Off to Iran, at last

Cracking ride I miss these the most of all

The Bazaars :drool

Where I was there always seemed to be mounds of Fresh pistacchio

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Loving this RR, but at the same time a bit peed off about the restrictions my GB passport brings. Oh to be Irish! ������
 
Simon, Great that you managed to get to the amazing city of Persepolis - and as you say, "empty" of tourists ....Thank Heaven that those Isis nutters never got near that place. Thanks for the photos - I can never imagine that the stallholders can ever make sufficient sales to cover the cost of their goods-on-hand stock! (Darius/Cyrus - cradle of civilisation stuff, really....but mostly forgotten. I'm just finishing a book on Ghengis Khan but your Silk Roads tome is next on the pile!).
Safe riding.
 
Kitsilano: I am now 40% through the Silk Road book and it is superb- particularly now since it covers so many places around here.


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Shiraz Sunday
This was a day of mooching around and enjoying what Shiraz has to offer. But there was big oil business to be done first!

I don't want to rely exclusively on the kindness of strangers when I need an oil top-up - especially I am going to be riding in more remote areas I suspect. Although to digress slightly, almost every Iranian I meet wants to help if they can.
So I get detailed instructions from the receptionist on where to go - there is a whole street nearby devoted to automotive needs. (A bit like Halfords except friendly and good value)!

I am looking for 'roghan' for a 'motor' - my first stop is a shop selling car light fittings but the owner grabs me and route marches me down the street to the right place where I get a litre of Total 20:50 for about $3.
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A few of the other shops
The battery shop?
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Roof racks -r-us
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(And there were two of the shops side by side)

Then on to the cultural elements:
Mosque Nasir el Molk
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Through the bazaar- a lot cooler than outside! At one point I get odd looks because I am now in the ladies underwear section

I end up walking 2 Kms to the Hadez mausoleum - on the way I drop in on the quiet and charming Imamzadeh Ali Hamze (I have abbreviated the name!) whose floor is all tombstones and where the tomb of Emir Ali lies.
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Then I mooch around in the Hafez gardens for a couple of hours as it's leafy and cool. Hafez as you all know (like I did before this trip is Iran's favourite poet and lived in 14th century). I resist the offer to buy a volume of his work as I couldn't bear adding weight to the bike.
Walk back through park where I talk to a young hydraulic engineer - he wants to do a PhD and rated Delft. He was very Impressed when I mention qanats (of which more in a later report).

I seem to be living well within my budget but want to change some more USD before heading East. I end up money changing alongside a Chinese couple from Shanghai.
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End the day with a fast food experience on the receptionist's recommendation (after I declined the $30 posh restaurant a taxi-ride away).
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It looks crowded but some of that is the off spill from two cars who have bumped into each other.


A note on motorcycles: they all seem to be based on the eternal Honda 125 4 stroke engine, just different badging and (rarely) a ponced up one with disc brakes. Ambitious badging on this one doesn't change that reality:
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And this is the closest to a super bike- a plastic kit
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And on car driving- no street is too narrow - indeed this photo does not do justice to the narrow gap the car just cleared!
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Early night tonight and off to Kerman in the morning!


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Great stuff Simon. You captured the essence of Shiraz. I'm not even a tiny bit jealous. Never found the motoring street but came across a street of camping shops, near the citadel, what a good idea. Keep it coming...
 
Riding though the desert on a beemer with no name...

from Shiraz to Kerman. (I do feel guilty that after nearly 100,000 Kms together, I still haven't named the old girl!

Kerman
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An early start again at 0740 - again the biggest challenge is the steep ramp up from the underground car park! But I manage it in style.

I head west and a Good Samaritan leads me to the right road on his scooter. Who needs a working GPS in Iran?

But in my euphoria of hitting the road again, I miss the well concealed petrol stations and spot I am already past the 100 mile mark and start to suffer Range anxiety in the desert - I stop at a little shop in the middle of nowhere and am offered a jerrycan of petrol - I decline as I remind myself I still have quite a few miles in the tank. But a long walk if I run out!
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When I refill about 50 Kms later I discover I Actually still have 10litres in the tank, I am driving so slowly- and that's worth about 200kms! But it feels great to have 300kms in the tank again, and I refill scrupulously all day when I have covered 160 Kms or so.

I will Let the pictures speak for themselves - it was a day of big spaces (including between petrol stations!)
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It's a good day for a set of shades
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I arrive in Kerman but cannot find the hotel so intercept a passing taxi - I realise there is a protective screen and actually the driver is a lady but the passenger, a teenage girl, understands my question and calls to two passing motorcycles who offer to escort me to the right address!

It's full so I end up in a grubby boarding house next door with the promise of a good room tomorrow - and full use of the hotel and its internet and helpful hosts from the beginning, so that has worked well.


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The planning committee met frequently over the past few days to discuss a strategic route shift based on this idea:
I am one day away from the Persian Gulf. From there the bike could be shipped on to India at a manageable cost. I have a COD.

Possibly I could then fly out to India in the new year and ride across India and possibly Burma and Thailand before onward shipping the bike to Oz and repeating the process to the US until RTW accomplished. I have the carnet de passage which is required for India - don't know about Burma and the rest.

The planning committee spends an almost sleepless night pondering this idea.

Regrettably the shipping subcommittee, charged with speaking to a shipping agent in Bandar Abbas, reported back that unless I could meet the ship on arrival (it takes about 3 weeks) the demurrage costs (I love these esoteric terms) would be prohibitive.

There is also the consideration that I would be taking on a major commitment without appropriate discussion with my loved ones. Once you bring the bike into one of these countries my understanding is that it's pretty difficult to leave without it.

I didn't entirely regret the abandonment of the idea: I have crossed India several times before but usually by train, and for a reason! The trains are safe, friendly and comfortable (to a point) whereas the roads are the reverse and the drivers make Iranian drivers look like RoSPA instructors!

Maybe at some future point, although I am also very attracted by the Silk Road (not this time, though!).


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sheesh- wish i had to wrestle with those types of decisions. The biggest choice i have had to make all day is when the boss asked me "One lump or two?"

reading and dreaming along with you, matie! :thumby:
 
Today is a religious holiday in Iran so all the public attractions are closed - a trip out to the desert beckons!

But fortunately I was forewarned so got to see Kerman's 1 km long bazaar yesterday. Kerman has been a major trading post on the road to Afghanistan for centuries, I believe

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The increasing Baluchi presence as we move East - these guys were very happy to be photographed
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With the approaching holiday, it was busy
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Modern alongside old in the bazaar
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Lots of good produce

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I take the opportunity to check over the bike - oil level good, tyres looking good, oil radiator looks intact, no obvious damage or leaks elsewhere of significance - and clean all the light lenses and the hi-viz strips on the panniers. It pays to be seen here amidst the traffic!



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Nemrut Dagi, wonderful place and in the middle of nowhere, that reminds me , I must go back !
Great Reporting Simon ...
 
Today was a holiday so I limited myself to a visit to the Mausoleum of nematollah Vali.

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These are badgirs which regulates heat
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DSC01383.JPGI then forsook the GS and shared a taxi with a Dutch traveller out to the desert, to the Kaluts 140 Kms east - I was glad I did as the heat was searing and the winds high. At least that helped me make one decision- the idea of riding 900 Kms across that desert (the Dasht e Lut) toward Mashhad in the Northeastern part of Iran has been knocked on the head!

Some views of the Kaluts - shaped by uni-directional winds
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I had read that this was the orange picking season in the 'nearby' town but we were disappointed to find none!

Tomorrow is the last and peak day of the holiday - however my genial host assures me that petrol will be available. I will be sure to fuel up before I leave, headed for the town of Yazd - even hotter I am told.

But today was momentous because it will be the furthest Eastward point of this trip, I think. At the Kaluts I reckon I was about 250 Kms west of the Afghan border.


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But fortunately I was forewarned so got to see Kerman's 1 km long bazaar yesterday. Kerman has been a major trading post on the road to Afghanistan for centuries, I believe
Now that you have been to Kerman's fabulous bazaar, for others, describe the smells of the place. My memories are of the exotica of the east.
 
Myke: much as I would likely portray an olfactory paradise, it was quite cool at sunset and the smells were very muted compared with the tropical equivalents you know!

Off to Yazd now...


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