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Jeffrey's Trackside Diner, May 2017! ALL are welcome, ALL ABOARD!
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<p>Good Night, Brent, and</p> <p>Good Morning Everybody!</p> <p>It´s Father´s Day here, but I bet I won´t get a bouquet of flowers [:'(] It is also Ascension Day, a public holiday, which makes it a quiet day - hopefully!</p> <p>Today´s feature of Ulrich´s Train Movie Theatre takes us into a forbidden world - the world of freezing cold temperatures and permafrost, the world of ice and snow, but also the world of the blood, sweat and tears of toiling men in GuLags.</p> <p style="text-align:center;"><strong> Ticket To Beijing -The Trans-Siberian Railway Documentary<br /></strong></p> <p>The <strong>Trans-Siberian Railway</strong>) is a network of <span class="mw-redirect">railways</span> connecting Moscow with the Russian Far East. With a length of 9,289 kilometres (5,772 miles), it is the longest railway line in the world. There are connecting branch lines into Mongolia, China and North Korea. It has connected Moscow with Vladivostok since 1916, and is still being expanded.</p> <p>It was built between 1891 and 1916 under the supervision of Russian government ministers personally appointed by Tsar Alexander III and his son, the Tsarevich Nicholas (later Tsar Nicholas II). Even before it had been completed, it attracted travellers who wrote of their adventures. Russia has expressed its desire for Pakistan to participate in the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor, by linking the Trans-Siberian Railway with Gwadar Port.</p> <p>The railway is often associated with the main transcontinental Russian line that connects hundreds of large and small cities of the European and Asian parts of Russia. At a Moscow-Vladivostok track length of 9,289 kilometres (5,772 miles), it spans a record eight time zones. Taking eight days to complete the journey, it is the third-longest single continuous service in the world, after the Moscow–Pyongyang 10,267 kilometres (6,380 mi) and the Kiev–Vladivostok 11,085 kilometres (6,888 mi) services, both of which also follow the Trans-Siberian for much of their routes.</p> <p>The main route of the Trans-Siberian Railway begins in Moscow at <span class="mw-redirect">Yaroslavsky Vokzal</span>, runs through Yaroslavl, Chelyabinsk, Omsk, Novosibirsk, Irkutsk, Krasnoyarsk, Ulan-Ude, Chita, and Khabarovsk to Vladivostok via southern Siberia. A second primary route is the Trans-Manchurian, which coincides with the Trans-Siberian east of Chita as far as Tarskaya (a stop 12 km (7 mi) east of Karymskoye, in Chita Oblast), about 1,000 km (621 mi) east of Lake Baikal. From Tarskaya the Trans-Manchurian heads southeast, via Harbin and Mudanjiang in China's Northeastern Provinces (from where a connection to Beijing is used by one of the Moscow–Beijing trains), joining with the main route in Ussuriysk just north of Vladivostok. This is the shortest and the oldest railway route to Vladivostok. While there are currently no traverse passenger services (enter China from one side and then exit China and return to Russia on the other side) on this branch, it is still used by several international passenger services between Russia and China.</p> <p>The third primary route is the Trans-Mongolian Railway, which coincides with the Trans-Siberian as far as Ulan-Ude on Lake Baikal's eastern shore. From Ulan-Ude the Trans-Mongolian heads south to <span class="mw-redirect">Ulaan-Baatar</span> before making its way southeast to Beijing. In 1991, a fourth route running further to the north was finally completed, after more than five decades of sporadic work. Known as the <span class="mw-redirect">Baikal Amur Mainline</span> (BAM), this recent extension departs from the Trans-Siberian line at <span class="mw-redirect">Taishet</span> several hundred miles west of Lake Baikal and passes the lake at its northernmost extremity. It crosses the Amur River at <span class="mw-redirect">Komsomolsk-na-Amure</span> (north of Khabarovsk), and reaches the <span class="mw-redirect">Tatar Strait</span> at Sovetskaya Gavan. On 13 October 2011, a train from Khasan made its inaugural run to <span class="mw-redirect">Rajin, North Korea</span>.</p> <p><iframe src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/By_d0rvXHzU" width="425" height="350"></iframe></p> <p>Enjoy!</p>
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