Project VELAIA

On the VELo cycling for and around gAIA


Tag Archive for 'nomad'

Schöne Pfade und seltsame Gesteinsformationen

Als die Nacht gut überstanden war, gab es erst einmal Frühstück. Dabei beobachteten wir ein für mich sehr erfreuliches Phänomen: Jede 2 Minute radelte ein Kind auf Fahrrad ganz in der Nähe vorbei. Alle auf dem dünnen Pfad neben der Straße in Richtung nächste Ortschaft zur Schule.
rock formations

WeiĂźe Felsformationen stechen hervor

Wir hatten uns in dieser Ortschaft eingedeckt, da wir nicht wussten, wie weit es zur darauffolgenden sein wĂĽrde - und sicher ist sicher! Noch eine kĂĽhle, bolivianische Cola fĂĽr umgerechnet 20 Euro Cent getrunken, konnte es weitergehen. So sahen die Wege aus, wenn wir nicht die viel zu grob geschotterte “StraĂźe” fuhren.

Bolivia: trail mania

Viel SpaĂź auf engen Pfaden

Und hier nun die Verpflegung Station am Mittag: Vier Frauen aus einem ansonsten ausgestorben wirkenden Dorf, die mit ein paar Styropor-Behältern und jeder Menge isolierenden Wolltüchern aus Eigenproduktion die Vorbeireisenden mit Nahrung versorgten. Das heißt, viel Verkehr gab es hier nicht wirklich. Das Geschäft lief gut, wenn alle 10 Minuten einmal ein LKW seine Staubwolke mit sich brachte und anhielt.

Bolivia women

Imbiss Stand an der HauptstraĂźe

Denn das Klima war trocken, Sonnenschein, dĂĽnne Luft. Da zog jedes größere motorisierte Vehikel seine Staubwolke hinter sich her. Wir Radler durften entweder Staub inhalieren oder mussten kurzzeitig anhalten … denn Luft anhalten und zugleich weiterfahren, daran war in diesen Höhen wahrlich nicht zu denken!

stone church

Steinerne Dorfkirche auf Bolivianisch

Plötzlich fanden wir uns in einer sehr skurrilen Felslandschaft wider, die sich über mehrere Kilometer unserer Fahrstrecke hinzog. Nur für die Straße wurde richtig Platz gemacht, selbst wenn sie sich noch immer in Schlangen-Kurven durch die Felslandschaft zog. Prima Klettermöglichkeiten für Entdecker aller Couleur gab es hier und ich nahm mir natürlich alle Zeit dafür - eine willkommene Abwechslung zu den langen Stunden im Sattel.

recumbent in the rocks

Skurile Felslandschaft am Abend

Das Zelt wurde mit prima Ausblick, windgeschĂĽtzt und mit Sichtschutz vor den Blicken der ab und an Vorbeifahrenden errichtet, direkt neben einem WegstĂĽck der ehemaligen StraĂźe. Mit fast allen verfĂĽgbaren Spannseilen gesichert und “ruhig gestellt”.

camp in the rocks

Bei der alltäglichen Camping-Routine

Danach hieß es nur noch Kalorien bunkern und die überwältigende Landschaft und Atmosphäre auf sich einwirken lassen:

sun rays and dark clouds

Der Blick zum Rande der Hochebene

camp in the rocks

Camp inmitten der Felsen

Beim Nachverfolgen der Route bin ich diesmal auf einige Probleme gestoßen. Die Karten-Kacheln bei Google Maps waren leider nicht höher aufgelöst, so konnte ich den Weg nicht gut verfolgen. Ich hoffe, dass ich im nächsten Beitrag wieder Witterung bekomme. Bis dann.

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Ein neuer Tag in Bolivien

“La Paz, wo bist du geblieben?” … so oder so ähnlich hätten wir am Morgen singen können, denn weg war sie, die Millionen Metropole. Untergetaucht gewissermaĂźen unter einen Teppich samtweicher Wolken.

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Ăśber den Wolken

Trotz des Erstaunens über das plötzliche Verschwinden von La Paz kullerten wir nicht einfach von der Strecke, wie es dem folgenden Genossen en route passiert ist. Die gelben Männlein sind übrigens Straßenarbeiter, die dem verdutzten LKW-Fahrer beim Abfüllen des restlichen Treibstoffes helfen. Könnte ja geklaut werden.

Nebenbei eine an uns gerichtete Frage: “Habt ihr Wasser?”. Wir ĂĽberlegen kurz, wofĂĽr die Männer wohl Wasser brauchen könnten und kommen zum Entschluss, dass es wohl nicht fĂĽr den Eigenkonsum ist. Zudem neigen sich unsere Reserven der Erschöpfung; in nicht allzu christlicher Manier teilen wir also diesmal nicht.

yet another truck accident

Neben der StraĂźe

Unsere ständigen Begleiter auf der Hochebene: Lamas. Dies sind die domestizierten Tierchen, die nicht gleich abhauen, wenn man sie mal schief anguckt. Nach uns gespuckt haben sie übrigens nicht, zum Glück.

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Vorbei an den Lamas

Jetzt die Herausforderung des Tages: Geradeaus, schnurstracks geradeaus. Zig Kilometer weit immer geradeaus. Kurven waren bei dieser Etappe Mangelware und sehnsuchtsvoll ersehnten wir uns eine jede schon Kilometer vorher herbei.

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Ewig lang gerade aus im Hochland Boliviens

Die Schotterpiste oder pista de grava compactada, wie man auf Spanisch sagen wĂĽrde, war technisch äuĂźerst anspruchsvoll zu fahren. Selbst mit den breiten 2 Zoll Schlappen, die aufgezogen waren, “schwammen” die Räder manchmal geradezu im Schotter und Sand.

“Hinter dem nächsten HĂĽgel wird es bestimmt besser”, sprachen wir uns Mut zu. “Jetzt aber wirklich hinter dem nächsten, garantiert!” Und wieder nicht. Dazu noch ein Platten am Hinterreifen des Mountainbikes.

long way ahead

Kleiner schwarzer Punkt = Elmar eine Minute voraus

Gegen Abend endlich Besserung. Zwar immer noch schnurgerade Strecke, doch wenigstens ein paar Wolken, ein bisschen Abwechslung wettermäßig. Weiter radeln wir mehr schlecht als recht durch Schotter oder auf engen Pfaden neben diesen. Radfahrer aus der Region haben diese Alternative erschaffen auf dem Weg ins nächste Dorf, zur Arbeit, zum Markt (mercado) oder zur escuela, Schule zu Deutsch.

Wir genieĂźen diese Radwege, erstellt von Radfahrern fĂĽr Radfahrer. Ein HochgefĂĽhl diese mit 20 km/h entlangzuflitzen, scharfe Kurve links um einen Busch, dann gleich wieder Ausweichmaneuver nach rechts um einem Sandfeld auszuweichen. Action, hurra!

easy rider
Einsame Schotterpisten

Kampiert wird diese Nacht 200 m entfernt von der eh schon wenigst befahrenen Hauptverbindungsroute der Region, die in Deutschland locker als größtes Bundesland durchgehn wĂĽrde … flächenmäßig.

P.S. Der erste Teil der Route im Karten-Feld unten ist hoch aufgelöst. Hier ist wirklich jeder Kuhstall zu sehen. Bei der Auflösung macht das Nachverfolgen der Route bei Google Maps richtig Spaß.

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Tag 353-357 (10. bis 14.04.2008): CouchSurfen in Tapu Bay, Fahrt von Nelson nach Picton und Fähre nach Wellington

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  • german

It’s the 17th of April, 1:22am right now, just past midnight. I’m sitting in front of Rhonda’s wonderful T43 ThinkPad laptop computer and am quite pressured, I couldn’t sleep without having written about the last few days, about the great time with the young CouchSurfing family in Tapu Bay, about the beautiful way to Picton, the set over in the evening to the North Island by ferry, and the totally last minute but marvellous friendly and warm welcome I received from Gaylia and Rhonda Powell, the mother and sister of Olly Powell, chief desorganizer (together with Ting) of the Beijing to Paris 2007 Carfree Rally without whom I wouldn’t be here after all.

I sometimes really feel guilty, guilty of not spending more time and doing more things with these wonderful people I meet during my journey, some of whom I will sadly but for sure only meet once in my life. I’m definitely spending too much time in front of computer displays, keeping my readers up to date in German and English, stitching together panoramas, uploading and communicating.

But I also can’t just stop writing as that would be unfair to the people who follow my journey over the internet, many of those being individuals I have met, some of them close friends and family.

It’s a difficult situation, a dilemma. I’ll probably be typing, including pictures and so on until the early morning hours. But that’s fine with me, it’s just that I think it’s not the right way to do it, the situation gnaws at my conscience.

I think that maybe a compact and long battery life laptop that I just included into my wishlist (model and manufacturer don’t matter) might help. It would allow me to type every evening, to translate, to put it in the right form already, to get the pictures sorted and edited and to sometimes wirelessly connect or just stop by in an internet cafe for half an hour and bring the content online. I could put into practice some of the ideas I often get while cycling and work them out in the evening. Being without computer for a long time turned out to be easier than I had anticipated and I could easily do without on a “just cycling, no reporting” world tour. But it’s this moral conflict I have to solve some way or the other.

There are probably also options I haven’t thought about and I hereby encourage my readers and friends to tell me what you think! I can’t and won’t ask for and wouldn’t even accept any more support from my father, sister and mother – they have done more for me than I could have ever wished for already and are going through hard and exhausting times themselves right now!

Well, now it’s 2am in the morning and I will start writing about the adventures of the last few days.

chic! Jade and a wonderful kitten on the veranda

David, Pania and Vincent were a absolutely new CouchSurfing experience. I had never stayed with a young child in the family even though I love children. And it was so different! A young baby takes a lot of the parents’ attention, at times it strongly influences the mood of everyone else, either warming your heart or making you feel really sad because it’s crying or tired or … There are multiple tasks that can fill the whole day of a mother and/or father and this day for day, week for week, year for year until at some time it leaves the house and starts exploring the world on its own feet (like I’m doing it now). Many fathers would probably secretly envy David for the possibility of working from home and spending a lot of time with his young baby, observing the forming of the first words in Vincent’s mouth and just living through the wholeness of this absolutely stunning period of young human life.

5 year old Dayna having fun and playing with the dog

(Dayna (front), Pania and Jade behind)

I am so thankful that they welcomed me at their home and let me participate in the family life for a few days!

silver fishing boat and David on his new surfboard

David on his new surfboard

shells under waterred iron chain under water

We often went to the beach in the evening, walking along the wet and soft sand during low tide and surfing or climbing over rocks with young Vincent in the special baby backpack during high tide. I followed my baking hobby and enjoyed the delicious ginger dishes David and Pania prepared for lunch and dinner.

evening after sunset in Tapu Bay near Motueka, New Zealand

I left on the third day just before noon as many guests were expected for Vincent’s first birthday party in the afternoon and as much as I would have loved to stay I still had to keep going, keep exploring … the nomad way.

So I almost made it to Nelson in the evening even though I had to recover from a long long night spent on the internet, only having had 4 or 5 hours of sleep. On a grassy spot close to a vineyard I pitched the Exped tent for the night …

… and the long sleep gave me back enough power that brought me to the Nelson city centre in almost no time the next morning. There I watched a event for young children in a community park who were obviously having a lot of fun in the Star Wars game and with other funny activities.

Children playing in Nelson, event in park

I met George (maybe 60 years old), a touring cyclist from Westport on the west coast of the South Island, who was on his way back to Motueka. He loves cycling the Australian outback and must have cycled more than 50 000km there already. When he saw my Rohloff gear hub he enthusiastically told me about the new bikes his wife and he just bought, the famous Thorn touring bikes from the UK that also come with the Rohloff hubs. He convinced me that I definitely have to come back (with company) to cycle and experience the Australian outback some day.

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I then left Nelson, cycled north to Wakapuaka, through Hira and up 3 hills, the first to about 100m, the second to 360m and another one of 200+m before pitching my tent close to the Rai Valley village on the side of the valley.

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Over night the valley filled with clouds and fog and the outer layer of the tent was totally wet in the morning, the view had changed dramatically over night.

wet tent in the morning with foggy valley in the background

my Vela I tent and bicycle on high campsite in the clear and sunny evening my Vela I tent and bicycle on high campsite in the foggy morning

But soon after I had left it cleared up and I had a dreamlike ride to Havelock, learning Spanish and listening to SomaFM music on the way and being in a Buddha like state of mind with all the great scenery surrounding me.

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kayaking group on the beach

I turned left to leave HW 6 and turn on the more scenic and quiet direct road to Picton, passing nice holiday houses and yachts in the harbours of Moenui, Linkwater, The Grove and some more villages before meeting Martin, another German touring cyclists whom I had met about 1.5 months ago in a bicycle shop in Christchurch the first time.

Together with him I cycled a few remaining kilometers to Picton, went to the ferry office, was lucky to get a last minute ticket for NZD 45 for rider and bike to Wellington and left only 20 minutes later.

 

The weather changed to rainy and cloudy as we left the Picton Bay on our way to Wellington and I therefore spent most of the time inside.

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I arrived half past six as the ferry spit the passengers, cars and trucks off close to the Wellington city centre. When I phoned Gaylia and Rhonda they offered to pick me up but gave me instructions how to easily get to their home in the hills by train when I told them that I’d come with a bike.

Rhonda then collected the stranded cyclist from the train station and brought me home where Gaylia had already prepared black tea and yummy sandwiches. (2:56am now, have to meet Martin somehow tomorrow at 10am)

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Tag 281 (30.01.2008): Goodbye Adelaide! Ab nach Melbourne!

Adelaide liegt hinter mir; nach 6 wunderbaren Tagen, nach gemeinsamen Kochen mit Olly, schönen Ausfahrten und gesundem Bio-Essen erfreue ich mich nun wieder am Wind in meinem Gesicht und lausche dem Summen meiner Reifen auf dem heißen Asphalt. Erst gegen Mittag radle ich in brennender Sonne langsam bergaufwärts durch zahllose Vororte der Millionenstadt, pausiere einmal im Apple Super Store und bestaune die neuste Technik, besuche einen kleinen Radladen, wo ich mich nach Bändern für die Hose umschaue.

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Mama hat heute Geburtstag und zudem läuft das Guthaben meines Prepaid Handys aus; von einem POST Office sende ich ein Paket nach Hause und Original Arzt-Rezepte an meine Worldnomads Versicherung nach Dänemark – zack! 35$ ärmer.

Dann der Anruf nach Bad Rappenau: Hier hat es ermüdende 35°C im Schatten und 20 000km entfernt auf der Nordhalbkugel sind es gut 30K weniger, bestimmt nasskalt und ewig dunkel – ich wäre bereit bezüglich der Temperaturen einen Deal einzugehen.

Na zumindest habe ich den Anstieg von 550m hinter mir gelassen und brause unter zahllosen Riesenbäumen und durch Alleen an grünstem Weinanbaugebiert vorbei hinunter nach Strathalbyn.Vom Rand der Straße lächeln mir reife Äpfel, Pflaumen und Brombeeren entgegen und bei gelegentlichen „Vitamin-Stops“ begrüßen mich die Pferde auf ihren teils ausgetrockneten Koppeln, eine feurige weiße Stute begleitet mich gar bis zum Rande ihrer doch recht begrenzten Welt. Aus Ollys Bibliothek habe ich „Small is Beautiful“ entführt und lese mich im Schatten und Duft eines Eukalyptusbaums in die vor 36 Jahren erstellten Prognosen und Lösungsvorschläge E. F. Schumachers ein – ich habe „The 3rd Degree“ und das „Travel Writer Handbook“ – letzteres nur wenige Seiten angelesen – zurückgelassen.

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Adelaide Hills near Strathalbyn

Und passend zur Region steht mein Zeltlein diese Nacht zwischen den Reben, die FuĂźseite an einem Holzpfahl befestigt, die Kopfseite am Vorderrad meines Fahrrads.

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Zwei Zitate von E. F. Schumachers Buch (um die Englisch-Kentnisse aufzubessern J ):

„A man driven by greed or envy loses the power of seeing things as theiy really are, of seeing things in their roundness and wholeness, and his very successes become failures.“ (S. 18, Small is Beautiful)

„greed and envy, which destroy intelligence, happiness, serenity and therefore the peacefulness of man.“ (S. 19, Small is Beautiful)

(Ihr seht, ich bin noch ganz am Anfang des Buchs)

78km; 5:13h; 15km/h; 899hm

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Tag 162-179 (04.-21.10.2007): Von Ali ins Zentrum von Tibet, Lhasa

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  • german

Together with Boris from Slovenia I continued my journey from Ali into the center of Tibet. Compared to the western part of Tibet, Aksai Chin, there were villages every 50km at least and many big valleys, sometimes beginning in high plateaus and ending in big lakes.

The road was paved for about 200km and we could have made fast progress if not for the steady and heavy headwinds that held the average down at about 10km/h even though we gave everything!

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On the first day I made a strange observation: A dog following the road (or us) for 10 to 15 km at about our speed - maybe he saw our exhaustion and was waiting for his dinner :-P
We stopped about 2 to 3 times a day in a small restaurant next to the street where the only meal you could order consisted of instant noodles - quite monotone but at least some calories to burn. The locals here mostly heat their water - a must because of the bacterias from the yaks, goats and sheep all around - with renewable energies: either the shit of animals they collect or the sunlight wich they collect with big mirrors in front of the houses.

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In between the yaks and goat+sheep groups you can sometimes spot antelopes, eagles and other wild animals.

Then after nearly 200km of perfectly paved road it suddenly stopped and we had to share the (mostly) wash board road with an endless truck convoy - they were building the extension of the good road and we saw them as the price for the fine road before :-)

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We passed the Kalish mountain, a spiritual place for many Tibetans and target of many many pilgrims and tourists alike, many of the latter coming by Jeep from Lhasa or Kathmandu, doing the way around the mountain in 4-5 days (compared to 1 - 2 days for many Tibetans).

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The road was covered in deep dust and after 45km we finished that stage and got a warm place to sleep next to a restaurant.

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The next day the dust was falling off our rims - a 1 to 2 mm brown layer of brown soil. The idea that much of this stuff went into my lungs made me pull up my pipe scarf again and again. But on that altitude - mostly above 4500m - you need every single O2 molecule and therefore after every Jeep or truck had passed and after the dust had been blown away by the wind the scarf went down again and you had to breath extra deeply - a feeling like after a 100m sprint!

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And just as the Kalish mountain went out of our field of view a really big one (7890m) appeared on the right side of the road and accompanied us for at least 2 days - we could feel the proximity of the Himalayans - the proximity of the real and eternal kings ;-)

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Just as we left a valley and spotted some amazing snow covered mountains in the distance extremely heavy side winds started to make our lives hard and blow us from the street not only once!

In the evening we were happy to find a cluster of nomad houses were we could cook some of the _very tasty_ instant noodles and spend a night protected from the storm.

Then a morning and noon full of ups and downs lead us to a nice but hard pass of about 5100m, continued by a short downhill and 15km flat.

We arrived at a house where an old woman, here daughter and grandchild hosted us warmly and made the about 1000 altimeters of that days stage and the resulting exhaustion change into a tired but relaxing evening and good night.

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After an easy to pass checkpoint we made a short photo shooting session, first Boris and then a few yaks :-) continued by a horrible road with 5 to 10cm of gravel where you felt like swimming or powdering with a snowboard!

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And then it appeared in front of us: a magnificent plateau with the Himalayans on the right side visible till the horizon!

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At the end of this plateau we arrived in a big village, had lunch, stocked up our food and drinking water and continued over another pass to a nomad family that hosted us for one night but first after we had drunken at least 5-6 cups of Tibetan yak butter tea (quite salty) each :-)

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In this area we discovered many sand dunes and a feeling like in Iran or Turkmenistan came up if I didn’t focus on the snow covered mountains in the distance - just a bit colder (about 30-40 kelvin :-).

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We passed the first monasteries - combined with the increasing traffic this was a clear sign that we arrived near the center of Tibet.

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Another evening, only about 30km after the town of Saga, we tried to get a place in a nomad house but in this area the nomads were quite reserved and didn’t want to host us which lead to a night below a quite low bridge, a night that got freezing cold!

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There was nearly no pass now without the famous Tibetan prayer flag and for the two cyclists these often provided some wind protection when resting for some minutes at a pass.

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But there were not only flags and cords - some people left old cloths there, hats, scarfs - everything you can think of and everything they didn’t need anymore :-)
After another small, unimportant village where black dogs were sleeping in brown shit and a small, sweet brown terror cat stole us our sleep, the road got paved, perfectly paved again for about 100km just to get worse again at the town of Sangsang - I really don’t understand the Chinese/Tibetan street building politics!

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Whenever we stopped somewhere in a small village immediately many people gathered around us and even followed us into the (often quite small) restaurants which often lead to a situation like this: Boris and Daniel preparing instant noodles, drinking a coke; 20-30 Tibetan villagers standing around them just staring :-P

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Then the moment came when in a downhill, fixed on the bad road we suddenly spotted something green on the left - green, that reminded me to a thing I hadn’t seen for weeks - what was it again!? Ahh, yeah, trees, real trees. And they were everywhere, every house in every village had a garden with at least one big green tree - beautiful!

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Soon we reached the Friendship highway (318) and from there on the road got perfect until Lhasa.

We did the nearly 400km in 3 days passing many many villages and small towns with complete mobile phone network coverage all the way!

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One evening we asked to stay for the night in a restaurant and we got brought to a side room. Having slept for one our we got woken up by the loud noise many Chinese produce while eating: 14 men inside our sleeping room, eating instant noodles - OK! DON’T PANIC! I get my eating stuff out of one of my cycling bags and also start to eat. But then the men start to smoke and I leave the place for a pipe just 200m away where I have a quiet night in good air!

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The next day I do some km alone until Boris who stayed in the restaurant (he sleeps like a dormouse) catches up with me while I am talking to a Spanish cyclist (Basque from the Pyrenees).

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Together we continue to Shigatse where we meet the Russian cyclist from Aksai Chin again and another Chinese globetrotter.

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From Shigatse on the valley sometimes gets quite steep and you can always hear the sound of the big river flowing through it.

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The day before we reached Lhasa was a black day for us: Boris had 2 punctures (4 holes) within only 5km, a Tibetan boy threw a stone after us and my PDA computer somehow quitted working - additionally we’ve been totally overpriced in a restaurant in the evening, paying 50 yuan for what was worth 20 at most.

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But at least during the night we fixed the punctures and made it to Lhasa in quite cloudy and wet cold weather the next morning.

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In Lhasa we found the H D F Youth Hostel, managed by cyclists and a very relaxed and open atmosphere - we’ve used the laundry service and my cloths are drying right now in the sun :-)

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During the next month I will be racing to Beijing which is still about 4000-5000km away, not an easy task I guess, but possible I hope. I’ll take a good road to get out of Tibet to the north and then turn right for the capital.

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Tag 141-159 (13.09. - 01.10.2007): Auf dem Dach der Welt

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  • german

Pictures this time in the German version! :-) And all the pictures are on my flickr-account!

Together with Marc I left Kashgar, having spent almost 4 days there, sent 2 packages, updated the homepage and met many interesting people.

Together we went on a three day ride mainly through the desert.

Whenever we came to a city after only a short time a huge crowd gathered around the bicycles and one of us always had to stay there (even though I am not as scared of rubbery as in Kyrgyzstan any more).

The people here understood our few Kyrgyz words often better than the Chinese phrases we had learnt - typical for many parts of China where minorities mix with Chinese people coming from the east of the country - and so we ordered water by saying ’sue’ instead of the Chinese ’shui’.

Unfortunately we missed the right road (G219) in Ye Cheng and went 20km into the desert where we found a movie ripe ruin to spend the night.

On the G219 Marc experienced the first attack of an animal on his tour: A gecko was overtaking first my then his bicycle and later ran away as it couldn’t find out how to ride these strange but very efficient vehicles :-)
In Kokya, the last bigger village in front of the first 3200m pass we had dinner and bought some more food and afterwards continued 15km and spent the night beside the street behind some small soil hills. Just as it got dark some shepherds brought their sheep and goats down and we took care not to be seen as stealth was our primary way to overstand the night securely.

The next day started with a tremendous slow-down of Marc caused either by the schaschlik from last evening or the piece of pepper which he eat from the side of the road. So we didn’t reach the pass as planned but stayed about 400m below to sleep in a desiccated water basin.

We also met a Russian cyclist that day who used passing trucks as cart horses to get up the pass faster - cheater! :-)
After the first 100 altimeters we met a German world tourer who had been on the road for 5 years. We changed a few sentences and then we finished our climb, took some nice pics of the downhill in front of brown mountains and white peaks in the distance and down we went. Marc had a puncture on the way down and was completely dust-brown as he arrived in the valley about an hour later because the same group of military trucks met and sprinkled him with street-dust three times.

The first time we took a pipe for rain water under the street for sleeping just after passing the village of Kudi in the evening (with a police check-point).

Short after the start (altitude 3000m) the paved road stopped and we got a first idea of what the next 2 weeks would be like - gravel, big stones, sometimes washboard and lungs full of dust whenever a truck or convoy passes.

The scenery was breathtaking and behind the brown mountains in the foreground we could see more and more snow covered peaks above 5000m.

And as we were on our way towards a 4988m peak we spent the night on 4500m in a tunnel again, having warm noodles with garlic for dinner - a real luxury on these altitudes, but also a luxury which you have to work hard for (carry the food from Kashgar into the mountains).

As there were only 500 altimeters left to the peak we climbed it quite early in the morning. But we could feel the altitude that made every pedal stroke incredibly hard and both of us got a soft kind of headache at the peak.

So we went down again after only a few minutes. The downhill included countless serpentines and the sides of the valley were sometimes covered by silver-sparkling stone fields under a blue sky.

The meal in the valley we came into got a funny touch by the tablecloth which had advertisement for ‘Ritter Sport’ chocolate on it. The two portions of noodles went down our gorges like the bikes the downhill before :-)
The next day we continued the journey over really bad roads and along bizarre mountains.

The bad streets took their toll in a flat tire - but luckily not for us but for a big big digger at the side of the road :-)
Again we climbed up a mountain to a pass only a few meters below the magical 5000m mark and found a message from Andreas at the top wishing us a ’super’ 30km downhill. But ’super’ it was not as the road was incredibly bad with soil hills just being distributed over the old washboard and sand fields that made navigation incredibly hard.

The continuous shaking caused some headaches for me and so we rested for half an hour only 2km after the downhill had finished.

Then we continued the downhill to Xai Dulla, a very dirty village just in front of a big military base. We had dinner and spent our night in a tiny restaurant where we could charge our technical devices for a few hours in the evening.

Here it was that my Thermarest sleeping pad got its first small bubble that should get bigger and bigger as the journey continued.

The weather got really dusty and foggy as we continued the next morning. We cycled all day long through a valley into the direction of a 4250m ‘pass’ that should bring us to a village called Gangshiwa. But as the evening started a strong wind from the left nearly blew us from the street and only with the power of 2 big apples we got from passing cheap-tourists we made it to a pipe under the street only 100m under the pass.

The big tornadoes we could see in the distance thankfully came too late to hit us and our night in the pipe got warm and nearly windfree.

In the ‘village’ of Gangshiwa we got some rice and tea from a Uighur roadworker called Mohammad. But a village it was definitely not - only one building for the accommodation of the roadworkers.

We cycled further through a tremendous valley where one could totally lose sense for proportions as after one hour you were still cycling towards the same mountain and it didn’t get noticeably bigger.

As we awoke the next morning we were surrounded by a snow-covered mountain scenery but it got extremely cold so we decided to first pedal some kilometers before taking the breakfast. Luckily we arrived in another roadstop where we could fill up our energy reserves with a big portion of rice with vegetables!

The rest of the day we cycled towards our first 5000m pass until we stumbled upon a sign saying “CYCLIST’S INN’ - the perfect place to spend the night - the room was filled with small paintings and signatures of other Tibet cyclists and as the broken windows were covered with cardboard it was windfree and warm during the night.

Then finally the day came for us to cycle our first 5000m pass. The road climbed up in steps with wonderful high plateaus in between.

On the pass sign I could read a discussion about the real altitude of the pass. I took the most conservative one of 5150m for my ‘pass stage’:

And about 20 minutes later Marc arrived and nearly broke down after a last adrenaline-powered sprint.

The scenery on the other site consisted of a tremendous high plateau that we should cycle through the rest of the day, and the following day!

We went down 200 altimeters and pitched Marc’s tent up the first time as there were no houses or tunnels at all.

Again we awoke in a magnificent scenery the next morning and again it was freezing cold. So we lost no time and made it to a nearby lake where many snow ducks and other birds also just woke up. The village at the lake looked abandoned so we didn’t go there.

The rest of the day we searched for a village that was only 30km away from the last - according to the map. But in fact it was more like 100km away - what a bad map!

We arrived at a beautiful lake and spotted a wild antelope just in front of the blue waters of the lake.

The road along the lake was wonderful and the smell of seaweed brought me back to the Mediterranean in my thoughts. Marc was also fascinated by this view and the hope to reach the lost village of Tielongtan motivated us to keep pedalling.

And finally after another small pass (of only a few altimeters but again over 5000m) we arrived in Tielongtan - but first a small stream had to be crossed (no problem for the recumbent rider but the upright cyclist got wet feet :-).

The view we had in the downhill was again so beautiful it took our breath away.

And as we took our meal in a restaurant another cyclist arrived as it already got dark: Boris from Slovenia. Together we talked and repaired some stuff until 1am! Then fled the arriving cold under big, fat and heavy blankets!

I made some calculations before I fell asleep and these suggested to go faster than the speed I could achieve with Marc to arrive in Beijing in time and not miss the Bicycle Film Festival in Sydney.

And so I started out the next morning together with Boris who is also going really light and and average of over 80km per day even under these hard conditions.

We met another cyclist, Ted, who goes about the same km per day as Boris but at a lower speed and together we climbed a new highest pass of over 5250 meters. The following downhill and another small pass brought us to a lake of immense beauty.

The street - or should I better call it wash board slope - followed the lake for many kilometers and we went through two arcs that supposedly marked the beginning of the Tibet province.

Then another pass of 6700m - according to the sign at the top, but my altimeter suggested something more like 5189m! After a short break we went down and came through a village that was just in a state of renovation and we therefore we couldn’t get any food there :-(
We proceeded our stage towards the highest pass of the journey - at 5343 we thought to be on the peak but we were quite wrong as the real peak was more like 5380 and the darkness had already taken hold of the landscape.

After only 2km going downhill I spotted a vague silhouette of a building 100 meters beside the road on the left side. And it was a real fluke as we found out. Protected from the wind we slept in one of the rooms with the only annoyance being a hamster that was constantly undertaking new approaches to get our cookies and thereby holding us from sleeping for at least one hour!

Then we went down, down and down again for a whole day. But very slow due to the horrific road conditions and headwinds that brought us down to 4 to 5 km/h or even to 0! Next to the road we could spot more and more chimneys and houses - a thing of total absence during the last 8-10 days.

Then as it was already dark we arrived in Domar, a really big village with loads of restaurants, stores and a military camp. I directly stumbled into a tourist group in a restaurant and was lucky to meet Johannes, a Taiwanese man who had studied for 5 years in Stuttgart and still spoke a good Schwaebisch dialect :-) He invited us for dinner (and breakfast) and told me that he had read a book from Ting, another rider of Beijing to Paris 2007 Carfree from Taiwan - she is quite famous over there!

The next morning we stocked up our food reserves and went out into the snow fall. We were happy about the climb that kept us warm until the snow stopped.

Then down again and slowly up a lake filled valley with more and more nomads to the left and right. We even spotted some herons who were supposedly having a break here on their way to the south.

The lake that opened in front of us after we left the valley was really beautiful surrounded by 5000m mountains and with 6000 and 7000m peaks snow covered in the far distance.

We cycled around many turns and saw more and more Tibetan prayer flags and got even heavy headwinds before we arrived in a small fisher village just with the dusk.

There we got really cheap rice with vegetables and a whole dormitory only for the two of us for the night :-)
Then as we just left the lake I stumbled upon a small town - yeah, it was only me, Boris didn’t realize it at all and just continued cycling. I went in for a short shopping session and later caught Boris who waited for me at a corner.

The road got paved now all the way to Ali and it would have been an easy ride if not for the steady headwinds!

So we had to spend another night in a tunnel below the street before our arrival in Ali just after a long and fast downhill.

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