Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Iran - A sleepless night, then Esfahan

Well I've made it to Esfahan - that's about half way through my Iran journey.
 
I've spent the last few days here and tomorrow I leave - back onto the road toward Shiraz.
 
The second night before I arrived here in Esfahan was rather eventful and I got no sleep from 11:30pm until the following night.   I made camp in a field with the permission of the three workers tending the field that afternoon and also the owner (their father? - holding the veg. in the photo) who sat and talked to me for 20 minutes outside my tent before loading me up with fresh produce from the farm for dinner. 
I settled down to sleep after it got dark and was awoken at 11:30 with the sound of shovelling.  A common practice as they open up a portion of channel wall to flood a paddock for irrigation.   I wasn't at all concerned as the owner knew I was here and I had his blessing.   A little while later an old man appeared beside the tent with a Kerosene lamp and shovel saying "Aab Aab".   I couldn't believe it - surely they don't want me to pack up so they can flood my paddock tonight.   I tried to let him know that the owner knew I was here and that if the plan was to irrigate then it could wait until tomorrow.   His voice however got a bit more serious and he stretched out with the shovel - holding the kero lamp high to reveal a dark patch approaching across the field only meters from my tent and moving our way fast...   Suddenly the situation had become a bit more serious.   I grabbed my Down sleeping bag - stuffed it into its sack as quickly as I could in the panic that was setting in, put it on a high bank beside the tent and went back to grab the camera, passport and other items that were also sitting on the floor of the tent.  Clothes and everything else - except the thermarest followed.   The bike was moved a little higher up the small paddock side bank that it was resting against, and I returned to unpeg the tent which was now floating in 50cm of water.
With the tent in my hands - poles still in position - I now had everything except the groundsheet and 1 of the 10 pegs. (I hoped that was all).   The man disappeared to the next paddock and more digging.   I attached everything (except the tent) as best I could to the bike and carried the bike over the irrigation trenches into an adjacent dry paddock where the onions and tomato's had come from and headed toward a light I could see at the far side (the direction the owner had appeared from and disappeared to.)  When I got to the light it wasn't a farm house as I'd hoped but a street light on a dirt road.  I tried to get a response from a  nearby house that had lights blazing but no response at all. (other than the dogs).   I returned to the paddock to get the tent then back to the street lamp.  By this stage I had put on a pair of sandals and a shirt so I was no longer running around the paddocks in only my jocks.
As I stood under the light contemplating whether the tent would be at all usable and if so where I would put it a row of headlights approached - one with the distinctive green stripe of the Iran Police.   The policeman asked to see my passport and for some reason seemed surprised when he said "Aab" pointing to the wet passport.  I said "Aab, Aab" and swung my hands around to show that everything around me was wet.   The man with the shovel was also there so he had obviously gone to get the police once he'd finished flooding the paddocks.  ( I suspect that it was the owners father with the shovel, either that or a farm worker - but knowing the way the economy and families work here father seems the logical choice).
The Police wanted me to follow them and I could camp at the police station 1.5km away.   I rode out to the highway and along the highway in front of the police car - still in my jocks - until we got to the local Mosque.  The mosque was to be my home for the rest of the night, but it would take many hours to get rid of all the interested parties and lie down with the lights off - hoping for sleep.  Lights out was 3am and at 4am the first people arrived in preparation for the 4:30 call to prayer.   I hadnt slept at all in that hour and wasn't going to get any after the call to prayer either.
When the people arrived at 4:00 they brought with them a bowl of food to heat on the kero heater, so that I could - like them - have a meal before sunrise and the start of the days fasting for Ramadan. 
With no sleep I decided that the ride into Esfahan that I would have made that morning could wait a day or two and that I would wait for another rider Roli (Swiss rider I met in Istanbul) who I believed would be about one day behind me.   I rode back to the field for photos The wet paddock the next morning. and in case I could find the missing tent peg - I actually found a cycling glove which I hadn't realised was missing and the peg, then set up my tent beside the road in plain view with my bike locked to the sign welcoming you to the town.  All in plain view so that Roli wouldn't miss it.  I also wrote a message - his name - in dirt on the black bitumen with an arrow.  Then I lay down until it got too hot and moved to the shade of some nearby trees.   I figured from my last email communications with Roli that he would arrive in the late afternoon or maybe the next morning - depending on where he chose to camp.   He arrived earlier than I expected, about 2 or 3 o'clock and had 90+km on the clock already that day so we passed through the town and started looking for a place to camp before we both headed to Esfahan the next day.
 
Esfahan is known in Iran to be "half of the world" - because it is so beautiful, the beautiful places in the rest of the world (combined) can only just try to compete.   And wow - it is stunning.  Compared to anywhere else I have been it is stunning, and compared to the barren hills in this part of the world it is truly spectacular.  Boulevards lined with green trees, the river banks lined with magnificent grassy parks and park lands equal to any in the western world.   Even the back streets are lined with magnificent trees and beautiful creeks with grass parkland.  You also see no litter - which is such a change from anywhere else in Iran (or any of the last few countries I have been through).  I sat with Roli by a small creek off a side street the other day eating lunch. In the half to three quarters of an hour we were there not a single item of litter past by in the creek - no paper, no bottles, only a couple of pieces of water grass that must have been uprooted by the flow.  And a crab sat on the other bank for the whole time.   I've not seen a creek so litter free in a city ever.
1. A new Hillman Hunter
2. Carrot washing
3. A message from me to Roli the day before the big wet - he took a similar photo at the same place at 11am the following day.
 
 
Esfahan - Half of the world
 
 
For all those interested in rock climbing.  Iran of course is loaded with places to climb and here in Esfahan we (Roli and I) have so far visited two climbing walls.  One outside the Fire Station (and Mountain Rescue centre) and another indoor one in a sporting complex.  The climbing wall in the sporting complex is fantastic - but there are NO easy climbs.  There are no walls on an angle beyond vertical _/ .  Everything is either _| vertical or _\  overhanging!!!!   There is also a lack of gear - the government funded or helped fund the fantastic wall but you cannot hire gear there so it is primarily used for bouldering.   They really need to pull some of the very impressive overhanging roof panels off and make some easy climbs - but then I guess they'd need harnesses, belay devices and  ropes.   One of the guys who runs the place got out two harnesses and a rope that they do have and showed us some serious climbing.
 
To Shiraz....
Jeff


Friday, September 14, 2007

Sanandaj (Kurdistan) Iran

Greetings from Sanandaj!

Iran and more particularly Kurdistan has continued to be a wonderful experience. I went to my first Kurdish wedding the other day - very colourful !!!
Of course this was followed up by being guest of honour at a post wedding dinner - I'm slowly getting used to the fact that I "DO NOT" stand when people - of more importance than me - walk into the room - because - well - there is no one of more importance than me... I'm the guest of honour.
 

I'm also having to come to grips with the guys eating in the main room with style and then what is left over being wrapped up in the tablecloth (if you can call it that) and carried back to the kitchen where it is spread out on the kitchen floor for the ladies to eat the leftovers. You sit there wanting to eat all together and with equal status but then remembering that "cultural differences" is why you travel in the first place. - It seems so degrading from our western perspective but the women that have been doing the work seem to be very content and really wanting to please. The smiles I get when I go to thank them are incredible - I wish I could capture that somehow.

Morning in Mahabad - Petrol in Bukan
 
Lunch by the roadside - Dinner in Bukan as guest of honour (again)
 
The road ahead -  A big down approaching Iranshah - Iranshah to Divanderreh "flat - but hardly"
 


Sunday, September 9, 2007

The end of Turkey and finally into Iran

Well I'm finally through Turkey and into Iran - and its great.  Yesterday was my first full day in the country and and I didn't eat any of my own food.  I had morning tea with Iranians, a cooked lunch, afternoon tea, and then for dinner used some of the food I had accumulated during those stops.
 
I wonder which of Turkey and Iran is really the Islamic state - Every tiny village in Turkey has at least one but usually more Minarets as the main feature of the skyline.  In Iran i have seen none.   I'm sitting in an Internet cafe with a girl opposite me and another next to me.  I never saw Bayan's in the "Bay and Bayan" Internet cafes in Turkey.  In Turkey every few hours you get an audible reminder of the main religion with the call to prayer blasting out through loudspeakers all over town.  In Iran none.   Ok, here I have to wear long trousers in Turkey I just chose to.
But it makes you wonder.
 
My last few days in Turkey were spent riding with a companion for the first time.  From Pasinler to Dogubayazit I rode with Julien a Frenchman who now lives in Germany.  Unfortunately we each have our own plans and routes and whilst I ride south in Iran he will ride east.  We had a good time and enjoyed the ups and downs of eastern Turkey together (figuratively and literally).   These included having stones thrown at us every time we saw a boy in the 8 to 14 age range - it wasn't isolated instances it was virtually every time a boy appeared  - it started from Horason and continued to the Iran border ).   There were a couple of times close to Dogubayazit when we passed a group without getting stones and we thought we were past the danger - but then another group and more stones.   It is blessed relief to be in Iran and away from that - (I've done about 200km in Iran so far and not a single incident from any of the boys here.)    My time with Julien also included an entire afternoon stripping and washing the bikes down with fuel, getting rid of liquid Asphalt that had been poured all over the road with no chance of getting past (no stones,  just the liquid).  check the photos for how thick it was.
 
TURKEY PICS
Pasinler - I'd been wanting one of these photos since arriving in Erzurum but never managed to get one.
 
Julien (France) at the bridge near Pasinler, we're riding a few days together - until close to the Iran border - then we go separate directıons.
Julien, Not long after we met in Pasinler
 
Specky scenery again
 
tar on the road - tar on the bike
 
I joined in the celebrations with the fathers mothers and sisters - then as I rode off copped a rock on the left should from one of the brothers.
 
Pedalling down against a head wind
 
Julien gets the locals into Sudoku
 
 
The internet in Iran is not unlike what I expected.  There are internet cafe's, but they hang on dial up lines (one line many customers - it has taken more hours than I care to mention to do this update.  So don't expect too much in updates.  (Every click of the mouse takes 10 minutes (or more).   I'm seriously going to have to avoid the internet else my frustration level will go through the roof.)
 
IRAN PICS
 Welcome to the Islamic Republic of Iran
Welcome to the Islamic Republic of Iran
 
 
Samuel,  I met him in Dogubayazit then again at the Iran Border.
Like me he started in Barcelona  - but I have wheels.  He's heading for Nepal
 
A typical village in north western Iran. - Note the kids running down to greet me (no stones)
Sunflower harvest time in Iran
 
A cooked lunch