Across Continents

Ken's Blog

On the case

July 1st, 2010

“Stoic” a friend had said. Realistic I thought. The next day I’d set out early for the Chinese Consulate, arriving shortly after nine. Already a lengthy queue, seemed quite disorderly, despite the barriers meant to avoid too much tussling. And there’d be no chance of admittance today.

So instead I went in search of a suitable visa agent. They supposedly hung around the Consulate, but the idea of handing over cash and my passport to a stranger on the street, purporting to be an agent, seemed inconceivable. Decided to go and look for a suitable travel agency in the city centre.

After much searching I eventually found Nurila. She spoke good English and understood my problem. Quick call to the Consulate. Unfortunately, she explained, without a residency permit they would not issue me with a visa. Where there any agents in the city who specialised in visits to China, I enquired? I’d heard a rumour they might be able to circumvent the residency requirement.

Took me over an hour to locate a specialist agency, tucked away in a small office inside a hotel on the far side of the city. Diana was very understanding, spoke excellent English, but no, without a residency permit, there’d only be a flat refusal. My only hope, she explained, was to go in person and plead my case. And get there early, around seven, to have any hope of admittance when the gates open at nine, she advised. But she could help me with the application form, especially as it was in Russian, an offer I gladly accepted.

Emerging back on the street, the lingering humidity had been replaced by gentle rain, soon descending into a downpour. A cheap umbrella – a few pounds – from a nearby bazaar and then the long trek back across the city, contemplating my next move.

Diana had explained that the Chinese Consulate only ever issued visas for thirty days, to Kazakhs certainly. Indeed, the application form gave no other options, unlike the one in Malta I’d completed. Would that really be enough to cross China, assuming I was able to secure a thirty day extension once I’d entered? Five thousand or more kilometres in a little over fifty days, terrain and roads a largely unknown quantity. Difficult. On the boundary between the art of the possible, and hopeless optimism.

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Back to Almaty

June 30th, 2010

Charin

Forty miles. Over six hours. An unrelenting uphill gradient for the most part, never ending false summits. Charin Natural National Park. An empty wilderness, parts I thought resembled a moonscape. Sometimes loud buzzing sounds from bushes besides the road, but nothing to see, from a distance at least. I didn’t want to inadvertently disturb anything that might swarm.

And then the start of the Kokpek Gorge, unassuming at first. The village sharing the same name appeared to be no more than a collection of cafes, a few small shops. Some quite smart, others rather run down. A water fountain. Cool. Refreshing. Cars coming and going, the occupants scattered about the place. The odd coach, some passengers striding off purposefully to replenish with water and a few snacks, others just milling around, mostly enjoying a cigarette.

Gorge

Swift descent, a short respite from the earlier climbs, soon dropping down on to the plain that would eventually lead to Almaty. Still a hundred or so miles remaining, I’d decided to stop in the town of Shilik, a couple of hours beyond the gorge. The layout was confusing, the centre difficult to discern, but I eventually found another workman’s hotel. Ten pounds. No shower, just a sink. But a nice clean room. And no cockroaches.

Back on the road the next morning, the traffic steadily increasing as Almaty edged closer. Sweat mixing with the blackening exhaust fumes of passing lorries, many racing by perilously close. Black streaks on exposed arms, rivulets of dirt down my legs. Quickly got my bearings once more in the city, within the hour reaching the house I’d stayed in previously. First part of the plan complete.

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Long road back

June 29th, 2010

long road back

I’d decided to return to Almaty via a different route to the one I’d come on, back tracking a little to the town of Koktal, then heading south across the Ile river to Shonzhy. Then westwards through the Kokpek Gorge and across the plain that led to the city. Two hundred and forty miles. The length of Wales. Despite the heat, reckoned this was possible in three days. It’d be hard going, but I wanted to get a fresh Chinese visa as quickly as possible, so as not to loose too much momentum.

Marker posts

Swift progress back through the provincial town of Zharkent, past fertile, irrigated fields, alongside woodlands, and a brief stop in Koktal. Then south towards the Ile river and, far beyond its banks, the town of Shonzhy for the night. Fifty miles. Thirty or more degrees. I’d camp if I could find sufficient cover to conceal myself, but I doubted that would be the case. Way markers showing the distance, in kilometres, from the border, and to Almaty.

A very gentle, at times almost imperceptible, downhill gradient towards the Ile, and then a steady, I thought flat perhaps, run to Shonzhy. Bar a short stop in a roadside cafe in the late afternoon, I’d kept moving. The briefest of water stops and I’d found myself engulfed in a cloud of flies.

The town of Shonzhy, a short detour off the main route towards Almaty, was uninspiring, nothing to distinguish it from other similarly sized provincial centres. I quickly found a small workman’s hotel, about five pounds. But, by the time I’d got my trusty steed and all the luggage into the room, the price had doubled. The lady indicated it would be more, as I’d have two beds, and there was a television. ’Nyet’ I said, picking up some of the panniers as if to leave. We settled in the middle.

After a shower of sorts – barely a dribble but at least it was hot – shared with a few resilient cockroaches, I settled down to watch some television. Mostly in Russian, including a dated – I thought the seventies – dubbed production of Jerome K Jerome’s “Three Men in a Boat”. Few musical numbers and nymphs on water lilies I’d not remembered from the book I’d re-read back in Istanbul. And at least two different dogs.

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Never to yield

June 28th, 2010

I’d seen China. Now half way across Asia, I knew I really could do this, reach Hong Kong and complete another continent. Then onwards, Australia, the Americas, Africa, and home. Not that I ever seriously doubted this, just the sudden realisation that if I kept going as I’d done so far, success must surely follow. I’d felt both tested and strengthened by Kazakhstan, the fearsome heat of the Steppe, the mountain passes and open plains in the east.

But first I needed a fresh Chinese visa, and soon, before my Kazakhstan one expired in less than three weeks. And that needed a plan. The first part would be simple enough. I’d need to return to Almaty, the former Capital and still home to a Chinese Consulate. Whether they’d be prepared to issue me a new visa was unclear. I wasn’t a resident, a requirement, officially at least. But perhaps the Consul could be persuaded of the unusual circumstances of my situation, and might be able to apply a little discretion.

If a fresh Chinese visa wasn’t possible in Almaty, I, or my passport at least, would have to go elsewhere, to another country with a greater prospect of success. And, ideally, I wanted a visa for sixty days duration, rather than the usual thirty days. It’s a big country. An added complication was that my Kazakhstan visa would expire in less than three weeks, and overstaying was out of the question. And I’d insufficient grounds for an extension to my existing visa.

Tot up time spent sending my passport by courier to and from a reputable visa agent abroad, processing of your application, returning to the border, an allowance for the unexpected and you quickly get close to the end of my Kazakhstan visa, little margin for error. Lots to think about. Quickly.

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Petty pilfering – a cautionary tale

June 27th, 2010

“Problem.” I explained. Assertively. “Or militia. Zharkent.” He knew exactly what I meant. I watched carefully as he and his son followed me to the room where I’d spent the night, along with all my kit. Made it clear something was missing and I wanted it back. My video camera. Now. A few words exchanged between father and son, the mattress lifted and the item retrieved from a box beneath it.

Sabit

I’d met the father, Sabit, the previous day near the entrance to the military zone that flanks the border with China. The unexpected closure had meant I was at a dead end, for the time being at least. He’d kindly offered me tea at his home in a nearby village, in itself a not uncommon gesture. I’d accepted, cautious as ever whilst I got a measure of the situation.

With Emma, my trusty steed, and all the kit supposedly secure inside his house, a little time spent meeting his wife and some of his eight children and we’d headed out to explore the village, take a few photographs. Nothing unusual in that. One of his young sons had taken a good deal of interest in Emma and the kit, but, in itself, that’s also not unusual. Curiosity of youth.

When we returned I’d noticed one of the panniers had been opened, nothing missing, but some rummaging had taken place. Amateurish stuff. Childish even. I’d a good idea who might have done this. But nothing more than curiosity, no suggestion of malice.

Almost every day I encounter unfamiliar situations, meet perfect strangers who offer hospitality, or who are just curious as to what I’m doing. Constantly assessing risk, plausibility, whether to accept offers of help or politely decline. Looking for tell-tale warning signs. Remembering most people are good, honest, individuals. Genuine. But all countries have rogues. And Kazakhstan, or indeed the UK, is no exception.

Mostly I rely on instinct, body language, simple observation to judge situations. And if I do find myself becoming a little unsure, thankfully a rarity, a few simple measures come into play. In this instance I’d decided it was impractical to depart before the next morning, but would secure everything in the room I was to sleep in. And I’d not disclose my intention to leave until I was about to depart.

If there was a problem later, I’d want to be sure of people’s actual identity. For the militia. Surprising what can be coaxed out of people, like their full names, dates of birth, even their identity documents and driving licences to validate who they are. And not that difficult to capture all as high resolution digital images with the camera. Discreetly of course. And a GPS satellite fix on the location, plenty of time stamped family photographs, lots to show we’d met, that I’d been where I’d said I’d been, and when. Simple, precautionary stuff, done on just a few occasions.

I’d offered to treat everyone to ice cream, some soft drinks, and a few beers for Sabit and I. Just by way of a thank you for their hospitality. Oddly, the village shop seemed to be just out of change, the equivalent of a few pounds. Curious. So I just stocked up on more rations for my as yet unannounced travels the next day.

Supper

Back at the house, supper then the suggestion of a walk around the village. This suddenly didn’t seem right, quite enough photographs taken earlier in the day. Sabit was persistent in his offer, so I chose to compromise. A few minutes fresh air, then I’d need to sleep. Told him I was tired from all the day’s events and his generous hospitality. A brief stroll, the son I’d been suspicious of absent.

Back in the house a brief check of my belongings seem to show everything in order, the tell-tales I’d set undisturbed. But what did Sabit do? Ten mouths to feed wouldn’t be easy, and no evidence of any other members of the family going out to work. Smart DVD player and TV in the corner. I retired early to bed, intrigued rather than concerned. Slept with my socks on to be on the safe side. Only to discover next morning the absence of the video camera. A final pre-departure check, making sure I’d not inadvertently left anything behind.

Ordinarily I’d have left the abortive theft of the camera as a parental matter. But Sabit made an unfortunate slip. He’d said ’video camera’ before the item had been retrieved. I’d never used the expression, nor had his son. I’d been watching, and listening, carefully. Scam. In some senses clever perhaps, but mostly amateurish – I’d had niggling suspicions fairly early on, and choosing to remain, employing some simple, precautionary disruptive measures.

If the attempted theft of the video camera had been an opportunistic act by a stranger, I wouldn’t have minded so much. Put it down to experience, be more careful in the future. But this was a breach of trust, an aggravating factor. Some might say poor people just trying to eke out a living. I’ve met many poor people. Amongst the kindest, most generous folk I’ve encountered, invariably willing to share what little they have, even with perfect strangers. So I don’t buy that.

And I’m a rich Westerner, fair game? Actually no. I’ve a limited budget, and replacing the rear bicycle lights and my cheaply acquired Azeri mobile phone I later found had disappeared is about three days living allowance. Some might think I’m a bit harsh, lacking compassion. You’re meant to. That’s what scammers play on, the predicable Western response, the tug at the heart strings. You have to get over this, adapt to the culture, the environment, you find along the way. Not easy. Remembering, of course, that most people are good, honest and very genuine.

What happened next? I’d like to think I deal with such matters in a fair, lawful, proportionate, and measured way, not coloured by emotion. So that’s what I did. A cautionary tale. For travellers. And thieves.

[Author’s note: This account has been published, after very careful consideration, to assist fellow travellers, wherever in the world they may be, in avoiding similar circumstances.

The post is deliberately factual – for example, the use of the word theft – the permanent deprival of property without the owner’s consent – above is, in context, a statement of what actually happened, not the expression of an opinion – I’m the owner and I did not give consent, either implied or explicitly.

Locations and names, other than that of Sabit, have been withheld as a matter of editorial policy. The decision to publish his photograph, obtained, incidentally, with his consent, as any facial portrait would imply, is deliberate. You might meet him]

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A man called Eric

June 26th, 2010

He too was called Eric. We laughed. But no, I couldn’t cross into the military zone that flanked the Kazakhstan side of the border with China. The Chinese side was closed. Until the end of the week. By which time my entry visa would have expired. Phone calls had been made, I’d crossed a few land borders before so knew how sometimes these things played out. But no. A dead end. For now at least.

Lorries

They’d been clues along the road from Zharkent. A long line of lorries, of trailers, parked up, abandoned it seemed, just a few Turkish drivers wandering about, waiting. I’d checked a while back, and again in Almaty a few days earlier, that the Khorgas crossing – a major border post – would be open and was assured it would be. No doubt in good faith.

Disappointed? Yes. I’d pushed hard to reach the border, made compromises ordinarily I’d not have even considered. Down-hearted? No. Which surprised me at first. But, fact was that given the scale of the project, information on the road ahead often scant or confused, significant language barriers to overcome, the odd blow to morale was always going to happen. Just a question of when. Suppose I felt pleased I’d got this far without any major dramas. And I was still going to cross China. Just not today.

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Acquired taste

June 25th, 2010

It seemed you were supposed to down it in one. Kymyz – fermented mare’s milk – is celebrated for its health giving properties. But probably not for its taste. A bit bitter, a little salty. Got the impression visitors were often reluctant to try it. Took balls. Something I was worried it might have in common with the horse. But never one to offend my hosts, did the honorable thing without fuss. Rewarded with a second generous helping. And more a bit later as a night cap.

I’d intended to stop just briefly in Zharkent, the last decent sized town a short distance from the Chinese border. My last few coins spent on the readily available English confectionary. A small shop on the outskirts, but even that had quickly draw a small group, curious to know what I was doing. Amongst them Marat, Deputy Mayor of the town, who lived close by.

Marat

I was soon invited to join him for tea, perhaps see something of the town, maybe stay the night. His daughter Meruert and her friends, all of whom spoke a little English, helping with the language barrier. I accepted, explaining I would need to leave very early the next morning to reach the border crossing in good time.

Picnic

A quick shower and then back towards the town of Koktal I’d passed through earlier. To a Yurt – a large circular tent – to experience kymyz. And then, by chance I thought, we joined in a family picnic. Marat was the consumate politician, as keen to be amongst his people as I was.

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Towards the border

June 24th, 2010

I’d woken early in the petrol station, back on the road before seven. On the edge of the village I spotted a pipe close to the road, gushing out water. Brief stop to fresh up, to remove some of the accumulated grime, to rinse some of the salt out of my clothes. Icy. Invigorating. Quickly re-warmed by the early morning sun.

Bathroom

The road began to drift south east. A few irrigated fields, one or two workers just visible. But mostly openness, horses wandering freely.

Horses

A steady, gentle descent towards a smaller range than the one I’d crossed through the previous day. The mountain pass downhill this time. The relative lushness of the plain quickly replaced by arid desert. Strange sandstone features, smooth, rounded by the elements, warm pastel shades.

Sandstone

Towards the towns of Koktal and Zharkent a sudden return to green, irrigated fields, rushes growing at the roadside. Trees offering a little shade for the frequent water stops. No longer alone.

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The Wedding Party

June 23rd, 2010

“Think to the future, live for the moment”

Dinner was something of an improvisation. Bread, by now quite crumbly, cheese and cooked meat. Smelt fine. Map case for a plate, the food to be shared between myself and the petrol pump attendant. An ice cream each from the local magazin – shop – for dessert. I’d offered beer as well but he was working, or at least indicated he’d get this throat cut if he drank, so we settled on some soft drinks instead.

A short while earlier I’d reached the village of Kongyroleng, the first settlement for perhaps eighty miles. The wide plain I’d crossed to reach it offered little chance for wild camping, concealment for curious eyes difficult at best. So I’d decided to try my luck in the first place I came across, a few hours of daylight left if I needed to press on.

Petrol station

Stopped at the petrol station to ask the attendant if he knew where I might be able to camp or find a bed for the night. He indicated I could sleep inside, on the spare bed. In return I’d explained I’d a little food I could share with him.

Station bed

I’d left Saryozek that morning, heading east towards the Chinese border. Good road, gently rolling at first, then later, long drawn out climbs for the most part, gradually ascending the Altyn-Emel Pass at over five thousand feet. A small cafe a little short of the summit. Lunch.

I’d emerged from the cafe to discover a strong cooling breeze, not unpleasant after the heat of the morning, but rain approaching. Push for the summit before the front came through. Then a rapid descent, steep, winding road, a brief stop to don my jacket as the first large droplets of rain started to fall. Tasted, smelt fresh. Past another small cafe, people beckoning me in. I waved in gratitude and then was gone.

Gradient tailing off, a wide plain ahead, mountains, or just hills, beyond. Difficult to tell. Distances very deceptive. But closer, a storm – just a squall I hoped – edging across the open steppe. Curtains of rain being slowly dragged off to the west. Forbidding. I pressed on east, catching just a brief heavy downpour. Cold. First time I’d felt this in Kazakhstan. And then it was gone. The incessant heat quickly returning.

Open space

The weather had brightened but I suddenly felt very alone. The odd house recognisable only by the trees around it, presumably to provide shelter. Little traffic. Any sense of distance lost in the openness, the nothingness, I found my mind soon wandered. The innocence of childhood. How’d I ended up out here? Friends and family I’d lost. I cried a little.

Then, beyond a slight rise, a few Mercedes parked at the roadside, festooned with coloured ribbons. The Wedding Party. The Bride in her dress, the men in tuxedos, the women in brightly coloured outfits. Elegant. They watched as I passed, quickly alone once more.

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Over the footbridge

June 22nd, 2010

He’d ridden horses at the 1994 Edinburgh Military Tattoo. That much I could establish. But not his name. One in the morning. His young son asleep in the next room whilst we drank tea with a little jam stirred in. Emma, my trusty steed, locked in his garage, two large, aggressive dogs chained up in the yard outside to guard her. A large stack of mattresses for me to sleep on.

Sayozek

An hour or so earlier I’d got off the train in the village of Sayozek. Cool night air. A few harsh electric floodlights cast bright pools of light intermittently along the platform. Elsewhere seemed quite dark, difficult to discern what lay beyond. I’d planned to spend the night in the station waiting room, moving off at first light at around five am. But the local policeman had come to meet the train and was having none of this.

A few people came over, watching me fit all the bags back on to Emma. Talk of a hotel, not sure where, and a masheyna – a car – to take me there. I politely declined, sensing a few hours sleep might quickly prove to be quite expensive. Thought I might wander off into the night, wait a while for the policeman to go, and then double back to the waiting room.

The train had by now left, the local merchants, mostly women, who’d been busy earlier offering drinks and snacks stacked up in old prams, preparing to head off into the darkness. They gathered around. Much discussion, mostly led by a matronly older lady. It was decided I should go off with the only man present, spending what remained of the night in his house. Over the footbridge.

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