So I’m still offline for a while especially social media but hopefully this one syncs to Facebook, Twitter etc. automatically like the others. It’s almost a live blog post which I’m copying and pasting from a Word Document in the only internet cafĂ© in the city of Khorog. They kindly let me plug my laptop into the mains and the ethernet cable. The joys of being the only backpacker in this remote town.
Khorog is known as the capital of the Pamirs. It’s is the largest and main city in the Gorno Badakhshan Autonomous Oblast region of Tajikistan, for which you need an entry permit. Despite the remoteness of the Pamirs, I’m spending four days here, doing some offline blogs and writing but mostly out exploring Gorno Badakhshan. This post is a return to my 2010 era posts when I was camping out in Poatina in Tasmania. I used to write articles as blank WordPad documents and then upload when I could. It’s basically a live blog post with a wee update on what I’ve been doing and what I am doing. It is not a backpacking guide article, but don’t worry – plenty of those to come when I get my videos, photos etc. sorted and uploaded.
My journey to Gorno Badakhshan from Tajikistan was a long one, winter time in this region can be cumbersome and when you’re the only backpacker in town, it can get even more harrowing. Hostel to hostel it was a staggering 22 hour trip. Well it is winter and that included awakening for breakfast in Marian’s Guesthouse at 6am in Dushanbe right up until my arrival in the Pamir Lodge Guesthouse at 4am the following day. On the way I had to deal with the lunatic “Land Rover filling policy” of the Avtovagzal in Dushanbe, Tajikistan.
Instead of getting a load of people going to the same place, putting them in a shared vehicle and off we go, one at a time, they put one person at a time in different vehicles and have a chat like there’s nothing important to do. It takes them all a while to fill up. This is Tajik culture and I have to respect it. However I waited for four hours in the same seat in the bus station in Dushanbe expecting us to leave any moment and we didn’t. From before 8am until almost 12 noon I waited. It’s rare for me to get a sore bum, but I had a sore bum most of those 22 hours! Eventually we left Dushanbe in a different vehicle and the story of this journey is to come in a World Borders series article. On route to Khorog we broke down 3 times, ran out of petrol once, skidded off the road, hit a rock and almost went off the cliff and it was simply a crazy adventure. We had to push the car a few times through mud roads. Alas, I arrived in Khorog at 4am knackered in deep snow and over-frozen ice.
I have a fantastic place to stay in Khorog. Pamir Lodge is excellent. The manager Said stayed awake until 4am waiting for me and he let me in and showed me straight to my cosy room and bed, up in the mountains of the Pamir Region. I slept and then out to explore the city!
What a place this is! The Pamirs are breathtakingly beautiful. I’m surrounded by mountains and Afghanistan and Tajikistan are beautiful in winter.
The road to Khorog runs completely along the Afghanistan border, to our right was always a river, behind the river every mountains we saw was in Afghanistan. We stopped a few times and my eyes kept feasting themselves on the land opposite. Lots of tourists backpack in Tajikistan, a lot less venture into Afghanistan. I can only blame the media and “Popular Place Only Travel Blogs” for this lack of tourism in Afghanistan. I’ll have more to come on Afghanistan of course…
From the Pamir Lodge here, I could see Afghanistan. Only a bridge and a brace of border checkpoints separates Khorog from Sheghnan in Afghanistan. In my backpacking lifestyle you know how much I love border crossings, getting visas, changing banknotes, updating my whereabouts etc. For the last week and for the next 2-3 weeks I may not be doing that as regularly as I wrote on this article. These towns and villages are more remote, less WiFi, more restrictions on websites and of course for safety and security, it’s not a bad thing to be offline. But rest assured I am enjoying my time in this region. In Khorog I have toured the day life, the night life, the markets, the mountains and I’ve been on the snow covered pitch at the football stadium. I have also spoken to the local volunteer organisation, Umedvor. It’s a fantastic city.
In the past week I have also toured Dushanbe and Hisor Fort with Pamir Travel and Travel in Tajikistan. I look forward to writing my reports on those exciting journeys too. I can’t wait to get them all written  in fact!
So bear with the journey, I’ll backdate some of my travel photos to Facebook and Instagram when I can and I’ve a few more borders to cross which you’ll hear a lot more about.
One more step along the world I go…
Brilliant!
Justin recently posted…Ramen: Konjiki Hototogisu, Hatagaya.
This is hardcore travel at its finest. Great photos and brilliant summary of your trip this far! Can’t wait to read more stories when you have the time and resources to.
Hi Justin, Thanks for the comment, glad you liked it. More to come hopefully when I have time. If I stopped travelling now, I reckon this blog could last 20 years with a post every day about ridiculous journeys on this ball we find ourselves on. I can still check my e-mails here (every few days) and got a notification that you tagged me on Facebook, just so you know I can’t access it but hopefully mid-February will be back online and able to see it and write more and chat to you again about Japan and our life outside of Bangor, Northern Ireland. Ikimasho! Jonny
Hi Ray, thanks for the comment and follow. Also, please note that I’m not on Social Media at present and have been off it for about a week now, I’ll be back to writing more and Facebook/Instagram/YouTube etc. in February. It’s a crazy journey! Safe travels. Jonny
Great tips! thank you very much to provide the backpacking gorno badakhshan touring khorog capital pamirs.
Hi Golden Triangle Tour 4 Days, thanks for the comment, glad you liked my article on Khorog. Safe travels. Jonny