Australia to Europe

Nisan 2019 - Nisan 2023
29th of April 2019 until 1st April 2013 Okumaya devam et

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  • 94,4bkilometre seyahat etti
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  • 125ayak izleri
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  • Altyn-Emel

    3 Eylül 2019, Kazakistan ⋅ 🌙 24 °C

    Singing sand dunes, red rock formations and white silica mountains make for a drastic change from steppe country and a huge impression. Surprises galore in the Altyn-Emel national park

  • Never Stop Learning

    14 Eylül 2019, Kırgızistan ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

    Two things I learned today
    1- Use engine brake when descending a steep decline, particularly when you were on a 3600m high pass, or the breaks might fail. I knew it , right? But did not translate it to my automatic transmission. The brakes thankfully gave in just when I wanted to leave from a little fill-up-my-water-supply-stop.
    2 - remove your mobile phone from your back jeans pocket before going to the toilet or it may fall out. It previously had happened and it precariously dangled on the edge of a long drop toilet, Plumpsclo. Today I realised some time and distance after nature called that my phone was missing. Luckily I remembered the exact bush I had visited and there my phone was waiting for me.
    Some days you could really do without. Or lessons learned with little or no loss are the lessons you wish for.
    Okumaya devam et

  • It's getting cold

    16 Eylül 2019, Kırgızistan ⋅ ⛅ 9 °C

    My three week delay in Vladivostok is catching up with me. As I will be travelling above 4000m I intended to be past or at least on the Pamir Highway right now, to avoid the snowfall in these high regions. But today the winter hit, driving up a 3400m pass in the snow. Quite exciting actually! I'm not sure what Rex thought about it, he didn't fuss when I told him to jump back in into the car. But then I wonder, how he will go in extreme cold, with his metal plate still in situ on his hind leg. If this will harm the bone? Might need to knit him a sock.Okumaya devam et

  • The Way Down

    17 Eylül 2019, Kırgızistan ⋅ ⛅ 2 °C

    Oh, what a feeling!!!

  • Helping Hands!

    18 Eylül 2019, Kırgızistan ⋅ ☀️ 8 °C

    I hadn't been on the road for too long this morning, when between the noises of the corrugated road I hear a metallic clonk. First I thought a pot had fallen out of the cupboard, but then again the sound wouldn't have been so heavy. Had I lost some essential bit of my car? So in reverse I go to the clonck spot, and oh no, when looking forward I see some drops marking the ground. When checking this out I see the fuel dripping from my tank. I still need to know what I had lost and find a heavy piece off metal. Is this apart of my springs? No these are complete. I think when driving along the road I must have driven over over this piece, it flicked up and hit my tank.
    I drove back to the village I just had come through, ask the first men I met there for a mechanic. They are looking under my car, lots of talking, no understanding on my part, eventually a third man appears and goes to work to glue the hole. In the meantime I get whisked into the house and served all sorts of freshly and home made goodies. By coincidence my on and of travel companions Lena and Christoph are traveling past, see my car and come to check out what's going on. I was very pleased as through Lena, being Russian, I could finally really talk to these lovely people and express my gratefulness and appreciation.
    At the end the guys checked out if they could find a home for this metal piece, but nothing seemed to be missing.
    I am amazed how these people just help, without fuss, without question, without wanting anything in return. Thank you so much for this wonderful experience!
    Okumaya devam et

  • Crossing from Kyrgystan to Tajikistan

    30 Eylül 2019, Kırgızistan ⋅ ⛅ 5 °C

    The journey to the border from Kyrgyzstan to Tajikistan was riddled with problems: the cooling system was still overheating even though some repairs including a new water pump have been completed in Osh. A well operating cooling system is kind of essential if you want to conquer the Pamir Highway, the second highest highway with passes up to 4655m and the highest country border. Ah well, after several stops and goes I decided, slowly but steady wins the race and to take the risk.
    So with a few stops to cool down the radiator I finally made it to the border crossing. No long wait as not too many people take this route.
    So first the Kyrgyz pass control, quick and easy. Unfortunately Rexby couldn’t do without a bark, so I had to show the doggy pass port and his Vet certificate. It is apparently a requirement that you get the dog vet checked before each border, which is a bit difficult as there aren’t too many vets around. I and all the other dog holders have never done this either.
    What can I do but blatantly offering him the vet check performed for Rex’s entry into Russia, which he accepted? My pride of my brazenness was short lived as he now made further checks of the dog passport and found that I don’t have an entry stamp into Kyrgyzstan in the document. Now, a dog I did not import into Kyrgyzstan I cannot export he tells me. So please what can I do???
    I will be travelling the Pamir in convoy with Christoph, a German guy and Lena his Russian friend. I quickly asked Lena, into the office to translate. I asked, what can I do now? Well, I am told, you have to go back to the border where you entered the country. “No I cannot travel back, my visa will not allow me.” “I don’t care, not my problem!” and so it went. Lena was really giving all she had: “you will need to shoot the dog, we will not travel leaving him here” “you have a gun, let’s go outside and shoot the dog!” Ahhh, the Russian temperament!!!
    I tried another avenue: “My husband has died, and now I have this dog as protection! I can impossible travel on without the dog.” It was very cold and my nose started running, so I sniffed. I caught his eye which made me to wipe my eye for good measure, and the other eye as well. I don’t know, what made him change his mind, the prospect of great difficulties with his authorities, when shooting a dog at the border or the prospect of a crying woman, but he gave me the stamp. So after 20mins or so we left the office with the stamp on the document hopefully successfully hiding our triumph. Thanks so much Lena!!!!
    Now through the noman’s Land again to the Tadjik border.
    The border is quite a ramshackle affair with some decrepit containers as offices. Into the first office: I say my salam alaykums and ask them in Farsi how they are going, Hojat, you would have been proud of me, and in no time I had a biscuit between my teeth and a stamp in my passport. I asked them, Please, please please put a stamp into my dog’s passport as well, but no, I will get this in the quarantine office.
    The next office I attempt to enter and I am told, to go out again and take my shoes of first. So I take off my shoes and back in I go. The same Farsi ritual, some small talk in English, 245 Somoni paid and out I am. Christoph later told me he had to pay the double of that and not even long discussions made the officer change his mind. I really have to work on my language skills, seems to be opening doors.
    Next office, quarantine. Same initial procedure, which always seem to be followed by a happy smile. I of course was a bit nervous, did I not have the veterinary certificate, but he only wanted to know if the dog is healthy. Oh yes, healthy he certainly is. Some more documents and the coveted stamp in my doggy passport and through the border I was.
    I drove through the gate, but I was still waiting for my travel companions. Whilst I was sitting in my car, one of the officers of the quarantine office called my back in. Now they’ve got me!
    But to my biggest surprise when I enter the office, they usher me into the second room, I am offered a little stool and on a log of timber in front of me they placed a frying pan with a yummy potato stew they have cooked themselves. Who had ever been served food by a customs officer! I was speechless about this welcome to Tajikistan!
    Okumaya devam et

  • Petroglyphs

    3 Ekim 2019, Tacikistan ⋅ ☁️ -3 °C

    On the 2nd day we decided to combine the Rexelby walk and visiting the cave paintings. the cars we left at the overnight spot. Walking those 3kms one way was not a big problem but the climbing up to the top of the cave at a height of 4000m left me quite breathless. In these heights breathlessness can come over you at the tiniest activity. This gives me additional respect for those mountaineers conquering 8000m peaks or those bicycle riders traveling the Pamir. Hat off, guys!!!Okumaya devam et

  • The Pamir Highway

    4 Ekim 2019, Tacikistan ⋅ ☁️ -5 °C

    Finally we hit the epic Pamir highway, the second highest Highway in the world! Once leaving the shoddy "paved" M41 the road is not paved anymore ( thank god for that, you really start to prefer horrible corrugation to these potholed roads with unpredictable ditches) and mostly one lane only. Now we are driving into the Wakhan valley along the Pamir River which represents the border to Afghanistan, On the first day we did not meet a single car on this road so I am really happy about driving in convoy with Christoph and Lena, just in case. ..
    Eventually it starts to snow and we really want to traverse this last pass of only 4300m as we don't want to be snowed in. Well, this one turns out to be the hardest of all: only one lane, with big boulders and huge ruts, lose gravel or sand in between and all this with the altitude greatly reducing the power of the engines and causing the engines to blow lots of smoke. Hard work to getting up there but eventually we make it. Big sense of achievement.
    Now we only wanted to get down quickly before the night breaks. Even though we drove until we could not longer safely dodge the rocks we didn't get below 4100m and just parked on the road side. No cars coming anyway.
    We have diesel heaters in both of the cars, but due to the altitude they do not work. So keeping warm is the motto for our nights here. Insulating sheets on the Windows, lots of tea which not only warms from the inside but needs to be heated on the gas stove, ahhh, nice and warm, and then, when going to bed, my hot water bottle! Best invention ever!
    Next morning I dread looking out the window, not only because I have to stick my hand out from underneath my warm blanket, I dread to see everything covered in snow. We still have to get down this rocky road! But hallelujah! Glorious sunshine.
    I am not sure how cold it was exactly, but the water in the dog bowl inside the van was frozen solid.
    Once dog is walked, the breakfast in the sun complete and everything packed up, I start my car without major problems. Christoph's Dicker (the fat one) doesn't return this favour to start without jumpstarting it. Just to prove, that's why we travel in convoy!
    The rest of the day traveling through the most amazing of landscapes. My heart wants to explode from joy.
    When I was young but lacking confidence I dreamt of riding my motorbike to Afghanistan and exchanging it for a camel. I wish I had done it then when it was still possible. This country has always fascinated me. But still... now I can stick my hand into water that has touched it's border. Who knows, perhaps one day...
    Okumaya devam et