Dates: .... - 26 /
05 / 2000
Stops: Dublin
Comments: I had been
working in Dublin for one year. The contract was finished at the end
of May and I had in mind to leave for a long trip rather than getting
another contract.
Dates: 27 /
05 - 07 / 06 / 2000
Stops: Locmine
Comments: A 18 hr crossing
from Rosslare in Ireland took me to Roscoff and I spent some time at
my parent's home in Brittany.
Dates: 07 -
23 / 06 / 2000
Stops: Rennes-Angers-Paris-Varey
(near the Jura Mountains)-Grenoble-Grasse
Comments: I am off,
first travelling through France visiting friends and relatives.
Dates: 24 - 30 / 06
Stops: Ajaccio - Zonza (col de Bavella) - Sartene - Bonifacio
- Iles Lavezzi
Comments: I crossed
from Nice to Ajaccio. In a campsite in Zonza, I met a group of 30 cyclists
from Sardinia who were biking 500 km in 25 days through Corsica, in
order to fight their addiction to hard drugs. They were having a day
off, and the leader of the group proposed me to borrow a bike for the
day. Some spoke a little french or english, it was nice anyway to have
dinner with them, and it was a great day biking. Very hot though. I
visited Sartene, Bonifaccio and the Lavezzi islands. Great scenery,
beautiful coast.
Country: Italy
Dates: 30 / 06 - 07
/ 07
Stops: Palau (Sardegna) - Pisa - Lucca - Firenze - Bologna -
Ferrara - Ravenna
Comments: Crossing
from Bonifacio to Santa Teresa di Gallura, night in Palau and then night-crossing
from Golfo Aranci to Livorno. I could not resist to stop in Florence
to see the frescoe in the Duomo which was under restauration last time
I was there. Visiting friends in Bologna and Ferrara who nicely took
me around the two (equally) nice cities.
Country: San Marino
Dates: 07 / 07 / 2000
Stops: San Marino
Comments: Brief afternoon
visit in the little state of San Marino
Dates: 08 /
07 - 13 / 07 / 2000
Stops: Zadar - Trogir
- Split - Hvar Island - Korcula Island - Dubrovnik.
Comments: Ferry from
Anconna to Zadar. The dalmatian cities are unique, with their historic
centres, and their small streets covered in smooth shine white stones.
The coastline is dotted with many islands and travelling south to Dubrovnik
by boat and by bus took me through some great scenery. The view over
old Dubrovnik is so impressive from the city walls that I walked several
around.
Dates: 15-18
/ 07
Stops: Durres - Tirana
- Korce
Comments: To go to
Greece, I had to go from Dubrovnik to Bari (Italy) as there are no more
direct crossing from Croatia to Greece. I met an australian and an islandic
bloke, and in Bari we saw the ferries going to Albania and we thought...
why not. An unexpected detour, decided in a few hours, this is the spirit
of travelling. Albania was quite a trip, not one cash machine in the
whole country, bad roads, concrete bunkers all over the countryside,
horse drawn-carriages amongst cars, etc... and a bad surprise at the
entrance port : like they said in Bari, a visa was not necessary but
there was a "border tax", 40 USD please....glp !
Dates: 18 -
26 / 07
Stops: Florina - Meteora
- Santorini - Creta - Rhodos
Comments: Just one-night
stop over the border from Albania in Florina. Then I wanted to see again
Meteora, monasteries on top of rocky peaks. From Pireaus, I took the
ferry to Santorini (marvellous island, white houses on top of very high
volcanic cliffs, blue dome of small chapels), and I continued to Crete
(Minoan Palace of Knossos, and Agios Nikolaos) and Rhodos (very nice
medieval old town but way too many tourists).
Dates: 26 -
31 / 07 / 2000
Stops: Olu Deniz -
Olympos - Antalya - Alanya
Comments: After a quick crossing from
Rhodes to Marmaris, I went to british-invaded Fetiye and Olu Deniz.
More quiet was Olympos, in a small valley where accomodation is in the
form of "tree houses", with old Lycian ruins in very green
surroudings and a beaufiful pebble beach. Antalya, the nearby greco-roman
ruins of Side and the waterfall of Manavgat was a very pleasant and
interesting stop. Turkey was one of the countries I absolutely wanted
to visit in this trip and the first impression was very good, inspite
of the heavily touristy summer season.
Country: Turkish Republic of North Cyprus (KKTC) |
PHOTOS
|
Dates: 01 -
03 / 08
Stops: Girne - Lefkosa
- Famagusta (Gazi Magusa)
Comments: I took a
ferry from Tasucu to Girne. The island of Cyprus has a troubled past
and is divided in two, and the north part (turkish) is only recognised
as a country by Turkey. The capital (Lefkosa) is split into turkish
and greek parts by a so-called "green line". Turkish Cyprus
is not very developed and few tourists come here. There are however
some interesting buildings and history (churches converted to mosques,
ruins, city walls in Famagusta). Beside the sightseeing, I came here
to visit a friend in Famagusta.
Dates: 04 -
16 / 08 / 2000
Stops: Cukurbag - Goreme
- Bogazkale - Amasya - Inebolu - Amasra - Safranbolu - Istanbul - Edirne
Comments: I returned
to Turkey from Famagusta (North Cyprus) to Mersin, then, in need of
some fresh air (summers are hot here !), I went to the mountains Aladaglar
near Cukurbag (the name Aladaglar means the crimson mountains, as they
take a red colour at sunset). I met two turkish lads at the pension
and went hiking with them. We split at a 3400 m high pass, they continued
to some lakes, and I continued to a 3723 m high peak (Engin Tepe). Great
15 hour walk. Then in Goreme (Cappadocia), I hired a bike to visit this
amazing place. The next stop was in Bogazkale, were there are some hittite
ruins from 1300 BC. I continue north to Amasya, an old town facing a
cliff with Pontic tombs carved out in it. Then, I suffered long hours
of travelling along the Black sea coast, on windy bumpy roads in packed
minibuses. Nice scenery though, very different lanscape, much greener
and more hilly than the centre of Turkey. I left the Black Sea after
Amasra, an old town with a great location on the coast. Safranbolu was
one of the prettiest towns so far in Turkey with many well preserved
traditional houses. And at last, I came to Istanbul : the Blue Mosque,
Aya Sofya, the bazaar, the views on the Bosphorus, etc... great place.
Edirne, interesting old town and more nice mosques, was the last stop
in Turkey. These 3 weeks were most enjoyable (excellent bus services,
great food, friendly locals). A pleasant country where will surely return.
Dates: 16 -
22 / 08 / 2000
Stops: Plovdiv - Koprivshtitsa
- Veliko Tarnovo - Balchik
Comments: Nice start
in Bulgaria : at the turkish border (very slow crossing), I got a lift
to Stara Zagora by a friendly french couple on their way back from Iran,
and then I got help for the train to Plovdiv by chap who then showed
me around the nice old town of Plovdiv and put me up for the night.
I continued by train to Koprivshtitsa, a "national revival"
village where houses have been preserved or restored in the traditional
style. Then followed a long journey for not so much distance (including
4 hour wait in tiny station) to Veliko Tarnovo (historic capital of
Bulgaria, interesting ruins). I wanted to see the Black Sea coast of
Bulgaria, so I went (by bus this time) to Varna, and then to Balchick,
a small town with some pretty sights.
Dates: 22 -
28 / 08 / 2000
Stops: Bucarest - Brasov
- Sighisoara - Sibiu (Paltinis) - Alba Iulia - Cluj Napoca - Oradea
Comments: At Ruse,
the bulgarian town at the border with Romania, I met two Russians and
a Slovak who where waiting for a lift. The Slovak had been waiting for
ages to go straight to Slovakia because he thought Romania was not safe.
The russians had 8 USD to make it to Saratov. After a little while,
a romanian man accepted to take me and the russians to Bucarest. The
Slovakian man may still be waiting there now.... This confirms a french
proverb "qui trop se hate reste en chemin" (basically : if
you want to go too fast, you get stuck). Bucarest was an interesting
stop (the history after the revolution in 1989, the contrast between
the interior of the Parliement Palace and the unfinished other end of
the Boulevard). I continued with the well preserved, medieval, beautiful
cities of Transylvania and a short hike in the Carpathian mountains.
Very nice country, scenic train rides, friendly people but I certainly
went too quickly across.
Dates: 28 -
30 / 08
Stops: Debrecen - Tokaj
Comments: Short visit
in Hungary, in the pleasant town of Debrecen, where I met two swiss
girls on their way to Egypt by bicycle...wow....! They later cancel
their plans due to trouble in Israel. After a brief stop in Tokaj (and
a little wine tasting), I moved on to Slovakia.
Dates: 30 /
08 - 02 / 09
Stops: Kosice - Dedinky
- Tatranska Lomnica
Comments: After another
lift by some french people, I arrived in Kosice, with a old and pretty
town centre. I went to the hilly and foresty area called Slovensky Raj
(slovakian paradise), a name it deserves well. Unfortunately, the sun
was not there... The high Tatras however were fantastic, and the sun
came out just at the right time. Great views from those gorgeous mountains.
I was talking one evening to Slovaks and Czechs who were sleeping out
in a park. They both agreed that splitting Czechoslovakia was not a
good idea and both blamed this slovakian politician. They were saying
"we are brothers, we should be one country".
Dates: 02 -
12 / 09 / 2000
Stops: Krakow - Kazimierz
- Warsaw - Torun - Gdansk - Bialystok - Bialowieza Nat. Park
Comments: I revisited
the wonderful city of Krakow. The small old town of Kazimierz made a
nice stopover on the way to Warsaw, where I stayed for a few days with
a friend I met in Istanbul. I tried to see if I could arrange a visa
for Russia but the only solution was via Intourist (either shooting
straight through to Mongolia on a transit visa, non-stop, or with a
2 weeks visa, stopping at 50-60 USD a night in designated hotels arranged
those useless money suckers, no thank you very much...!). So I moved
on, first to another nice old town : gothic Torun, and wonderful Gdansk.
I met here some Aussies who told me they easily got a russian visa in
Tallinn via an agency. I finished my visit of Poland with a nice sunny
day in the Nat. Park near Bialowieza, with one of the last remnant of
the european primeval forest (and I could not resist renting a bike
for a few hours).
Dates: 13 -
15 / 09
Stops: Kaunas - Vilnius
Comments: I must have
travelled too quickly here, the sun did not follow me... it was rainy
and cold when I arrived in Kaunas and Vilnius. I crossed the border
from Poland by bus, thus avoiding Belarus (and 20 USD for a transit
visa if I had travelled by train). I had quick look around the old towns
Kaunas and in baroqueVilnius.
Dates: 15 -
17 / 09 / 2000
Stops: Riga
Comments: I spent a
few days in the largest town of the Baltic states, an old and lively
city.
Dates: 17- 22
/ 09
Stops: Tallinn
Comments: Back into
this very pretty city, which I visited already 2 years ago. I got a
lift to Tallinn by a local couple at the Latvian border, who later proposed
me some accomodation. I spent a few days in Tallinn to get the visa
for Russia thanks to a very helpful agency (got it overnight, with no
restriction where to go or where to stay, but only 2 weeks). From this
point, I knew I was on my way to the east, to Asia.
Dates: 22 /09
- 05 / 10 / 2000
Stops: Moscow - Vladimir
- Suzdal - Yaroslav - Moscow - Krasnoyarsk - Irkustk - Ulan Ude
Comments:
Moscow : I arrived
with a night train from Tallinn, spent one night, saw again the Red
Square, and got the visa for Mongolia (in 5 minutes). A friend in Moscow
helped me buy the train ticket to Beijing (basic ticket all the way
+ sleeper to Krasnoyarsk only, and I bought the reservation for the
each stage as I go along). I had time during the (sunny) weekend to
visit a few towns of the "Golden Ring" near Moscow, with very
nice architecture (kremlins, golden domes of churches, monasteries).
Going East : The train to Krasnoyarsk
was quiet, I had the compartment for myself and spent time chatting
in german with a mongol man from the next compartment. After two and
a half days in the train, across totally flat land covered by endless
forests (nice colours) ar marshland, and 4 hours time difference from
Moscow, I reached the siberian city of Krasnoyarsk. I was looking forward
for change from the train : some firm ground (the train shakes a lot)
and ... I stayed at a ship-hotel ancored on the Yenisey river (in a
room that looked very much like a train compartment with bunk beds).
Buying train reservations was not always easy,
and in Krasnoyarsk took much time. I had not only to find the right
office and the rightwindow, but to wait that the clerk arrives, argue
that my ticket was valid and then wait as they type in the computer
the visa and passport details (not to mention the powercut). The trip
from Krasnoyarsk to Irkustk was much different than in the first train.
The first was a chinese train, very clean and quiet, with quite a few
foreign tourists on board, who do not even stop on the way to China.
This second train was a russian train, busier and more lively with vodka
and russian folk songs. I was quite tired when we arrived in Irkustk,
a nice ciy, with many wooden houses, pleasant tree-lined streets, and
an interesting museum about the Decembrists. I went to Listvyanka, on
the shore of Lake Baikal : very impressive, with the taiga in full autumn
colour and the high mountain peaks around. Unbelievable to be here.
I wished I had more time. The bus between Irkustk and Listvyanka passed
through beautiful scenery : along the wide Angora river (the only to
flow out of the lake), across more taiga, with beautiful autumn colours.
I stayed in a wooden house, just 20 m from the lake, but unfortunately
the banya was not working. Next day, surprise : it was snowing !!!!...
No chance for a walk around, too cold and too wet, so back to Irkutsk.
Welcome to Asia : After
a "Short"-8 hrs day train (for a change) I arrived in Ulan
Ude, a pleasant town which feels more asian than russian, thanks to
the presence of the Buryat people. The landscape is also different now,
with more steppe and less forest. On the main square of Ulan Ude, the
enormous head of Lenin is a real oddity (biggest figurehead in the world).
I visited the first (but not the last !) buddhist monastery of this
trip : a very fascinating complex near Ulan Ude (the buryat people,
like the mongols, follow tibetan buddhism). On the way back, I met a
buryat lady in the bus. She had a lot of patience to talk with me considering
my poor level in russian) and then helped me book the
train to Ulan-Bator.
Dates: 05 -
19 / 10 / 2000
Stops: Ulan Bator -
a number of places in the middle of nowhere in
the Gobi desert - Kharkhorin - Ulan Bator
Comments: After a very
very slow 24 hr train ride from Ulan Ude leaving at an incovenient 5.20am
(and over 5 hours waiting time at the border), I arrived in Ulan Bator
at another inconvenient 6am. An easy going city with some beautiful
buddhist shrines and monasteries. Some locals are walking around in
the traditional dress, along with some buddhist monks dressed in purple
or yellow. The owner of the hostel where I was staying arranged a trip
with other people (an american lady teaching english, an english bloke,
and two swedes). The funny mongolian driver took care of everything
and drove us across the steppe south to the Gobi desert and back. It
was a rough week bouncing around in a russian 4 wheel-drive minibus.
The scenery varied from wide snow-covered valleys in the steppe just
south of Ulan Bator, to flat barren, empty desert or mountainous areas
and sand dunes further south. The Gobi desert is a very fascinating
part of the country : it gave a feeling of immensity. Nomadic people
live there in "gers" (round tents) and move around with their
cattle according to the season (they herd cows, horses, camels, sheep,
goats). Our driver arranged things so we could stay for the night with
the locals, and we always enjoyed a very warm welcome. We shared some
mongolian vodka with our hosts before going to bed, drunk some airag
(fermented mare milk), ate mutton or goat meat with rise or noodles
(for dinner and for breakfast). When we left in the van in the morning,
the lady would give us a traditional farewell by throwing a laddle of
milk in our direction. We saw some wildlife (many eagles on the side
of the dirt road, and some vultures), and we visited on the way back
some buddhist monasteries that were not destroyed during communist times.
During this trip, it was sometimes cold, sometimes dusty, it smelled
petrol in the van, we had no possibility to shower for a week, but the
welcome of the mongolian people and the beauty of the landscape (apart
from those hours across featureless land) made up for the discomfort.
Country: China (1 : northern cities) |
PHOTOS
|
Dates: 20/10
- 12/11
Stops: Beijing - Xi'an
- Huashan - Shanghai - Zhu Jia Jiao - Suzhou - Qingdao
Comments:
Beijing : The trip
from Ulan Bator took 30 hours by the train, but I was in the very nice
company of a mongol bloke studying in the US and two pretty mongol ladies.
We passed across some very very flat land in Mongolia, waited a few
hours wait at the border to change the wheels of the train, and saw
the next day a gradual change in scenery, getting greener by the hour,
passing a stretch of the Great Wall on the way. Beijing was much warmer
than Ulan Bator but the crowd, the noise and the pollution came as a
shock after Mongolia. The streets were jammed with buses, plenty of
people on bikes (I love that) carrying amazingly big loads, and soldiers
almost at every street corner. However, the food here is varied, excellent
and plentiful. Many sights to visit in Beijing (Forbidden City, Summer
Palace, Tian An Men square). I went to the Great Wall at Simatai where
it is very impressive, with very steep sections following a montain
ridge.
Xi'an : a big provincial
town, with well preserved city walls, and an interesting Taoist temple.
There is also a muslim minority (this city was on the Silk road), and
it was interesting to walk around this part of town with some mosques
built according to traditional chinese architecture. I had not been
in muslim surroundings since I left Turkey, this is the other end of
the muslim world. Not far from Xi'an are the famous Terra Cotta Warriors.
Each is unique in the expression on their face, and their posture, very
impressive. Next day, at last I escaped the city and the pollution :
I walked up one of the sacred mountains of China, near the village of
Huashan. Great day with pure blue sky above from the summit at about
2000 m. Nevermind that the way was paved all the way (some very steep
steps were quite good fun in fact) and lined by groups of loud chinese
tourists and tacky souvenir shops. This part of China, though interesting,
was the most unpleasant : the foreign visitor here is seen as a walking
dollar, and it was a pain to be always on guard to avoid rip-offs.
Shanghai : a huge and
very impressive city with many faces and so much contrast : modern shopping
streets all lit up at night, tall new sky-scrappers (many under construction)
next to old small houses, the old british buildings on the Bund facing
the ultra-modern Pudong developement area across the (filthy) Huangpu
river. With a friend from Germany working in Shanghai, we went to Zhu
Jia Jiao, a small old town next to Shanghai, with narrow streets, wooden
houses and old stone bridges over small canals. This was a very pleasant
day away from the noise of the big city. Next day I visited the poetic
traditional gardens of Suzhou. Sometimes China can be so nice and quiet,
so peaceful (with traditions like people practicing their Tai-Chi in
the morning), and then you hit the street again with its chaos, it's
noise, people pushing in buses etc.... Where is Confucius, where are
their poets ?
Qingdao : my last stop
for this first visit in China was the former german colonial city on
the coast facing Korea. This town understandably produces the best chinese
beer. It feels weird to find german architecture here, and it was also
nice to see the sea for the first time since I left Estonia. The last
leg of my trip in China (train from Qingdao to the ferry port of Weihai,
departure for Korea) was very pleasant as a chinese couple invited me
to sit with them, and we "talked" all the way, mostly with
the phrase book, pen and paper, and a bit of english.
Dates: 13 / 11 - 13
/ 12 / 2000
Stops: Seoul - Soraksan
- Kyongju - Iksan - Maisan - Mokpo - Cheju Island - Pusan - Tongdosa
- Yangdong - Kampo - Pusan - Seoul
Comments: The crossing
from Weihai (China) to Inchon (Korea) was very quiet. In contrast to
european (and in particular scandinavia ferries) not much drinking takes
place (there is only a small karaoke bar, no thank you ...) and most
people just watch TV. After a short train ride, guided by a korean man
on business met on the ferry, we arrived in Seoul. There is an interesting
mix of modern tall buildings and a few palaces and old city gates. It
felt a lot more orderly and cleaner than China, people being more polite
and more respectful, no rip-offs, such a relief. Then, I went to Soraksan
National Park, but unfortunately it was raining heavily the first day.
Next day cleared up and I had a nice and sunny day in the mountains.
After a long bus ride along the beautiful eastern coastline, I arrived
in the historical city of Kyongju, with many tumuli and temples. Having
heard of quite good conditions, I considered for a while taking up a
job as an english teacher but it turned out that work visas are only
granted to UK, US, NZ, Canadians and SA nationals. So the sightseeing
continued, with a short stay in the Maisan Provincial Park. In this
park is the T'apsa buddhist temple with about 80 dry-stone columns or
pagodas, some 3-4 m tall, which withstand strong winds since they had
been erected by a monk 100 years ago. The trip onwards to Mokpo deserves
a special note for the record of the fastest bus connections. I never
waited more than 10 min for the next bus at each of 4 changes. Korea
(along with Turkey) is the easiest country to get around, just turn
up at the bus station and there is usually a bus within half an hour
for your destination. From Mokpo, I took a ferry to Cheju Island. This
place has extinct volcanoes and a very mild climate (it's end of november
and I am walking around in a T-shirt). I also managed to hire a nice
road-bike for a day, and it was great to get away from tacky tourist.
In some parts, the scenery reminded me of Ireland (the sea, the small
fields surrounded by stone walls, the very green and hilly landscape,
the small fishing harbours), but unfortunately there was not a pub in
sight. The overnight crossing from Cheju to Pusan went smoothly, and...
surprise... I met an irish lady on the boat (there are very few travellers
in Korea, most westerners here are canadians, teaching english). Pusan
is a big sea port city of 4 millions which speads between the hills
and the sea. I had thought about going to Japan to look for a job there
teaching english as there are no nationality restrictions but in Pusan,
I met a greek bloke and an irish girl who have been travelling (rough)
for several a few years. They were coming back after some months in
Japan and told me how expensive things are. He also mentioned minority
ethnic groups in the south of China and Laos, so in the end I decided
to keep on travelling, going straight to the south of China. While waiting
for the visa, I visited Tongdosa, an important buddhist temple near
Pusan. I was invited to stay for dinner and overnight as there was many
people there for some celebrations. In the surrounding areas are more
temples set on a background of bamboos and mountains. Then I went to
Yangdong, a wonderful genuine village where there are many traditional
thatched houses. I continued along the coast and could go for a swim
in the sea of Japan (water about 12 deg I guess, no problem) in Kampo,
a fishing harbour. Back in Pusan (to pick up my chinese visa), it suddenly
got really cold. Time to go south. After one month in Korea, this country
was one of the most friendly and welcoming, locals telling me "korean
people feel they have a duty to help foreign visitors". This materialised
with lifts, sponteneous help with directions, etc and even once someone
offering me some money after giving me a lift. I did not expect I would
stay that long in Korea, but it has been a very pleasant stay.
Country: China (2 : Guangxi and Guizhou) |
PHOTOS
|
Dates: 15 /
12 / 2000 - 09 / 01 / 2001
Stops: Shanghai - Yangshuo
- Longsheng - [Zhaoxing, Xijiang and other villages] - Kaili - [market
in Chong'an] - Guiyang - Guangzhou (Canton)
Comments: After 1 night, 1 day and 1
night on the ferry from Inchon, I enjoyed a cruise - like arrival up
the Huangpu river (through an industrial lanscape of cranes and shipyards)
into the morning mist to Shanghai. I took the train the same evening
to Guilin (in the pleasant company of 2 chinese men who spoke very good
english). Another one hour, in the bus for a change, and I arrived in
popular little Yangshuo. Great place for cycling amongst the rice fields,
the little villages and the karst peaks. After the larger northern cities,
I wanted countryside and I got some. Winter had arrived in Korea when
I left but here the landscape was still green thanks to abondant bamboo.
Then, during a rough 10 days in dusty local busses up and down bumpy
dirt roads, I continued through more beautiful places. I visited the
impressive terrassed fields near Longsheng, the lovely villages of Zhaoxing
(Dong people), Xijiang (Miao people). It was quite rough (even a bit
scary when one bus driver was racing with another bus in order to be
first to pick up passengers, all on windy bumpy dusty dirt roads on
steep hillsides) but this part of China is so much more interesting
than the northern cities I saw earlier. I caught local
markets in Kaili and Chong'an. The latter was particularly interesting
and colourful, as almost all the Miao and Gejia women were dressed in
the traditional way (blue and orange colours dominated). Street scenes
included for example a man selling rat poison (with living and dead
proof of the efficiency of his products) next to people getting their
hair cut. There were also street dentists, old men selling birds in
cages near the slaughtering of pigs and buffalos. Other locals were
selling ducks, chickens, dogs, rabbits, vegetable, meat, spices, clothes,
etc... This was on New Year's day (nothing special here, but best wishes
to all anyway !). I took the train to Guiyang, and it feels odd to be
in a major city after over 10 days in little villages. On a day trip
I visited the small untouched traditional chinese village of Qinyan.
Then I intended to go from Guiyang, first to Liuzhou by train, then
Wuzhou by bus, and then Guangzhou but I ended up continuing
directly to Guangzhou with the same train for several reasons (friendly
girl sitting next to me amongst others...). Long tiring trip in hard
seat, but good company.... I had a quick look at Guangzhou which has
pleasant side streets, some old architecture from the time part of this
town was a british and french concession. The trip in the small villages
and markets of the minority groups was what I found the most interesting
so far in China. I knew then that I want more of this, rather than big
chinese towns, and Yunnan would be very rich on the subject.
Dates: 09 -
11 / 01 / 2001
Stops: Hong-Kong - Tai O
Comments: I arrived
in HK after a few hours in the bus from Guangzhou (a modern one, and
the nicest bus since ... Turkey,...). Before going back to some villages,
I had to come here to obtain a one-month visa for Laos. All those tall
buildings so closely packed between the hills and the sea make a very
impressive sight, especially at night with all the lights. However,
the air pollution was terrible so I escaped the big city and went to
Lantau Island where I visited the little fishing village of Tai O. I
left as soon as my Laos visa was ready.
Country: Macau
Dates: 11 - 14 / 01
Stops: Macau
Comments: A short fast
ferry trip took me to more easy going Macau, with its interesting mix
of chinese and portuguese styles. Chinese buddhist temples here actually
see worshippers, not only tourists like in mainland China, and portuguese
language can still be heard on the street, in shops and in the several
catholic churches.
Country: China (3 : Yunnan) |
PHOTOS
|
Dates: 14 /
01 - 13 /02 / 2001
Stops: Zuhai - Kunming
- Jianshui - Potou - Tonghai - Jinghong - Menghai - Menghun - Damenglong
- Ganlanba - Mengyang - Jinuo - Menglun - Menglan
Comments: From Zuhai
near Macau, I caught a sleeper bus to Zhanjian and a train to Kunming
thus avoiding the chaotic busy station in Guangzhou. I arrived in Kunming
which, as chinese cities go, was rather pleasant place with some interesting
old streets still left amongst newer buildings. South of Kunming, I
continued to Jianshui (busy old streets and a large temple to Confucius),
Potou (I saw the small Sunday market and some villages with Hani people,
who have built impressive terrasses) and Tonghai (a pleasant traditional
town). Near Tonghai, I was guided by a local girl around a fascinating
village whose inhabitants are descendants from Mongols who came this
far south over 700 years ago. They have their own language and dress
and there is even a temple to Genghis Khan, with the words "He
never died in people's heart". I spent the Chinese New Year (Spring
Festival) with the family of this local girl in Tonghai : many firecrackers,
a firework display, street parades, and much food. I continued south
to Xinshuangbanna, a tropical, exotic part of China. I visited the area
around Jinghong and Menghai, dotted with interesting markets, temples
and pagodas, and home to Dai and Hani people. Damenglong is another
small town, not far from a border point to Myanmar (only for locals).
The area is very green with rice fields in the valley. I could hire
a bike and make my way to a small remote Bulang village in the hills,
where a local invited me for some tea, some food and eventually to spend
the night. I continued to more such places, including Jinuo, Menglun
(very nice tropical plant gardent) and Menglan where I was invited to
spend the night in a Dai village near Menglan.
Dates: 13 /
02 - 14 / 03 / 2001
Stops: Luang Nam Tha
- Muang Sing - Udomxai - Bun Tai - Phongsali - Muang Khua - Muang Ngoi
- Nang Khiaw - Luang Phabang - Van Vieng - Vientiane - Van Vieng - Luang
Phrabang - Pak beng - Huay Xai - Nam Tha
Comments: I crossed
the border from Mohan in China to Boten. In Laos, transport is done
by truck or by boat (rarely by bus). Towns here are rather villages,
as it is not a very populous country. Besides the bumpy dusty truck
rides, Laos is a very relaxing and the pace of life is very slow. There
were many travellers around (I had not seen a westerner in one week
just before in China). The north of Laos, like just over the border
in China and Vietnam, is populated by many different ethnic groups,
some like the Akha (or Hani) dress in a very colourfull way. My best
time in Laos was surely the boat trip down the Nam Ou, passing great
scenery of steep hills, small villages of bamboo houses, a few poppy
fields (opium), keeping cool with water splashing from the occasional
rapid. The green colour of flooded rice fields at was beautiful. In
Luang Phabang, there are many superb temples and a number of houses
in french style left from the colonial time. Van Vieng, on the way to
Vientiane has some fine scenery with tall peaks shrouded in the morning
mist. Vientiane is not an extraordinary town, but there are a few temples
and some french houses and for a capital city, it's very quiet. Here
I decided to turn back (going to Thailand would take me the islands,
to Cambodia, to Myanmar, to Indonesia..... I would get carried away.
I went back to Luang Phrabang and then, I took a boat up the Mekong
to Huay Xai. From there, it was long 12 hr ride
(for 200 km) in the back of a pick-upa across jungle and villages on
a muddy slippery tortous road (it started raining a few days before).
Next day I reentered China at the same border as a month ago.
Country: China (4 : Yunnan - Western Sichuan - Xinjiang)
Dates: 14 / 03 - 02
/ 07 / 2001
Stops: Jinghong - Menglian
- Shangyun - Lincang - Fengqing - Baoshan - Luxi - Wanding - Ruili -
Husa - Yingjiang - Tengchong - Baoshan - Dali - Lijiang - Zhongdian
- Xiancheng - Litang - Kangding - Lixian - Aba - Hongyuan - Zoige -
Langmusi - Xiahe - Tongren - Xining - Dunhuang - Hami - Turpan - Urumqi
- (Kuytun - Jinghe) - Yining - Gongliu - Kuqa - Wushi -
(Bachu) - Kashgar - Karakul lake - Tashkurgan
Comments:
Yunnan (see
PHOTOS)
Back in China again, and I had at this point in mind
to return to Europe via Central Asia. I stopped for a rest-day in Jinghong
where I met Evelyne, from France who was also going to western China,
but then Pakistan. I travelled slowly for several weeks in the south
of Yunnan across minority areas. I started in Menglian. This was one
of the best and most friendly places in China so far. I visited a number
of villages of various ethnic groups (Dai, Lahu, Hani or Akha, Wa),
and sometimes got invited for tea, some food or to spend the night.
Wonderful people. I made my way to Baoshan in small stages, stopping
in Shangyun, Lincang and Fengqing. The latter is a nice traditional
chinese town with great scenery around (terrassed valley, and a big
white stuppa on a hill). The region is very beautiful and montainous.
From Baoshan, I went south to the Dehong region where there are more
minorities. I spent a day around Ruili, a very very lively town near
the Myanmar border. Near Yingjiang, I came across a Dai village festival
by pure chance. The kindness of the locals, the atmosphere, the colours,
the beauty of the Dai girls made this day one of the most memorable
of the whole trip. I spent the next few days with a Dai friend who took
me to a nearby Jingpo village where the locals dressed us in their beautiful
festival clothes. The Jingpo (like the Lahu near Menglian) are christian
since they were converted by english missionaries. It was hard to leave,
but I continued to Tenchong where there are volcanoes and hotsprings.
However, the interesting nature here is sadly converted into tacky tourist
resorts and it was rather disapointing. After a long bus ride, I arrived
in famous Dali, an old town with a population of Bai people and many
tourists. I went to interesting markets of Bai and Yi people in nearby
villages. I continued to Lijiang, another (larger) old town of Naxi
people. I walked the well known and absolutely fantastic Tiger Leaping
Gorge. Amazing and very impressive scenery, with friendly villages on
the way. From here start the mountain areas and the tibetan places :
first, Zhongdian, a town at 3200 m with a very important monastery.
From here I travelled with Evelyne.
Western Sichuan (see
PHOTOS)
Xiancheng was the next destination, a very traditional
tibetan village surrounded by small green fields and dry mountains.
After another difficult arduous ride on a dusty dirt road over
mountain passes at 4500m, we arrived in the town Litang,
set on the high plateau at 4000m. The tibetans here are Khambas and
gave the fiercest resistance to chinese invasion a few decades ago.
Their wild looks (darker skin from the harsh sun, long hair, tall size)
make them very impressive to look at. Europeans are also exotic for
them so we all stop walking to look at each other. The sky at this altitude,
the light on the plateau, the mountains, the yaks, the architecture
of the houses and temples, the chanting in the temples, the kindness
of the locals ... no wonder Tibet has fascinated so many people and
still does. The next stop was Kangding, in the valley, where the festival
to celebrate Buddha's birthday was held at the tibetan monastery. Many
visitors, tourist (chinese and foreign) and travellers came to watch
the sacred dances by the monks dressed in very colourful clothes and
wearing elaborate masks. Chengdu was just a necessary halt for a bank,
it's just another big chinese city, nothing special and we left quickly
for Lixian where Qiang people, related to tibetans live in large stone
houses villages set in green pretty valleys. After this, I was back
in tibetan areas, on the high cold plateau. Some
trips were quite hard (early buses, long rides, breakdowns, flat
tyres, stuck in the snow in the blizzard on the first of May, etc....).
Aba (nothing to do with my most despised music group from Sweden) was
worth this trouble, to visit the large monastery. After more hours in
buses, we reached Hongyuan and Zoige, small towns in vast grasslands.
Gansu, Qinghai
In Langmusi, Xiahe and Tongren, there are also more
important monasteries. This is the limit of the tibetan world, and the
presence Hui people (chinese muslim, who make the majority of the nearby
Ningxia province) is noticeable. Xining is yet another big city, necessary
stop from where we changed direction making a westward turn.
Xinjiang (see
PHOTOS)
After a long bus ride, we got to Dunhuang which is
an oasis town in the middle of the desert. Total change in scenery,
the tibetan plateau is miles behind. Towards the south, the oasis (poplars,
fruit trees, fields...) suddenly gives way to very high sand dunes.
Near Dunhuang I visited buddhist caves with paintings dating back to
the arrival of the buddhist religion in China (4 - 5th century BC).
Hami was the next stop to break the trip to Turpan. This town (located
in a depression below sea level) is populated mostly by Uighur people
(related to the turcs). This other oasis town gets its water from the
nearby mountains since ancient times. The old part of town was very
interesting with traditional mud-brick houses, donkey carts on which
locals were kindly offering lifts, street bakers. Near Turpan are ancient
cities dating back to silk road times. Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang
is yet another ordinary big modern city, but nearby is the beautiful
Tianchi lake, set in the Bogda mountains, where we spent a few days
sleeping in a Kazakh yurt (round tent, a bit like the mongolian ger).
From Urumqi, we went to Yining and Gongliu
(nice valley, but this last town was closed to foreigners and we got
sent back to Yining with a "warning", happy enough to have
avoided a fine). When we asked the chinese lady at the police station
"why is this area closed ?", she replied "because it
not open." There was then no choice but to go by night bus straight
to Kuqa, which like Yining has an interesting traditional part of town,
where we had a good time with friendly Uighur people learning hard the
english language. There is much desert around here with the occasional
oasis town, and some dust storms sometimes blocked the view from the
bus as if we were in the fog. It was hot at this time of the year (June)
and an afternoon break was often welcome to escape the heat. Finally
we arrived in famous Kashgar : the west-end of China (big market, mosques,
many buildings of muslim architecture, and a fantastic old town). Here
Evelyne continued to Pakistan and I stayed a little longer. I changed
my mind and decided not to go to Kyrgistan and Central Asia (need of
a visa and no consulate around, need to arrange expensive transport
over the Torugart pass) but to go to Pakistan (no visa, public bus,
easy). The road back to Europe was then set : it will be Iran and Turkey.
On the way to the border with Pakistan, I stopped at the beautiful Karakul
lake, at the foot of two BIG mountains (7000+ m). Tashkurgan is the
end of China. Most people here are Tajik, and it was amazing to see
this little girl with curly blond hair and blue eyes. That was it for
China, as the road to Pakistan culminates at 4700 m at the Khunjerab
pass and descends into Pakistan.
Dates: 02 /
07 - 28 / 08 / 2001
Stops: Pasu - Gulmit
- Karimabad - Minapin - Chalt - Gilgit -Skardu - Khaplu - (Gilgit) -
Rawalpindi/Islamabad - Peshawar - Dir - Chitral - (Kalash valleys, Garam
Chasma, Reshun) - Swat - Peshawar (Darra Adam Khel) - Rawalpindi - Quetta
Comments:
Northern Areas : Pakistan this year
has decided it's their tourist year, so no visa is required although
the cheerful pakistani border guard was joking "yes, you need one
since yesterday 1st of July, 50 USD". After the Pamir plateau on
the chinese side, the road drops in narrow rocky valley and meets the
Hunza river. Rockslides plague this road and we had to get off the bus
to walk over a large one, then the bus followed. The first stops were
in Pasu and Gulmit, small villages populated by Wakhi Tajik people.
They are Ismaili muslims and are women are more comfortable talking
with foreigners than in some more conservative villages. Near Pasu are
two large and impressive glaciers. Karimabad is a larger and more touristy
village with great views on several peaks over 7000 m. People in Hunza
speak several languages (Shina, Burushashki, Urdu and english) and most
are Ismaili. Nearby in Nagar (Minapin, Chalt), most people are Shia
muslim. From both Karimabad and Minapin I enjoyed great one-day walks
into the mountains with views on glaciers and snowy peaks. Gilgit is
an mandatory passage to go to Skardu. There people are Balti (ethnically
and linguistically related to the tibetans but muslim). 100 km east
is Khaplu, not far from the Line of Control with India, a pretty village
of stone and timber. These areas are very dry, so locals have built
some elaborate irrigation channels sometimes cut into the cliffs to
redirect glacial melt water into their fields. Therefore, some areas
in this barren rocky landscape are surprisingly green. I came back to
Gilgit the same way, along the very impressive Indus valley (rather
a gorge, with the narrow road twisting on or into the mountainside).
After a long bus ride down the Indus valley, I arrived in Islamabad
/ Rawalpindi. It was very interesting to see the change in landscape
from the rocky upper valley to the lush and green (almost tropical)
lower areas. Islamabad is the very spead out, new (and boring) capital,
adjacent to the older, chaotic and dirty town of Rawalpindi. Here it
was very hot and humid at this season (end of July), with some heavy
downpours sometimes (with flooding and some victims). Overall this was
the most unpleasant stop in the whole trip.
North West Frontier Province :
After finally being done with some paperwork (Visa extension, application
for iranian visa), I moved on to Peshawar, even hotter, but at least
it was interesting. The tiny streets in the bazaar are fascinating with
afghani women in burqa, men with long black beards, .... This is the
land of the friendly Pathan people ("you are guest in this country")
and who are also conservative muslims and openly pro-Taliban. To get
away from the heat, I quickly went north to the mountains to Dir and
Chitral where it is much cooler. In Chitral and in Garam Chasma (hot
spring), there are many afghani people with turbanned heads and long
beards. Great looks. I also visited the Kalash were live about 3000
non-muslim people. Women tie their hair in braids and wear a colourful
outfit. The area here is part of the Hindukush mountains, dominated
by the Tirish Mir at over 7000 m. Eventually, all good things have an
end, I left the mountains to return to the heat of Peshawar (after a
stop in green Swat valley). I spent only one day there, and took the
chance to visit Darra Adam Khel. This is an odd place where the locals
are busy making copies of guns from all over the world. Officially,
the town is off-limits to foreigners, but in reality, I was welcomed
by a policeman and taken around the workshops after paying a "permission".
I could also fire a few shots with a kalashnikov (original one "copy
not good" said the policeman...).
Baluchistan : Then,
I returned to Rawalpindi and, after one more day wait, I got my iranian
visa : 30 days !!. This will save the trouble of getting extensions
on a 7-day transit visa, thank you my friends. After over 35 long hot
hours in a bouncing train (the worst leg of the whole trip because of
the heat and humidity and insufficient ventilation), I reached Quetta.
Less hot and not so awfully humid, this town is more pleasant than Rawalpindi
/ Islamabad. The locals have great faces, baluch people wear colourful
caps and some of the many afghan refugees have asian features (Hazara
people, descendants of the troops of Genghis Khan and do look like the
mongols. They are shiite muslims and therefore opposed to the taliban).
I left Quetta by bus in the company of Kumiko from Japan which whom
I travelled till Esfahan and we reach Taftan, the iranian border after
a long long 12 hr trip, but fortunately an
easy border crossing.
Dates: 28 /
07 - 21 / 08 / 2001
Stops: Bam - Kerman
- Yazd - Shiraz - Esfahan - Khorram Abad - Sanandaj - Hamadan - Ghazvin
- Masuleh (near Rasht)- Ardabil - Kandovan (nearTabriz)
Comments: It was a
long trip again after the border and it was so good to arrive in Bam
(well preserved ruins of the ancient city and the citadel). After more
desert : Kerman (kilometre long bazaar), Yazd (very nice old town of
mud houses and some beautiful blue-tiled mosques), Shiraz (more mosques
and nearby Persepolis, ruins of the ancient capital of the persian empire),
and Esfahan (the most elaborate of those beautiful blue-tiled mosques,
the huge Khomenei Square, an armenian church where we met a very friendly
iranian family). After Pakistan, Iran gave the feeling of a rather organised,
modern, clean, and I'd even say western society. People are generally
very friendly "Welcome to Iran, welcome" and I none of the
people I talk with had anti-western opinions, on the contrary : "Fransa
khub (good), Amrika khub". Actually there are common points with
the US : fast food is popular (burgers, sandwich) and they love coca-cola
(fake one here of course, called Arso-Cola or Coffy-Cola). I continued
west in order to avoid Tehran (huge polluted uninteresting city). The
most interesting places were Sanandaj where there are many Kurds, most
of them in traditional dress (more exotic than iranians who dress like
europeans). Near Hamadan I visited a big cave (Ali Sadr) in company
of a friendly Mullah very keen on meeting foreigners. Ghazvin, further
north, had a few nice mosques and mausoleums. One of the most beautiful
villages I saw was Masuleh, in the very green Caspian region. Near Tabriz
is another one where locals live in houses carved into the rock, in
a landscape similar to Capadoccia in Turkey. From Tabriz, I got to the
turkish border at Bazargan, in company of other japanese people. Apart
from being assailed by money changers like by sharks, this was another
easy border crossing, out of Iran through a small door, just like I
entered.
Dates: 21 /
09 - 05 / 10 / 2001
Stops: Dogubeyazit
- Van - Tatvan - Mardin - Sanli Urfa - Nemrut Dagi (Kahta) - Ganziantep
- Antakya
Comments: I said last
year when I left for Bulgaria that I would be back in Turkey. Good to
be here again, things are easier suddenly, signs are in roman characters,
hotels are easy to find, good turkish food is everywhere, but transport
is more expensive (well, how can you beat Iran where petrol sells for
a few US cents a liter...). The first halt was in Dogubeyazit, just
over the border where the Ishak Pasha citadel on a hill offers great
views on the surroundings. Also nearby is the impressive Mt Ararat,
an extinct volcanoe over 5000 m high. Near Van I visited a the ruins
of armenian church on a small island on lake Van, with well preserved
bas-reliefs. Mardin, not far from the Syrian border is a nice old town
on a hillside. I walked to the nearby christian monophysite monastery
where the liturgical language is still aramaic, the language of Jesus.
The Bible is writen in an early arabic script. Sanli Urfa, also near
the syrian border shows some arab influence especially in people and
how they dress. This interesting old town is supposed to be the birth
place of the prophet Abraham (Ibrahim for muslims). The next destination
was the famous Nemrut mountain, where giant statues were erected by
the king of Commagene. I was for sunrise on the cold windy summit when
the first rays of sun illuminate the giant head of the greek gods. Then,
after a stopover in Gazi Antep I came to Antakya (Antioch), interesting
old town with many old houses and one of the first christian churches
(St Peter's church). Then I was off to Mersin for the ferry to Cyprus.
Country: North Cyprus (KKTC) |
PHOTOS
|
Dates: 06 -
08 / 10 / 2001
Stops: Famagusta
Comments: This detour
was a quick trip over to visit a friend over the weekend. Then I went
back to Turkey from Girne to Tasucu.
Dates: 08 -16
/ 10 / 2001
Stops: Konya - Egirdir
- Pamukale - Selcuk
Comments: From Tasucu
I went straight to Konya, where I met a friend from Antalya whom I met
in Pakistan and I stayed there 3 days, shown around by her and her friends.
Turkey is not short of interesting places and I made my way west stopping
first in Egirdir (small lake side town), then Pamukkale (white limestone
terrasses and roman ruins of Hierapolis) and finally Selcuk. Here, I
visited the roman ruins of Ephesus. Then I was off to Greece from Kusadasi,
an expensive short ferry trip considering the distance.
Dates: 16 -
21 / 10 / 2001
Stops: Samos - Paros
- Naxos
Comments: I absolutely
wanted to see a few of these irresistable greek islands with their little
white houses, the small churches with the blue domes and the sea and
I surely enjoyed Naxos and Paros, especially off-season. Then it was
a quick trip to Piraeus by ferry where I arrived at 5am, then to Patras
by train and direct to Ancona in Italy by ferry.
Dates: 22 - 25 / 10
/ 2001
Stops: Bologna
Comments: I visit again
my friend in Bologna, like last year on the way and I took the chance
to make a day trip to Venice, great place to finish the trip. In the
end I still have not seen Rome...
Country: France
Dates: 26 / 10 - ....
/ 2001
Stops: Varey - Locminé
Comments: After a day
in the train from Bologna, I am back at my sister's place where I stayed
for a week, meeting for the first time my 3 month old smily nephew.
We drove to Brittany to my parents place and I was back one the 2nd
of Nov. The trip was finished after a total of 17 months, countless
miles and 23 countries.
|