Tajikistan - The Pamir Plateau

July 11, 2007 11:20 by Jan

Leaving Khorog to continue the Pamir Highway, remote dirt track through the Himalayas. We climbed up to Jelandy where we got a room at a health spa, comfortable quarters in this harsh landscape. The Lonely Planet refers to this place as a sanatorium, because people come here to fix their ailments, no evidence of loonies, but then who are we to talk. Lucky to get beer from a group of German voluntary workers, who'd had their accountant ship it in from the capital. The effects of higher altitude now and I can feel the heart pumping hard when trying to sleep, we've gained 1500m today, sleeping high at 3800 metres. Bodies adjust to altitude given time. More...


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Tajikistan - The Pamir Highway

June 29, 2007 15:08 by Jan

Back into the mountains after our rest in Dushanbe, heading onto the Pamir Highway. orgasmic scenery. Celebrated my birthday with a bottle of Tajikistan cognac, could just cram into bags and great value at 4 pounds. We spied an ideal camping site on the other river bank, that rare occasion when there was a bridge across the huge river we've been following. The previous night we'd camped on the lawn of a tea-house, having fantastic home made beer, a barrel cooled by stream water and pulled by foot pump. Fantastic cool down swims the end of hard days ride, also washes the clothes. More...


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Tajikistan - Himilayas

June 21, 2007 10:19 by Jan

Clearing customs from Uzbekistan to Tajikistan was fast and simple, and we were soon off in search of local currency, food and drink. The first night we camped on the edge of a farmers field, it wasn't easy find a spot soft enough to drive tent pegs in, I actually half propped my tent up with rocks, and windy too (not baked beans), slept well! Then a couple of days, riding huge v-shaped gorges, a river for company, thrashing noisily as we followed it's course up hill. There we did an overnight stay on the floor of a mud hut for the princely sum of 3US dollars for the 2 of us. The noise and sight of the gushing river was staggering, had the owners left the valley maybe they'd find the silence strange. Fantastic spot. More...


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Bhutan

October 1, 1997 13:47 by jan

'Bhutan? Where's that?' This is the response you can expect if you say that you are going to Bhutan. Most people have never heard of it. Bhutan does not make the headlines - it rarely makes a small paragraph in a, Western newspaper once in every ten years.

Hidden in the eastern Himalayas between India and Tibet, as big as Switzerland, with a population of only 700 000, Bhutan exudes charm. The mountains are magnificent, the forests are dense, the people are delightful, the air is pure, the architecture imposing, the religion exciting, the art superb. There are no beggars, little violent crime, and a traveller's personal safety is guaranteed. For the cycle tourist Bhutan is truly Shangri-La.

Favourite Memory

Apart from fabulous scenery I will always remember being kidnapped by 5 children on a mountain walk. It came as a pleasent suprise to find this photo, as one of children, carrying my camera, took this shot without my knowledge, not bad for one so young, well done.

Our group of cyclists had taken the 'tour bus' into town and I decided to walk back to camp, twas a rest day, something to do. Five excited children burst out from nowhere; to join this 'exotic westerner' complete with big western noise. This doesn't happen to back in England, kids don't go up to strangers, in fact, I was initially frightened by the experience.

As we walked together, they demanded to hold hands and sing Bhutan songs, gosh it was so sweet, even for a tough dude like me, cough. No TV here, so I guess sing comes as a natural form of entertainment here. When they asked me to sing, all that came to mind was the theme to "Hong Kong Phooey", but they loved it anyway. We joined the others at the camp-site, then I had to walk 'em home to their relatives, the last was came from a monastery.

We could communicate a little, they were walking back from school; 90 minutes each way, tough kids!!! Keen to show their pencil cases and exercise books with notes from English lessons, they woz keen to go through da english lessons and pratise their prononsiation, and mi help wid it, na wat i mean in it.

Up, Up, Up

We worked out the total height gained over 19 days, coming in at a cool 16 miles! I was struggling towards the back end of this tour, most days were solid uphill as the down-hills are relatively quick, and there is no flat land in this country. All 16 of us were amazed when we saw a full sized football pitch, being the biggest area of flat land we'd seen in weeks since the airport runway. Was all worth the effort, fabulous scenery and a charmingly un-touched country.

A couple of the group with altitude meters said we'd done 16 miles of vertical height gain in 19 days of cycling. The longest downhill was a staggering 50 miles the road truly awesome clinging over big vertical drops. Would have liked to have been fitter, as I was struggling at the back end of the tour, as soon as I reached the group at some scenic spot, everyone's saddled up the mountain again ;)

More Background

Until the 1970s the country had only very limited contact with the West. Although tourists are now allowed into the country the policy is to restrict their numbers. The purposes are threefold. First, it preserves the natural environment and the lifestyle of the people without upsetting their socio-economic balance.

map_bhutan2Secondly, it recognises the lack of infrastructure and tourist facilities, the rugged character of the terrain and the problems of communication. Third, by charging all travellers a daily package fee for tourist services, Bhutan is able to earn the foreign currency it needs for vital expenditure in other areas of development.

The latter ensures that less than three thousand visitors are entertained each year. These package charges for every day spent in the country are very high and therefore a trip to Bhutan will always be expensive.


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