In the fur hunting trade, since there are no easy
portages to the Okhota, the Russians usually approached Okhotsk from the Urak or the
Ulya to the west. The only main route that used the Okhota ran from the "corner" of the
Yudoma over the Okhotsk Portage to the Okhota about 100 kilometres north of its mouth. There was some pasture along the river but not enough to keep many
Yakutsk pack-horses over winter.
Larch was cut and floated down the river for shipbuilding. Around 1750 there were 37 peasant families and from 1735 a few
Yakut cattlemen. ==See also==