Tuesday, 2 September 2014

Cycling through Clouds in Central Asia: Badakhshan Region; Total: 733 km



May 11-17, 2014

We woke up to find, that "everything" under the cover of the tent was wet and muddy. It was 11:30 when we dried our stuff. We were very lucky that we were not flooded because we were camping very close to the top, which meant there wouldn't be a lot of water accumulated in the creek we had camped near.

We started climbing again and in an hour, we were over the pass 2000 m. The decent down, was even harder than the ascend due to the condition of the road. I had to constantly break. At the bottom of the mountain, there was the police check point. After checking our permits, they gave us a lot of bread and wished us a safe trip! How nice!

From then on, we basically were riding in mud. Thank God it was downhill. I don't know what would happen if it were uphill in that condition. We finally got close to a village by a river, on the other side of which was Afghanistan. We camped in a garden with a fantastic view: very tall mountains, at least 4000 meter high.



Close to the Pass


The Pass: 2000 m
















Our Camp Ground: The Other Side of the Panj River is Afghanistan


May 12, 2014

Since we rode our bikes in mud most of the time yesterday, our bikes was covered with a thick layer of mud all over. We were hoping it would rain during the night to wash off the mud.

We started riding our bikes in very muddy roads again, but we had to struggle tremendously to keep the bikes moving even down hill. I could hear the tires rubbing against hard clay, the chain and the cassette was squeaking too. We had to wash the bikes or we would wreck something on them, but the muddy road had not finished.

It was about noon when we reached good road, and in the first creek we found, we striped our bikes and washed everything. After that, we faced the strongest head wind on a very steep road.

At about 3:30, we found a roadside cafe and decided to have something. But at the end, we spent the night there and enjoyed good organic food.

My Achilles' tendon got worse, and I have a cold! I now have a sore throat added to my bad physical condition.

The two Chinese guys were documentary film makers trying to get into Afghanistan

Which way to take? That's the question!

The Way Down


The Cafe we Dined and Stayed the Night at
Spectacular View on the Road

 
Friendly People Everywhere

Desperate, we asked Abdulrahman, a meteorologist, to stay in this weather station.  He played the dutar for us.

May 14, 2014

At 6 am, we woke up and at 7, we took off. In the morning, the ride was usual: mostly off road along The Panj river, going up and down the mountain. At about 11:30, we saw a sign of a homestay in a village where we had lunch and rested for two hours. At about 2, we hit the road again, but the road turned almost impossible to ride on. In most places, there were big stones, the size of a baseball, all over the road. Very beat, we pushed it and pushed it to get to the next villages where we pitched up our tent, and had some really bad pasta, half of which was trashed.

My Achilles' tendon hurt so much today. And my big toe, is very big now. I am sure it is infected. I should see if I can find a doctor on our way.











May 15, 2014

At noon, we found a homestay in a village and stayed there for lunch and an hour of rest. When I took off my shoes, I saw a yellow thick liquid oozed out of the corner of my big toe. So... It WAS infected. I pushed the germs all out and sterilized my toe with disinfectant. I then kept the toe in the sun for some time, and it is behaving itself ever since. After lunch, we kept riding through very tall mountains along the river, and finally at 5:30, we stopped to spend the night at a garden in a village. The altitude was 2000 meters above the see level. 



May 16, 2014

At 8:15 we took off. My foot was hurting very much right from the start! What is going on with it? One day, it is good, one day, it hurts so much! I am really tired of this concession. With a lot of pain, I rode until12:30 when we stopped at a cafe for lunch which was eggs, and a leg of chicken. We were getting close to the main town of this area--khorogh, so we decided to camp outside the town instead of arriving in a town late evening. At 4:30, we stopped to buy something to cook for dinner. I asked the shopkeeper, a nice lady, where we could pitch up our tent for the night. She offered her back yard. How nice of her!

May 17, 2014

Khorough is a small town, so it was easy too  find the guest house, Pamir Lodge where we met a Spanish cyclist, Raimon, who had been on the road for a long time. He had ridden his bike from Barcelona, and he had a fantastic time in Iran. He told me about the parties he had been to and the beautiful girls in Tehran. His bike had a defective hub and his fork was not adjusted well. It was surprising to see that he didn't know how to fix his hub! I fixed his bike for him and he took off. We will probably see him again as he is going to Osh too.

After 6 days of bathing in mountain creeks and taking a shower with two litters of cold water, we finally treated ourselves with a hot shower in the lodge. How refreshing it was! Then we gave our filthy clothes to the lady who ran the lodge to wash it. She charged us 30 Somoni ($6).

At noon, a couple came in on their huge motorbikes. Laura and Christofer had been on the road for 20 years (18 years in an RV and the rest on motorbikes).

We tried to take a nap in the afternoon, but our bodies were too tired, so we couldn't at the end. Then we started to repair our beaten bicycles. We spent three hours on our bikes cleaning and lubricating the parts. At about 5, we went out to grab a bite. We found it difficult to find a good restaurant. At the end, we went to a buffet and had a huge meal.
.

My foot was hurting a lot today. I don't know what to do with it.

Tomorrow is a big day. We officially start Pamir. We will go up and up on the mountains.

Sunday, 31 August 2014

Cycling through Clouds in Central Asia: A Stormy Night in Pamir;Today: 76 km; Total: 295 km



May 10, 2014
 
As we were packing up in the morning, we were sweating from the heat. We biked for 20 km when we got to Kulyab. It was very much like an Afghan town you might see in the movies. Such a dirt and chaos, no presence of driving rules, cars parked wherever, lots of honking, a lot of vendors in every corner, etc.

We needed to change $100, so we went to a "bank". The policeman at the entrance asked us what we wanted and when we told him, he called someone out on the street and asked us to give him the money so he could exchange! By then, some people had gathered around us, so we didn't want the people to see or know that we were changing money; $100 is a lot of money here. We told the guy we would be back later and went to a corner to take out $100 from our bag. We didn't want them to see where we hide our money. We went behind the bank to do so. And when we had our $100 in our pocket, the guy showed up from the back door of the bank and asked us to do the exchange. I  knew the exchange rate so I asked about the guy's rate. His rate was the same, so we did the exchange and took off. On our way, we bought 6 boiled eggs from a vendor and had them outside the town.

We resumed our paddling in a very steep road. It was scorchingly hot. After an hour of cycling. We couldn't take the heat anymore. It was 12:30 in a village when we took a three-hour break. Three hours because it was impossible to bike in that heat. The villagers would pass by and just say hi. Apparently, it was a no brainer why we had stopped by a grave to seek refuge in the shade. After a couple of hours, a guy showed up and tried so hard to communicate with us. I was in no mood to show that I knew Tajik language, so I played dumb, but he had a big bottle of beer and had just started to chat. After three hours, some clouds blocked the sun, so we took off. We kept riding in a long steep road meandering up a mountain. At times, it was so difficult to be on the bike that I walked my bike--little did I know that I was over stretching my right calf. I realized it later at night when the pain started.

At about 5 pm, we saw a boy riding a bicycle with no front tire. I filmed him and asked him where we could find a shop. He showed us the only shop (magazine, as they called it) in the area. We walked our bike into a house and the "shop keeper" showed up with all her goods: a plastic bag full of biscuits, chips, etc., and three bottles of scented water, none of which we were interested in. I asked her if she had bread, vegetables, eggs, rice, spaghetti, milk, etc. we walked out with a kilo of rice, three onions, and a kilo of carrot.

According to the shop keeper, there was a spring on top of the mountain where we could spend the night. It was very difficult to reach the spring.  Finally at 7 pm we reached the spring when we did not have energy to even go 50 meters further.

We pitched up our tent, washed ourselves with two litters of water, and made dinner: rice, boiled carrot, onion, and the special source of energy by Kaveh. The sky was clear when we went to sleep, but ...

In the middle of night at about 2:30, I woke up to the worst thunderstorm only second to what I had seen in Italy. It was coming down like you wouldn't believe. We were rather close to a creak, so I was afraid the flood would get us.  I could hear the water in the creak getting louder and louder. I got up, put on my feather jacket and rain gear, got my money and passport--ready to scape. I took a look outside the tent. A lot of water was running around and under the tent. After two hours of non-stop storm, it quieted down and I could relax.

















He Ran to Bring us Tea and Fresh Bread


Second Round of Tea with Fresh Bread























Cycling through Clouds in Central Asia: An Easy Ride; Today:119 km; Total: 204 km

May 9, 2014
                                  
I woke up at six to a somewhat foggy morning. I went to the edge of the hill and enjoyed the
picturesque scenery. Then I went back to sleep!
We left the camping spot at 9:30. At about noon, an old linesman waved us to stop and invited us for some tea. He was 65; to impress us, he did 10 push-ups on his three fingers! With tea, he offered us what he had--bread. There were some other guys too. They all were very funny.

The scenery got more and more beautiful. It rained a little bit. At about 5, we kept an eye open for a possible camping spot. After an hour of looking, frustratedly, we rode our bikes into a village and looked for a place. We finally found one. It was very hot then, and we both were sweating terribly. It was too bad that there was no water near our spot. We needed a wash very badly. When we were cooking, a guy showed up and said that he was the owner of the place. It didn't take us long to make friends with him and ask for some water to wash ourselves. After taking a shower with two litters of water, we had our super dinner (rice, potato, carrot, onion, tuna, and some kind of fortified fat that Kaveh had prepared for my trip).









The Police Officers Who Let us Camp behind their Starion
The View from our Camping Spot
This Little Guy Wants to Play
  
The View in the Morning

Friday, 29 August 2014

Cycling through Clouds in Central Asia: Camping in the Clouds; today 85 km



Cycling through Clouds in Central Asia: Camping in the Clouds; today 85 km

May 8, 2014

And finally, let the pedaling begin. We woke up at 5 in the morning and left the hostel at 6. Our bicycles were terribly loaded. In the city, there still was huge presence of the police. Every five meters, there was a cop standing guard. The Turkmenistan president has been visiting Dushanbe.

Very soon we started going up the mountains. We wanted to take it easy for the first day, but still with the load we both were carrying, even taking it easy was difficult. We passed through two tunnels and a beautiful lake where we stopped at a police station to see if we could get some water. It was 4 o'clock so we decided to camp behind the police station overlooking the lake.

After washing ourselves in the bathroom of the station, we made dinner with wild mushroom we bought from some locals and let our withered bodies rest.


The Start

Some Cheerful Kids
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