5.28.2008

THE CAUCASUS (7/05/2008 - 28/05/2008)

We docked to Baku at night and spent one hour at the
immigration. Around 2 A.M. we found a hotel in the city
centre. Everything is too expensive compared with Iran and
Turkmenistan. We spent some day in Baku before resuming
again. Azerbaijan was the end of the desert! After three
months we could see again trees, rivers and snow!

We spent most of the nights in our tent close to the kafe along
the way. The owners were so friendly and sometime we got
dinner for free!

Although the landscape was up and down and hard by
bicycle we enjoyed cycling there! We went through the
valleys riding alongside the snowed mountains. We got Sheki
and spent three nights in the Karavanserai Hotel, one of the
best reasons to visit the city.

On 17th May we crossed the border and went to Georgia.

Very important for all travelers: at the border hide your
Lonely Planet because in Azerbaijan is forbidden!

There isn't any money changer at the border but fortunately
they can be changed in Tblisi. (Lari into Manat or vice
versa)

On the way to Tblisi we stopped visiting Sighnaghi the most
attractive town in Kakheti. A little piece of Italy in
Georgia!

We got Tblisi and spent some days there. We stayed at Nasi's
Homestay where we met a few travelers. Two Dutch, an
American and two South Africans traveling by bicycle from
Cape Town.
Nasi (the owner) wasn't a bad person but she wanted money
for everything we needed!

We left the city and in a few hours we arrived at the border
with Armenia. We got the Visa on the spot and changed
little money to pay for it.

Amazing landscape with rivers, mountains and a lot of
shepherds riding horses. Their dogs weren't so friendly as
them! Usually they chased us and tried to bite our legs.
Fortunately when we stopped they went away!

We went through Alaverdi, Vanadzor, Dilijan, Lake Sevan
until Yerevan, the Capital city. Usually we spent our nights
in the homestays, the cheapest places where to sleep.

Yerevan is a modern and quiet city, nice for walking around.

Here we are! Tomorrow we are leaving toward Georgia. In a
few days we'll be to Batumi on the shore of the Black Sea.

Till now we rode 18835 km.

Have a nice trip!


Claudio and Patrizia

5.27.2008

TURKMENISTAN (28/04/2008 - 6/05/2008)

At the border we had to take a van for the firsts 20 km
as far as Ashgabat.
Between the border and Ashgabat it's "No man zone".

We had to stay in an expensive hotel in order to get the Visa
registration. It was interesting going around Ashgabat.
The city has been rebuilt and everywhere there is gold
statues and the President's picture.
We began our trip in Turkmenistan but not alone! Vladimir, an old Russian followed us with his car. He spoke only Russian!
With a tourist visa we couldn't go alone inside the country.

We spent all the nights in tent while Vladimir slept inside
his car. At the beginning the wind pushed us but from the
third day on it was strong against us!
Vladimir was a good person but sometime too much stubborn!
We know only 40 words in Russian but he insisted in complicated
conversations. Usually we said "da da" so he was happy but we
didn't understand anything!

On the 4th May we got Turkmenbashi where we slept with other 15 people in the waiting room of the port. There wasn't
any timetable and nobody knew when the boat would have started.
Inshallah...

The day after we crossed the border and got inside the boat.
We paid 100 US$ each! Of course, that was a tourist
price!!

We slept one night on the boat stuck at the quay.
Fortunately inside there was a restaurant and a small
kafe. On the 6th of May we left Turkmenistan sailing toward
Baku, Azerbaijan.

Claudio and Patrizia
TEHRAN - MASHHAD (13/04/2008 - 27/04/2008)

We started again toward east. In Tehran we contacted a
travel agency in Ashgabat in order to get the Turkmen Visa.
As the process took two weeks we decided to leave for Mashhad hoping to get the visa there. Along the way we met Yuka, a Japanese girl traveling alone by bicycle for eleven months. She is cycling toward Eastern Europe.

Most of the nights we slept in our tent below the flyovers. They
were perfect places because nobody could see us.
The landscape was everyday boring, desert ahead, behind and on both sides!
In Sabzevar we got hospitality from an Iranian family. We
had everything we couldn't expect. They gave us tea,
biscuits, lunch, dinner and a bed for the night! It was a
beautiful day with them.

When we got Mashhad we met again Mary (we stayed together at
her sister's house in Sabzevar) and her family. Sara (Mary's
daughter) speaks perfect English and she told us many
things about Iran. We spent five days with them and Mary was
a beautiful mom with us! Thanks a lot for your kindness!
We got the LOI for Turkmenistan! We went to the border
(Bajgiran) and got the Visa on the spot.

Goodbye Iran!

Claudio and Patrizia
IRAN (17/03/2008 - 12/04/2008)

We crossed the border early but we couldn't pedal! Unsafe
area from the border to Kerman. Some years ago two
travelers were kidnapped in that area.
We had no choice. The police put us in a Taxi and we went straight to Zaedan where we caught a bus to Kerman.

Riding again our bicycles we got Yazd. We met many
travelers here. The city was quiet and lovely for a walking.
The roads in Iran were perfect and mostly flat. 95 km before
Esfahan we spent a night in Toudeshk. We got hospitality in
Jalalil Mohammad's home having a delicious dinner, night and
breakfast. He's very friendly and welcomes all travelers who
come on that way.
In Esfahan we got the visa extension in just one hour.
We stayed and went around the city for some days.
The hospitality in Iran is very warm, usually they have been
very friendly giving fruit to us on the way.
On the way to Tehran we slept in our tent hidden during the night by bushes. The city doesn't seem Iran, chaotic and expensive.

In the Capital city we got the Azeri visa in 24 hours. We
tried to get the Syrian visa but it was impossible. Probably will be
better to apply for it at the border.

Claudio and Patrizia
PAKISTAN (22/02/2008 - 16/03/2008)

The first day we stopped in Lahore and slept at the Regale
Internet Inn. We met there some travelers.
We went back to the border by taxi to see the closing
ceremony. Unbelievable! Football stands, people waving flags, football chorus and officials wearing old traditional clothes. A big
atmosphere of party and patriotism! They do the same every
day!

In Punjab the roads were perfect. We met friendly people and
along the way we could sleep in the restaurants. In Mian
Channun (before Multan) we slept in a hotel for free! The
owner was very glad to invite us to sleep at his place offering us a kind of all you can eat! He likes cyclists a lot!

After Multan the landscape changed. No more trees on the way,
only sand and stones. The beginning of the desert!
We left Punjanb and entered Balochistan.
The towns here are more chaotic and it was difficult to see women
on the streets. Toward Ziarat the road went up reaching 3000
meters over the sea level. It was cold and there was snow
beside the road. On the way to Quetta the police escorted us. They said that it was for our safety.
In Quetta we saw some women on the streets but all wearing
the burka.

The desert between Quetta and Taftan was a hard part, 600
kms in 5 days. Patrizia was sick and tired so we hitchhiked, a
big truck stopped and we went on with it for 100 kms.
The road was in bad conditions but fortunately mostly flat.
Taftan was an unwelcoming city at the end of the world!

Claudio and Patrizia
INDIA AGAIN (8/01/2008 - 21/02/2008)

Nepal was very quiet compared to India!

After one week we got Agra. We stopped here some days
visiting the city and the magnificent Taj Mahal (from
outside because it was too expensive for budget
travelers like us!) the symbol of love.

We got Delhi after a few days. The capital is different
from the other chaotic and noisy towns of India.
Patrizia got a new passport (she finished the pages) and after that
we got the Pakistani Visa in a couple of days. For the
Iranian Visa we had to wait two weeks. We needed a LOI in order to get a tourist Visa valid up to one month.
Waiting the Visa we took a train to Pushkar and met our
Italian friends there. They are traveling around India
by their Bullet Enfield bought in Punjab.
Have a good trip dear friends!

We got the last Visa and started cycling again toward West.
We stopped in Armistar visiting the Golden Temple. Many Sikh
go there to purify themselves having a bath in the "nectar
pool".

We changed our clothes, took off our shorts and worn a pair
of pants. Patrizia wore a scarf over her head and we were
ready to cross the border to Pakistan!

Claudio and Patrizia
NEPAL (25/11/2007 - 7/01/2008)

The road went up through the mountains as far as Kathmandu.
Here we are, our parents came to visit us! We'll leave
our bicycles for a month and by bus will go around with them.
We spent some days in Bakthapur, sacred city for Hindu.
In Nagarkot we enjoyed the dawn behind the Himalaya mountains.
Lumbini, Siddharta’s birthplace. Pokhara, the city on both
sides of a beautiful lake surrounded by Annapurna.
We went for a short trekking from Nayapul to the Poon Hill,
Gorepani and Gandruk. A short five days trekking because there was too much snow on the path.

Our families went back to Italy and we began again our trip!
It's the beginning of the new year and on the mountains is very cold. Four days later we were back at the Sunauli border.

Claudio and Patrizia
INDIA (26/10/2007 - 24/11/2007)

We spent some days in Kolkata before leading toward
west. We visited Bodhgaya, one of the most important pilgrimage
places in the world for Buddhists.

Along the way many Indians wanted to race against us! It was a non stop race, we overtook each other every other 50 meters, a continuous annoying overtaking! Every day it was the same!
When we stopped along the road for eating something, a lot of
people used to come around staring us. Just watching... They didn't
say a word!

After one week we got Varanasi (Benares) where we spent
almost ten days, really a fascinating city! Cows
and bulls strolling around the alleys, cheeky monkeys everywhere along the sacred Ganga. Daily life is carried out along that river, while more then 50 sewages dropped into the river some people washed their clothes and others bathed. Dead people are burnt on both sides of the river. In a few days we crossed the Nepalese border.
(Sunauli-Bhairawa).

Claudio and Patrizia
MYANMAR (4/10/2007 - 26/10/2007)

Finally we landed in this country and in the afternoon we reached
Mandalay.
There were a few tourists walking in the streets, all the
internet cafe' were shut down during the protest by the crazy government.
We couldn't get money from the ATMs so we
changed our dollars in the shops.
All people were so friendly with us despite inside their eyes we
saw sadness.

Inside the country there are only a few roads where foreigners are allowed.
Along the way we met lots of nice friendly people. Unfortunately in many hotels we couldn't sleep, the owners weren't allowed to accept tourists.
Sometimes we rode more than 170 kms in order to find a place where to sleep.
We had our tent but in Myanmar it's much
better to find an "allowed" place where to sleep.
We stopped some days in Bagan in order to visit the thousands of Buddhist temples in that small area. The lake Inle surrounded by mountains and Bago. At the end we reached Yangon.

During the day Yangon was chaotic and noisy but after 10 PM
there was curfew and all people closed their shops and
went back home.

Before leaving Myanmar we could use internet because the
protest was finished.

Many people have been killed, many
monks have been arrested and the government is still working
in the same way as before. Nothing happened!
Incredibly the West doesn't care about that.
There's no petrol, no jewels, only rice and few people...
No business for the West!

26/10/2007: We flew into Kolkata (India).


Claudio and Patrizia
GO OR NOT GO? (MYANMAR). by Lonely Planet.

Reasons Not to Go:
Aung San Suu Kyi has asked tourists not to; the government
used forced labour to ready tourist-related sights and
services; international tourism can be seen as a stamp of
approval to the Myanmar government; the government forbids
travel to many areas, particularly in areas inhabited by
minority groups; it's impossible to visit without some money
going to the military junta (roughly US$20.00 per visa,
US$10.00 per departure fee and seven to 10% tax on
purchases); and activists claim that tourism dollars fuel
government repression directly.

Reasons to Go:
Tourism remains one of the few industries to which ordinary
locals have access -in terms of income and communication;
authors of subsequent Burma guides say that the vast
majority of locals they speak to tell them they want
travellers there; human-rights abuses are less likely to
occur in areas where the international community is present;
the government stopped forcing foreigners to change
US$200.00 into government notes upon arrival; the majority
of a careful independent traveller's expenses can go into
the private sector; and keeping the people isolated from
international witnesses to internal oppression may only
cement the government's ability to rule.

If You Decide to Go:
In order to maximise the positive effects of a visit among
the general populace, while minimising support of the
government, follow these simple tactics: stay at private,
locally owned hotels and guesthouses; avoid package tours
connected with Myanmar Travel and Tours; avoid MTT-sponsored
modes of transport, such as most Yangon-Mandalay Express
trains, the MTT ferry between Mandalay and Bagan, and
Myanmar Airways International (MAI) flights; buy handicrafts
directly from the artisans, rather than from government
shops; avoid patronising companies involved with the
military-owned Myanmar Economic Holdings (companies with
solid links to the Tatmadaw or armed forces are often called
Myawadi or Myawaddy); write to the Myanmar government and to
the Myanmar embassy in your country expressing your views
about the human-rights situation there.
THAILAND (8/09/2007 - 4/10/2007)

A few meters inward were enough to see the big differences
from Cambodia. The roads are perfect, good cars, the fields
disappeared, no more stilt houses but new factories.
In two days we reached Bangkok where we got the Indian and
Burmese Visas.

The border points with Myanmar are still closed (for more than 40
years) so we bought two flight tickets. Chang Mai -
Mandalay,
Yangon - Kolkata. We cycled one week toward Chang Mai
(north of Thailand).
We left our bikes and went by bus to a
village close to the Burmese border. In that place two
tribes live, Karen and Long Neck. They are refugees from
Myanmar, escaped from their own land.

4/10/07, we are ready to take off for Myanmar but the
protest inside the country makes us a bit afraid.
Despite the uprising we decided to go.

Claudio and Patrizia
CAMBODIA (20/08/2007 - 7/09/2007)

Cambodia is a small and flat country. Unfortunately for
Cambodians the ground is still full of unexploded mines,
hidden by the crazy Pol Pot’s led Khmer Rouge.
From the border we cycled two days and got the
Capital city Phen Phnom.
We spent there some days with a friend of us. Lucia is an
Italian working there for an NGO.
We left our bikes for some days and rented a motorbike.
We went down to the ocean, Kep and Sihanoukville. We took some
days off for swimming in the ocean!!
Again on our bicycles we reached Siem Riep in a few days.
On the way we saw many stilt houses where a lot of children
waved and shouted "HALLO!!".
We went to Angkor's temples. They are very beautiful and
cycling around it's the best way to enjoy them.
We saw the funny monkeys and, unfortunately,
some elephants loaded with tourists.
After four days on the worst road of Cambodia we left Siem Riep for Poipet (Thai border).

Claudio and Patrizia
VIETNAM (20/07/2007 – 19/08/2007)

Hanoi is an interesting city, we spent there some days.
The Capital city
was full of small motorbikes that makes the traffic crazy!
After a couple of days we left for the south. The people
were friendly and helpful and everyday we got more than
one hundred "HALLO!", too many indeed!
The north of Vietnam was flat and there were many cultivated
fields with rice. Farmers worked wearing their typical hat
made out of dried leaves.
After Hue' the landscape changed. The road
followed the Pacific coast and the view became amazing!
Unfortunately the wind got more power against us!
We spent a couple of days in Saigon and went to the Museum
of American's War Crime. After one month in Vietnam we crossed
to Cambodia.

Claudio and Patrizia