Thursday, April 17, 2008

Planning a round the world trip

Last week I watched the DVD Long Way Round which documents the 2004 journey of Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman from London to New York on motorcycles, including driving over 18,000 miles through 12 countries and a seriously difficult stretch of road in Siberia called the Road of Bones. The documentary itself is very good, but also of interest to me were the logistics involved in planning a round the world adventure. For several months before the actual trip they had an office setup, lined up donations and sponsors, and worked out the final plans with a staff of at least a dozen people. I'm not sure of the production costs of the actual movie, but most information I could find about it says that it was a "low budget" production. Besides Ewan and Charley they had an additional camera man on motorcycle and two support vehicles carrying an additional camera man and the two producers. For much or the Russian portion of the trip they also had a Russian "fixer" to take care of problems and assist with translation and also a Russian doctor.

It's going to be a long road from this idea to re-create Russel Farnham's round the world journey to actual planning and implementing it. But what a wonderful challenge this will be.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Oil Painting

I've added a scan of the only image known to exist of Russel Farnham to the blog. It's an oil painting done by Chester Harding and owned by the Missouri Historical Society. It's reposited in the Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, but it was for a long time displayed in the museum of the Missouri Historical Society with this inscription: "Walked from Oregon to St Petersburg, 1813-1814." That is something of a Tall Tale, but it shows that for years people have been fascinated by the story of Russel Farnham's remarkable journey from Oregon to St Petersburg Russia.

Friday, April 4, 2008

Russian Travel Routes

Starting and ending his round the world journey in New York, Russel Farnham set foot in the following places: Falkland Islands, Hawaii, Astoria Oregon, Sitka Alaska, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, St Petersburg Russia, and Copenhagen Denmark. The exact path he traveled between Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky and St Petersburg is unknown at this time, but most likely followed parts of the Russian mail and supply route from Moscow to Irkutsk that existed at that time called the Sibirsky Trakt - Сибирский тракт in Russian. This route generally follows the route of the Trans-Siberian railway. At other times he most likely follow the Lena river from Irkutsk to Yakutsk. From Yakutsk to Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky is anyones guess as few routes exist even to this day, but his route may have followed what is today the Kolyma Highway which is also know as the Road of Bones because the bones of inmates from the gulag camps that built it were incorporated into the road.

Our team hopes to research the Russian State Historical Archives (RSHA), Kiev Region State Archives (in Ukraine) and the Kazan Region State Archives to find documents mentioning Farnham's journey.