Scheepslog
Sailing trip to Archangelsk via the Russian Inland Waterways with the Lemsteraak "t Gauwe Haentje"
Episodes:
30-03-2010 1. Preparation visit to ST PETERSBURG - 22-25 March 2010
10-05-2010 2. Visit St. Petersburg and Finland - 5–9 May 2010
01-06-2010 3. Today the real voyage starts - 30 May 2010
07-06-2010 4. Vasilyevskiy Island, on the western boundery of St. P-burg - 7 June 2010
08-06-2010 5. Contribution by Romeo van der Borch, crewmember - 5 and 6 June 2010
12-06-2010 6. Contribution by Paul van Hooft, crewmember - 8 and 9 June 2010
14-06-2010 7. We finally left St. Petersburg once and for all - 10 and 11 June 2010
21-06-2010 8. Leaving Mandrogy - 14, 15 and 16 June 2010
24-06-2010 9. The boat has been taken over by a film-crew - 17, 18 and 19 June 2010
29-06-2010 10. Midsommer arctic light - 21, 22 and 23 June 2010
29-06-2010 11. The big jump - 24 and 25 June 2010
12-07-2010 12. Return to Solovetsky - 26 June / 9 July 2010
20-07-2010 13. On our way back - 10 July / 18 July 2010
28-07-2010 14. The Ladoga circumsailing - 18 July / 23 July 2010
03-08-2010 15. Our Finish in Helsinki - 24 July / 1 August 2010
12-08-2010 16. Epilogue - 12 August 2010
16-08-2010 Check out our Photo Albums:
* Photo Album 1
* Photo Album 2
* Photo Album 3
08-10-2010 Check out our two videos on TouTube:

General overview of Voyage to Archangelsk 2010, 27 May – 1 August 2010.
1 – White Sea, Belomorsk Canal
2 – Lake Onega, Svir River
3 – Lake Ladoga, Neva River and St. Petersburg
4 – Gulf of Finland
1. Preparation visit to ST PETERSBURG - 22-25 MARCH 2010
This week I decided to start my first report on my planned sailing trip to Archangelsk via the Russian Inland Waterways, lakes and canals starting in Helsinki via St Petersburg and back. It still feels as a great challenge and expedition, although the idea came up 4 years ago. In 2006 I started sailing back to the Netherlands when I was invited for a Midsommar dinner by Charlotte Airas, a Finnish producer of documentaries, on her island south of Tammissaari in the SW corner of Finland. I had spent 3 glorious summers in Baltic waters with my lemsteraak "t Gauwe Haentje" (Rapid Rooster), especially in the Finnish Gulf and went over the past 6 years 3 times through the Saima Canal to the vast Saima Lake District to attend the Opera Festival of Savonlinna and to our most northerly point Kuopio (~27*30'E;~63*N), passing through the most western tip of Russia past the city of Vyborg..jpg)
The cathedral in the soft spring sun
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I happen to meet the president of the Russian submarine captains.

The director of the Wolga-Balt Waterways System suggest how to
make progress during calm weather. "Wolga" a famous painting of Ilya Repin.

The Fortress of "Peter en Paul" over the frozen Neva.

The official level offers solid support.

The support team with very experienced captains show the way.

The River Neva is still solidly frozen.

Also the cultural aspects are included: The Russian Museum.

The central staircase if the Russian Museum, palace of one of the last Grand-Dukes.
2. Visit St. Petersburg and Finland - 5–9 MAY 2010
Flying to St. Petersburg in the afternoon of may 5th provides me with a sunny perspective of the landscape in which ‘t Gauwe Haentje will sail the coming month. The snow almost totally disappeared and I don’t see any ice in the Newa. It was graciously offered to sleep comfortably on one of Viking River’s cruise ships on the Inland Cruise Terminal on the east side of the city. Next morning is still fresh but the sun is shining brightly, which I see as a good omen for the expedition. Dmitry and the back office team he created are all there, captains Victor and Alexander for navigational aspects and Natalia and Alexander deal with the general support needs. The place for the stay in St.P. is decided and a landing will be created along the pier for the cruise ships, providing wave protection from fast boats and surveillance when we leave the ship for a visit downtown. A seal of the ship is needed to formalize the documents to hand over to authorities. Natalia solves the problem I ran into a couple of days ago when I wanted to get it made in Holland. The next day I saw the perfect result of the official seal of ‘t Gauwe Haentje, beautiful!
Again I’m very impressed by the friendliness, dedication and charm all persons are helping the project further. It is a feast to go through the details and for potential hindrance is a solution. The apprehension I have to engage in this voyage has been stronger then any of my trips in the past due to the unknown systems and procedures and language barrier. It creates a feeling of lack of control and I have to let it go trusting it will work well. The official permit from the Minister of Inland Waterways has not yet arrived, but the process is closely checked by Alexander and evolves fine. All parameters will be in place on the day we approach Russian waters, i.c. 30 May.
In the afternoon I fly to Helsinki, where Charlotte has invited the documentary team to meet for a drink and dinner. Again a very challenging and fruitful evening. In fact a couple of artists will colour Charlotte’s ideas, each from their own perspective. Although not very clear to me how and what, I’m totally confident they know how to express the eventful and sublime moments of the journey with their lenses. We discuss an archaeological site on the eastern shore of lake Onega; beautiful rock engravings of over 7 thousand years! In our minds we are there already.
When I drive to Sommarö (south of Tammissaari) the air is cold and heavy with rain. The day before Max, the shipyard manager, called me to tell that the ship was not yet ready to sail. Some spots on the outside of the cabin needed to be sanded and varnished again. After a whole winter in a heated hall, to use time efficiently during the short Baltic season, and only 2 days to get the boat to Helsinki, it is a late assessment and tell him to proceed putting it in the water. When I arrive at 9am the ship is already outside the hangar, but not yet launched. I screen the varnish and don’t notice the spots at first sight. Not a real problem: to the water! The rain starts pouring down. When taking down the mast in the fall all lines, stags, halyards, have been put together; sheer disorder. In the rain and by times sleet, we pierce up to disentangle for 4 hours. A mate is hoisted to clear the last lines. One hour later all booms and rigging are in place. I decide to leave next morning, a skipper friend of Max will take care of bringing the ship from Helsinki to Kotka in the coming week.
In the evening I pass by at Mikael’s and his sons Christian and Maximilian; he invites me to stay and sleep in a warm bed. Mikael offers to next day accompany me to sail the ship to Helsinki (60 m). Fantastic, as under these cold conditions it is a gift! Next morning we leave Sommarö at 9:30 am after a last check. The sky starts to lift and after midday it is getting warmer and even the sun shows up. At 6:30 pm we arrive at NJK Blekholmen yacht harbour downtown Helsinki. To bring Mikael back and to pick up the car we take a taxi home. The ship’s heating doesn’t function. I had this problem already last year too. With the water still 4 *C my first night on board is still a little uncomfortable. I accept Mikael’s suggestion to get a new heater to be installed in the next days. In the morning I fly back to the Netherlands cold, a little tired, but happy to know that everything is in place for the Voyage!

Sunday 9 May 2010, In a still empty NJK Blekholmen harbour downtown Helsinki

Half way to Kotka
3. Today the real voyage starts - 30 May 2010
At 4 am the alarm goes off. It was quite a short night. The day before Martine and I had the privilege to be present at the ceremony of the 4 Freedom Awards in the Abbey of Middelburg (Zeeland), the SW corner of the Netherlands with the presence of H.M. Queen Beatrix and Crown Prince Willem-Alexander. It was a very worthy and yet an emotional celebration. All 5 laureates were of great stature, but listening to thet 2 persons in particular personal courage became almost palpable; one of them being a Russian journalist. President Roosevelt first voiced the 4 as corners of democracy – freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want and freedom from fear – in 1941. In the past 30 years the Roosevelt Foundation together with the Province of Zeeland awarded 73 persons with these prestigious awards, among them a number of future Nobel Prize winners.


It was an impressive and motivating ceremony followed by coctails and lunch, which provided me with so many ideas and contacts that after packing, some emails still went out in the very early hour of today. A notice came in, with relieve, from Christiaan telling he finally got his visa. For the past 3 month Chris studied Russian in Odessa. He now heads for St.P. to join our crew the next week. Martine offered to take me to the Schiphol Airport. At 4:30 am on the way to the airport, I still had difficulty imagining that I probably wasn’t going to see her for some 2 month. The rain comes down in droves. The plane leaves in time. Approaching Helsinki over the Finnish Gulf the sun glittered from a miriad of little islands beneath.
Coming out of Arrivals, everybody is there; clockwise, just in time. Romeo’s son Allard, wife Annukka and children living in Helsinki region see us off. Charlotte’s car managed to take us all to Kotka including quite some lugage. Again Dmitry and his son Ivan, captain Alexei and Alexander were there already. Before taking off we needed time to find a suitable place for a joint luncheon in the empty streets on the Sunday noon of Kotka. The last purchase done and harbour fees paid we left at 4:30 pm. On the suggestion of Alexei we dicided to sail to the most south easterly Finnish custom station Santio for clearance. On sail and in beautiful weather, favorable winds took us just in time to meet the border officials. To the bunks at 23:30 pm to be sure to timely get up next morning.

Voyages in the Gulf of Finland (General map no. 4)
- Red outbound voyage 27- 30 May 2010
The Nordic nights are very short during this period of the year. The sun is out when we start sailing towards St.P at 4:45am Russian time. The wind is favorable from SW but soon calms to a mere 2 Bft. Capain Alexei gets early and routinely contact with the Russian Coastguard. First we follow the coast east bound and after we pass the traffic lane to Viborg we head south and under beautiful weather we sail-motor parallel to the main traffic lane to St.P. The wind is negligeable unfortunately, with the advantage that the waves are dying gradually and with 6 knots we make good progress. Before passing the fraffic lane to St.P. we head east parallel to the lane towards Kronhstadt. The wind dies almost totally, so before Kronhstadt The sails are put down. At distant we see 3 large summerplaces of the Romanovs, Peterhof and Strel’na in the evening sun. On motor we arrive at Passport Controll and Customs at 8:45 pm. Immedately we are welcomed by a young official checking the ship inside, taking the passports and ask me to follow her with Alexei and Alexander to the main building. One hour and a half later I’m back at the ship with the permissions for us to enter the country. However the ship has to stay in quarentaine for another day.
After Alexei and Alexander leave the boat we have our drink and nice rustic meal on board. Tomorrow Dmitry and Alexander take care of the procedure to get the boat cleared.

At the Custom pier of Border Station Santio SE corner of Finland

Romeo and our Russian captain Alexei
4. Vasilyevskiy Island, on the western boundery of St. P-burg - 7 June 2010
For more than 2 days we now are moored alongside the yachtpier of the customs at the Passenger Terminal, Vasilyevskiy Island, on the western boundery of St. P.
Tuesday, June 1st, on 7am a Dutch sailboat moored alongside. The weather was very nice and our Alexander (Sacha) soon showed up with all the papers needed for boat customs declaration. I had the text for the weblog ready to be sent off, so Timo and I went to the passenger terminal building to see how to do this. A very clever young Russian girl helped us. Besides English she speaks Finnish and Swedish fluently. When I look at the screen before her there is a Dutch text, so I am puzzled. Marina happens to study Dutch too as she has a Dutch boyfriend with the name Stofberg, the name of the builder of ‘t Gauwe Haentje of which the family are building beautiful traditional boats since 1793. Alexander manages to mail the fotos and text in a jiffy. When we come back I meet Vladimir Ivankiv, who helps our neighbours in handling the procedure for the permits. They now can proceed to the Yachtclub nearby. As we go on through the inland waterways system, the procedures are far more complicated and it isn’t sure we can move the boat today.
At 3 pm Charlotte arrives at Finlandia Station but can’t come aboard not being on the crewlist. She takes a hotel downtown and we will meet her for dinner. The driver Nicolai meets us at the entrance of the Pessenger Terminal. He has taken care of my logistics on the earlier visits. Aside from driving he combines this with teaching English and skuba diving. While we drive through the streets and along the Neva he explanes us the touristic attractions of the city. Along the embankments of the Neva Timo spots the locations for the shooting when the ship will pass the Peter and Paul Fortress, the Hermitage and the pantzercreutzer “Aurora”, which gave the first salvo during the Russian Revolution in 1917. We have a nice meal at the Park restaurant and express our hope to move further next day.
June 2nd starts like going to be a rainy day. Charlotte calls and wakes us up. It rained the greater part of the night. Dmitry calls us. Everybody is busy with the permit, but no certainty when we can move to the Yachtclub. It may take still some days…This is a state of mind I’m not used to…I inform friend and fellow KNZ&RV clubmember Wouter Hoek, who together with a delegation of the Dutch Maritime Museum visits St.P., that we unfortunately cannot meet for a drink on board today, as they are not on the crewlist. It starts pouring down.
From the Terminal we take a bus to the Nayy Museum where we meet Charlotte. The museum is very worthwile to visit. The expansion of tsarist Russia, the 2nd World War and the many different type of battle ships up till the Kursk submarine class are very informative of warship development. The rain keeps pouring down. We get drenched and decide after a coffielunch to find tickets for tonights’ performance in the Mariinsky Theater. Valery Gergiev conducts the opera “Khovanshchina” of Mussorgsky,heich will start at 6 and will take more than 4 hours.
The telephone rings; it’s Christiaan, who has already arrived this morning but running out of prepaid time on his phone, didn’t get an earlier contact. In an hour the performance will start. I invite him and his schoolfriend where he will stay for the night to join us. 5 minutes before the start they show up. Then Dmitry calls telling we can move the boat, even this evening if we like. A notion of being still on track gets hold of me for a moment. The opera is an epos about a very crucial moment in Russian history in Tsar Peter the Great’s time with the fall of the Boyar class and the “Old Belief”; Russian history in a very compact format, beautiful, very well played, dance and performance. Very impressive! We all feel happy to have seen this.
Outside Dmitry waits for us. Charlotte decides to go back to the hotel. Chris and friend return to their domicile. Dmitry tells us the next good news: tomorrow we can move to the Yachtclub, however the permit to proceed inland is not yet given. They work hard on this Sacha went to moscou this afternoon to get the final approval from the Minister of Transport. 8 ministries are involved in order to comply with all regulations. It may take still some time to obtain permission but moving this faster isn’t possible. I get slowly the have lost grip on my own destiny and an outside mechanism has taken over and installs a new pervasive rithm. Dmitry invites us to the Wodka museum/restaurant and we plan the next day with a visit to a dentist, as a molar is starting to hurt over the past days. Charlotte and Timo will return to Helsinki tomorrow afternoon. The time available they will use to instruct Chris to handle the camera and do the shooting while we sail the Neva. Captain Konstantin will join us in the morning to help sail the boat to the Yachtclub and then get me to the dentist. Everithing is set.
Today, June 3rd, we wait for Konstantin, who arrives around 10am in the Passenger Terminal. He suggests to go straight to the dentist, as the final release for moving the boat will soon be communicated. During the trip he is informed we have the permission to sail; we will do so at return. A nice dentist is molding my next hours and day. 4 nerve treatments and 3,5 hrs later we return to the ship. The sun is out again. Konstantin tells we can sail on so Romeo and I bring the boat to the long aspired harbour of the St. P. Central Yachtclub. I cannot meet Charlotte and Timo any more as they already are on the way to the railroad station. Chris will join us in the club.
Arriving at the Central Yachtclub Chris father Carel calls; some anxiety in his voice. I can tell him Chris is already a day around and doing well. At that moment a crie from the pier; Chris has arrived and can talk with his father. An hour later Paul arrives ahead of schedule. The team is complete for the next week when Konstantin arrives with 2 friends to see the boat. Our plan to be in the Neva tomorrow seems premature. The procedure may take more time and can’t be planned. The feeling of advancing through time without personnel control pops up anew. During the drink on board the Dutch neighbours of 2 days ago join us; they make a trip of over 5 month around the Baltic. Chris prepares a delicious meal, which we finish with a desert in the club restaurant. It was a fantasic sunny day once again.
June 4th. We are woken up by Konstantin at 8:45 am. We sleep like a log on board. First I go with him to the harbour captain for clearance, all papers with me, but as we don’t find him in his office Konstantin gets clearance by phone for us; no paperwork. Then Dmitry arrives with good news. Probably we will get clearance for the inland voyage today. The procedure is progressing favourably and maybe we can move over to the Neva Inland Passenger Terminal during the afternoon. A little impediment is my dentist appointment at 8 pm tonight. We decide to take advantage of the beautiful day to visit the city at the surface. When we walk to the cab we notice the announcements if the celebration of the 150 years of the St. P. River Yachtclub next week. Founded during the reign of Tsar Alexander II, it is just one year prior to “my NJK” in Helsinki, founded by the same Tsar. First the Isaac Cathedral and Nevsky Prospect and then after a quick bite in the Russian alter ego of McDonald’s we walk over to the Hermitage and the Fortress of Peter and Paul passing the Neva in a blazing sun which provides us the best view of the city river and embankments we could have hoped for. As the hours pass the chance to move over today deminishes. I call Gamine to invite her and partner for a drink on board, which now is possible after clearance for the city. Arriving at the harbour the wind blows at 5/6 Bft. Now to get the email out for this day.

Paul, Koos and Romeo on the Neva bridge

Sunny view of the Fortress Peter and Paul
5. Contribution by Romeo van der Borch - 5 and 6 June 2010
It is Saturday morning and we understand that we will not receive our permit before Monday at the earliest. According to Dimitry everything was arranged late Friday afternoon but apparently the person who had to give the last permission had already left the office. So now we will await developments on Monday. Cristiaan is happy to spend more time in the evening with his local friends.
The weekend will therefore be spent sightseeing and on Saturday we went in different directions, some of us who were more culturally inclined visited the Hermitage while others after visiting a small Russian boat show enjoyed a lunch on a high terrace in town. The outside temperature was some 11 degrees and it was sunny but very windy so after a while we opted to be seated indoors. After lunch and a visit to one of the St. Petersburg cathedrals we returned to the River Yachtclub. On the occasion of its 150th birthday Koos presented the burgee of the Royal Netherlands Yachtclub to the Commodore and expressed or eternal friendship. In return we were invited for the festivities on Sunday.
The next day we again were touristic and visited Peterhof, one of Peter the Greats palaces outside St. Petersburg. We went there by hydrofoil and returned in time for the reception for the 150 anniversary of the Yacht Club. This was a happy if not very extensively visited occasion and Paul found a Russian friend with whom he drunk a substantial number of vodka’s. We met there Nikolay Litau who turned out to be the one of the Russian crewmembers who was with the first foreign yacht ever to pass along the Belomorsk channel in 1992. This trip is documented in the book Sailing around Russia by Wallace Clark. He was so kind to inscribe the copy of the book we had onboard. He also is one of Russia’s most experienced offshore sailors who claims to have circumnavigated the world already three times. He plans to go to Nova Zemblaya this summer and we hope to see him again on our return trip from the White Sea when he goes North, that is if we ever get there.
After that the President of the Yacht Club and some other Russians joined us for drinks. As they had already ample to drink earlier this turned out to be a very boisterous party and we had some trouble to persuade them to leave us, but finally succeeded.
Now we will have to wait if tomorrow the Russian authorities will finally issue us the long awaited permit for inland waters.

Captain Nikolay who sailed three times around the globe

Exchanging burgees with the St. Petersburg River Yacht Club

6. Contribution by Paul van Hooft, crewmember - 8 and 9 June 2010
General sociological observations
How is life aboard a non-sailing vessel? Different than you had expected. Stick to your expectations and every day is a dissapointment. Dmitry is doing his outmost, at this moment of writing not yet leading to a trip to the White Sea! A new session with an inspectionteam of the customs department is announced to make pictures of the ship (again!), new questions about the authenticity of the Dutch flag (with “des konings naamcijfer” – hoe kun je het ook bedenken? No wonder that Russians are becoming puzzled about this mysterious ship) and old questions about engine power. See every day as a new opportunity to discover Russia, Saint Petersburg and her people and every day is a joy for the whole crew. And so it is.
Then we have the pattern of interaction, the balance of power and the division of labour aboard.
- Christiaan is mostly in town (for his parents: to study Russian often facilitated by a certain quantity of wodka, Russian friends and from time to time a female “teacher”). At sunrise he returns to take some rest and to prepare himself for the lessons of the new day. And, most important: he is the cook. An excellent one; especially his “ommelet” is the mother of all ommelets.
- Then we have Romeo, reading, discussing with Koos about the Romanovs and doing the dishwashing with Paul. - Koos is the boss, even when the ship is not sailing.
- Koos knows the answers on all not asked questions.
- Paul is constantly challenging Koos. Paul – frustrated by his limited knowledge about nearly everything and especially the Russian history - is looking for possibilities to destabilise the powerbase of Koos. And this in the best Marxist tradition. To summarise: fun and friendship.
And further: what did we do on June 8th ?
- Novgorod: two times four hours travel by car. Beautiful Kremlin
- Excellent lunch… unfortunately without bear-meat
- Pushkin, summerpalace of Catharine. Visit of the gardens and view from the outside
- visit to the KLM office (Paul is leaving earlier)
- Peter and Paul cathedral (so much gold that one could hardly discouver Peter and Paul) and the fortress
- Again an excellent lunch
- Visit to the defense museum (closed) - Visit to the Marine base Kronhstadt (cathedral closed)
Personal note: I am leaving tomorrow: Koos, thanks for the hospitality. Crew members: go for it!

De so called team in front of the monument “1000 years Russia” (8 june)

Tsarskoye Seloe (8 june)

The team in apparent unison in front of Cathrina’s Summerpalace, Pushkin
7. We finally we finally left St. Petersburg once and for all - 10-11 June 2010
Thursday 10 June.
Today a new (final?) custom’s inspection at 11am. While Paul, Romeo and Chris are going to visit the splendid Hermitage Museum I will stay on board for this last control. As the inspectors arrive Dmitry and Alexander are present too. In 15 minutes the inspection is over, without further questions. This is the last piece of the procedure. We hope to receive the report and final decision today or tomorrow.

Voyages on Lake Ladoga (General map no. 3)
- Red Outbound 12 – 13 June 2010
If you notice a small change of style the next part of the story, it is because a younger member of the crew took over. At first a personal note to someone who lost his faith in this journey too early:

"Paul, Koos and Romeo in Peter and Paul"

"Swan-Lake in St. Petersburg"

"Gauwe Haentje at the River-cruise terminal"

"The Viking-fort in Schisselbourg"

"Gauwe Haentje has survived the first Russian dock"

"Chris with his Russian fishermen-friend"
8. Leaving Mandrogy - 14-16 JUNE 2010
Monday 14 June. 
Voyages on Lake Onega (General map no. 2)
- Red Outbound 15 – 19 June 2010

"A warm welcome in the by industry abanded Petrozavosk"
9. The boat has been taken over by a finish film-crew.
Thursday 17 June. Friday 18 June

Peter the Great ships 2 boats of his fleet from the White Sea to Onega (1702)

Evening night over the Solovetsky Kremlin
10. Midsomer arctic light.

Voyages in the White Sea: 22 June - 2 July 2010 (General map no. 1)
White dot: point of return on 24 June 2010 (N 65* 19' 800": E 36* 13' 650")
Our captain koos who keeps course in watever horrible weather circumstances
A beautifull sunset around midnight in Petrozavodsk
The finish movie-crew Illka and Timo preparing themselves
for an other beautifull shot of 't Gauwe Haentje in Kizhi
11. The big jump

Chris taking a dive in the not so cold vyg-lake
The video: Chris taking a dive in the not so cold vyg-lake
't Gauwe Haentje entering Solovetsky village
12. Return to Solovetsky

A = Solovetsky Islands


The video: Our return so early on Solovetsky was not planned
On 7 am in the morning Illka tries to record the bell sounds for the last time. 4 earlier attempts failed due to very strange and unexpected events, like non performance and the start of drilling at the very moment when the bells started ringing. Fortunately he “shot” right this time. Then around 9am with all sails set we leave the island behind us to deliver the 4 Finnish crewmembers in Kem some 35 miles west, while welcoming 2 new friends, Rolf and Pieter, from Holland. While heading west the clouds start to turn very dark and the wind suddenly increases to Bft 7 to 8. We take in all sails and look for shelter under the leeward side of the Zurkova islands on the way to Kem. We experience the eventful passing of the races between these islands, which are considered quite dangerous when out of the fairway. We arrive at Kem at 6pm and celebrate a lively farewell dinner in the nearby restaurant.
28 June 2010 Contribution by Charlotte Airas, producer of documentaries
We are heading towards Kem. The sea is jumpy and rough. Can this be the same element on which we sailed a week ago? Then the sun was shining, the belugas jumping and the seals sticking up their heads above the surface to check us out. Sandra and Chris where jumping into the sea enjoying the clear salty water. Now the wawes burn your eyes as they hit over deck. ‘t Gauwe Haentje fights against the currents that forces her flat belly sideways. We pass angry waters on boiling white crests through an archipelago known for its neolithic monuments- mazes, seitas. The sea is too rough and the schedule too tight to allow a closer study of them however. Will we have to turn around and go back to Solovki? Last week we tried to leave the island heading for Archangelsk, but the sea proved to be too rough so we turned back. We landed in a beautiful bay and were woken up by an angry guard demanding our immediate departure from the sheltered bay. He calmed down as we presented our landing permit signed by no one less than the Igumen Porfiry. The guard lived in a house that had been used as an orphanage for the children born in the gulag. They were raised here on this barren peninsula, and trained to become wardens in the labour camp. There were still bunkbeds left and inscriptions ‘’ mama” on the wall. The guardian gave us hideous looking fish that we did not know the name of. They contained a enormous amount of delicious roe that we feasted on for several days.

Timo the camaraman at the wheel

Entering as far as possible in the long but shallow Ryba Troiskaya Bay

Interior of a little chapel on Anzern

Exterior of the same chapel

Exterior of the same chapel

View at the interior Golgotha church

Interior with iconostase of Golgotha church

The icon of the last Tsar family

A view from the Golgotha hill

The miraculous cross tree on Golgotha hill on the spot where many gulag prisoners died

The landscape of Anzern

Voyages on Lake Onega (General map no. 2)
- Blue Return 5 – 16 July 2010
13. On our way back

Saturday/Sunday 10/11 July 2010
As we are moored near the center of the town we start off on foot to get money from a cash machine, coffie, internet connection and food for the next days. ATM”s are plentiful available in Petrozavodsk, as in any major city in Russia. Good restaurants also accept the normal creditcards. Service/tipping is dealt with separately. In the main avenue we find a nice terrace of an internet café and although it is quite warm the breeze and trees provide us a refreshing cover. All Petrozavodsk is out and it is nice to see the people walk in mediterranean outfits as being on the Esplanade of Barcelona. The majority is heading for the beaches which are plentiful around the bay, while the water reaches pleasant temperature levels of 18 to 24*C.
In Carelia many shops close during Sundays. After shopping we decide to make a tour for the days we have to wait for Romeo, joining us Monday morning for the 2nd time and the departure of Pieter and Rolf also by train back to St.P. in the late evening. We sail to the Baraniya Bay and are eager to swim to cool off as the temperature has been above 30*C in the town and harbour. As we throw ancor we discover that the water temperature is only 14*C!, a no swim level for us. The current through the sound probably is coming from deeper water levels. In the meantime Pieter makes a list of improvements for the ship. In my mind I see the ship transformed in a copy of an airconditioned nightmare, which I would not be able to influence in any way….The mosquitos keep us busy, but temperature drops to a comfortable level when we go to sleep, this time not too late.
On Sunday morning we slowly are getting on speed. Pieter is rechecking the systems and makes a special wooden tool to keep the convertors afloat. The water is still very chilly and we decide to sail to a place named Suisar, which was indicated on the map by Valery when we passed Kishi going up to the Belo More. The heat is getting serious now and we drop ancor in a bay south of the Suisar sound. Cooling by swimming, except Pieter who wants bathtub temperatures above 28*C. At 3 pm we take the ancor in and sail back to Petrozavodsk to moor on the same spot as for 2 days ago. Unfortunately a tupperware motoryacht is now being placed just behind at our cockpit and, although we kindly requested to stop the airco and generator, we have to accept the cumbersome nightly harbour conditions of the Cote d’Azur, providing an image of potential developments in the years to come in this part of Russia.
Monday 12 July 2010
At 8 am Romeo calls from the station and arrives soon on board by taxi, after a comfortable night ride by train from St. P.,. We make a programme for the day and move the boat to Alexander’s shipyard “Wokroug Sweta” , which means “around the world”. There we meet the owner Yuri, who has build the 3 nearly finished wooden yachts. The construction works on the piers have made serious progress and we now moor on the same pier but equiped with platform, bolders and electricity. And while Yuri rightfully proud, shows us the boats, in the machine hall 2 little keys are being made to assist our enhanced electrical board system. His shipyard will be transformed to also harbour a yachtclub with a club building planned to be ready next year. When he visits ‘t Gauwe Haentje I present him the birdy of the Royal Netherlands Yachtclub to be the first foreign club flag to hang there. The new harbour shows the interest of a number of Russian sailing lovers to improve the nautical infrastructure of this part of the country, which has, the short season taking granted, such beautiful possiblities for toursailing for any person loving adventure, different sceneries, points of cultural interest and quiet ancoring locations.
On 11:30 am we are off in a taxi for a sightseeing tour North of Petrozavodsk. We visit the waterfall of Kivach, certainly wothwile, and the old wooden church of Kondapoga on a promontory in lake Onega. It is a harmonious little church in an arcadian setting, partly still under renovation, but very authentic with beautiful icones. The hugh paper mill spreading out and around this town but barely visible is said to employ the whole population. We stop for shopping on the way back in the “Lente” supermarket and replenish our reserves for the coming days. After having picked up Pieter and Rolf’s luggage, we go to restaurant Petrovskaya for the captain’s dinner. At 11 pm they board the train to St. P. from the nearby station. When back on board we decide to move on to the Baraniya Bay to escape the heat of the town. While leaving whe are saluted by Yuri and Alexander who at 11 pm are still evaluating the progress of the contruction works.

Visit to cataracs of Kivach. Konstantin, Rolf, Pieter and Romeo

Interior of old wooden church on lake site Kondaponga
We want to get into the Kishi Archipelago through a north westerly entrance, but map indication is not sufficient to give us enough comfort to do so. The Onega Regatta passes just in front of us southbound into the wide yonder. In the skärgárd we encounter Sergei, the owner of the restaurant for tonight. We pass the Kishi island, where we will stop once again for the visit of Romeo and later on for kaarle flying in from Helsinki to Petrozavodsk by plane tomorrow afternoon and coming to Kishi by hydrofoil to join us. We enjoy again dinner at the veranda of Sergai’s place, walk to the little authentic village with a church and skyte ruin, receive an exorbant high bill and ancor nearby in the bay for the night. Then Koistcha tell us he heard Sergei telling there is no hydrofoil at 5:30 pm tomorrow coming to Kishi! Fortunately in Finland we can reach Kaarle as it is one hour earlier there. We have to go back tomorrow to Petrozavodsk to pick up Kaarle.
Early the next morning temperature is already above 30*C. Romeo and I start as early as possible to avoid sunstroke to visit the museum premises of this exceptional island. At noon we sail back to Petrozavodsk all sails set. We are happy to do so after many days of headwinds. While we wait Koistcha and Romeo do the food shopping for the coming days. Kaarle arrives at 6 pm at the pier and as soon as all is stored, we set off to Pushinskaya Inlet on the west coast of Onega (61* 35’ N; 34* 44’ E). We learn from our friends in St. P. that today it has been a record of near 40* C there! We have a new problem with loading our the service batteries.
During the night the bimini was kept over the cockpit. It now becomes a habit to jump in the water at any convenient moment, at least 2 times a day. Now we are off to explore the petroglieves encrusted in the rocks of the shore at 2 places on the eastern side of Onega. We ancor at the north side of Besov Nos (the Devils Nose) and under extreme high temperature and permanent attack of the mosquitos we find a number of them clearly engraved in the rocks said to be made 7000 years ago. At this awesome place we feel like lost in time. The next spot for petroglieves is Muromskiy Point, some 20 mile south. When we arrive at the mouth of the river we are quicly grounded on the sandy bottom of the small river leading to a big lake some 500m more inland.. The water is even too shallow for ‘t Gauwe Haentje (depth 0,90 m). At a short distance we see the Muromskiy Monastery, which is in operation and under restauration, on a beautiful outcrop of the mostly sandy, flat and wooded south eastern shore of Ladoga. Not having a sheltered bay on this part of Onega, we decide to cross over to the western shore (about 23 miles) and already closer to the entrance of the Svir River, our next objective. Before we ancor at Rapruchevskiy Bay, we see a monumental sunset at exact 11 pm, which gives melancholical thoughts to Kaarle, a feeling of the coming shorter days…

View from trerrace if Sennaya Bay Hotel

On terrace Sennay Bay Hotel

Bell Tower on Kishi Island is played

Ancored on trees near petroglieves site of Besov Nos

7000 years old petroglieves, Besov Nos

Idem Swan petroglieves

Petroglieve at Besov Nos

Spectacular sunset on Onega
At 1 pm we approach the entrance of the

After a thunderstorm at Svir River
After 1 hour the weather improves. When we approach the upper Svir lock we hear that we are not allowed to sail any more during the night as it now starts to get quite darker during 2 hours in the middle of the night. The fuel supply boat seems to be elswere near the 2nd (lower) Svir lock. So we have no choice but stop at the pier before the lock and go to sleep.

Restaured Orthodox Church on north Svir River shore
Then at 1 pm we arrive at Mondrogy with the temperature within normal limits now, after many days of tropical levels. It rained occasionally still this morning, but both barometer level and wind stay very stable and benign. Within a halfhour Valery with dog Dascha and Elena arrive with fresh fish. This evening we will have captains dinner with all of us in Mondrogy, as Romeo will leave us tomorrow morning, and after dinner we will enjoy the famous banya, we remember still vividly when we came up the river in June. We meet Anastasia again the manager of the Mondrogy resort and ask her to be able to move to the pier of the official datcha, a quiter place for the night. This datcha is said to be Putin’s, and we feel previleged to moor there. After 5 minutes being berthed a man turn up out of nowhere to ask our permission. Anastasia’s word is law. Then Nikolai, the driver who will return with Romeo and Elena next morning arrives also. The banya is a different experience. Four weeks ago we escaped the cold in the banya, we now escaped the heat diving in the Svir. After the banya Valery and his Dascha goes back to St.P. It was very nice of him to come to see us. We then celebrate Romeo’s 2nd departure in the restaurant of the resort with regional specialties and a very warm red

Temporary waterfall in upper Svir River lock

Entering Higher Svir Lock with 2 cruise ships

With cruise ships in the upper Svir River lock

Mondragy, Svir River, Romeo shoots picture after repairs

Only 't Gauwe Haentje is allowed to moor on Putin's datcha pier
14. The ladoga circumsailing

18/23 July 2010
Nikolai woke us up at 6pm and 15 minutes later I say goodbye to him and Romeo as they have to be timely back in St. P. At 9 am we meet Anastasia to pay for the stay including dinner, berthing and banya. It’s not the cheapest place, about 20K roebels. We soon start the engine and we will take in fuel just before the Lower Svir lock. At 10:30 am we moor alongside the fuel supply boat. A very friendly captain helps us efficiently to fill the tanks again and also provides us with assistance to find a taxi to do some shopping in a little local shop, open on Sunday morning. We then proceed immediately to the lock and are served immediately. In the lock we hear that many ships from both sides now approach the lock and are requesting a position to pass. The lady lockmaster makes it clear on the VHF who is the boss and takes decisions about the sequence.

Voyages on Lake Ladoga (General map no. 3)
- Blue Return 18 – 24 July 2010
The bridge we have to pass is considerable lower then indiquated on the map, 12,4m instead of 17,55m mentioned, hence we have to lower the mast again. Now the whole operation with mast under about 45* is efficiently executed. With 6,5 to 7 knts we sail towards Ládoga where we arrive at 6 pm. We receive the latest weather info from Sacha in St. P. and having favorable weather conditions we sail-motor NNW into the night towards Valaam.We keep a distance of about 2 hours, 10 miles from shore, in case the treacherous winds of Ladoga suddenly turns up as now clouds are appearing from the north. As we sail into the morning we a wind shift makes us decide to seek shelter for some sleep near 2 large islands on the NE corner of Ladoga, between Mantchinsaari and Lunkulusaari. We drop ancor at 4 am in the morning in a fairly protected bay near Lunkulusaari (61*20’850”N; 31*41”675”E).

Meeting 2 friendly oilmen on Svir River
On 8;45 am Monday morning 19 July we are up and set sail through the sound in NW direction, when Kaarle suddenly sees an overhead cable too low to pass under. It is not indicated on the map even the detailed GPS info and pilot don’t tell us. We have to turn and go south rounding Mantchinsaari to head for Valaam on a course of 300*. Kaarle a Finnish filmproducer recently coproduced a film about the 2 sole iduals, one Fin and one Russian, who since 40 years don’t talk to each other, a very special topic for a documentary. The wind drops totally. We get the latest weather forecast by sms from Romeo’s son in Helsinki: rain in the afternoon and wind fronm the NW. While we proceed towards Valaam suddenly the clouds start building up and the wind starts blowing from NW indeed. Wind again on the nose we take down the fok and kluiver. The wind increases gradually and it starts to rain, while the temperature quickly drops to a chilly level, we have not been used to over the last weeks. Around 6 pm we arrive north of Valaam and the rains poors down. The island is in a haze and we only can see the contours of the monastery. Then just before entering the fjord to the natural harbour of Valaam the rain stops and the sun peers through accentuating the through the mist the beauty of the sites, the St. Nikolai Skyte at the entrance and the main monastery on a hilltop aside the fjord, in an amazingly beautiful setting in the landscape.
Sacha in St.P. has organised a berth but the harbour guard doesn’t allow us to stay there. We then move to a brand new pontoon well placed to have an awesome view of the monastery and harbour. On this pier the “Star of Onega” is moored and we are welcomed with great enthousiasm by its crew of whom we met already when we made our first stop in Petrozavodsk. I then also visited this beautiful replica, which was christened by the Valaam igoman (head of the monastery). I invite them to visit ‘t Gauwe Haentje, which they appreciate very much. We then walk to the monastery and when returning to have a drink with the captain and officers of the “Star of Onega”, we just see them leaving the sound, leaving a postcard behind (www.polar-odyssey.ru) .

It rains for the first time in weeks

Moored aside "Star of Onega" with Valaam Monastery at distance

Director of production of the documentary Kaarle on Valaam

Inside the opulent Valaam cathedral

Peaceful gathering
On Tuesday morning we have arranged a visit of the monastery and surroundings. At 9:00 am we are awaited by Ekatherina, who during the summer month is guiding tourists on Valaam. We visit some of the premises and the cathedral while also having attended a typical Russian male choir with their special a capella singing. We visit the skyte of St Nikolai, the protector of seamen, at the entrance of the fjord now from landside. A few weeks ago a chapel opposite the skyte at the entrance of the fjord has been christened by the Patriarch of Russia, adding to the unique setting and integration of religious expression in the landscape.

Early morning tranquility

The Valaam male choir
At 3 pm we are ready to leave, but then the harbour guard present us the astronomical bill of 4.800 rubels for a night on an incomplete pier without service facilities whatsoever. We ask for the pricelist and invoice. The invoice arrives with stamp and signature but no pricelist. As Koistcha insists on the irrealistic pricing we suddenly are told to leave, which we do without delay.

The Valaam "invoice" harbour services one night: 4.800 rubels!
A call from Natalia in St.P.: Timo, the camaraman who did the shooting during the first 3 weeks of the voyage, arrived unexpectedly and would like to stay on board. We have since long indicated our arrival in St.P. next weekend. It is the pinnacle of the tourist season in this city. Fortunately Natalia is able to arrange a hotel room for him in the fully booked hotels of the city. With a very nice wind we are able to sail again and with 3 Bft we enter with a speed of 5 knots a beautiful and totally protected bay of Putsaari. We drop ancor near a pier exclusively to serve the skyte on the island. It is warm again and we dive in the refreshing water.

Passing the Valaam Monastery
A number of inland passages are blocked by electricity lines and we have to sail to open Ladoga again. In a quiet bay with low polished rocks by ice and water during the glacial periods we suddenly and to our exitement are confronted with a curious Ladoga seal. These fresh water animals, which are considerably smaller than the ocean water species only live in three lakes on the whole world: Saimaa Lake District in Finland, Ladoga lake and the enormous Baikal Lake in Siberia. Ekatherina, our Valaam guide, told us that there are still about 2000 living in the northern part of the lake, while about every day one is dying. Having been 3 times on the Saimaa over the last 10 years I never managed to see one of these animals. It is said still about 400 are living there and seriously threatened by extiction as human populaton pressure doesn’t offer sufficient space to reproduce.

The spectacular NW skärgárd of Ladoga
At 6 pm we continue our trip through the beautiful Carelian skärgárd to Lahdenpohja at the end of a bay deep inland. When arriving we see again the silhouet of the “Star of Onega”. When we pass close by we invite the captain for a drink, but he is on shore visiting the mayor of the town. For 200 rubels we moor for the night on a guarded pontoon and walk down to the village. We arrive too late for the restaurant and Koistcha again makes us a nice dinner on board.
When we awake next morning we make a plan to sail through the astonishing beauty of the Carelian skärgárd. At the first entrance starboard from Lahdenpohja we again run into an overhead electricity cable and we have to go out to the sea to continue through another entrance into one of the many fairways. At a certain moment we are almost stopped as the depth and width hardly makes our passage possible, but we manage. We drop ancor again as the weather continues to be subtropical and the fresh water invites to cool off. After sailing through a very deep idyllic inland trough of several miles we set sail for Priozersk, a major town on the west corner of Ladoga. We moor in a modern marina east of the city.

The medieval castle of Priozersk
The infrastructure for marine sports is also developing around Ladoga. A number of expensive modern motorboats are moored on the piers. It is the harbour of good friend of Koistcha, who now has his Dutch built kotter renovated in Krohnstadt. The harbourmaster is very professional and friendly. A taxi drops us near the restaurant “Captain Morgan”, recommended by the harbourmaster. We find ATM’s and before doing our shopping to be able to survive the coming 2 days, we visit the old fortress build by Novgorod to defend the region against the incursions of the Swedes in the 14th century. When we return and want to take a shower we discover to our discomfort that the water supply is stopped. Fortunately the temperature of surface fresh Ladoga water is 22*C at this site.
Thursday 22 July: we pay the friendly harbourmaster. The new marine charges 800 rubels for our stay. Again it is fantastic weather. After a tropical week on Onega this week we experience subtropical conditions on Ladoga. At 10 am we set all sails in SE direction to Konevets Island, which is also called “malinki Valaam”, small Valaam.

What a nice speed on Ladoga
When we arrive we are introduced to the igoman, who just starts with a religious service in the church. He allows us to stay 2 hours on the pier of the monastery, for us the only possible landing on the island. Aside the monastery and church we visit 2 nearby skytes which are an integral part of the monastery. It appears that tomorrow it is an important day for the island. It is the day of the main icone of the cloister and the Partiarch of Russia will visit the community. The enormous renovation efforts on the major sites of monasteries and churches all over the region we have passed, are very impressive.

15. Our Finish in Helsinki

24 July 2010
Just when I get up at 8 am I’m witness of an action of the guards of the fortress. After several sommations to come out, they tear down a tent nearby and a dizzy person emerges under vociforous protests from under the debris. Some moments later and a sip of solidatiry wodka they behave as being old friends. In Russia people camp at any place freely, but at certain monumental premises it seems not allowed.
We soon have to leave as the hordes of visitors are emerging, shipped in by a little ferry, which moors ar our pier. It is again a subtropical to tropical day. It seems we are not anymore aware of the differences in temperature, it feels as being inland in Southern Europe. We move to the south side of the Neva river entrance and moor a mile downstream close to the centre of the Slisselburg town. Nearby is a monument of Tzar Peter the Great, who gave orders to build the main body of the remnants of the fortress. Upon his return 1702 from his famous visit to Holland and England he concurred this region, the then Swedish province Ingermanland.. The Oreshek fortress, already known as a stronghold in Viking and Rurik’s times, was build simultaneous with St P, as Tsar Peter felt still being vulnarable to Swedish attacks from the NW and Ladoga. It meant an important impuls for this region. Since he wiped out the Swedes of Estonia and part of Finland in the following years, the fortress has not been used as component of the defence system for over 2 centuries. However it became known as an important political prison. Many Oktabrist from the revolt of 1825 and revolutionairies have been kept there. The brother of Lenin, Alexander Ulianov, was hanged there at a young age in the 1860’s. In the 2nd World War it did regain its original function, when it played an important role in the defence of Leningrad for 900 days, attacked many times and bombed almost daily by the Germans, who held Slisselburg somewhat 200 m away. It never surrendered. With many parts under restauration and still many more to do it is a very impressive complex which gives you a very puzzling perspective on Russian history over centuries, a history we in western Europe to my regret ignore almost completely
The first thunderstorm in weeks passes quickly just when at 12 am Carina and Steve, Sacha and Natalia arrive with Nicolai, the driver. We celebrate their visit with a drink. Sacha and Natalia have in particular been instrumental in having made this voyage possible, assisting in many ways to facilitate our wanderings. I’m very grateful for their consistent support. We prepare the procedure to lower the mast to pass under the bridges of the Newa and get of to St P. The sun breaks through the clouds as we leave and quickly the perspective on Ladoga vanishes when, with partly lowered mast, we pass the first 2 bridges. We hoist the mast again and then are able to sail till our mooring on the inland cruise terminal on the east side of St P. Suddenly we are paged by VHF, River Traffic Control: “How high is your mast? Where are you coming from and where are you heading for?”. Koistcha answers: “17 m, coming from Ladoga we proceed to St. P.”. “But how did you pass the bridges?”. When Koistcha explains the lowering of the mast, we hear laughing and a very friendly voice wishes us a pleasant journey.
Sailing down the Neva and feel like the circle of our voyage is now definitely closed. The banks are crowded with sunbaders and swimmers to find refreshment for the again very high temperatures above 35*C. We pass a tug construction yard of Damen Shipyards and on the northern banks the newly constructed often opulent datchas signal a new class of rich people with attention to private property. At 4 pm we moor on the little landing made at the landside of the piers where the ships of the river cruise boat companies are lined up when in St.P. Carina generously invites us to have a drink in her appartment and dinner in the nearby Park restaurant, which we gratefully accept and drink again on the extraordinary experience of the last 7 weeks. I do realize that it has been almost 3 weeks, day by day, we very much enjoyed the opulent cooking of Koistcha. To our astonishment, delightment and respect he under mostly tropical temperatures was making the kitchen of s/y “Bistry Pitouch” his pivotal centre of axion, to the benefit of us all: Nazdravye!

Important visitors: Carine, Natalia and Steve on board; Koistcha. Nicolai and Sacha on shore in Schlisselburg

Diner invitation of Carine, the day crew in St.P.

Blocked by submarines on the Neva
Sunday 25 July 2010
Today it is the Russian National Navy Day. A number of battle ships, destroyers and a submarines, are moored on the Neva and open for visitors. We are not allowed to proceed over the Neva to the west side of the city, where the yachtclubs and the Customs pier is situated. While Timo and Marja arrives to accompany me on the last leg of my voyage, Kaarle leaves to take the train at Finlandia Station to return to Helsinki. In the afternoon Dmitry, Sacha and captain Victor visit us. He has sailed a.o. cruise ships over Russian inland waters for many years. It is the first time Victor is on board. In the back office of Viking River Cruises he prepared all the sea maps and pilots for the trip, while contacting the persons responsible for the waterway system on our route, having made our journey in the original expression of Dmitry “a piece of cake”. I’m most grateful for his contribution to have made this voyage such a success.
Monday 26 July 2010
Koistcha is coming along. Unpleasant news: today the customs are not able to provide clearance and we cannot pass over to the west side of the city. The responsible officers were visiting the ships yesterday and not in today, while we might need a pilot to sail past the fortress of Peter and Paul….A feeling of déjà vu is surfacing reminding me the 2 weeks of waiting on the so called “customs pier” and the Central River Yachtclub to receive permission to sail inland based on a Russian boat registration number. Again I feel being held hostage by an invisable mechanism, with no rules or expectation of outcome. Sacha is taking care of all formalities. Also Koistcha is very embarrassed and is going to call friends in the system… I sense: this is going to take more time then expected. In Koistcha’s car we go off to refill the empty gas bottle: 250 rubels. Then Koistcha invites us to make a visit to Staraya Ladoga, an old settlement along the Bolshoy River near Lake Ladoga. It has been a base for settlers over millenairies and the Vikings, 800 AD, used it as part of their support system in the trade route to Kiev and Byzantium. Then Rurik founded the town as part of the State of Novgorod and has been inhabited since. It is located on a steep wasterly shore of the river and has a male and female monastery, which are under reconstruction, soon to be in old splendour again. The old Castle/Fortress is also being recontructed with parts and its 2 churches dating from the 13th century.

The Men monastery at Staraya Ladoga on the Bolshov River
Although the temperature of 36*C was not stimulating, it certainly was worhtwile the visit. Back on board the temperature doesn’t seem to go down for the night.
The contrast with the past weeks can’t be bigger. Having been able to ancor, dive in the water and listen to the birds and leaves over many weeks, we now hear the constant noice of the ship airco generators, diesel engines and cars passing nearby, while smelling the exhaust and dust of the city for 3 days. “It will become very warm today, please take your umbrellas with you to protect you from the intense sun” announces the speaker of the cruise boat “Tixhi Don”, moored parallel to us on the pier. At 4 pm Koistcha comes along and informs us that Sacha is working on the papers and “maybe” tomorrow morning will come along. Today the right person is not in the office to finilize the authorisation procedure to be able to leave. It is almost unthinkable for us only one man is responsible for providing a permit to go. Every day thousands of visitors come in and out of Russia without problems, so the customs department of the seahandling of sailors/visitors may need a serious overhaul to enable such tourists as me to enjoy a journey to the impressive hinterland of North West Russia in an efficient manner. Not many sailors have the time available to lay idle and waiting for more then 2,5 weeks to enjoy such a holiday. In the afternoon Dmitryand his friend Andrei visit us and invite us for dinner in a nice terrace of a restaurant on the northern shore of the Neva overloking the river and part of the city. Koistcha joins us and we receive our passports back. Now the authorization to leave with the ship. Putting our frustration for having to wait more aside, we drink together on the fantastic experience we all feel being part of and without Dmitry, his team, the captains and people like Andrei, being involved with getting the procedures in place, we never would have been able to achieve.
The air during night stayed hot. The barometric pressure has not moved for days now. The radio announces that today Moskou expects again to pass record temperatures, while St.P. will approach its records once more. At 11:45 am Koistcha arrives with his friend Athur Grokhovsky, sailing editor of the magazine “KATEPA n RXTbI”, ”Power and Sail Boats” one of the most important in Russia. He just flew early this morning in from Spain where he attended the annual regatta in Barcelona.and didn´t sleep but 2 hours. No news from the authorization process yet. Sacha is very busy with it. Arthur is going to make a story about the ship and its voyage for the magazine and takes pictures from all sides and situations. They leave to get a couple of examples of the magazine and at 3 pm return. No news yet from Sacha.

The most important men for the expedition: Dmitry and Andrei, crucial in obtaining the written permission for sailing on Russian waters

All ends with a steady hand, a good wodka and friendship
Then at 4 pm we hear that we are going to receive a new registration number and passport for the ship, something was incorrect in the former documents. Sacha is coming to bring the documents. At 5 pm we can leave directly for the Customs pier. Timo and Marja leave with Nicolai to shoot the final pictures for the documentary when the ship passes the fortress Perter and Paul and the Hermitage and will join us when we take in gasoline at the Centre River Yacht Club before setting off to Cutoms. Koistcha and Arthur will accompany us there. We leave the fuel pier at 7:30 pm and arrive at Custom’s at 9 pm. We announce ourselves at the already well known premises and a young lady is taking care of the procedure. I fill in all required documents. Something seems not correct. The lady now is permanently on line with other people apparently of the Custom department too. The law has changed since 1 July recently and the textbooks she consults seem to indicate that something is wrong. I look patiently at the television screen where a songfestival is broadcasted. The ventilators in the unventilated room are increasing the temperature and humidity as well as the heat of the discussions. The more time elapses Koistcha and Athur, after his long day almost asleep initially, are taking more active part in the discussions with the offical and her back office. The explanation of the new laws doesn’t indicate a problem, even in the contrary seems to endorse all documents for leaving. Arthur states that he will make a special topic for his magazine of this issue as already the coming month the handling of visiting foreign yachts is going to be discussed at department and organisational levels. It is midnight when also Dmitry arrives with Sacha. It soon is clear to Dmitry that the official doesn’t want to make any decision and tells us to come back in the morning when her superiors will also be available for legal exegese. This is clearly asking too much of Dmitry’s patience who now exploses. He tells the lady that with all documents in line with the new laws, what he experiences now is “administrative banditism” and cannot be tolerated in a modern society and is a disgrace for Russia. Finally after many telephone consults and more interpretations and discussions the lady gives in. At 2 am on 29 July 2010 we get the permit to leave. Even after such a sordid experience we are very happy and every one recieves a well meant abrazzo for their genuine support and friendship. We would never have made it without them. We express our hopes to be able to return under better procedural treatment in the coming years.
It is however an abberation how different tourists are dealt with in Russia. The Russians we have met, even officials, were all very friendly and hospitable. We have been helped whenever a question popped up in an extremely friendly way to a point of embarrassment for us, not used to such fullhearted attitude and treatment. While tourists travelling by air, car or train seem not to have any impediments for their visits, the way however yachtsmen are dealt with at Custom’s in St.P is open for improvement in a way everybody will benefit. It could start with a decent pier for arrival and departure. A voyage to Ladoga or Onega is a fantastic experience and I don’t speak yet about the White Sea.

Voyages in the Gulf of Finland (General map no. 4)
- Blue return voyage 27 July – 1 August 2010-08-16
Back at the quaywall Timo and I hoist the mast in the dark and we are able to leave for Finland at 2:30 am. Through traffic lane nr.10a we approach Kronhstadt. We several times call the Ships Guiding and Control post, informed of our departure by the passport control department, by VHF 16: no answer. At the south side of Kronhstadt we cross the busy lane twice between cruise and cargo ships, then continue with tailwind of 4 to 5 Bft on motor and fok westbound north of traffic lane no.1 At 5 am when the sun comes above the horizon we hear a call for “Yacht Bistry Pitouch” in Russian. I answer in English and immediately give our position, direction and destination. After some moments we hear a somewhat shy female voice: “Thank you, Bistry Pitouch”. At 10 am we cross fairway no. 5a to Primorsk and at midday the Fairway to Vyborg. The wind eases and the visibility reduces considerably. At 4pm Russian time I page the Russian Coast Guard to inform them we are leaving Russian territory and then inform the Finnish Coast Guard about our approach from Ostrov Sommers to Haapassaari Archipelago. Passport control and Customs at Haapasaari take 10 minutes. At 3:30 pm EET we moor at the pontoon in the beautiful natural harbour. First we take a bath then a drink and do some shopping for the meal Timo is preparing. We install the bimini and within a few minutes the first thunderstorm hits us. We go asleep early the day having been long and intense.
30/31 July 2010
In the morning we are informed that a heavy thunderstorm passed over us and caused serious damage in eastern Finland. We have heard nothing. With a nice wind from SSW we continue on sail to Kaunissaari (beautiful island). We arrive at 2 pm and decidse to stop for the day. Timo buys fresh smoked Gulf salmon, delicious, and we visit the island. In the evening a designer of small wooden motorbaots comes along and later shows his workshops and nets of his ancestors dating back in the 18th century still in good state.
The wind has veered to SW with 4-5 Bft in the morning when we leave Kaunissaari and sail westbound. The swell doesn’t allow nice sailing and on motor we proceed to the Lovisa Inlet. We then set sail but as all sails are set, suddenly one BB stag snapps loose. It had been bent earlier this summer when someone forgot to take in the leeboard up before veering. We take the most inland fairway and sail through the again beautiful east Finnish skärgárd. We arrive in the natural harbour of Byön at 4 pm. Fortunately I have a replacement piece for the spanner and the stag is quickly repaired. We enjoy, discussing with a glas of good Russian champagne again our spectacular voyage and the state of the world in general, a very nice and quiet evening once more.
Monday 1 August 2010
Tomorrow Marja has appointments in Helsinki, so we intend to arrive there tonight finishing our voyage to the not reached objective: Archangelsk. In order not to stress anybody we proceed through the inner causeways where we have less swell. Again the wind is on the nose, which was the case in a disproportional amount of time during this trip. The more we approach Helsinki the happier Timo looks. Coming home. A number of Dutchmen pass us intentionally to friendly salute us . We didn’t have the slightest idea how many of them are living around Helsinki. At 4:30 pm we moor along a pioer at NJK Blekholmen in the centre of the city. The line is taken by Johan Hellmann, we know for some years through friends and has just arrived from a tour to Estonia. Before Timo and Marja go off we have a joint drink in the cockpit and once more celebrate our endevours.

Back at base in NJK Blekholmen, Helsinki
16. Epilogue - 12 August 2010
Did the voyage live up to expectations? I fullheartedly can answer affirmatively: absolutely! From a cultural point of view, nature and scenery as well as from a antropological experience it was very rewarding to do. We met - with almost no exception - very friendly and hospitable people, willing to help in all imaginable ways. The rather untouched coasts with forests, beaches, bays and small settlements provided an intense notion of freedom to discover and amaze. The immense ongoing efforts to restore important historic sites like churches, monasteries and buildings and the quiet villages spread over this wide expanse add in a singular way to the experience of the old and authentic Russia. The weather we had during the voyage was of unprecedented stable and warm nature and may distort my view on the accessability of some of these waters.
On shore I like to thank in particular Anna in Solovetsky, Yury and Alexander at the shipyard in Petrozavodsk, there also the electric engineer Evgeny, very instrumental to get us sailing again.
Together with them I wish to thank all very sincerely: Charlotte - who provided for the idea, concept program and realisation of the documentary - and her team, Timo and Marja, Illka, Sandra and Kaarle, in the meantime besides the shooting they being cook, deckhand and swain as well; Dmitry - with his back office of Viking River Cruises, Sacha, Natalia, Nikolai, captains Victor and Alexander and his very instrumental friends, Andrei and Vladimir - without him this program probably would have come to a standstill at least for this year; the sail captains Alexei, Valery and Konstantin (Koistcha the cook), the last two became totally part of the crew and good friends; my friends from Holland, each of them bringing a special aspect to the party, Chris who happened to be a friend's son and very instrumental in many ways - cook, deckhand and translator -, Pieter who took care of the technical problems, Rolf who was the photographer and for a day almost made Koistcha starve, Romeo who after the St Petersburg enjoyments of culture returned once more on board to sail Onega and moored at Putin's landing at Mondrogy on the Svir River and Paul who, being idle on board in St.P. through cultural assimilation during the sorties, became almost as dangerous for the ship's balance of power as Lenin for Tsarist Russia then leaving the ship before potential sinking.
Finally I owe a lot to Jan Eissens of SSRP, who took care of getting all the pieces of info together and putting them in this comprehensive weblog.
All of you: THANKS
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