Pedaling from the Black Forest to the Yellow Sea
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Category — Tajikistan

Day 171 (Tajikistan): Veshab - Ayni ($400 fine???)

I paid a visit to the school in the morning before heading out. The elementary school had just been refurbished with the help of the German embassy and German Agro Action. The before and after pictures were a telling sign. We had little time only as we were heading back by car (didn’t want to bike down the same bad road), but it was good to talk to the children for a bit. I wished I had had more time with them and would have been able to talk to them longer. But that would have required a much longer visit.

It was then back to Ayni - a harrowing ride in a car. I felt much safer on my bike really. The rest of the afternoon I spent trying to update the website, that being blocked by power outages and low line speeds.

This is also the day when I found out that I may have to pay a $400 fine for registering late. This is a bit of a nuisance, but I couldn’t have done it even had I wanted to. All offices were closed. Hopefully we can work something out. We decided that it wouldn’t be worth taking a cab to Dushanbe and instead that I would be heading there tomorrow so that I am there on Friday morning. Keep your fingers crossed that all works out.

September 10, 2008   1 Comment

Day 170 (Tajkistan): Veshab (lots of new impressions)

I should have headed back to Ayni today, but decided to stay for another day to get a better impression about Veshab, spend a bit more time here to talk to people and have a look around. It ’s not simple to summarize the impressions I had during the day. Where to start and where to end?


Poverty happens on so many levels and different from what we conceive it to be so often. There are no kids that are ravished by hunger to be seen here. But it is the kind of poverty that is extremely substantive and which is very telling about the lack of all things essential.

We started the day with a visit to the local hospital. But I wanted to speak with a doctor and not just look at a hospital. So we talked for a good long while. There isn’t much there. The doctor reports that in the winter time it is hard to maintain even basic services as it is simply too cold at -25C and there is no real heating happening. And she treats almost 20 people per day - including roughly 60 births per year. Which struck me as a lot of kids for a town the size of Veshab. It also points to part of the problem. Overpopulation - combined with rather scarce fertile ground, which explains a lot about the projects that German Agro Action is running here. They are apparently simple projects, but again they are telling: projects that involve courses about preservation of fruit - something that may have been known before, but many of the fruits spoiled because people didn’t know how to do this properly.Another project includes the usage of crops without fertilizer as well as making better crops available that are then shared with others in and outside the village. I talked to one villager who said that he was initially skeptical when he heard about it and was uncertain about the claims being made in the mandatory training that was carried out beforehand. He now says that his fields yield 300% more crops.

In the afternoon, I headed out to take a closer look at the water pipeline. The person responsible for it came long and explained that the villagers are seeing a major difference in their everyday lives and that their health has tremendously improved. And that other villages are thinking about building the same system. It is not free of course and with the (very low) payment they are able to do the maintenance work that is necessary. It’s a very basic construction, but has tremendously improved the life of people here. And for me, this picture almost says it all.

The same person is also a teacher and told me about his extremely low salary, he makes $60 / month. This is a high salary for a teacher and younger teachers make a lot less. Somewhere around $20 / month. They also have to pay a substantial amount for their university education and have no chance of living off of their salary. Which means that they either have to work additional jobs or, as is increasingly the case, there are no longer people willing to do the job. It just isn’t worth it. Something I can very well understand. And there really is no solution for that problem.

At the end of the day we sat down at the village square - and more of the problems became apparent. The complete lack of electricity for 7 months of the year is a major issue. This is not limited to Veshab, but is a countrywide problem. The villages don’t get electricity for the majority of the year. And in the long hard winters this is a major issue. People run generators to power their basic needs. But that is not a way any of us would really want to live and is only a meager solution. The other pressing problems were additional water resources for irrigating plots of land on the other side of the river, protection from landslides and educational issues.


The visit was in a lot of ways an eye-opening experience for me. And I am glad I came. People came to me without demanding anything. They looked for understanding of the situation, for why they are thinking about leaving to Russia to work there and send money back. This creates its own problems of course. The men leave to make money, leaving the families - i.e. mothers and children - to do all the work at home. Apart from the social problems, it creates downward pressure to fulfill the role that the father then leaves behind. It is not a pretty situation at all when countrywide more than 30% of the adult men are no longer here. This is made even worse in a country which is strongly patriarchic.

For me, the projects carried out here in Veshab never struck me as excessive - all of them were carried out in a way that made a lot of sense to me. They were sustainable without involving a massive amount of outside interference. And I didn’t mention all of them here. But I am convinced that the money spent here is well-spent. So, again, please consider donating.

 

Some of you have asked me for my Paypal information as international transactions are still a bit of a hassle. I will respond to this individually - and forward the money to the account of German Agro Action in Germany.

September 9, 2008   No Comments

Day 169 (Tajikistan): Ayni - Veshab (it’s well worth it)

daily distance: 47km
total distance: 10,199km
riding time: just under 4h 

Today was the day. I would be heading to Veshab after all, the town that the charity ride is for. I was anxious to go there, but because there was yet another independence day coming up tomorrow, there is another holiday today, so the center of town was closed and we couldn’t go together. Interesting celebration for sure … everyone could say something, the Chinese construction worker crew representative, all the town’s important people, someone from Iran stressing the good ties and common heritage and many loud musicians.

After all was said and done we were able to set out. The packs were put into the car that was going up before me (didn’t really see the need to make the ride more difficult) and after the initial photos being taken I was on my own until just before Veshab. The area is beautiful … though I am sure the winters make for a rough environment. The mountains are high and forbidding, the valley narrow. There are only few patches to grow anything and all of those areas are being used it seems. The remaining areas are occupied by the villages. It never seizes to amaze me where people live and that they don’t move elsewhere - but family ties here are strong and so people stay. 

The road to Veshab was rough and it took me a good while to get there. It also climbs over a great many cliffs and at the end of the day, I clocked almost 1000m in altitude over a distance of just under 50km on mostly rocky roads. 

The valley seemed to be lasting forever and the further I went the more stretched out the road seemed to be. It was a lot of fun though and with each passing village I knew I was getting closer. And then I saw something: a group of cyclists who were apparently waiting for me to accompany me the last couple of km into the village.

It was great fun riding together with about a dozen or so people and we were greeted by no less than 100 villagers. Just before getting there I kind of reminisced about the last 5 or 6 months and what was going on and why I was doing this. But soon enough I was torn out of these thoughts. We arrived in the village. Kids were saying rhymes in German (kind of cute), salt, bread … the works. I had to tell stories about the trip and where I was going and why I wanted to come to Veshab.

After the initial hello we were welcomed in one of the villager’s home, had something to eat and eventually I had a look around, many people eyeing me curiously - though well aware of who I was and what was going on. This isn’t a tiny village in terms of numbers, there are almost 2,000 people living here. But there isn’t much space. Take a look for yourself. 

As one person explained to me - it reminds him of a highrise. The houses are so closely built together, many people in too few rooms. To some extent this has to do with rock slides which, though rare, do happen here every year. The village stretches along the bank of a river which was used for everything, including fetching drinking water. It wasn’t until German Agro Action proposed and implemented a seperate pipeline that people had safe drinking water. The number of infections dropped dramatically as I was told the following day - by putting in something that we take entirely for granted. And probably don’t even think about when we turn the tap.

The night was dark. I woke up during the night and knew that the power would be out - another thing that makes life very hard here. But I mean out. No light except one flashlight at 3 am - someone wondering through the village. This may be OK during the summer time that the power is out for a few hours during the night, it is an entirely different matter though that for 6-7 months power is cut entirely in this and other villages. This has partially to do with political issues, but the people who do suffer are not the high and might. But what else is new?

PS: I would love to bring you many more pictures from Veshab, but slow upload speeds even here in Dushanbe make this pretty much impossible. My apologies. My hunch is that this won’t change for a while as I will be heading into more and more remote territory.  There are more pictures of today at the flickr site though.

September 8, 2008   1 Comment

Day 168 (Tajikistan): middle of nowhere - Ayni (Chinese attacks)

daily distance: 82km
total distance: 10,152km
riding time: 8-9h 

The majority of the day was uphill and a bad one at that. The much shorter part was downhill. But first off, tonight’s living quarters.

The area is amazing and extremely beautiful. And it was cold. That coldfront seemed to be hovering over the area for quite a while. But soon after this picture things warmed up and by the time I got to the pass it was warm again.

This is a picture which shows the top of the pass. Take a closer look at the right top on the range in the back. You can sort of make it out. 

The way up was nice and smooth until the turnoff to what will be a tunnel …

Until then, Chinese construction crews are busy working on it and not much is done to maintain the road over the pass. Nevertheless, a great many “Ni Hao” was thrown my way on the way up.

Here is the road …

and after a long struggle, I finally made it to the top. A small cry of happiness …

The downhill was similarly atrocious. The road had pretty much been destroyed by all the traffic. It was hard to navigate a way through the remaining rubble, with rocks protruding everywhere. Slight problem: it was getting late. By the time I was at the top of the pass, it was late afternoon. It had taken much longer than I had anticipated. Riding was impossible on parts of the uphill, it was simply too bumpy.

That meant that I wanted to get down into Ayni as quickly as I could. After 15km the road was again a silky black line and I thought that it would be a no-brainer. Little did I know that a Chinese road worker would eventually kick my bike, followed by a slight disagreement. You can hit me, but don’t hit my bike. The Tajiks around us clearly understood that I was in trouble in terms of time, but that meant nothing to him. I tried to reason that with all the Chinese construction workers going up and down the road there was no problem. But his feelings were hurt. He showed me his tatoos, his sunglasses were mirrored and his cigarette he held between his teeth. He reminded me of a dragon (sans the sunglasses I guess) and litterally spewed fire. What I didn’t know was that construction workers are allowed to throw stones at the cars and so kicking a bike is nothing to him. Eventually with the sun gone and it getting gloomy, I could head down the mountain and arrived in Ayni - the town where the German Agro Action is located in this area - just before it became seriously dark. The interesting thing again was that the 30 or Tajik drivers were all on my side. They tried to reason with him long after I had given up. There was no way this would work out I thought. Too many people involved wouldn’t help either and so I waited things out.

I was welcomed by the German Agro Action staff and together we had dinner before I crawled into bed. Tomorrow I’ll be off to Veshab for which the donations that this charity ride is intended for will go. Please consider donating!

September 7, 2008   No Comments

Day 167 (Tajikistan): Khujand - middle of nowhere (putting the socks on)

daily distance: 107km
total distance: 10,070km
riding time: 8h

Out of Khujand and into the unknown. After a yummy milk and cheese curd breakfast prepared by Nodir’s wife I set out and started working on the hills that lay ahead.

Too bad I didn’t gain that much altitude quickly. But slowly things were getting more and more desolate as I was leaving the Western end of the Fergana Valley. It looked the same as when I entered after coming over Kamchik Pass in Uzbekistan. Long, long stretches of desolate dusty land with a few villages here and there. Very few though.

I went through the only - unremarkable - town of any proportion and passed a number of smaller villages. Just prior to Istarafshan, I picked up some yummy melons from this stand and had a go at it.

A lot more climbing until the end of the day followed through more and more alpine surroundings. All day long, I was either skirting snow-capped peaks or was heading towards them. Great scenery overall.

I ended the riding before sunset and found a good little shed to spend the night. It did get cold though towards the end of the day and I am getting a bit apprehensive about the temperatures in the Pamir region which is considerably higher. But for the time being it’s all good.

September 6, 2008   1 Comment