The Trans-Siberian’s last leg covers 3650km – that’s more than the Moscow–Ulan-Ude journey alone – as it rolls into Russia’s ‘wild east’. The people, like the countryside, are a bit wilder and more rugged than their Western brethren.
Trans-Siberian Railway - Ulan-Ude to Vladivostok (Chapter) Lonely Planet
Taking in exquisite Tsar-era buildings along the legendary Amur River in Blagoveshchensk
Searching for the lost Jewish soul of ‘Stalin’s Zion’, Birobidzhan
Poking around for the best views of the bays, bridges and islands of mountain-spiked Vladivostok
Spinning prayer wheels around Buddhist temples at Tsugol and Aginskoe
Taking a party cruise on the Amur River before a night of clubbing in hip Khabarovsk
Coverage includes: Chita, Around Chita, Nerchinsk, Blagoveshchensk, Birobidzhan, Khabarovsk, Vladivostok, Around Vladivostok and Around Vladivostok.
Trans-Siberian Railway - Ulan-Ude to Vladivostok (Chapter) Lonely Planet
Taking in exquisite Tsar-era buildings along the legendary Amur River in Blagoveshchensk
Searching for the lost Jewish soul of ‘Stalin’s Zion’, Birobidzhan
Poking around for the best views of the bays, bridges and islands of mountain-spiked Vladivostok
Spinning prayer wheels around Buddhist temples at Tsugol and Aginskoe
Taking a party cruise on the Amur River before a night of clubbing in hip Khabarovsk
Coverage includes: Chita, Around Chita, Nerchinsk, Blagoveshchensk, Birobidzhan, Khabarovsk, Vladivostok, Around Vladivostok and Around Vladivostok.