Max

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Reporting from Kashgar

Tomorrow we leave China for Kyrgyzstan for one day then into Tajikistan for about 6 days. During this time we are not expecting much if any Internet for blog posting. I will be however writing a post every day as we go along which I will post as soon as we get Internet. At times I may only be able to publish the post and not get it emailed out to you all so if you have not heard from me just click on the blog and see if I’ve posted some new stuff and photos. Until the Internet returns this is the Kashgar report.

 

Day I

Kashgar is a very busy town for international tourist as it’s the cross roads of the northern and southern Silk route.

We have a 2 day stop here as we had made up a lot of time crossing the desert in that past few days. Yesterday morning was car service morning for the other cars and Alim took us to the service centre for the BYD dealership. BYD stands for Build Your Dream. As Peter is a excellent Radiologist and a not so good mechanics I went with him to help service the Peugeot. When we got it on the hoist we changed the oil and checked out all the underside of the car. We found that he had a slight crack in his fuel tank so we drained that and fixed it with quick metal putty and all seem to fine now. Garry’s Landcruiser needed some welding on the exhaust and Frank’s Willies needed some brake-fluid but nothing major for any of the cars.  We left there after a couple hour working with the local Mechanics with no common language, a car wash and a bill for about $40.00 each.

After lunch the rest of the group when out looking around the town. I how ever was feeling unwell and tired so decided to retire to my room for a rest. I must have got something really bad in the morning because the rest of the day was spent with the worst tummy bug I’ve had since Kathmandu in 1976.

 

Day 2

Today is market day in Kashgar so the first stop for the morning was at the animal market just out side town. This is the market to buy and sell you animals from sheep to Camels plus purchase any supplementary food for them as well. After the animal market, taxis were a bit thin on the ground out there so we headed back in town in the back of little 3 wheel electric carts things.

Once in town we headed to the town market or what would be best described as a Bazar. The range of produce at this market was as diverse as any Bazar around the world. Alim said your can buy anything at this market other then Roosters Milk! I guess that a Chinese expression.

 

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Always plenty of fresh meat
Always plenty of fresh meat

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Making Noodles
Making Noodles

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A clean sweep
A clean sweep

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The water running out of the mountains is mind-boggling!

Today was a fairly easy 500k’s on a mixture of good roads and expressway from Hotan to Kashgar through a mixture of Desert and Oasis.

Ever since we have been following the edge of the desert we have been crossing both rivers and irrigation channels with mind-boggling amounts of water flowing down at incredible rates. Some of this water is used for the intensive farming we have driven past in the last 2 days we have driven. This is the end of the growing season with all crops getting harvested as winter approaches, not much water being used for irrigation at the moment I guess it’s flowing out in to the desert to either evaporate or soak in and help replenish the water table.

One of the main crops today after Walnuts was Cotton. This is grown in the usual Central Asian way of fairly poorly then all hand harvested.

On our arrival in Kashgar we checked in to our home for the next 3 nights.In this hotel we have seen more European tourist in one night then we nave seen since entering China 20 days ago.

After a cool drink we checked our gearbox repairs from yesterday as well as finishing the service and check the was interrupted by the gearbox problem yesterday. I’m very happy to report that at this point in time all is well with Penny.

The day was finished of with Reg, Mitchell and I walking the streets and found a food market for some chicken legs, fish, and little dumpling things topped of with cool Watermelon for desert.

The end of dinner saw me retiring back to my room to henpeck out todays blog before bed tonight.

 

The Chinese are building Apartments everywhere
The Chinese are building Apartments everywhere
The first Camels for the trip
The first Camels for the trip
Riding side saddle on the bike with your Baby
Riding side saddle on the bike with your Baby
The Lunch Stop
The Lunch Stop
The lunch Cafe
The lunch Cafe
More Apartments
More Apartments

A Quite 2 Day Layover was Planned

I must start this blog with a quick explanation. From here on in you will find some of the spelling incorrect and not all the coma’s and full stops will be were they belong. I have always sent my posts back to Julie my great wife for a quick grammar fix. Today she has left Australia to go to Tonga to swim with the Whales for a couple of weeks and no internet.

 

Yesterday morning the first day of our 2 day layover we all visited a silk co-operative place to see the old fashion way of making silk including getting the silk off the cocoon’s. They also made hand wove garment for sale. The ride out in the taxi was an experience in its own right as our taxi dropped us at the wrong place to start with but luckily he waited till he was sure of the drop off. All was good in the end.

 

The second stop was at the hand knotted wool carpet Co-operative. The biggest carpet making place that I’ve seen.  The carpets were up to 5 metres wide and five people working on the carpet and about 20 carpets under construction.

 

The afternoon was spent looking at shops and banking duties before we departed for a drive too the north into the vast expanse of sand hills forming the Taklimakan Desert. The return too town was just before the peak hour traffic rush that we experienced entering town the previous afternoon.

 

That night most of went too the street food market we had discovered on the way home from a restaurant dinner the previous night. The food choices were many and varied including quite a few dishes that no one wanted to try. Some of us found such great food that we returned for more tonight only to find that not all of last nights stalls had come back tonight. Not to worry we didn’t come home hungry.

 

Todays plan was that Maurie and I where going to meet at Penny at 7.30am and fix the flat tyre from the other day and give Penny a complete check over. As we checked the gearbox I discovered that 2 gears on the countershaft and become lose and started too move on the keyway. After discussion it was decide that it was a lot easier too take the gearbox out and fix it in a big town then the side of the road in the desert. The removal of the box with Mitchell’s help only took just over a hour. It was then off around town with Mitchel, Maurie, Alim and me with my IPad with picture’s of a lathe and a mill too search out a workshop to help get it sorted.  We eventually found a workshop and we have been able to cobble things together in a manner that Maurie and I believe will most likely get us to Helsinki.

 

Maurie’s background is that he owns a large workshop in Mackey Queensland looking after very large mining gear and has a wealth of knowledge and experience in repairs that I have found an invaluable help on this trip.

 

I must also thank the rest of the crew that had to survive the day with out the services of Alim. Also for the cold drinks and nice De-caff coffee in the afternoon as we reassembled the car in the hot afternoon sun.

 

As a back up I phoned my office and thanks to Ryan, by the time we had the gearbox back in the car at 7.00pm, my spare gear box from the shed was packed and collected by DHL and on its way to meet us in Uzbekistan in 9 days time.

 

I’ll have photos of the workshop on a later blog.

Dismantling the Box
Dismantling the Box
Tidying up at the End
Tidying up at the End
Installing the box in the Car
Installing the box in the Car

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Frank has a new badge for his Car
Frank has a new badge for his Car
Reassembly
Reassembly

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The Taklimakan desert
The Taklimakan desert

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Carpet Weaving
Carpet Weaving

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The Street Butcher
The Street Butcher

The Realization of a Dream

I’ll start the blog with way back in 2002 before I had any old cars. I was travelling to the UK for a turf conference in February via Hong Kong on a daytime flight with a window seat. The flight path took us over the Taklimakan Desert. Looking out the window I saw the road around the south of the desert on the slopes of the massive mountain range that runs along that edge and I said to myself that “I would love to travel that road one day”.

Well yesterday was that Day.

On the day of the flight the air was crystal clear and now back to the present; sadly yesterday was a dusty day in the desert and we still haven’t seen the mountain range out to our left as the visibility for the whole day never got much over a kilometre.

Once again at midday we decide to skip a small overnight stop to drive 867k’s and spend three nights in Hotan. Hotan is a larger more vibrant city with some very old culture, but more of that tomorrow after a city tour.

I think most of us left Rouciang in the morning expecting a desert drive for the bulk of the trip. How surprised where we when we came across so much agriculture. The farms varied from small family operations, to what was obviously large scale corporate type farms. All of this farming is being irrigated from the rivers and streams that flow from the mountains. They are still developing large areas of the desert into new faming area with machines flattening and laser levelling into small blocks ready for someone to come and farm.

All the rivers and streams just flow out into the desert and vanish into the sand. This is also feeding the underground water table that some of the farms are pumping from when not near the river or associated irrigation canals. The crops were very diverse with Chinese dates, cotton, walnuts, apples, maize, fruits trees, and melons being the main ones, but the list goes on and on with so many market gardens.

As we got closer to Hotan, we travelled through areas where the main businesses were grass matting then to another town where everyone was carving and polishing lagers stone for features in gardens and parks. I always find it fascinating how in so many cultures around the world you drive into a town and so many people are doing the same thing as the whole street; whether it be carpenters or welders making gates. I wonder who was the first and are all the others copycats?

The day ended with a 15k drive through the markets and traffic to the centre of Hotan.

Trying to keep the sand of the road
Trying to keep the sand of the road
how to carry goats on your motor bike
How to carry goats on your motor bike
Collecting feed for the c owing winter
Collecting feed for the coming winter
Preparing more desert for irrigated farming
Preparing more desert for irrigated farming

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Fixing a flat tyre
Fixing a flat tyre
Most police check points involve a photo shoot
Most police check points involve a photo shoot
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A local cemetery
The local market on the way in to Hotan
The local market on the way in to Hotan
Drying Walhuts
Drying Walhuts