Well I started yesterday in Zanjan, Iran, with the intention of riding to Tabriz and stay in a better hotel than last time and visit the basaar again. The first thing I noticed was the temperature, 20C, a real contrast to the day before where it started at 32C. This was a much better riding temperature. I had also slept well and felt rested and very relaxed heading down the motorway. Pretty soon there were signs flashing up the distance to Tabriz and then one later showing the distance to the border. This sign started me thinking. Feeling refreshed as I did and in these temperatures it seemed possible to ride to the border but I also needed to get through the border and on to the next place to stay, Agri in Turkey. So what did missing out on Tabriz mean. I would not get back to the basaar, but I'd been before and I think all I bought were some Persian Delights. The night in the hotel was no loss and apart from a little coffee shop I had no other places to visit. So I could miss out on Tabriz, so was it practical to get to Agri. The big uncertainty was the border, and if course part of the attraction of going to the border today was to get it over with. I hate borders, I may have mentioned that before. So Tabriz was 300km, a further 300km to the border and then 130km to Agri. A long day, and I had not started early, with an uncertain delay at the border, the sensible answer was wait in Tabriz. This debate took up most of journey to the outskirts of Tabriz. I did notice the Iranian mountains as I went along and some of the shapes and colours were great.
I know a big part of me likes to move on, and it is a biking holiday and I love the freedom of these holidays to just change plans in flight and move to another area or country. It would be a long and tiring day but I'd get a real kick out of doing it. Once I passed Tabriz, then I was committed. It was the last town I wish to stay in but I also knew that once I'd passed Tabriz I'd go all out to get to and through the border. Then the uncertainties crept in, say there was a delay at the border, maybe a hold up on the road, but still I kept going. What time did the border close? What I'd not though of was a deterioration in the weather. I noticed some clouds building up and then getting darker, then there was clearly rain ahead. I was stopped at a security check so took the chance to put on waterproofs and the rain hit soon after. There wasn't a lot of rain but it slowed my progress and the dark clouds seemed to hasten evening and I thought again about the border being closed. These conditions, riding hard, poor weather, rushing for a deadline and getting tired are classic conditions for making a mistake and so I did what I could to keep focused. The hardest bit was when we went down to a single carriageway where everyone else seemed to be in a hurry. One thing which ocurred in my favour was I remembered that as I was now heading west I would gain some time, at least on the Turkish side of the border, 1.5 hours in fact. So I was still hopeful the border would be open, and it was when I finally arrived, around 17:00 Iran time. Before entering the border I stopped on the side and relaxed a bit. Got my papers ready, had a drink of coffee from a flask and had something to eat, as I was not sure how long it would take to get through. Unbelievably I was through both borders in 45 minutes.
I had some help on the Iranian side and I exchanged some money with him at a favourable rate to him for his services. It is hard to describe the process, which I'd like to try and do for other travellers. Like most borders it starts with the police and passport and there were 2 sets of police. Then you take the Carnet to a single guy at a desk. He looks at it and signs the back. The process seems to rely on accumulating these signatures, many of which are gained from guys walking around in civies. With this guys signiature on the Carnet we went to the formal Carnet office and you hand the Carnet, passport and bike registration document through a glass wondow. This guy take a bit of time and completes the Carnet and returns all with a white sheet. This white sheet is shown to a couple of other people walking around and finally to the guy who waves you forward to the gate, simples. You then wait for some army guy to come and check your passport and finally open the gate.
Now you are in Turkey and the process happens again but is simpler. First the police, who are inside the building and processing all the people on foot or in coaches. There is no time for politeness here you just march to the front and stick your passport in. It seems accepted that vehicle travellers get preference. The Turkish police guy took ages looking at my passport and even made a phone call about it but finally stamped it. Then back to the customs with insurance, registration document and passport and finally a search of the bike, which amounted to asking me to open the topbox and he looked less then impressed with the few bits of food I had on the top and waved me on.
Again I stopped on the Turkish side just through the border, took out the Iranian GPS map card and resisted throwing it away. It will be a relief to be on proper Garmin maps again. Had something to eat and drink before heading off to Agri. The weather had really closed in and I looked up at the mountains behind the border post and lightening was crackeling. Time to move on, not before a lorry driver shouted over and asked where I'd been. I feel for them sitting in a 4 or 5 mile queue. Mount Ararat stood out again but of course covered in clouds.
There seemed less snow than last time I saw it about 2 weeks ago. I must check how Martin got on. Before I arrived at Agri I stopped at a service station and filled up. Much more expensive than in Iran where you pay less than 25 pence for a litre. To have a look at the hotel options in Agri I got my 2nd phone out and installed my Turkish sim and set it as a WiFi and connected my main phone. Hope you are keeping up! This was a tricky process with cold fingers and I needed to get a sewing kit out for a pin to release the phone sim. The guys in the garage were fascinated and offered me cay. Once connected the phone went mad with Facebook and other updates which were not allowed in Iran.
The result of the hotel search was I needed to go back to the poor hotel I used last time. The guy recognised me and gave me a cheaper price and a better room. However it did have a couple of funnies, when I switched on the shower the head(with the holes in it) shot across the cubicle so I showered with a flow of water and last night I put the security chain on as well as locking the door and this morning forgot to release the chain but the door still opened, as the wooden frame on the side simply came away from the wall, you got to laugh. I spent some of the evening looking at what route is possible in Turkey and have a rough plan which starts with going up to the Black Sea.
If yesterday's ride had started pleasantly cool today started unpleasantly so. It was about 14c and even with my waterproof jacket over the main jacket I was cold. I should have put the waterproof trousers on too but expected it to warm up, it didn't, not for a few hours anyway. The route took me up into the mountains and at times it dropped to 12C. Around this time I had some of the remaining Persian Delights and was surprised to find it hard to bite into. Then I remembered the temperature and realised its all physics. The coefficient of jelly softness is inversely proportional to the ambient temperature. I remember the experements in school. We used jelly babies, all boys (sorry Roddy). Moving on, the mountain scenery was good and the winding road through the valleys was a joy to ride.
I stopped at one point for fuel at a largish service station boasting a restaurant and a mosque, but was told they had no petrol. As I rode away passing the mosque I said a silent prayer that the next station will have petrol. This road is quite closely checked by police and army. In fact there are number of army forts, with manned guard towers, along the road. I was stopped by a few checkpoints with a mixture of army and gendarmes, all heavily armed, including backup from an armoured landrover with a conning tower with a machine gun. They were very plesant to me and I concluded they were not interested in tourists.
Along the road I met another cyclist. Not your all geared up cyclist with all the proper kit but Ascan(?) from Tehran on his mountain bike and a rucksack on his back and a few bits on the back of the bike. I asked him where he's heading and he said Venice, for the film festival. It seems he's a film maker on his way to the September film festival. Good for him. I gave him my card and I hope he contacts me.
For those who have been with me for a while, you'll remember the diggers throwing the stowns down to the road. Well I passed the spot again today and parked next to one of the stones, pretty big.
As I approached Erzincan my destination I could see dark clouds on the mountains either side of the road and the town and I hoped the road would remain dry. I stopped to take a photo of this massive shower on the right of the road
and glanced back at the bike and saw it set against the dark mountains on the other side and thought it looked good.
Oh and we had cattle today on the dual carriageway...
