Saturday, August 12, 2006

Sonkol

We had heard that the lake at Son Kol was one of the most remarkable sites to be beheld in Kyrgyzstan so from Karakol we headed to the town of Kochkor to get ourselves the 100 km from there to the lake. The easiest way to do this is to hire a cab from almost anywhere in Kochkor which charges 9 som per km but wants you to pay for the round trip in case of no fare from the lake back to Kochkor, which comes out to around $50 US.

We opted to travel in the old way, except that CBT (Community-Based Tourism) now exists to help tourists arrange guides and horses for the 2-day trek in over the mountains from Kizart. We visited CBT, paid our money, and made the arrangements.

At 8 a.m. our guide Marat showed up right on time at Mira's in his old Russian car, from 1983 (what are they called??). We had agreed on a 4 day trek ($400) which involved two days on horses, a day for the guide to return the horses, and a day for us to get back from Son Kol, which would be our destination on the horses. Kol is Lake in Kyrgyz, so this was Son Lake, and it was supposed to be a prime pristine spot in the country, at 3000 meters altitude, and surrounded by mountains and pastures, called jailoos, where the kyrgystan people migrated with their livestock and yurts each summer for the grazing there. And to take in a few tourists and tourist dollars while they had the chance during the brief warm summer spells before their country turned bitter cold and isolated for the winter.

By pre-arrangement Marat took us by the animal bazaar on the way out of town. This event took place each Wed and Sat, and on the wed we were there, and that early in the morning, people seemed to be just setting up and there weren't that many animals there, nothing like Karakol a couple of Sundays previous.

We then hopped back in the car and drove a couple of hours to the little town of Kizart south west of Kochkor. The trip went over hills again reminiscent of Morocco perhaps. The people had the habit of creating elaborate cemetaries outside their towns so these were the salient features on the high ground outside the oases, mostly brown brick tombs, with some silver plated domes. At the high point in the trip (high as in altitude, a pass) there was an interesting monument on a hill with a collection of filthy, soviet, kyrgyz railroad-car houses where people were running storefront businesses in apparent squalor, kids running about with little to stimulate them, an old broken down heavy earth moving machine just across the road, in front of a toilet structure built around holes containing decades old excrement. Lovely spot.

Kizart was more pleasant. We reached it a couple of km down a left turn off the highway and drove down its poplar lined dirt roads to a house like any other except it was marked "Shepard's Life" which was one of the companies collaborating on horse treks. We got there at 10:30 and found kids rolling a shydark (sp.) around. This was a pile of sheeps wool being pressed into a felt rug. It was rolled in canvas and the mom was pouring hot water on it while the kids kicked it back and forth in such as way as to compress the wool inside. The house served as a SL hostel, and we were invited inside to sit in the cool rooms for an hour, and then another hour. Meanwhile lunch was being prepared, and horses were being rounded up for us.

Lunch when it finally arrived was an elaborate affair with numerous jams in wine goblets served at a table in an attractive dining room. We had hearty noodle soup with goat meat (what else? but filling) and plenty of Kyrgyz home made bread to dip into the jams, and of course someone pouring us tea, one after another. After lunch the horses were about ready and waiting in front. Marat had told us at Mira's to bring our sleeping mats but when loading our things he decided we wouldn't need them and we stored them in the boot of his car rather than take them on the horses. Apart from those, our three back packs were tied saddlebag style and draped over Marat's horse. The other three were saddled and we were mounted and told how to speak horse language. It's a binary language. Kyrgyz horses understand Chuuu when you want them to go, and Drrrrrr to stop them. We tried out these words in the street outside SL and were happy to see that the horses responded on command.

Not to draw this out in too great detail, the first two days of our trek were superb!! We traveled at a walk most of the time at first. It was only the second day that we got our horses to trot and canter, the first was a learning curve. We started out through the town and soon got onto a road leading past the fields of the community, past the community cemetary with its jumble of tombs, along a river, workers in the fields stacking hay, animals grazing on the summer turf, chuuu to keep the horses moving, making sure they knew we had whips, which we didn't need to use all that much. The horses were pretty obedient. We tried to ignore the flies swarming around their heads and ours.

The trek really got good when Marat took us off road just before a river crossing and led us uphill around a small collection of yurts. I recall smoke puffing from a samovar outside one of them, kids in the 'yard' and the mother preparing food. The trail led ever upward, up the slope of a mountain, with views of the river we'd just left behind unwinding below us in the low part of the gorge we'd just traveled up. The footing was dodgy, my horse tripped twice, forcing me to dismount the second time in case he rolled on me. We continued through the wild grass growing on the slopes of the mountain, near the edges looking down on the whitewater river farther and farther down in the steep gorge below. The scenery was great, the trail almost non-existent, and the smell of horse sweat mingled with the fresh air as we approached the top of the pass. At the top we stopped and took a break, walking out on a balcony rock that gave great views out the way we had come, and down on the river below, a direct drop of some hundred meters, dangerous to go near the edge of that one.

Coming down the other side was just as interesting, but steeper. This time the view was before us. The horses picked their way down 35 degree slopes, slowly and carefully. Eventually we got off the mountain and into a valley up which we traveled as the sun sank lower in the sky. We headed over the grass toward the mountains we would have to cross next day. This area was called Kilemche and there was a yurt there up one of the valleys, our destination.

Not totally remote, there was one of those old russian junk cars parked outside the collection of yurts. When we arrived after about 6 hours in the saddle we were ushered to the guest yurt, but more interesting things were happening outside. The family had piled in their car, filling the back seat with kids and ladyfolk, while one man retrieved a goat tied on the ground and stuffed it onto the front floorboard, passenger side, and then got in after it and slammed the door. The driver started up and the car headed down the hill in a cloud of dust and stopped a half a km away. The driver got out, put the hood up, and we watched him pour water into the innards before he could continue on his way.

Meanwhile back at the yurts, a herd of sheep was being rounded up and headed along the mountainside to a nearby holding pen. Horses galloped freely on other hillsides and the sound of their hooves thundered when they moved. Cows grazed by the river. The sun turned deep orange in a V in the mountains and the clouds turned flourescent red. The moon rose white and full. A welcome chill replaced the heat of day.

The yurt was decorated inside with carpets in naive-art patterns. We studied its interior in the waning light. It was open at the wooden wheel in the roof but a flap of felt was drawn over this to keep the heat in. Food was brought, noodle soup along with the usual bread and jam and endless bowls of tea, and later the bedding was laid out. Bobbi and I were given a double duvet at one end of a line of beds, Dusty's next to ours, then our guide Marat, and two more for a French tourist hiking with his guide. The blankets were warm and the pillows full and fluffy. We slept cozy and when I got up in the night I was surprised at how quiet all the animals were, even the dogs and hundred sheep crowded in their pen.

In the morning, the little girl was out doing chores. She found a baby sheep and culled it from the herd. Next we saw she was riding her horse with this little lamb in her lap. Interesting life for her.

We were served ... can you guess? Let's see, there was bread, jam, cream made from cow's milk, churned butter, tea poured by the hostess of the yurt. There is usually a hot dish as well, porridge I believe. After breakfast the horses were readied. We resumed our ride.

The riding was not as dramatic as the day before. Still it was slow going up the mountain pass, the horses struggling over the rocky path near the top. We stopped there in a meadow with our first views of the lake Son Kol. It was surrounded by low hills and we were soon heading down them. My horse sensed his destination on this leg and wanted to trot in the lead. But it was a long way down and a bumpy ride for me until with better footing near the bottom, Dusty joined me and we got our horses to canter, a smoother ride. As we neared the lake we crossed streams snaking their way to the larger body of water, and the horses stopped often to drink and chew grass. Eventually at around 2 we reached the yurts near the shore where we would take our lunch.

Food was getting predictable. Bread was laid out for us, with jam and cow's butter, tea was poured incessantly, and noodles arrived with bits of mountain goat inside. I soon had a pile of goat gristle beside my bowl.

These yurts by the lake seemed to serve tourists. There was a Novinomad camp nearby, several yurts at $25 a night, full board. Horesmen galloped by occasionally very much at home in the saddle. We sat outside in the shade of the hut watching the goats and cows grazing as always till Marat summoned us for our afternoon ride. But there were no more offroad adventures. We essentually headed over the grass to a dirt track running alongside the lake. The way was clear and we worked on getting the most from our horses, galloping along the lakeside when possible. We had a couple of hours of that, heading for a rusty dislocated railroad car in the distance, just beyond an abandoned derelict building on the lakeshore. As the car came into view we saw a few dozen yurts beyond them. As we drew nearer we say that some had CBT signs on them, the company where we had arranged our Karakol and Son Kol trekking.

We cantered up to the first one and saw that it had, a bit unpleasantly, a solar panel leaning against a cassette player sitting in the sun so as to churn out sounds from a stack of cassette tapes during the daylight hours. This was the yurt that Marat chose for us, so we dismounted and went inside for tea and a bread and jam and a rest from our exertions. It was interesting to observe life there but in effect our trek had come to an end. There was little for us to do here but settle into routine. Later in the day we took the horses for a spin, but the following day we were to remain there while Marat returned the horses the way we had just come. To do that he said, he must get up at first light, 4:30 next morning, and lead the horses 10 hours back to Kizart. He would then get his car and drive the four hours from there to the Naryn road and then in the other side and up the mountain to where we were.

Where we were was a strange mix of yurts with kindly rustic Kyrgyz people maintaining their herds and catering to the tourists who came by horse, on foot, or by car on various tours arranged for them in Kochkor. They migrated there by the lake in the summer months and their animals were spread out in the pastures between the lake and the mountains like animals in a game reserve in Africa. Marat had friends here, it was clear. They were searing goat parts with, of all things, an acetylene torch, and Marat invited us to taste one of the bits. Dusty ate his but I only bit into mine, and it left a taste in my mouth that tea could not eradicate. This might be partly why Bobbi and I began to wonder if there might be an off-licence yurt somewhere. Marat suggested we check the railroad car. Indeed, the car itself was a mess of untidy junk but a woman lived there who profited on bringing $1 bottles of Vodka in from Kochkor and selling them at 50% markup, and she produced one for us which we put in our day packs to enjoy later when the moon came up. But wandering back by the yurt I saw that Marat was engaged in a game with one of the residents there. There was money next to the game board and a half empty bottle of vodka with two glasses. I think I had gone over there to ask if it was alright if we took the horses off for a joy ride, and he said sure, would we mind if he didn't come ...

When we got back it was dinner time, the usual more or less, toast, jam, a noodle soup, and tea which was left for us and into which we splashed a bit of vodka. The vodka didn't seem to affect us all that much, but aware of its bite we stopped drinking it at half a bottle.

There was a place set for Marat, but he didn't come for dinner, and later when the beds were laid out for us, his was empty for some time. About the time we were getting ready to get in ours, to combat the cold at that altitude mainly, Marat did pop by to say that he would be coming to bed soon and we could leave the kerosine lamp burning for him and he would extinguish it. He somewhat absentmindedly had brought his cigarette into the yurt with him.

To make a long story short, we went to sleep with the lamp on but were awakened frequently by the sound of voices from a nearby yurt. They were the voices of men around the vodka bottle, and Marat's bed was still empty. He finally came in at 2:45 in the morning. I asked him if he was still getting up to take the horses back to Kizart. As he flopped into bed he answered: "In the morning, I look for horse."

I went back to sleep with some concern for the rest of the trek plan. Marat's coming to bed so late was not a sign of reliability, and it seemed doubtful that he could take the horses back with a late start next day and return that evening with the car, which meant that he would appear perhaps next morning at some point the day after, which meant we'd be delayed driving with him back to Kochkor, which meant we'd arrive late in Bishkek, and the hostels there tended to fill early.

I awoke at 7 and was relieved as well to see that Marat's bed was empty. Later Dusty told me he had left just 15 min before then but at least he was on duty. This relaxed me and since there was nothing for me to do that day I went back to bed and slept another couple of hours. I finally awoke for good around 9:30 and when I lifted the flap on the yurt and stepped outside I was surprised to find our horses still there. Marat was sitting with his friends enjoying his tea.

I meant to make the long story short. Essentially he said he could cover the distance back to Kizart in less than ten hours by galloping the whole way. He said he would be back by dinner time. I pointed out that dinner would be in 11 hours, and it was hard to see how he could collapse a ten hour horse trek and a 4 hour drive in that time. He said if he was not able to come by dinner time he would come first thing in the morning. I imagined him reaching Kizart and then falling in with his friends there and no telling when he'd wake up in the morning. He said in any event he could telephone the CBT coordinator in the morning and they could send a cab for us. I pointed out that CBT did not open till 9 and the cab wouldn't reach Son Kol till noon in that case. Also I found out later that there were no phones in Kizart and the first place he would have been able to contact anyone would be his home between there and Kochkor. I asked him what we should do while waiting for him and he suggested swim in the lake and pointed to the mountain and said there was a nice waterfall in there somewhere. I thought, hmmm, we'll just strike out at random shall we?

In any event, he galloped off at ten and Bobbi and Dusty and I had breakfast, porridge, bread, jam, cream, tea and more tea. At around 11 we got to wondering if any of the cars in the area scattered amongst the yurts might belong to taxi drivers. Keep in mind that we had been 6 days in the mountains, exerting ourselves and living in some discomfort three in a small tent. We'd then had a day in tranport getting to Kochkor, one day of rest in Kochkor but not with all creature comforts, and then two nights in yurts after two days on horseback. Other tourists were leaving in the cars they'd hired to bring them there, tiring perhaps of the food, glad they'd seen the lake, but what next?

It was an interesting area, interesting to be amongst the gentle people there, but we were tired and not looking forward to spending 24 hours there with not much communication between us and our hosts, since it was almost certain that Marat would not be back that night, and no telling when the next day. So we thought we'd go for a walk and just ask around if any of the cars there might be heading back to Kochkor, 100 km away.

We were lucky. Some drivers told us they were there with tourists and couldn't leave, but we found a guide for some French tourists and in French found that the driver they had brought would be able to take us into town and return for his charges afterwards. But we would have to leave right away, and we would have to pay the round trip fare for the car to return to Son Kol. The price would be $50.

In our receipt for the trek we had booked, and which we were about to abandon, there was an item for tranport from the lake, and it was $50 which we had already paid. So we agreed to the driver's price and got him to take us down the mountain 50 km to the road to Naryn, and then the rest of the 40 km into Kochkor, all the way to the CBT office where without mentioning the vodka we explained that we had reached a mathematical impasse on the timing of our trek. The coordinator there agreed that 10 was a very late start and understood our point. She arranged with our driver that he should be paid from the funds we had left there up front, and she would call Marat's home and leave a message with his wife that he didn't need to go back there and collect us. We forfeited only our next night's yurtstay and the meals we were happy to not have to eat any longer.

And as we were packing to catch a ride into Bishkek, we realized we had forfeited also our three sleeping mats. We had left them in Marat's car, remember? Oh well, easily replacable in Abu Dhabi.

ok, the rest of our trip was relaxing in Bishkek, a nice laid back town. We'll try to put some further impressions once we've had a chance to upload our pictures here.


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Tuesday, August 8, 2006

Kochkor

August 8, 2006 - Internet is very slow in Koshkor. We came here after trekking 6 days from Karokol. I broke my little finger coming down steep too fast from Ala Kol pass 3900 meters and that plus a space bar on this computer that needs 2 or more hits to work causes me to not be able to write very creatively. While I write this tediously I await Yahoo mail to open.


Kochkor is an interesting little town with friendly people, and everything happens slowly. It has an interesting market, everything taking place at one junction. Old Russian cars are being worked on while passengers wait inside. The taxi stand appears to be operated from a junkyard. The taxi we took to get here from Balykchy had to pull off the road due to compression problems. The driver had to pull over in the remote rode, scenery reminiscent of mountainous Oman, and put water in his car, then push start to get it going again. Fortunately he knew what he was doing and we arrived after nothing much more disconcerting than his trying to race other drivers in similar vehicles, humorous but also life threatening. When we arrived we found a quaint rural town where people in conical hats trade animals and watermellons and we stayed in a nice homestay run by Mira, with a classic Soviet interior and outhouse toilet, but with a nice spa-hot common shower room though.

The cabs here are box-shaped vintage soviet cars 20 to 30 years old. We got one from the town of Balykchy on lake Issuk Kul to Kochkor. Ainura had helped us board the Bishkek bus in Karakol and pay the fare only up to Balykchy and when we descended there, we were in one of those third world contexts where signs were in cryllic, men wore conical hats, and people were moving on the street in seemingly random fashion. But our bus driver teamed us with someone else who was supposed to be going to Kochkor and this man (and his young son) pointed us to one of those ancient cabs and put our bags aboard in the boot and we all squeezed in.

We had got him to write down the price first and showed that to the driver, so we knew what to pay, and the driver set out .. in the wrong direction! No problem, he had an errand to run. He had parked on a downhill slope and he started the car by releasing the brakes and engaging the clutch on a roll. A few minutes later he was driving through some trees. hmmm no problem, just heading for the gas station. There he wanted our fare in advance for gas. We refused, saying we'd pay in Kochkor. He pulled out a wad of cash, paid for the gas, and headed up the two lane tarmac into mountains resembling those in Morocco or Tunisia or Oman. Many km further on the engine started missing. It got worse and worse. Our driver pulled over in the middle of nowhere. Apparently it was a known problem. He had extra water under the hood and he poured some into the bowels of his automobile. His sidekick who'd been sleeping in the front seat was roused and the two of them pushed and the driver hopped in, the car sprang to life in a manner of speaking, and we proceeded toward Kochkor without incident EXCEPT when another similar box on wheels appeared alongside in a passing manoeuvre that turned out to be a race, which was fine as long as our car was on the right side, but the engine missed again, and ours fell behind, and our driver then felt compelled to pull alongside in an attempt to race up a hill and into the path of whatever was coming the other direction. I had to summon almost all my Russian and put a nyet to these antics.

In any event, we arrived in Kochkor safely, in the company of a veritable fleet of these antique autos either serving as taxis or movable stores with boots piled high with melons or other produce for sale by the roadside near the real bazaar situated at the town crossroads. We emerged into this and made our way back in a light drizzle to the CBT offices (community-based tourism) where we found our homestay with Mira and talked up the possibility of a horse trek starting the following day. At that point (after 6 days sleeping rough in tents south of Karakol and a 7th day on the road) we felt we needed a day to rest and look around Kochkor, which turned out to be an interesting, friendly, and pleasantly bucolic place.

But an odd place ... I remember the market setup - yurts where people could order tea or buy lunch. The "Big" supermarket in town consisted of a cavernous building filled with stalls selling outdated batteries, underwear, clothes and almost anything you don't need and can't use.

* Internet? Two computers at the post office running at squirrel on treadmill speed, about 5 min to open an email. I opened a few emails there and mainly wrote in Notepad in hopes of posting this to a wiki. It worked, eventually.

* How about changing money at the bank? Come back in 15 min, that lady who does that has gone to the doctor's. An hour later, on return, same thing, but she wouldn't come back to work 15 min before lunch would she? No, I guess not, so come back after lunch. After lunch we found her and changed money. We had to change there because the changers in the market were very critical of our dollars.

* The lawn mower goat ... other animals tied by the roadside effectively controlling the height of weeds there. Trash dumped on the dirt tracks to Mira's, the water pump at the corner, woodsmen blatantly taking trees from just beyond the borders of the park. No wonder there was a concrete wall around it.

* The stores with all manner of alcohols, variety of beers, wines with unpredictable surprises inside (sweet, fizzy, you name it) but not that much to eat. Some salami sausage and other more like baloney or mortadella, no decent cheese, mayonnaise and ketchup occasionally.

* Sleeping at Mira's, a pretty typical home in Kochkor we think, draped interior with carpeting on the walls, situated on the outskirts of town down a dirt road leading 50 meters past Mira's to fields with mountain backdrop, snow on the peaks. We had a nice room in the best part of the house. The family used a second annex not so attractive, seemed purposed for utilities and kitchen, would serve as servants' quarters in other societies. Dusty had his own room well appointed with carpeted walls, and we had a double bed, see-through lace curtains, shelves and closets and drawers stocked with personal items, an alarm that went off at 5:30 a.m. and we had a devil of a time explaining to them that we wanted it tracked down and switched off for the next morning (they thought we wanted a wakeup call at 5:30 NOOOOO ... finally we got through and they found it, apologized).

There was a shower room they fired up literally for us each evening (warm inside with a trickle of hot water, very rustic, walked past the goat pin and garden to get there). On the other side of the garden there was an outhouse toilet with a squat wooden floor kept scrupulously clean except when others had used it and missed and well stocked with toilet paper, but I have just listed only its positive attributes and I'll leave the negative ones to the imagination.

Breakfast was always bread and jam and tea kept out of reach of diners by seating them at the other end of the long table and served by Mira who kept checking back and asking if we wanted more, which was the Kyrgyz custom for dispensing tea. We took our dinners there, noodle soup with the ubiquitous bread and jam and tea dispensed again by a kindly, smiling Mira. One evening we picked up a watermelon in the souq for a dollar which she cut up for us. We brought our own wine and beer from the 'magazines'. The beer was interesting, varied, and worth experimenting with; the wine was not, fell far short of expectations and we stopped buying it.

After a day in Kochkor, taking pics at the market, Kyrgyz people churning outside yurts serving as restaurants and lots of stuff for sale on the sidewalks, having a beer with Philippe the Frenchman at http://www.la-balade.com, whose website has since gone defunct, we decided to push on to Sonkol, getting there after horse trekking through the mountains.

When we created the wiki, we never put the pics that we took around Kochkor on the wiki, except for the one at the top of this page. Obviously I had meant to. Now we'll have to find those pictures, but one of these days, hopefully ... 


Sunday, August 6, 2006

Karakol

This is from a message to one of my communities of practice at the time, Webheads, sent on Sunday Aug 6, 2006, from the pleasant town of Karakol, which served us as a base for a week-long trek in the area, and as a recuperation stop when the trek was done.




I've been trekking in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan for the last 6 days and have not been anywhere near a computer in that time.

At the moment I've just returned from this trek, checked into a hostel in Karakol, stopped off for a very cold beer, very cheap and very tasty after 6 days of only water, coffee and tea, and popped by this internet cafe in time to get onto webheads, at around 14:30 GMT. And I find that Tapped In will not connect here, so hmmmm too bad.

If anyone in Webheads is checking email and can say hi to other Webheads for me, great. Other than that, I seem to have broken the little finger on my left hand from a moment coming down the steep side of a pass from 3900 meters, and I'm happy to see I can still use it to type.




Here are some pictures from one of Karakol's much anticipated weekly events, 
the crowded livestock market








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Saturday, August 5, 2006

Altyn Arashan Trek


From Karakol we went trekking for 6 days  into the mountains from Jete Oguz to Altyn Arashan with the petite, but completely capable Ainura as our guide.


Her name means moonlight and she was a treat to be with for several days in the wilderness though we didn't always agree with the slow pace of the trek. We found Ainura working with one of the community-based trekking companies in Karakol. This means that you might pay a little more but local guides are employed and paid decent wages to carry quite a lot of stuff, which probably accounts for the pace, whereas we were always feeling energetic, but with relatively little to carry. Still we noticed that food preparation took 10 daylight hours a day while we trekked for only 4.

Sometimes the time spent in food preparation was worth it :-)
In this shot I have just broken my finger trying to come down the mountain too fast

After a few days we fell into the rhythm and while not stretched, we accomplished our objectives, two 3800 meter passes, camping by lake Ala Kol at the base of a glacier at 3500 meters, and generally an invigorating experience with the occasional panorama of 5000 meter peaks. We got very near 4000 meters ourselves on two occasions. Sleeping in a small tent, getting rained on, no joke in such mountains, but a great experience.



Although we weren't forced to walk for long periods each day the trek still posed challenges of Alpine hiking at 3000-4000 meter altitudes. There were dangerous streams to cross, with standing waves over washed-out bridges, and rainstorms including one day of rain when we happened to have camped at S. Camp with its bizarre wood carvings, a base for KG alpinists in summer and winter when they do ice climbing up the frozen waterfalls near there.


The camp had a hut where we stoked a fire and sat out the drizzle thru breakfast. We stayed put until it was time to have lunch, which lasted till 2 pm, and then we could wait no more but had to climb the mountain in the rain to Ala Kul lake, a welcome site in the miserable downpour.


But our porters had reached there first and erected our tent, so it was still a cushy life we led, rain on the tentflaps protecting us from all but a little mud, and it was cozy warm in tent when I returned there from a lull in the rain teeth chattering after dashing out to grab our ponchos before the next rain squall. At sundown, our view of the lake through the tent flaps revealed a sun patch on the glacier.


By morning the skies had cleared and we dried out in the morning sunshine and entertained ourselves watching marmots while awaiting our entourage to prepare our breakfast and move on up to Ala Kol Pass.


At the pass we met these Russian hikers, who took a group photo and sent it to us later. The one without a shirt had been romping in the snow like that, reveling in piling snow onto his bare chest. They all descended the mountain at a trot and were soon down the other side and were on their way. Ainura was very careful with our group, walking backwards and using her walking stick to point out to Bobbi where she should step. Over Ainura's objections, I declared I would follow the Russians the fast way down. Bobbi had two walking sticks and insisted I take one to help in the descent. About halfway down I indeed upended myself and the extra walking stick wrapped abruptly upwards around my left hand, cracking my little finger. There's a lesson in there somewhere.


Here we are descending further down from the high pass ...



and arriving at Altyn Arashan after 5 days hiking ...'




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Saturday, July 29, 2006

Jete Orguz

Jete Orguz was a town not far from Karakol where nature moves seamlessly from there up its mountain trail heads.



Jete Oguz is known for its rock formations, and bee keepers have set up below one of these because people stop there to take pictures. On the back side of this formation are the seven (jete) bulls (oguz) which give this town its name.



The community based trekkers took us out there a day before our hike to see a festival set on a glade in the fresh open air.







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Thursday, July 27, 2006

Ala Archa Hiking

On July 27 we went hiking in Ala Archa canyon. We had been planning to move off to Korokol at the east end of lake Issyk-kul but after talking with a travel agent at Novinomad the day before we decided to self-arrange a mini-trek in the Ala Archa gorge just south of Bishkek. The agent had wanted $30 to supply a car and little else in the way of support, so we figured we could arrange a car on our own in the morning.


The day dawned fine with clear skies so we packed light, I took a light flannel shirt and not even a poncho. We walked out to the main road, bought two bottles of mineral water, and flagged a cab. The car was a rattletrap, the driver was poor but friendly, spoke no English, but by using my notepad and jotting down numbers and times we reached an agreement. He asked $30 as well but easily came down to $20, and this included his waiting for us till we did our walk. We agreed to return to him at 4:00 p.m. and the deal done, we all piled in and drove alongside pastures and then into mountains very reminiscent of the pyranees in summer. From Bishkek at 900 meters we drove to the 'alpenlager' or accommodation area of the Alarcha Park at 2140 meters where the driver parked.


Russian trekkers were leaving the accommodation area loaded with gear but we went into the hostel and found a huge warm kitchen where we were greeted warmly but perfunctorily and shown where to sit for a meal. We ordered from the menu and were brought instant coffee (3 in 1 whether we ordered it black or with milk) and a couple of dishes with goat meat, kuurkuk or something like that (meat and fried veggies) and russian plov (rice with carrots and meat).

At the agents' the day before we had picked up a map of the gorge area and this helped us interpret the trail signs. It seemed we could head straight south up the Alarcha River or go east up a trail marked Ak-Sai which I could see from the map climbed and approached a glacier. That was appealing and shortly on our way, as we rose up the shoulder of the mountain we were mounting, we could see that two rivers converged from the east and south in a torrent of whitewater that laced the gorge floor in resounding rivulets, and the south trail would have taken us up that but lower down. The east trail climbed and turned up the gorge coming in from the east, and in the distance there we could see a waterfall which was a day-trip destination here.


We reached the falls in two hours but the trail to it climbed up the right hand side of a mountain toward the snowy peaks just distant and we passed the falls on this trail and grunted our way past the russian trekkers on their way to their base camp just over the cols we kept mounting. It was a steep climb, from 2800 at the height of the falls, to 3114 when we finally decided we had to turn back in order to meet our rendezvous with our driver. To continue to the next col would have taken half an hour, or an hour round trip, and as it was we barely returned to the car park by 4. On the way we made a side trip to the falls before making our way back over the two river crossings and descending back into the gorge we had earlier climbed out of.


It was quite a walk actually, a lovely day out but also a tantalizing taste of what we hoped was to come as we got more attuned to the mountains and how to navigate them. The atmosphere was sublime, alpine, smelling of pine below the treeline, spacious with unlimited skies in a world dominated by the sound of raging water fed by the glacier beyond the cols, guarded by the snowy peaks that beckon the adventurous to come ever closer.


And back in Bishkek, the dollar beers went down a bit too freely, and we sloshed off to bed without packing. Bobbi and I were awakened in the morning by the lissom Kyrgyz chambermaid opening our door, perhaps by mistake. She apologized, but it was a good thing, since we had to get up, pack quickly, and catch a bus 8 hours to Karakol, in time to find accommodation at the other end.

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Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Bishkek


July 24 - We caught a plane to Bishkek, Manas Airport, on an Altyn Air flight from Dubai's small Terminal 2, poor cousin to the much more pretentiously garrish Terminal 1. We had left Abu Dhabi for the Dubai airport in plenty of time. It reminded me of adventures in Oman where I would pack for trekking and walk out the front door, catch a ride with anyone leaving campus and get a lift to the taxi stand, take a shared taxi to the next town up the road, get another cab to the next one, keep going with people driving their 4x4's home from market into the wadis, and just carry on walking up the mountain, sleep wild at the top, and come down the other side, hike to a road, and start reversing the process till I returned home a day or two later.


Now we were three, Bobbi, Dusty, and I, riding down the elevator packed for hiking in mountains, flagging a cab to the bus station, and finding transport going to Dubai airport. We had left home hours before we had to be there, and as we neared the outskirts of Dubai, it seemed we had timed it with too much time to kill at Dubai airport. But as we approached the city center, we were reminded why we needed so much time - the traffic in Dubai is perpetually snarled. It takes an hour and a half to reach the first shopping malls from Abu Dhabi and an hour to get from there to the airport, a trip that used to take 20 min. So we arrived barely within the 2 hours required check-in time.

Dubai's Terminal 1 is state of the art, garrish, but terminal two was more truly third world. Smoking was allowed everywhere, we didn't recognize the names of the airlines departing from this terminal, and there was no P.A. system announcing flights, just airport staff running about asking passengers if they were going hither or yon? Eventually we heard callers shouting out "Biskek, Departing from Gate 2!" Ground staff had eschewed the technology and organization skills that would have printed a seat assignment on our boarding cards (no telling what other corners had been cut on this Altyn Air flight) so seating on the flight was "free" which meant you had to jostle your way on board and fight for a good seat, but Bobbi managed to board quickly and save seats for the three of us together. The four hour flight took from 11 to 3 a.m. our time, but we went forward two time zones and arrived at Manas Airport at 5 a.m. in Bishkek July 25th.

The airport at Bishkek was notably relaxed. There was one immigration staff writing out visas for the dozens of foreigners who had descended on Kyrgyzstan just then, and he was also keeper of the forms for applying for the visas so that each of these foreigners had to get his attention and interrupt him to get a form and then get back in the queue, or more correctly, realize that wait a minute, this is Kyrgyzstan, there is no queue.

After half an hour managing that formality, it was on to the queues for the passport stamp, another 20 min, and then entry into the too-narrow door granting access to the apparant chaos of the baggage claim area. The door was too narrow because of all the people leaving with bags being delayed by the single tag checker who was doing such a stoically good job that there was a glut of people trying to exit with their paraphanalia, while those just coming from immigration were trying to squeeze inside. But it was a controlled chaos, our bags were on the floor piled among the others, and we were soon in the part of the airport where the money changers operated from offices that doubled as bedrooms. They were friendly and accommodating, and the taxi touts hovering at our elbows quoted consistent prices (350 som, less than $10 for the trip into town) and offered up their mobiles to contact the hotels listed in our Lonely Planet. So as not to become beholden to one of these I insisted on making the call from a telephone office. No one so far spoke any English and we spoke no Russian, but people were friendly and responsive to hand signals. Unfortunately the people at the other end of the phone line could not see my hand signals, and it became apparant that calling budget hotels from the airport was an exercise in futility, so we finally made a deal with a cab driver and piled in for the trip into town.


The airport was in the countryside, 20 min from the town. Bishkek in the early morning presented itself as a flat town with clear skies and relatively cool temperatures compared to Houston and Abu Dhabi. Mountains with snow in the distance above the straight tree-lined streets revealed the reason for the mild weather. We had requested a hotel run by a business school, and we arrived there without passing any tall buildings or making a clear distinction between town and country, so apart from the map in our LPG there were no clues in the tree-lined streets of where the center was. The cab driver made a show of claiming the price quoted was per person, not for the entire cab, but we dismissed him (where had we heard that one before?) and it was the only time anyone tried to rip us off our entire time in the country. We paid him the agreed price, thanked him, walked off, and he neither persisted nor pursued.

The business college, which our Lonely Planet said might have rooms, was quiet at that hour in the morning and according to the lady on duty, was completely full with sleeping guests, and fully booked well into August. We lingered on the couches to reconoiter our position, and then set off for the hotel around the corner, but it was full too, though we were told to come back around ten. We used the LPG map of town to wander the straight green streets, feeling like we were in a town without a center, like somewhere in Africa, to find two more hotels with no spaces before hitting on a homestay (through "an unmarked gate next to a kiosk opposite the German Embassy" = how would you find it without LPG). The proprietor showed us two rooms, spacious and comfy, his home after all, $10 a person, one communal toilet and shower for all. Dusty's room was actually the family library, and Vance and Bobbi had a big room with large windows opening out to trees full of squirrels and birds. When at night, Bobbi could not sleep, she sat at the window, listening to the peaceful sounds of birds, insects, dogs, and night noises. A good way to spend a sleepless night - jet lag probably.


We walked about town to find coffee and then sample some one-dollar beers and a greasy laghman soup before deciding to go back and crash for the afternoon and sleep off the plane ride. Then we came out to an internet cafe and started this wiki.

Eating here has been interesting - most menus are in Russian and when we do find a place with an English menu we find that maybe they don't have food anyway! Consequently, we had one awful meal of greasy noodle soup and a more palatable lunch of Russian soup, baked potato, and sandwich. At least ordering beer is straight foward, more or less, and that makes the lack of food more tolerable.

July 26 - We thought we would get a move on today and visit some sights, but we had gotten up early, showered, then went back to our room, cuddled more and slept until noon! Dusty woke us up - unheard of! - but we groggily got out of bed. Dusty had chores to do - shopping for a flashlight, writing and mailing a postcard, etc., and we wanted to visit travel agents, change money, etc. , so we spent most of the day doing business.

In the end, we decided ONE MORE DAY in Bishkek. We'll do a day hike tomorrow,and then leave for Karakol to do some more serious hiking and visit the Sunday market.

Vance's Impressions of Bishkek. We are all at the cybercafé here. Bobbi is updating the wiki. I'm working offline and will add this to what she is adding to what I wrote yesterday. A wiki is a good way to work on a family travel document. Later we can add photos here.

We arrived really tired yesterday, and we gave ourselves yesterday to relax and explore Bishkek. Today, our second day here, Bobbi and I slept till noon, which would have been 10 a.m. in Abu Dhabi and some time at night in Houston where we'd been the past three weeks.

We must have been tired. The homestay where we've based ourselves is friendly. Dusty has a room in the library (his room has a wall of books in cryllic mostly). Our bigger room with the double bed has a closet with someone else's clothes in it. It's like staying in someone's house as a guest. We leave a window open all the time to bring in fresh air. Still it's a little warm there, but the humidity is mountain low so we don't sweat. We need a sheet over us at night only to cover our ears from the occasional mosquito from the open window. In the dark a dog barks for hours at a time. In the morning there is pounding from a nearby construction project somewhere in this residential low-rise city. In the tree outside our window a squirrel jumps about unaware that we are on the other side of the glass. It's interesting to see squirrels, and to be able to sleep fitfully for hours despite these disturbances. There is something relaxing about the place.


So today we got started at noon to organize ourselves for moving on from Bishkek. This entails walking about incessantly up and down the grid of streets in the city. The town has such a pleasant atmosphere. The women are strikingly modern yet exotically ethnic. Bobbi can comment on the men. You can tell that everyone enjoys the summer respite. Snows come in October here, then the fog. Right now we can see the snowy mountains to the south, and going there is one of our options for tomorrow. We went from breakfast at Fatboy's where we came to appreciate the straightforward English items on the menu despite the insipid coffee, which we took outside under umbrellas. We went to the government dept store Zum to price local items (to get an idea of price in case we encounter them in traveling). People there were welcoming. Outside, people were drinking beer from soviet style vending machines (require an attendant) next to the shwarma and samosa stands. We warded off beggars and strolled the Chuy Prospect to get information on trekking and maps from small offices in nondescript buildings which we could only find with LPG, and armed with a program of sorts, went to drink beer by the water fountains at less than a dollar each.


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Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Vance, Bobbi, and Dusty in Kyrgyzstan, Summer 2006

I've lost control of one of my wikis. My wife Bobbi and son Dusty and I made a trip to Kyrgyzstan in the summer of 2006 (Glenn went there as well before we got there but by the time we arrived he had moved on in his travels to Moscow and St. Petersburg). We took pictures and I posted many to a wiki I kept to archive the trip. 

The wiki still exists at http://kyrgyz2006.pbworks.com/ - but maybe not for long. 

I can't find the email address I used to create the wiki, and PBWorks, often helpful, are not replying to my requests for assistance in recovering my access. You get what you pay for, so I deserve what I get I guess, but it's only a matter of time before PBWorks deletes this wiki, which is their policy for wikis left untouched for over a year.

So I downloaded the photos and grabbed the prose and reconstructed that wiki at this blog. I found when doing this that we hadn't completed uploading our photos. We need to see if we can find the originals, and if we do, and as we get time, well ... check back and see :-)




Here is a map of Kyrgyzstan. We spent parts of July and August in the northeast part of the country. We went hiking in the canyons near Bishkek and then traveled around Lake Issyk-Kol to Karakol, where there are mountains excellent for trekking. We spent six days hiking from Jete Oguz to Altyn Arashan and then returned to Balykchy at the west of the lake and went to Kochkor, where we arranged to ride horses to another lake, Son Kol. From there we returned to Bishkek to catch the plane to Dubai and catch public buses back to Abu Dhabi. 

You can find more pages about our journey below. 

Let's begin in Bishkek http://traveloldway.blogspot.com/2018/09/bishkek.html
AlaArchaHiking - http://traveloldway.blogspot.com/2006/07/ala-archa-hiking.html
Jete Oguz - http://traveloldway.blogspot.com/2006/07/jete-orguz.html
Altyn Arashan Trek - http://traveloldway.blogspot.com/2006/08/altyn-arashan-trek.html
Karakol - http://traveloldway.blogspot.com/2006/08/karakol.html
Kochkor - http://traveloldway.blogspot.com/2006/08/kochkor.html
Sonkol - http://traveloldway.blogspot.com/2006/08/sonkol.html