Somewhere completely different! Uzbekistan is opening up to tourists and it’s time to visit before it turns into Dubai! Read more
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  • 6.9kmiles
  • Day 1

    Tashkent here we come!

    September 12, 2023 in England ⋅ 🌧 15 °C

    This trip to Uzbekistan has been booked (and anticipated) for over a year and now it is here. Ted and I have had a glimpse of what is to come by watching Joanna Lumley doing her Silk Road TV programs tracing the Eurasian trade routes of yesteryear from Venice to China, Uzbekistan being but one of the stops on the way. Whilst I cannot hope to emulate the model-like and designer-clad Joanna in any way I will endeavour to provide you, dear Readers, with fascinating facts and fabulous photos over the next 10 days.
    Liam kindly dropped us off at East Didsbury station for the 05.36 to Manchester Airport. After a short Indian Summer, the UK is back to seasonal norms and it was raining cats and dogs. Usually, on these trips, there is a problem caused by Ted at Security (devotees of the blogs will recall the bullet in the case at Hanoi Airport or the screwdriver in Ted’s hand luggage at Delhi) but this time the body scanner identified a “problem” with my right leg. “Oh yes” said I, with a disarming smile, “it’s my new hip!” But no, it was my knee causing the problem 😳 The offending knee was gingerly patted down and swept over with the wand before I was reluctantly released and we were allowed to fly on our merry way to Heathrow. Two small eggs Benedict later, (honestly couldn’t afford the larger version!) and a bit of a wait before we met Georgina, our Great Railway Journeys tour leader in Terminal 4.
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  • Day 2

    A dash around Tashkent!

    September 13, 2023 in Uzbekistan ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

    Six hours and 40 minutes with Uzbekistan Airways was uneventful, local time being around 4am on arrival. 20 Great Railwayers were rounded up by Georgina and in a short space of time we were in the Radisson Blu having been given the non-stop itinerary for the next couple of days. Basically, today is our only opportunity to see Tashkent so after a four-hour snoozette it was down to breakfast! Dinner will be 7pm tonight then it’s early to bed as we are up again by 4am to go back to the airport for a one and a half hour flight west tomorrow (14th).
    And so we set off around Tashkent about 12 and were out til 5.45 pm, the last museum on the itinerary missed out as no time left to visit it! Our local guide, Shakira, spoke her many words of wisdom, firstly at the Mosque, the home of the largest Koran in the World, amongst beautiful domes and minarets, then onto the huge market to see and taste some of the Uzbekistan locally grown and made wares and lastly to squeeze onto the Tashkent Underground to go and see some of the beautiful Metro Stations constructed in the Soviet era. It was 28 degrees with a beautiful blue sky. Tashkent is a busy and vibrant city with the same problem as the M60! There is a mix of the old white Soviet era apartment blocks and more modern buildings. Shop signs are Uzbek, Russian and English. Young Uzbeks come up to chat and practise their English-very polite and fascinated by where we live. Having said that, our local guide has now asked me twice if I am Russian-said my face has a look of a Russian ….. 😳 Hope she doesn’t want a tip at the end of this… 🤣😂
    Back to the hotel at 5.45, quick blog and shower as we meet at 7 to eat out in a local restaurant.

    Update: Alarm set for 03.45!
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  • Day 3

    Urgench-Ancient Fortresses-Khiva

    September 14, 2023 in Kazakhstan ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Clutching “breakfast boxes” in hand this morning we boarded the 6am Uzbekistan Airways flight to Urgench. The majority of the breakfast box content was ditched at the airport as there were many aluminium trays containing small pieces of “spam”, cheese (but not as we know it), cake plus fruit and copious bottles of water. Not a croissant or a bread roll in sight! Ted and I now feel like camels as we have six bottles between us. On board I had a pleasant and refreshing cup of tea, best drunk, I have discovered, black rather than adding the powdered milk which turns it into sludge.
    An hour and a half later, on arrival into Urgench, we board our coach for an hours drive to the ancient palace city of Toprak -Kala. A stop here to climb up, marvel at surroundings and imagine how life was back in the day then back to the coach and onto Ayaz-Kala, one of the more magnificent fortresses in the Khorezm region. It’s purpose was to repel onslaughts from nomadic tribes. Here the task to “climb up” to the fortress was a bit more challenging and not for the faint hearted. Those who ignored the advice to wear “sensible shoes” regretted it! However, nothing ventured, nothing gained so a short trek across the sand followed by a hazardous climb afforded great views of the surrounding district and of the Yurt Camp (with its one lone camel) and car park behind. Worrying I did hear an Australian tourist jovially saying he’d be fine as he had had “three cardiac procedures” that year so his heart should be in tip top shape … 😳
    Feeling pleased with our endeavours we returned to the Yurt Camp for lunch which was vegetarian salads, soup, flat breads, a sort of meat stew and water melon served with green tea. Fortunately Ted and I were early to be seated so we chose seats with backs against the walls at the low table. It was a bit challenging to sit opposite with no support or to try cross-legged sitting once over 60s… A short stop to a cotton field to observe and feel the cotton growing there followed. Uzbekistan is the second largest producer of cotton after Egypt. In Soviet times, child labour was used and all the cotton had to be exported to Russia.
    And so on to Khiva, an important city on the Silk Road and for the next two nights we stay in the Khiva Orient Star Hotel which is a madrasah. Madrasahs were educational institutions and many, like the Paradors in Spain, have been converted to hotels. This one is recommended for a visit according to a tour member’s guide book. Our room is a bit “cell-like” but on the ground floor leading onto the courtyard. The Wi-Fi only works in the courtyard so the blog has been a challenge! There isn’t a window either but there is an air con system which doesn’t seem to be working at the moment… 😬
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  • Day 4

    Khiva

    September 15, 2023 in Uzbekistan ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    I’m not quite sure why Find Penguins thinks we were in Kazakhstan yesterday - we weren’t…I think it’s probably because we must have flown over their airspace so it automatically assumed we went there.
    However, after the horrendously noisy but hilarious dinner show last night, with lots of Russian-looking men dancing madly with the “turn” and downing many shots of vodka, we returned to our cells to attempt to sleep on the rigid, board-like beds! Some (mostly male) members of the group said they slept well…. I don’t know how! On the other hand, this is a very clean, peaceful and traditional hotel which is an experience in itself though I do find myself wishing wistfully this afternoon that there was a gorgeous pool in the gorgeous courtyard!
    Shakira (our guide) conducted us about Khiva on a 4-hour walking tour, punctuated by coffee in the middle. We explored the Icahn Kala, Khiva’s walled inner town and the oldest part of the city. This once mighty fortress with its 4 gates is very awe-inspiring. It is like a vast open-air museum which has UNESCO World Heritage status due to its historical monuments, including the Djuma Mosque, its mausoleums and two magnificent palaces…… having said all that, I can’t remember half of what she said! 😬
    At lunchtime we all parted company (here is where a pool would have been a very welcome but incongruous sight in our courtyard) so we went in search of lunch, taking a group member with us whose husband had gone walkabout!
    Had a couple of hours to ourselves this afto. It is possible to “walk the walls” at 5pm but Ted and I have wimped out of this as the health and safety experience is reportedly iffy and with my recent mishaps plus the cobbles, steep steps and uneven surfaces I think I better not do…… 😕 Earlier in the day Ted ascended some extremely steep stairs, which I daren’t do, to take some pics from a walls viewing area so I will add these now.
    PS Also posting a photo someone took of how steep the steps were up to the wall …. So glad I didn’t do it!
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  • Day 5

    Desert run to Bukhara

    September 16, 2023 in Uzbekistan ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    Coach day today, leaving impressive Khiva to travel through the desert and indeed along part of the Silk Road to our next destination, Bukhara. Our guide (not always understandable… never have I understood the phrase “lost in translation” so much 😳) gave us a few more facts about Uzbekistan. She refers to it as a “young country” following the departure of the Russians in 1991, but one which is trying hard to develop. It is one of the CIS (community of independent states) the countries which used to be part of the USSR. Population is 38 million, education is free and there is 100% literacy (or so she said!) as education is also compulsory to the age of 18. The average age is 28! The majority of the inhabitants are of the Muslim faith. There are 12 districts, then provinces made up of villages which are now known as “unions of farmers”. The main industry is agriculture. Each baby is born in hospital and strict administrative records are kept. Health care is also free. The Great Silk Road (named as such in 1877) passed through Uzbekistan from China with routes to Egypt and Europe.
    Had a short toilet stop after a couple of hours. The ladies were required to pay 2000 Sum each to use the “facilities” (1 Western and 3 Eastern style i.e. hole in the ground!) No loo paper either. The Gents was free-of course it was. But when you consider 15000 Sum is about £1, you can’t expect much more. We paid 120000 Sum for 1 beer and 2 wines at dinner last night and rounded it up to 150000-approx £9-10.
    Onward through the desert (quite a lot of traffic and tour buses) and across a new bridge in order to cross the Amu Darya. This bridge was a shared one between Road and railway. Apparently if there is a train coming the traffic is just stopped for an hour….. Next stop (no toilets) was for a “panoramic view” which I have included in the photos. Across the river is Turkmenistan.
    Lunch was a chaotic free-for-all with Shakira dashing about getting us all seated, getting the tables cleaned, ordering the vegetable samosas (very nice) and the kebabs. She seized Ted’s kebab from him, divested the beef from the skewer, chucked most of it on his plate and tore the last chunk off with her teeth and ate it! We were all so surprised we burst out laughing… even Ted!
    Three hours more in the coach and then arrival into the Omar Khayam hotel in Bhukara. Quick wash and brush up then dinner at 7pm.
    PS someone in the group posted the photo of the lady with the gold teeth!
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  • Day 6

    Bukhara

    September 17, 2023 in Uzbekistan ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    Pleasant hotel and for once we are not overlooking the car park or something similar! See attached video. Pleasant breakfast then embarked on the 4-hour walking tour, cut short by Ted having to return to the hotel with stomach pains…. I continued to the embroidery workshop then went back to the hotel to check on Ted’s status. Suffice it to say we have both taken Imodium this morning! Tried to rejoin the group but couldn’t find them so currently stuck in hotel room with Ted….. 😕

    Two hours later …. Georgina the GRJ guide came back for me. I had missed the musicians’ workshop, carpet workshop (thank goodness!) and the coffee break but rejoined the group to go to Fortress Ark which, before the Red Army arrived in the early 1920s, had been the residence of Bukhara’s rulers. It turns out several people have gippy tummies and, for moral support, I accompanied a group member to the Ark’s toilets (photo enclosed for your edification!). Again, 2 stern ladies were sitting in a hut receiving payment for use of the facilities, such as they were. They were most aggrieved that I wasn’t partaking (and therefore not paying!) There was a small sink with tap trickling water outside their hut and they were only giving one squirt of liquid soap for my new acquaintance’s use. There was much muttering and sour looks when two squirts were asked for!
    Back down to the square and our trusty bus drivers had turned up to transport us to a pleasant sort of open-air park for a quick spot of lunch. The visit to the puppet workshop turned out to be a non-starter as the puppet master had gone to a funeral so it was on to a gallery where we had a little talk and viewed the paintings. During the week 10-14 year old deaf and dumb children attend to learn painting there.
    Very hot day today. On return to the hotel Ted was found to be better but not A1. We are therefore wimping out of the evening activity i.e. cooking demo and meal in family house but c’est la vie! Video of musician courtesy of another group member.
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  • Day 7

    Mausoleum, Museum, Tea

    September 18, 2023 in Uzbekistan ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    Ted valiantly went down to breakfast and was spotted by a group member on our room balcony-hence the photo. The morning tour was a bit gruelling as it was hot and no time for any refreshments! First stop, after a short bus ride, was the Chor Bakr Memorial complex which is a Mausoleum and burial complex, visited by Muslims pilgrims for centuries. From there we went to visit the former home of an Uzbek politician, Fayzullah Khodjaev, who was bumped off by the Soviets (shot) at the tender age of 32 in Siberia. His house is now a museum but is also where affianced couples come for pre-wedding photo shoots. A quick stop at another Murassah (with accompanying souvenir stall which sold Soviet Military Uniform jackets, literally covered in medals and badges) before we were allowed to have a quick snack- 13.45 by this time! The second attempt to visit the puppet theatre was again thwarted as the bloke was still not back from the funeral so we went to a tea tasting instead. This was really lovely with 4 types of tea and little sweets to try-delicious. Ted was not up to tea tasting so had made his own way back to the hotel after the lunch snack. Several others had also parted company with the group to do their own thing but will be meeting up at 19.30 for dinner in another local restaurant. By now several group members are or have been on Imodium but all battling on!Read more

  • Day 8

    More of Bukhara then on to Samarkand

    September 19, 2023 in Uzbekistan ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    Shakira joined our table last night and once more (in fact more than once!) stated that I was definitely not English and needed to look into my DNA and I would find I was of some Asian heritage…. 😳)
    Suitcases picked up by 9am this morning as they are being transported in the coach and we are going by train to Samarkand this afternoon.
    The last morning of sightseeing took us to The Ark again with the prison and a couple of mausoleums. A quick coffee and cake in the café opposite the hotel then off to the station at 2.30 pm
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  • Day 9

    Samarkand

    September 20, 2023 in Uzbekistan ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

    So the Grand Samarkand Hotel Superior seems to be duplicated - one on either side of the road. Ours looks very old and authentic but is in fact quite new, or so Georgina says. There is an open garden courtyard with the rooms all around it on 3 floors-Ted and I are on the top floor. The greatly anticipated swimming pool is apparently over the road so I may get chance to see it later if the schedule allows. Breakfast was in the same delightful room as last nights dinner and…. there was a toaster!
    Our starting point today was Registan Square (to Uzbekistan as the Taj Mahal is to India) with its ensemble of brightly coloured madrassahs. On to the Bibi-Khanum Mosque, Sian Bazaar (much like the huge Tashkent market), Gur Emir Mausoleum and finally Timor’s mausoleum (he was their national hero who died in 1405). There was a coffee/lunch stop somewhere in there! Most of us feel Mosqued/Mausoleumed out but all the architecture is beautiful and much revered by our guide Shakira!
    Back to the hotel and one hour to go for wash and brush up before we set off once more to the theatrical costume museum then to dinner. Determined to even just look at the pool, Ted and I hared over to the sister hotel, climbed 4 flights of stairs to the roof and there it was…. About 5m by 3m. I was only allowed time to get a quick pic before we zoomed off to get a couple of bottles of beer to drink in the room whilst getting ready. One brave couple did go over in their swimmers but they wouldn’t have had much time to get ready. Tomorrow will also be a non-starter pool-wise as we get straight off the train to go to dinner before checking into the hotel….. 😩
    So off to the theatre to find it was actually a show with beautiful costumes depicting Uzbekistan fashions through the ages. Lasted an hour and was lovely. Thence to dinner which was outside in a lovely courtyard but a little chilly. On the way back to the coach we stopped by Registan Square to see it all again but lit up by night with music-beautiful!
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  • Day 10

    Samarkand then back to Tashkent

    September 21, 2023 in Uzbekistan ⋅ ☀️ 11 °C

    First up after breakfast was a visit to Ulugh Beg Observatory, followed by the Afrosiab Museum. At the latter we saw excavated wall paintings from the 7th Century which proved Samarkand was an important spot back in the day giving us a glimpse of rituals, religions, practices, social hierarchies which existed then. Then it was off to the Silk Paper makers where we saw a demo on the making of silk paper from mulberry leaves. Some of us managed to grab a most unappetising cup of coffee here which was so slow being produced, one cup at a time, that the first to receive the coffee were going back to the coach before the later ones got theirs. We are all running out of Sum or is it Som or indeed So’m - the National currency which is in thousands. For example 50,000 is about £3. A coffee was 40,000. We still have dollars and euros so that’s not a problem.
    Back to the coach for a 40 min trip to a village house for lunch which was set for 20 on a long table. I am not a great lover of the food here which is cooked with a lot of added oil. The bread, fruit, salad is fine but not keen on the white slimy dumplings we had last night or the thin equally white and slimy “pancakes” today! However-when in Rome and all that. The lunch had been cooked by the ladies of the house plus the sisters of its owner, who come to help on a busy day. They had an outside tandoori oven and (thankfully!) an outside Western-style loo!
    Back on the coach, Shakira told us more facts about Uzbekistan.
    1874 was the coming of the railways, built by Russian Empire. Total length is 5000 km all over Uzbekistan. It is very important, especially in a double land-locked country, to have an efficient railway for goods to reach to and from ports. Life expectancy is 66 for men and 72 for women. Basic health care is free but private is available if desired. Marriage can be for love or arranged. Divorce is not common.
    We arrived at Samarkand Railway Station and made the most of sitting out in the sun for as long as we could. The 17.29 from Samarkand to Tashkent takes two hours and 10 mins. The luggage has gone by a separate coach and we are going straight from train to dinner before booking into our hotel (Radisson Blu) once more.
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