the "Venice of the North", standing resplendent on the delta of the Neva River. St Isaac's Cathedral, richly filled palaces and museums, wide boulevards and canals. The gilded halls of the Hermitage Museum hung with the works of Da Vinci, Rembrandt and many other great masters, and beyond the city lie the incomparable summer palaces of the Tsars at Petrodvorets. Yet for all this, St.Petersburg remains one of Europe's best kept secrets. We join the overnight express to Moscow - our epic journey is underway! Days 5-7. Moscow Moscow will amaze you, its palaces and public buildings restored to their former glory. The echoing vastness of Red Square, the splendid twirled cupolas of St. Basil's across the cobblestones, and the Kremlin itself - that fabled palace-fort. We ride the palatial underground rail system, adorned with chandeliers, mosaics and baroque bas-relief and perhaps a river cruise or a magical evening at one of Moscow's great theatres or State Circus. Days 8-10. Aboard the Trans Siberian Railway We join the Trans Siberian Railway booming over the steel bridges spanning Siberia's nerve system of 5,000 rivers. We pass over the Ural Mountains which divide Europe and Asia, and we cross the Irtysh and Ob rivers. We travel through Ekaterinburg, well known for the execution of the Romanov family in 1918 and the industrial cities of Omsk and Novosibirsk. Days 11-13. Irkutsk and Lake Baikal (Siberia) Almost in the centre of Asia, Irkutsk - 18th century churches, bright painted shutters and log houses decorated with wooden lacework. Modern administrative blocks and soaring bridges reach out across the Angara River in this beautiful town known as the "Paris of Siberia". On our walking tour you will discover the city’s wonderful historic sights. We also enjoy a full day at Lake Baikal and time to visit the village of Listvyanka with its traditional houses and beautiful wooden church and nearby Limnological Museum. To gain an insight into the traditional lives of Siberian people we also visit the Museum of Wooden Architecture. Day 14. Aboard the Trans Mongolian Railway We settle into life on board, enjoying the company of our fellow passengers and a picnic in our cabin. The train arrives at Naushki, the Russian border town where formalities are completed and then continue across no-man's land to Sukhbaatar where Mongolian officials board the train for visa formalities before we continue on to Ulaanbaatar. Day 15. Ulaanbaatar Bounded by Lake Baikal to the north and the Great Wall to the south is the Mongolian Plateau and Gobi Desert. This was the homeland of the brilliant, tough, well-drilled horsemen who, for over 500 years from the 13th century, plundered and occupied lands and cities from the Yellow River to the Danube. At daybreak, classic scenes of traditional nomadic life greet us as the train winds impressively across the Mongolian Steppe and into the capital. Ulaanbaatar is a contradiction - a metropolis amid endless grass steppes, with donkeys and motorbikes, concrete apartment blocks and traditional gers. Days 16-17. Ulaanbaatar & the Mongolian Steppe After breakfast we visit the Zaisan Memorial from which the entire city is visible. Also to the country’s largest remaining monastery, Gandan Hiid where you can mingle with Buddhist monks. In the afternoon we travel out across the grasslands through the countryside where we spend a night in a traditional Mongolian nomad tent or ger set amongst spectacular rock formations and wild rolling hills. Among nomadic families and their grazing livestock we can explore nearby valleys or just relax and enjoy the area. We return to Ulaanbaatar to catch our train north to Buyatia and Ulan Ude. Day 18. Arrive Ulan Ude Welcome to Buryatiya, centre of Russia’s Buddhist community. Reminiscent of old Siberia, Ulan Ude is located in the middle of the vast Siberian steppes, on the 5640th kilometer of the Trans-Siberian railway. It is a very unusual and charming city. The local open air ethnographic museum tells and interesting story about the life and traditions of the native Siberians (Buryats and Evenks) as well as the colonisers (Cossacks and Old-believers). Days 19-21. Trans Siberian Railway We settle into life on board, getting to know our travelling companions. Relax in the comfortable four-berth compartment that is home for the three days and nights it takes to cross eastern Siberia to the to the once-secret Pacific port of Vladivostok. Itinerary - St.Petersburg to Tokyo 1. Mongolia 2. Trans Siberian Express The world’s longest and most spectacular rail journey 3 & 4. Japan Traditional dress and city lights of Tokyo. 5. Small Group On board the train towards Mocow. 6. Mongolian Local faces and a welcome smile. 7. Ulaanbaatar Th largest monastery in the capital is Gangan Hiid. 8. Relaxing on the train 9 & 10. Siberia Relaxing in Siberia 11. Moscow St.Basil’s Catherdral set amidst Moscow’s infamous Red Square 12 Small Group Journeys The original and classic Great Rail Journey. From the Pacific Coast to the nation’s capital you cross the world's biggest country and largest landmass aboard the world's longest railway, spanning 7 time zones & almost 10,000 kilometres, from the Far East to Europe. From Japan’s temples and the Great Buddha at Nara, across the Sea of Japan to the once top-secret port of Vladivostok. Through the spectacular scenery of eastern Siberia, to magnificent Lake Baikal and the historic Siberian town of Irkutsk. Crossing massive bridges over huge rivers, through forests and across plains, aboard the train you experience Russia as few travellers ever can. RUSSIA MONGOLIA CHINA JAPAN St. Petersburg Moscow Irkutsk Vladivostok Kanazawa Lake Baikal Ulan Ude Ulaanbaatar JAPAN Kanazawa Tokyo Takayama Kyoto Nara Reverse Itinerary Tokyo to St.Petersburg (29 days) Day 1 - Tokyo Day 2 - Tokyo Day 3 - Takayama Day 4 - Takayama Day 5 - Kyoto. Day trip to Nara Day 6 - Kyoto Day 7 - Kanazawa Day 8 - Ferry to Russia Day 9 - Arrive Vladivostok Day 10 - Trans Siberian Railway Day 11 - Trans Siberian Railway Day 12 - Arrive Ulan Ude Day 13 - Trans Mongolian Rail Day 14 - Arrive Ulaanbaatar Day 15 - Terelj (ger stay) Day 16 - Ulaanbaatar Day 17 - Trans Mongolian Rail Day 18 - Irkutsk (Siberia) Day 19 - Lake Baikal (Siberia) Day 20 - Trans Siberian Railway Day 21 - Trans Siberian Railway Day 22 - Trans Siberian Railway Day 24 - Moscow Day 25 - Moscow Day 26 - St.Petersburg Day 27 - St.Petersburg Day 28 - St.Petersburg Day 29 - St.Petersburg 11 3 2 1

Trans Siberian Railway Grand - · PDF fileDay 22. Vladivostok Once a top-secret naval base of the Soviet Union, Vladivostok was sealed off from the outside world. Now its doors are

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Page 1: Trans Siberian Railway Grand - · PDF fileDay 22. Vladivostok Once a top-secret naval base of the Soviet Union, Vladivostok was sealed off from the outside world. Now its doors are

Day 22. VladivostokOnce a top-secret naval base of the Soviet Union, Vladivostok was sealed off from the outside world. Nowits doors are open for business and the city is booming as Russia's gateway to the Far East. For 100 years thishas been the legendary eastern terminus of the Trans Siberian Railway, its historic railway station recentlyrestored to its former grandeur. Discover the city and port at the end of the railway before we board ourferry to take us to Japan.

Day 23. Ferry to JapanWe mingle amongst the guests on board this ferry to Russia, often businessmen travelling between theneighbouring countries and we start to adjust to the change in culture and language allowing time tocontemplate what we have already seen and wonder what is still in store on this adventure.

Day 24. Arrive KanazawaOur first tantalising destination in Japan is Kanazawa where we will visit Kenrokuen, one of the Three GreatGardens of Japan, once the outer garden of the city’s castle. We marvel at the horticultural creativity and thecontrast to what we have seen in wilds of Russia and Mongolia.

Days 25-26. Kyoto and day trip to NaraKyoto, one of Japan’s oldest capitals unlocks her treasures of the Golden Temple, the Geisha district of Gionand Kiyomizudera temple set on a hillside overlooking the city. The possibilities are endless and there isnever enough time to explore everything. We also journey to Nara, the first permanent capital of Japan toTodaiji Temple, reputedly the largest woodent building in the world housing the Great Buddha. We havetime to explore the surrounding deer filled park before returning to Kyoto.

Days 27-28. Kyoto and to TakayamaAfter the hustle and bustle of Kyoto take the time to relax in this town of wooden houses and have theopportunity to stay in a traditional ryokan where samurai would have stayed. We wander the streets and thelattice bayed windows entice us in to sample some sake or view the wooden and Japanese handicraftstraditional of the region. You will perhaps catch a glimpse of one of the many colourful festival floats thatare paraded through the streets in spring and autumn. We visit the Hida Heritage Folk Village full of handthatched farmhouses and take a step back in time.

Day 29. TokyoWe take the express train to Nagoya and from there the shinkansen whisks us away from the tranquillity ofTakayama to end our adventure in the exhilarating capital city. We take in a highlights tour of Tokyo, amodern city of awe inspiring skyscrapers, an impressive modern metro system and limitless technology andtake time to reflect on all that we have seen and done.

Day 30. TokyoThe last day has arrived too soon. The adventure is complete, the legendary rail journey that started manydays ago has taken you across Asia, through lands and cultures literally worlds apart.

The EssentialsGroup Size15 maximum, plus Group Leader.

AccommodationHotels - 12 nights (twin share).Mongolian Ger - 1 night (shared)Siberian Guesthouse - 1 night (shared)Trains - 11 nights (4 berth)Ferry - 2 nights (4 berth)Ryokan - 2 nights (traditional JapaneseInn dating from the Edo period (1603-1868).

Meals19 in total. Breakfast (17), dinner (2).

Travel byTrain: Comfortable 4 berth sleepers.There are 5 rail sectors on this journey -St.Petersburg to Moscow to (1 night),Moscow to Irkutsk (4 nights), Irkutsk toUlaanbaatar (2 nights), Ulaanbaatar toUlan Ude (1 night) and Ulan Ude toVladivostok (3 nights).Other: For ‘Scheduled Sightseeing’ wegenerally use a small minibus, and for‘City Exploring’ we use local taxis, publictransport, underground metro and go onfoot.

2 Berth Rail (Optional)Available for a supplementary price onlywhen two people book and traveltogether. Available on all rail sectorsbetween St.Petersburg and Vladivostok.

SightseeingScheduled Sightseeing is part of theitinerary and includes all transport,entrance fees and English speaking localguide. This journey enjoys a greaternumber of included sights that otherswithin this brochure.St.Petersburg: City tour, Palace Square,Hermitage Museum. Moscow: City tour, St.Basil's Cathedral,Red Square, Kremlin, ArmouryChamber.Irkutsk (Siberia): City tour, Museum ofWooden Architecture, LimnologicalMuseum, Lake Baikal.Ulaanbaatar: Zaisan Memorial, NationalHistory Museum, Gandan HiidMonastery, Terelj National Park.Ulan Ude: Ethnographical Museum,Ivolginsk Datsun.Vladivostok: City tour and museums.Kanazawa: Kenrokuen Garden.Takayama: Hida Folk Village.Nara: Todaiji.Kyoto: Kinkakuji, Sanjusangendo,Kiyomizudera, walk of Gion.Tokyo: City tour.City Exploring is further sightseeingoutside the itinerary guideline but withthe Group Leader.

Local PaymentYour Local Payment is the final balancepayment of your tour price and is to bepaid directly to your Group Leader at thePre Departure Meeting on day 1 of yourtour. The Local Payment is utilised byyour Group Leader to pay for variouslocally provided services.

VisasRequired for Japan (depends onnationality), Mongolia & Russia.Sundowners Overland will provide allrequired invitation letters and full visasupport including detailed visaguidelines.

Trip DossierOur trip dossier provides furtherinformation about this journey and isavailable on request. Call SundownersOverland or your travel agent, or visitwww.sundownersoverland.com

PricesAUD - $10,330NZD - $13,080USD - $8,070CAD - $8,975GBP - £5,060EUR - €5,750

Local Payment(See Essentials)

from Tokyo

USD - $400

from St.Petersburg

EUR - €250

2 Berth Rail(Optional - SeeEssentials)

2 Berth Rail -AUD - $2,707NZD - $3,428USD - $2,115CAD - $2,352GBP - £1,325EUR - €1,506

DatesSt.Petersburgto Tokyo (code TSGS)

2009Start Finish14 Jun - 13 July12 July - 10 Aug02 Aug - 31 Aug06 Sep - 05 Oct

2010Start Finish06 Jun - 05 July04 July - 02 Aug08 Aug - 06 Sep12 Sep - 11 Oct

Tokyo to St.Petersburg(code TSGJ)

2009Start Finish18 Apr - 16 May23 May - 20 Jun20 Jun - 18 July25 July - 22 Aug29 Aug - 26 Sep26 Sep - 24 Oct

2010Start Finish24 Apr - 22 May29 May - 26 Jun26 Jun - 24 July31 July - 28 Aug21 Aug - 18 Sep18 Sep - 16 Oct

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6

7

8

9

10

Grand Trans Siberian Railway30 days

MONGOLIA + RUSSIA + JAPAN�

Days 1-4. St.PetersburgIt is the city on the water, the "Venice of the North", standing resplendent onthe delta of the Neva River. St Isaac's Cathedral, richly filled palaces andmuseums, wide boulevards and canals. The gilded halls of the HermitageMuseum hung with the works of Da Vinci, Rembrandt and many other greatmasters, and beyond the city lie the incomparable summer palaces of theTsars at Petrodvorets. Yet for all this, St.Petersburg remains one of Europe'sbest kept secrets. We join the overnight express to Moscow - our epic journeyis underway!

Days 5-7. MoscowMoscow will amaze you, its palaces and public buildings restored to theirformer glory. The echoing vastness of Red Square, the splendid twirledcupolas of St. Basil's across the cobblestones, and the Kremlin itself - thatfabled palace-fort. We ride the palatial underground rail system, adorned withchandeliers, mosaics and baroque bas-relief and perhaps a river cruise or amagical evening at one of Moscow's great theatres or State Circus.

Days 8-10. Aboard the Trans Siberian RailwayWe join the Trans Siberian Railway booming over the steel bridges spanningSiberia's nerve system of 5,000 rivers. We pass over the Ural Mountains whichdivide Europe and Asia, and we cross the Irtysh and Ob rivers. We travelthrough Ekaterinburg, well known for the execution of the Romanov familyin 1918 and the industrial cities of Omsk and Novosibirsk.

Days 11-13. Irkutsk and Lake Baikal (Siberia)Almost in the centre of Asia, Irkutsk - 18th century churches, bright paintedshutters and log houses decorated with wooden lacework. Modernadministrative blocks and soaring bridges reach out across the Angara Riverin this beautiful town known as the "Paris of Siberia". On our walking touryou will discover the city’s wonderful historic sights. We also enjoy a full dayat Lake Baikal and time to visit the village of Listvyanka with its traditionalhouses and beautiful wooden church and nearby Limnological Museum. Togain an insight into the traditional lives of Siberian people we also visit theMuseum of Wooden Architecture.

Day 14. Aboard the Trans Mongolian RailwayWe settle into life on board, enjoying the company of our fellow passengersand a picnic in our cabin. The train arrives at Naushki, the Russian bordertown where formalities are completed and then continue across no-man'sland to Sukhbaatar where Mongolian officials board the train for visaformalities before we continue on to Ulaanbaatar.

Day 15. UlaanbaatarBounded by Lake Baikal to the north and the Great Wall to the south is theMongolian Plateau and Gobi Desert. This was the homeland of the brilliant,tough, well-drilled horsemen who, for over 500 years from the 13th century,plundered and occupied lands and cities from the Yellow River to theDanube. At daybreak, classic scenes of traditional nomadic life greet us as thetrain winds impressively across the Mongolian Steppe and into the capital.Ulaanbaatar is a contradiction - a metropolis amid endless grass steppes, withdonkeys and motorbikes, concrete apartment blocks and traditional gers.

Days 16-17. Ulaanbaatar & the Mongolian SteppeAfter breakfast we visit the Zaisan Memorial from which the entire city isvisible. Also to the country’s largest remaining monastery, Gandan Hiid whereyou can mingle with Buddhist monks. In the afternoon we travel out acrossthe grasslands through the countryside where we spend a night in atraditional Mongolian nomad tent or ger set amongst spectacular rockformations and wild rolling hills. Among nomadic families and their grazinglivestock we can explore nearby valleys or just relax and enjoy the area. Wereturn to Ulaanbaatar to catch our train north to Buyatia and Ulan Ude.

Day 18. Arrive Ulan Ude Welcome to Buryatiya, centre of Russia’s Buddhist community. Reminiscent ofold Siberia, Ulan Ude is located in the middle of the vast Siberian steppes, onthe 5640th kilometer of the Trans-Siberian railway. It is a very unusual andcharming city. The local open air ethnographic museum tells and interestingstory about the life and traditions of the native Siberians (Buryats and Evenks)as well as the colonisers (Cossacks and Old-believers).

Days 19-21. Trans Siberian RailwayWe settle into life on board, getting to know our travelling companions. Relaxin the comfortable four-berth compartment that is home for the three daysand nights it takes to cross eastern Siberia to the to the once-secret Pacificport of Vladivostok.

Itinerary - St.Petersburg to Tokyo

1. Mongolia

2. Trans Siberian ExpressThe world’s longest and

most spectacular railjourney

3 & 4. JapanTraditional dress and city

lights of Tokyo.

5. Small GroupOn board the train towards

Mocow.

6. Mongolian Local faces and a welcome

smile.

7. UlaanbaatarTh largest monastery in the

capital is Gangan Hiid.

8. Relaxing on the train

9 & 10. SiberiaRelaxing in Siberia

11. MoscowSt.Basil’s Catherdral set

amidst Moscow’s infamous Red Square

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all

Gro

up

Jo

urn

ey

s

The original and classicGreat Rail Journey. Fromthe Pacific Coast to the

nation’s capital you crossthe world's biggest country

and largest landmassaboard the world's longest

railway, spanning 7 timezones & almost 10,000

kilometres, from the FarEast to Europe.

From Japan’s temples andthe Great Buddha at Nara,across the Sea of Japan to

the once top-secret port ofVladivostok. Through the

spectacular scenery ofeastern Siberia, to

magnificent Lake Baikal andthe historic Siberian town of

Irkutsk. Crossing massivebridges over huge rivers,

through forests and acrossplains, aboard the train you

experience Russia as fewtravellers ever can.

R U S S I A

M O N G O L I A

C H I N AJ A P A N

St. Petersburg

MoscowIrkutsk

Vladivostok

Kanazawa

Lake BaikalUlan Ude

Ulaanbaatar

J AP A

N

KanazawaTokyo

Takayama

KyotoNara

Reverse Itinerary

Tokyo to St.Petersburg (29 days)

Day 1 - TokyoDay 2 - TokyoDay 3 - TakayamaDay 4 - TakayamaDay 5 - Kyoto. Day trip to NaraDay 6 - KyotoDay 7 - KanazawaDay 8 - Ferry to RussiaDay 9 - Arrive Vladivostok Day 10 - Trans Siberian RailwayDay 11 - Trans Siberian RailwayDay 12 - Arrive Ulan Ude Day 13 - Trans Mongolian RailDay 14 - Arrive UlaanbaatarDay 15 - Terelj (ger stay)Day 16 - UlaanbaatarDay 17 - Trans Mongolian RailDay 18 - Irkutsk (Siberia) Day 19 - Lake Baikal (Siberia) Day 20 - Trans Siberian RailwayDay 21 - Trans Siberian Railway Day 22 - Trans Siberian Railway Day 24 - MoscowDay 25 - Moscow Day 26 - St.Petersburg Day 27 - St.Petersburg Day 28 - St.Petersburg Day 29 - St.Petersburg

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