Showing posts with label Kyrgyzstan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kyrgyzstan. Show all posts

1.9.07

Lenin everywhere


Places of Worship in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan

Karakol Russian Orthodox Church


Karakol Chinese Mosque


Alichur Mosque and Murgab Mosque


Blogged with Flock

Osh to Bishkek

When we finished the Pamir we still had to cycle the 762km between Osh and Bishkek. It took us just over 5 days and we really did some cycling. Several days we did between 130km and 150km and on the last we managed 165km. It was just getting easier and easier even though we were still climbing huge amounts. The worst day of the cycle was 69km continually uphill, with not even one small bit of downhill, climbing 2200m. This took us from Toktokul up to the first of the big passes before Bishkek. We even had to cycle 3km through the tunnel that shortens the final pass before Bishkek. The air was not brilliant and we were lucky to be cycling slightly down hill through it. After the tunnel we had an amazing drop of 2500m and some of the fastest roads that we cycled on all journey.




Full Screen Slideshow Here

26.8.07

Ala Archa Trek

As acclimitisation for the main trek, we all had to spend time in the Ala Archa mountains - 30km from Bishkek. We trekked up to 3500m and made a base camp in the flat bits next to a glacier and it's morraine. From here we spent a few days going on walks and made an attempt to climb Uchitel peak but there was too much snow on the final summit ridge - we had to turn back from 4300m which was a bit demoralising - only 200m from the top.

Our time at the orphanage

The students spent 5 days working with Save the Children on some projects in a village about 100km outside Bishkek. We stayed in the school building because most of the 'orphans' had gone home. In the old Soviet Union it was normal for families to leave their children in orphanages when they went to work away. Save the Children spend all their time trying to convince communities that this isn't a good idea and trying to help the orphanages that still exist.

We helped renovate a dining area and kitchen, we cleared a park, painted trees, and some of the students went into Bishkek and bought loads of books and sports equipment for the orphanage.

On the last day they insisted on taking us up into the mountains for a glorious picnic.

Pamir Slideshow with Sound (not yet)

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25.8.07

Climbing Mount Uchitel


We tried to climb Mt Uchitel but there was too much snow on the ridge so we had to stop at about 4300m. I walked down with Stephie and Keith. Here's a little bit of video of me trying to get on the cool pinnacle in the picture above:

I am definitely not shouting "I'm scared"!

Mare's Milk

In Kyrgyzstan and lots of Central Asia everybody drinks mare's milk which has been slightly fermented to stop it going off.

Up in the mountains of the Tien Shan range in Eastern Kyrgyzstan we trekked and managed to get some straight from a yurt. It was just like slightly fizzy yoghurty milk. Quite nice really. The guy in the picture is Adam from World Challenge.



In Bishkek they have stalls everywhere selling a commercial version:

Some of our students videoed themselves trying it out:


Mare's milk - from New Scientist (June 16th 2007)
How would you like a delicious horse sandwich? The French have their specialist butchers called boucheries chevalines and the Italians their salame di cavallo sausages, but for some reason horse meat is taboo in the English-speaking world. The same goes for horse milk - yet across much of the world, mare's milk is regarded with no more suspicion that goat's or sheep's. Some societies even consider it a luxury item.

Mare's milk is not a new fad, but it is coming back into fashion. In the early 20th century it was so popular in Germany that it was delivered door to door. More recently it has enjoyed a revival in continental Europe, with equine dairy farms springing up in Belgium, France, the Netherlands and Norway. In central Asia, mare's milk is a staple food, though they prefer it with a kick. In Mongolia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan the tradition is to ferment it in a horse-hide sack for a few days until it turns into a frothy, acrid and mildly alcoholic beverage called kumis, or airag in Mongolia.

Where can you go for a refreshing cup of mare's milk? Most of it is sold as a freeze-dried powder, though there are also places where you can get it fresh. The food hall of the famous Le Bon Marché department store in Paris sells bottles of organic lait de jument, produced from thoroughbred mares on an organic farm in Burgundy.

It doesn't come cheap: a quarter of a litre will set you back ¬12. But according to some connoisseurs, it's worth it. Mare's milk is lighter and sweeter than cow's milk, with notes of watermelon and wild grass, and a nutty undertone.

Novelty aside, there may be good reason to pour some mare's milk on your breakfast cereal. Long thought to have curative properties, mare's milk has been touted as a balm for digestive problems, elixir for the liver and tonic for general malaise. It may be good for the skin too. Legend has it that Cleopatra bathed in ass's milk to soften and whiten her skin; scientists have recently discovered that ass's milk is indistinguishable from mare's.

Whether there is any truth to these claims remains to be seen, but there is one group of people for whom mare's milk has proven benefits. Infants with severe food allergies will often tolerate mare's milk when all other milk makes them sick. Recent research suggests that this is because mare's milk is closer in composition to human milk than that of any other mammal.

So how on Earth do you milk a horse? It takes considerable skill. Unlike a cow, a mare will not lactate unless her foal is present - and there is the ever-present danger of getting a flying hoof in the face.

23.8.07

Old Men with cool hats

The Pamir Highway


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Pamir Highway (Russian: "Pamirsky Trakt", Памирский тракт) is a road traversing the Pamir Mountains in Central Asia. Sources disagree on the termini of the highway, with Mazari Sharif, Afghanistan; Dushanbe, Tajikistan; and Khorog, Tajikistan all being offered as the beginning of the highway; however all sources agree that the Pamir Highway ends in Osh, Kyrgyzstan. The Pamir Highway is designated as route M-41 over much of its length in Tajikistan, and is known as the second-highest altitude international highway in the world (4,655 m). It has been given the European route number E 008 between Dushanbe and Murgab, but not between Murgab and Osh, because of the unreliability of the highest part. Tajikistan etc have got E-roads (around 2001) since they have become members of the UNECE.

Despite being called a highway, the road is only sparsely maintained, sometimes paved but often a dirt road, and heavily damaged in places by erosion, earthquakes, landslides, and avalanches. However, it is the only continuous route through the difficult terrain, serving as the main supply route to Tajikistan's Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Region. The route of the Pamir Highway has been in use for millennia, as there are a limited number of viable routes through the high Pamir Mountains; the road formed one link of the ancient Silk Road trade route. The quality requirements for an E-road is among others, paved, at least 8 m wide, at most 8 % grade, but they do not seem so stringent.
The road begins just east of Mazari Sharif in northern Afghanistan, passing northward into Uzbekistan before turning east and crossing another border into Tajikistan. It then follows a general eastward route through Dushanbe, the capital of Tajikistan, to Khorog, crossing the Kafirnigan, Vakhsh, and Bartang Rivers. From there it continues east for a distance of 311 kilometers (193 miles) to Murghab, there crossing the Murghab River before turning northward. The Pamir Highway passes through the altitude 4,655 meter (15,270 ft) Ak-Baital pass and past lake Kara-Kul before crossing into Kyrgyzstan and on to Osh. The Murghab-Osh leg is 417 kilometers (259 miles) in length. The stretch of road between Khorog and Osh attracts some small amount of tourism due to its rugged, unspoilt natural beauty and sparse but friendly native population.


20.8.07

We've been cycling the Pamir Highway

IMG_3874

We've spent the last 5 weeks cycling around Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan in Central Asia. They're amazing countries - sort of a cross between Mongolia/Nepal and Afghanistan. Yurts everywhere in Kyrgyzstan and not much at all in Tajikistan.

Here's a slideshow of the whole route from Osh to Khorog (and back)
If you pause the slideshow and press F11 for Full Screen and click on the (i) in the middle of any photo there is a full description of what it shows.




We'd read about some roads that are worth cycling and the Pamir stood out - there's also the Karakoram highway and the Friendship Highway in Tibet but this looked really exciting - 750km long, camp where you want, nobody lives there and mostly above 4000m!

The road joins Osh in Kyrgyzstan with Khorog in Tajikistan.