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So far Fredrika Ek has created 140 entries.

Lao Adventure Withdrawal

‘Hey you! Aren’t you… Fredrika?’

Fresh off the plane from Thailand to Laos I was still comfortably snuggled up in the love bubble that had surrounded my whole being for the last couple of weeks. My family had already landed and gone on with their lives back home in Sweden, but I still hadn’t really felt the need to join my own reality just yet. I was just back at the Luang Prabang hostel that had stored my bicycle while I was away, but before I had even dropped my panniers on the dorm room floor, someone was addressing me. In Swedish?

I turned around.

‘So the bicycle upstairs is yours! I’m Björn. I’m reading your blog! We were actually talking about you earlier today.’

Whoa.

Weird, weird, weird.

I do know that I am keeping a blog. I also do know that there are people out there reading it. But to unexpectedly bump into one of them that doesn’t have their backside glued onto a saddle? That was unexpected. And hadn’t it been for the friendly smiles of Björn and his backpacker companion Johan, I’m quite confident I’d also have been a bit embarrassed.

Excited as I was to reunite with my bicycle, and officially kick off the Southeast Asia leg of my journey, I had anticipated a bit of a vacuum getting back to Laos. Saying another indefinite goodbye to my loved ones obviously includes some heartache, and I had gotten myself ready to take on another battle with the empty feeling I struggled with as I was peddling away from everyone and everything I ever knew on those very first trembling days of this journey.

Turned out though, my new Swedish roomies would save me from – or at least postpone – all that. Instead of pondering on when I’d get to hug my Mom or crack jokes about my brother’s haircut next time – I was sipping fruit shakes at the night market, engaging in sprited and highly scientific debates on what actually is the best Swedish fika (google it).

As it turned out, these guys had both been playing around with the idea of taking the plunge and head out for bicycle travels of their own. But – as so many others – never really gotten to it. When it comes down to it, it simply is too complicated. Too much to organise. Too many decisions to take. Too many unknowns.

Naturally I played my part of the game as well. Dumbing the whole process down to an extent that makes preparing breakfast seem like an overwhelming task in comparison.

‘Buy a 2nd hand bicycle. A tent. Strap it with your backpack to the rack. Pick a direction. Go.’

Johan had his flight home a week later, Björn hadn’t. And even though (at least initially) the whole conversation was a joke and strictly hypothetical, this new glimmer in his eyes was increasingly obvious. As though the big smile on his face hadn’t been enough on it’s own.

Already next day we all parted ways. The guys taking a bus south, and I was strapping my bicycle to the roof of another one – headed north back up to the Chinese border. I had already been excited to get back on the road again, but meeting Björn and Johan had been yet another reminder of how incredibly lucky I am to get to be doing this. Living my dream, all day every day. It would be an insult to those who aren’t, to forget to appreciate that.


Back at the China – Laos border crossing

Right off the bat Laos treated me to a royal experience in the saddle. The lush north is a complete wonderland of rolling hills and steep passes topped off with some quite otherworldly views. I thought I already had appreciated them, as twice before I had watched them with my nose pressed up against the bus window. This one time on the bike though, brought the value of a million bus rides combined. There is really no denying it. Experiencing nature is simply not done through a glass window.

I don’t want to see a view. I want to feel it.

Absolutely breathtaking, and serene but still challenging as it was, there was something about riding the northern part of Laos that didn’t quite resonate. My boxes were definitely ticked, and it was all seemingly there. Except for the feeling of adventure, that had been my constant companion all through the Middle East, Central Asia and China.

I had difficulty pinpointing it at first, but as the days went by it got more and more obvious. Was this… too easy? I knew it is all about mindset, but I still had difficulty setting mine straight.

Now don’t get me wrong here.

Laos is one of the poorest countries in the world. A country where almost half the population is forced to live on less than 1.25 USD/day. The tiny and completely undeveloped villages I passed were mostly made up by a string of small, beaten down bamboo houses, and communal tap of water used for showering and laundry.

With chickens, children and dogs (all equally dusty) running all around, people gather around small wood fires to eat and socialise after long days of working on the rice fields.

For most people in Laos, life is not too easy.

For me though? A well off tourist with budget enough to spend every single night in a guesthouse? I would like to say that it is.

On this journey, helping hands from locals have been essential for me. Being fed by that shepherd in the outskirts of Tajikistan when something to eat simply wasn’t to be found. Or getting invited to warm up and stay in the nomads’ heated tent on the Tibetan plateau, when the cold was making me seriously wonder how I’d ever make it though the night.

I’ll never dilute myself to the point where I’d ever mistake myself for being anything else that a tourist. But the somewhat obscure places I’ve gone to, and the mean of transport which I’ve been using to do so, have indeed given me a sense of – even if only for brief moment – joining the life of the people along my path. Doing so has been completely vital and at times I’ve simply had no other choice.

In Laos though. When being invited to sit down by one of the village fires, taking a bite of a newly grilled piece of buffalo skin. I felt like I was in a museum. What was going on around me obviously wasn’t fiction, but I couldn’t really getting over the feeling of merely being an observer. I was never in it.

As women queued up to wash their hair, I didn’t. I didn’t need to. I was never more than a day away from a hot shower. And buffalo skin? All of a sudden it was my curiosity – rather than hunger – chewing away on things like that.

Zipping up my tent at night, I almost felt like if I’d just be silent enough, I’d be able to hear the beating music from the night clubs of Luang Prabang, Vang Vieng or Vientiane – whichever was the closest backpacker hotspot that day. It turned out Southeast Asia was not only a new chapter in theory. The days went on and more and more I realised that change was here – and there was nothing I could, or should, do about it.

So.

Can’t change it? Embrace it.

And I think that by now I have. I mean, after all I am here. I actually made it to Southeast Asia. On a bicycle! I’ll gladly have a bed and a shower at the end of the day. I’ll have one – no, actually two – of those fruit shakes. I figued I’ve sort of earned them.

Although. And I don’t think I really need to tell you this. Obviously I still prefer the rides in between the cities, rather than the beer and backpackers inside them.

Who wouldn’t?

Making it to Vientiane I was up for a few days of rest in order to get my upcoming Vietnam visa in order. Guess who arrived there the same evening as me?

Björn!

On. His. Bicycle.

Now this guy is amazing. What he did after we said our goodbyes in Luang Prabang a couple of weeks earlier?

Bought a 2nd hand bicycle. A tent. Strapped his stuff to the rack. Chose a direction. And went.

We’d kept in contact as he’d made a big loop through the country, and I was so happy to get to see him as he returned to his starting point in the capital. We spent a few days being super tourists together, and on the morning of us both leaving we rode out of the city like total partners in crime.

I was headed further through Laos, and Björn was hitting Thailand – taking on the 2nd country of his first epic bicycle tour. And he did it like a boss! I’m still so impressed by this guy.

In life – not only as it comes to something as silly as riding a bicycle – making a change, or taking a leap of faith can be horribly complicated. Too complicated in fact. Too much to organise. Too many decisions to take. Too many unknowns.

I think for most of us, if we’re completely honest – it’s too scary. And Björn is a good reminder that it doesn’t always have to be. Sometimes we just got to go with it. Because really – that thing we want, is usually ever only a plunge away.

Obviously – watching him set off for the Friendship Bridge over the Mekong was a total proud mother moment.

Can you really blame me?

Fredrika

By |February 15th, 2016|Asia, Travel Logs|

A Reunion, New Year & A Holiday From The Holiday

I love the rewards. Watching the world around me change at the pace of my pedal strokes. Cashing in that massive downhill after a big climb. Or finally having that shower, washing a week’s worth of sweat and dirt off my tired body.

Because that is kind what makes the whole thing, isn’t it? Working – or at least waiting – for something, to then get it. At least I know that when I still had a soft bed to fall asleep in every night, I sure didn’t appreciate it. Now however? Well. And don’t even get me started on clean sheets.

Obviously the same goes with people, perhaps more so than with anything else. A fact that became very clear to me as I was standing at Luang Prabang Airport, ticket in hand and with a heart beating like a drum.

I love the rewards. And I was now about to receive the biggest one I could ever even dream of. Those 3 months in China had been one of the richest experiences of my life. But it had all been with that one clear goal constantly resting in the back of my mind. A goal that during the last rough weeks had become pretty much all I could think of.

This.

With mind and body equally exhausted, I boarded the plane. Flying me to Bangkok, Thailand. A place which I have absolutely zero connection to, but that now felt more like home than anywhere else in the world. Because awaiting me there – was my family.

I love the rewards.

Now. Getting to hug my mom. Dad. My younger brother Henrik. Older brother Kristian. And his Sara. To – after 10 months of boiling deserts & ruthless mountains (& some pretty good stuff, but let’s be a bit dramatic here) – reunite with the people I love most in this world. That simply does not fall into the same category as a sweet downhill or a good shower.

This was… something else.

I think most of you can relate. In the end I had almost 2 weeks with my family. 2 weeks during which we basically didn’t do or see anything. Still. This is and will remain one of my big highlights for a long time to come. And not because of the showers.

Writing this it’s one month ago since we were all standing on the beach of Hua Hin, spending the last trembling minutes of 2015 together. Now we’re already well into 2016, and I’m still thrilled to see what this year have in store for me. My first ever full year of adventure.

One thing is clear though. 2016 can hit me with all the mountains, deserts, new cultures and adrenaline rushes it wants. Whatever it might come up with, nothing will ever quite measure up to these guys.

And to you. You’ve already heard this, but I still want to say it again:

Mom & Dad. Henrik. Kristian. Sara. Thank you! Thank you for coming down, and giving me the energy boost of a lifetime. You are all amazing. I love you. And I miss you already.

Fredrika

By |February 2nd, 2016|Asia, Travel Logs|

Yunnan – The Ultimate Obstacle Course

Yunnan – my 4th, and the southernmost province of China – was a whole new experience from start to finish. By the time of me getting there I already knew this of course, as it seems to always be the case in this country – containing more separate worlds than one think could exist within one nation’s borders.

Yunnan hosts some 50 different ethnic groups and provides it’s people with nature ranging between everything from the massive and merciless mountains in the north to the thick and tropical jungles of the south. But expecting variety is one thing. Experiencing it, is of course another – and the whole thing turned out to be a lot different from how I had first imagined it.

A lot of the surprise was directly connected to two particularly crazy French people, and a cycling clog. Yeah, one of those wooden, somewhat pointy, Dutch clogs. A clog which of course makes up a complete pair with a second clog of the same size. This second one though, plays no part in my Yunnan experience, as it’s still long lost somewhere on the empty steppe of Uzbekistan. Even saying that the first one is, is kind of stretching it. The man insisting to keep putting his foot inside it is though. As if only to put the craziness of the French to shame.

However, all of that comes later. Before all the madness that would eventually come to be my Yunnan – I arrived.

Once again I was booming down big mountains. The difference from all the other times I’d done this in China was that this time I was actually bound to stay down there. For a long time. I was well aware that Yunnan no doubt would give me my fair share of climbing, but mountains? No, that chapter was officially finished.

Though life was still good.

Nature was doing it’s best to give me a colorful welcome and I was rolling straight into the town on Shangri-La. A finish line which meant an at the time extremely needed time for rest. And an even more needed visa extension.

A week spent in Shangri-La was the start off of a short but intense dash down the beaten tourist track. One I have to say I enjoyed immensely. This was actually the place where I met my very first non Chinese people since leaving Kashgar almost 2 months earlier.


With Canadian & English friends in Shangri-La


I continued on to the beautiful but crowded town of Lijiang


From a 2 day trek through the Tiger Leaping Gorge

Let me tell you it was a cool feeling to – at last – be able keep a conversation where the main concern actually was what was being said, and not the words being used to say it. To meet people who had somewhat of the same western references as myself, and together try to make some sense of that always so confusing, and seemingly constantly expanding puzzle of China.

It didn’t take much though. Actually it took a lot less than I’d have thought, before I was completely done with these stuff. Letting TripAdvisor & Lonely Planet set the agenda. Staying put in the tourist herd. Snapping photos of those ‘Must See’s. (Who in all honestly, very rarely are just that). And then end up in another hostel with a new bunch of people who all had, or were just about to, experience exactly the same things as me and everyone else.

Gosh. Are you coming to the same conclusion as I did?

It was high time to hit the road.

So I did.

And that’s when real things started happening.

On the road south is when I bumped into French cyclists Amelie & Kris. A lovely couple with whom I spent a couple of nice days and evenings until all of ours next stop – the city of Dali. After a detour passing the old town of Shaxi we had a sweet ride by the lake into Dali, getting our first proper glimpse of agricultural Yunnan.

After a few good days together I thought our roads would part. My plan from there was clear and with zero wiggle room for compromise. My family, most of whom I hadn’t seen once since setting off some 10 months ago, was coming to Thailand to celebrate New Years. And if I would just get my ass to Bangkok in time, I would be joining them for the occasion.

That I would be taking transports for the whole thing to work was a given, but still I was up for a classic race against time. In order to later get back to my last point and keep cycling, I first needed to get out of China. And to make it in time to my family, I needed to do it in time for Christmas.

Easy.

Considering the distance and elevation ahead, easy was perhaps not the term for it. But neither was impossible. Far from it. I had had my rest, I had the best motivational carrot imaginable, and I was headed for those 10 straight days of tough cycling with a good feeling.

To my great surprise I found out that apparently I wasn’t the only one. The Crazy French, with no apparent reason not to keep on with their slow mornings and juggling breaks, decided to join the party.

‘We’ve been lazy for a long time now. So why not? Let’s cycle!’

And before we had even set off the next morning, our trio had been expanded with yet another mad man – Ritzo from the Netherlands. Now what went through this guy’s head here is still a mystery to all of us. Not least to himself I think.

Short version: Ritzo rolled in to Dali late evening, ready for a big break. Big break for real, that is. Aiming to pick up an English teaching job, maybe Dali could actually become home for the upcoming year? Those big things would have to wait for a few days though. First things first: getting a shower, washing those dirty clothes – and finally doing something about the bike. That would be enough for now.

Or so he thought.

The next morning Ritzo was standing there – again. Bike loaded and ready to hit the road. This time with a couple of crazy French and a Swedish girl in a rush. His clothes just as dirty as yesterday. He still hadn’t showered. God, he hadn’t even had breakfast. What was this? And why..?

No one has the answer to those questions anymore now than we did then.

But don’t worry – we left before he had time to change his mind!


In the back: Ritzo, Kris & Amelie

The upcoming 10 days and 900 something kilometers, I won’t say too much about. I can’t. Nothing I’d say would come close to doing this madness justice. Our ride south through Yunnan was gorgeous. But more than that, one of the most chaotic experiences ever. Landslides, crashes, road blocks, stomach bugs, mechanicals and mud roads being just a few ingredients to it all.


Got this one from my brother. I think it pretty much sais it all.

It was dirty. Sweaty. And pretty damn exhausting. But most importantly incredibly beautiful, and some of the better 10 days I think I’ve had on a bike. Here are a few clues to what the whole thing looked like.


First camp night. Completely clueless of that this was just the calm before the storm…


…that the upcoming day introduced itself in the form of a huge landslide


Locked in overnight, loosing a valuable half a day


Being back on obstacle free roads…


…rarely lasted very long.


Stuck waiting for the 3rd landslide in 2 days to be cleared

Despite continuously testing us. Yunnan never let us loose faith, and always seemed to know just when to throw in some encouragement to keep up motivated.

…Unfortunately we were usually thrown right back into the Yunnan reality a bit quicker than one might would have preferred. As soon as we got too relaxed, the road disappeared. Literally.


When China takes your road away…


…you kind of have to find yourself a new one

Great views are great. But on the top of passes, it’s even better when you actually get to see them. Or anything at all for that matter.


So much easier with these guys!

The toughest times we had were all in the first half of our ride. Things cleared up and soon we actually started noticing that the cycling was enough of a challenge all in itself. The topography of this region is at times incredible demanding on a loaded bike. The hills are steep. And many. Actually, hills are all there is. You’re either going down at great speeds, or up in complete snail speed. And as the equation reveals, you’re in all likelihood climbing during 9 out of 10 given moments.


We passed Pu’er & went through one of Chinas big tea production regions


…and camped accordingly


Well, don’t ask me about the clog. Ritzo claims it’s super functional…

Believe it or not, but we did keep moving south, making good speed. Every day nature took big steps. Banana trees, sugar canes, pomelos, coconuts, tea & coffee plantations. Not to mention all those fruits and plants we didn’t even know the name of. Amazing is the word.


A very welcome addition to everyday life on the road


Christmas started coming around the corner…


…and we officially crossed the Tropic of Cancer! Wow.


The big day arrived!


And so did we, reaching the Laos border just on time.

Three months. Between 5 & 6 thousand kilometers. China. That this humongous country actually could come to an end? Crazy thought. I was more than ready for it though. Not so much because I wanted to get out of there. More that by now I really wanted to step into something new.

And I really would. Starting off this great new chapter of cycling Southeast Asia.

But before doing that, I’d just cross the border in style (anything for the Christmas spirit, right?).

I’d leave my bike. And then.

Then I’d head off to find my family.

Until next time,

Fredrika

By |January 24th, 2016|Asia, Travel Logs|

Tibetan Plateau Pt. 3 – Back to Earth

Long time no see! More than a month has passed since my last post, and a lot has happened. By now China is a finished chapter. The year of 2015 is as well. Writing this it seems like such a long time ago since I was making my way down the Tibetan mountains. Though for the sake of chronology, I’ll give you a short recap of what the whole thing looked like.

Less words, more photos. Here we go.

Somewhere in the 2nd half of November, trees made their first reappearance in my life. After weeks completely without vegetation the first ones popping up on the hillsides felt like a huge sign of progress. But just as much of a warning for that my dreamy mountain life would soon come to its inevitable end.

Quickly a few trees here and there turned into thick mountainous forests.

Though the landscape was changing rapidly and I had now crossed into my third province Sichuan, I was still totally in Tibetan area.

Obviously going downhill opens up for quicker changes than going when going up. But one of those ‘descent-days’ I definitely consider to be one of the crazier ones I’ve experienced. From waking up with frozen water bottles, I just hours later found myself standing next to cultivated fields in nothing but a t-shirt wondering what had happened.

I realize that this might not sound too exciting. But trust me, then and there it was. And if you had been there with me, I’m pretty sure you would think the same.

So. A few days of downhill, getting rid of a bunch of layers of clothing and that was it? Fortunately not. Though the plateau was officially over, the mountain life wasn’t. Between me and my final province Yunnan, were still some serious passes which would turn out to be some of my favorite ones ever.


These numbers are starting to feel a bit absurd…

Bad roads make for slow speeds. But more importantly a sky rocketed feeling of adventure. And after the silk smooth tarmac roads I’d been riding all through China, getting a bit dusty was just what I was looking for.


Views of this kind…


…are simply best enjoyed after having had to work for them

I kept peddling, and the big passes kept outshining each other. Until I was standing on the top of the very last one. Yet again thinking that this might be the most gorgeous view I’d ever laid eyes on. Maybe it wasn’t, but for sure it was the most beautiful sight I’d earn in a very, very long time.

This was it – I was going down. Not necessarily for good, and I surely had a lot of climbing ahead. The thing though was that I’d be climbing hills in comparison. After this, my next true mountain experiences would be continents away.

When you’re headed for the next one, it’s easy to get going and head down from a pass like this. But when you’re not. When you’re just going down.

How in the world can you stay up there long enough?

Forever tailwinds,

Fredrika

By |January 14th, 2016|Asia, Travel Logs|

Tibetan Plateau Pt. 2 – Mountain Love

It’s fascinating how fast things – no matter how crazy they first might seem – become the new normal. Living in deserts for weeks on end. Conforming to religious dress codes. Never speaking your own language(s). Or even the whole concept of being a human snail, slowly moving along with your house and life packed up in the back.

Same goes in the mountains. I’m always astonished when I get up there, with mouth hanging open and eyes about to pop out from their sockets. When I first reach those truly magical landscapes I’m incapable of doing pretty much anything. Riding just seems stupid, as it would only take me out of the piece of art I’m. Pulling out the camera makes more sense. Or at least getting off the bike to find a comfy spot from which to enjoy the scenery.

Though most times I tend to end up doing neither. I just stand there. Bike still between my legs and without a thought in my head. Without the feeling of being the luckiest girl in the world. Often times without even really registering what I actually have in front of me. All that does come later, but first off is always me going though some kind of beauty-blackout before my mind gets back its balance.

That first love feeling is obviously incredible. But there really is something special with what comes after it. When the magic you’re in becomes your new natural state of things. Being able to take it all for granted might be the wrong way to put it, but at least reaching the point of truly being one with what’s around you.

To realise you’ve let go of the feeling of being presented with a temporary painting that could disappear forever as soon as you take your eyes off it. And instead become part of that same painting. Zipping up your tent in peace at night, knowing that the every part of what’s outside it will still be there waiting for you when you wake up in the morning.

As I’m writing I do realise that this gibberish is not all that different from how people tend to describe their no longer new relationships. So. I guess some cynics are now shaking their heads in a sigh, and perhaps a few romantics are smilingly nodding theirs. Anyways, I’m sure at least a few of you can relate in one way or another.

Days on the plateau were dreamlike. And most of the time quite similar. At least one + 4 500 meter mountain pass a day sounds like hard work, but it rarely was. I don’t think I ever dropped below 4 000 meters, so going up again never became such a biggie.

Though of course I was slowed down when there was a bit too much snow on the road. And the oxygen (or lack of it) on those really high passes did make my heart beat for more reasons than being excited about the views.


4 797 meter ASL. Will be a while before I get the chance to break this record.

This complete ride took place outside the border of geographical Tibet. Though life in western Qinghai & Sichuan are just as Tibetan as it gets. People, food, history, culture, religion, language… Tibet. The prayer flags that greeted me on top of every single mountain pass being a small but really nice detail of it all.

Rolling through the small Tibetan mountain villages is always a great mood lifter. I haven’t been falling so hopelessly in love with a people since Uzbekistan, and here I felt more at home than I have in a long time. Sure, I was just as much of a rolling circus as always, and my bike could might as well have been a spaceship. But that didn’t stop anyone from welcoming me like their long lost daughter, sister, friend or grand daughter.


Everyone has those sleeves. And I am SO jealous!

I couldn’t post this one without mentioning the yaks. For quite a while there, I felt like I spent just as much time with them as I did with people. Daytime I was hanging out with them…

…And in the evenings I was mostly eating them. Classic dinner with the nomads was just having a bucket with big pieces of meat go around in the tent. Usually served with the least sharp knives you can imagine, making the whole thing a complete caveman event.

Another thing that definitely takes some getting used to is the yak tea. A salty hot drink that is typically improved (?) by a rich add on of yak butter.


Still not my favourite…


…but I must say it did give me good energy for those mountain roads

Receiving big smiles and a hearty ‘Tashi delek!’ as I’m coming through villages is always making me smile. But as usual, there is nothing quite like getting invited for an actual peek inside peoples’ homes and lives. As English wasn’t even to think of, these evenings were often more exhausting than the day of cycling leading up to them. Didn’t make them any less wonderful though. People are simply amazing.


Another Dad of the day


Yak on the menu!


The little ones tested out my tent…


…but decided they preferred their own bed

Sometimes I get the feeling of having ended up on a different planet from the one I thought I was on. So much is going on right now. News and people I talk to at home paint a picture of a world going up in flames. One of bottomless misery. And I’ve never had a more difficult time to relate.

There is chaos and a darkness beyond belief, there is no denying that. But there is also love, light and good. Everywhere. In the most remote corners of the world. There is people who seemingly have nothing, who without as much as blinking an eye will give a complete stranger everything. I don’t need anyone to lift a finger for me. But people do. They carry the world for me, for no apparent reason. And they do it in a way that make it difficult so for me to understand how in the world this wouldn’t also work the other way around.

I’m the girl who needs nothing, but still receives it all from people who, with our standards, don’t have squat to give. Then I open the news apps. To read about how us lottery winners with all the wealth in the world deny less lucky people sheer survival. Then I close them. And roll straight into the open arms of another Tibetan grandmother who’ve decided to make me family before even knowing my name. The absurdity is just beyond.

I really don’t have anything well articulated to say about this. Especially not in English. But fact is, that the world I am in right now is the most beautiful thing I’ve ever experienced. And being inside this bubble of unconditional goodness, I just can’t see anything else than that in the end – all will be good. It has to be.

Sure. No matter how much we’d like it, none of us have the power to save the world. But I’m absolutely convinced that all of us have the means to save someone’s world. There is statistics. Those will remain the same, regardless of what you and I decide to do. But then there are the people behind them, each one with their own story. And I like to take comfort in the fact that for each one of us deciding to simply pull our weight, a few more of them can be turned into good ones.

A few more of them will get a truly happy ending.

Because everyone deserves that.

The ActionAid fundraiser is always up and running. And there is always people in desperate need of our help. However big or small your donations are, I am so endlessly greatful to all of you who’re pitching in and making this project what it is.

Here’s yet another link to the fundraiser.

All the best,

Fredrika

By |December 5th, 2015|Asia, Travel Logs|

Tibetan Plateau Pt. 1 – Uphill To Cloud 9

One of the things I enjoy about keeping this blog is getting to experience parts of my trip all over again as I sit down to try and make som kind of sense of it all in written form. Flicking through photos and glancing in diary entries from weeks back in an attempt to recall what I’ve actually been up to.

I tend not to not always notice it on my own, but these flashbacks really make it obvious how fast things are moving, in terms of everything from changing landscapes and cultures to shifts in my head and gut.

Last time I checked in with you guys I was in Golmud. Hopeful – but nervous like Professor Quirrell – and just about to head for that magic military checkpoint situated 30 something km south of town. The one that supposedly isn’t to let foreigners through it’s gates. But unfortunately also my only option for ever getting up the majestic Tibetan plateau, and the one that I so desperately wanted to pass.

This was a situation made to – if nothing else – at least create a good story. And it did. Unfortunately one that’d be a bit too long for me to jot down here, so I guess I’ll just save that one for my grandkids.

I’ll brief you with the short version though:

In full disguise, I left Golmud late afternoon hoping for the best. Reaching the checkpoint I snuck up behind a truck giving me cover from the controllers’ booth. All according to plan. But only until 5 minutes later when I got too curious too fast and ended up super-caught as I tried to sneak a peek of what was going on in front.

Caught and terrified to have ruined my own chances on the mountains I was dreaming of, I pulled out my best poker face and went for it. Being the stupid tourist or the briber, go for kissing up or acting out. There are so many ways to go about these stuff, and I had no plan.

What I ended up doing? Well. Equally horrified and amused, I watched myself kind of play… the girl card.

The one thing that shocked me more than my own creepiness and parodic fake laugh, was that it actually worked. It sure took it’s time, but after a long questioning, a few phone calls and some lengthy discussions amongst the earlier so stern guards – I was let through. Just like that.

??!!??!

So. With my pride left at the gates, the rest of me made a mental victory dance, jumped up the saddle and hit the road before giving anyone the opportunity to decide they’d made a mistake.

I was through. And this was going to be epic.

First thing up to reach the actual plateau is an enormous mountain pass on close to 5 000 meter ASL. As Golmud is situated on 3 000 meters, I was already decently acclimatised, but obviously still needed to keep a slow pace in order not to rise to fast.

Apart from comfortable and gorgeous riding, these days included some lovely hospitality. Nights were already starting to be quite a bit below freezing and when the opportunities of sleeping inside presented themselves, I gladly accepted.

Now, sleeping wise I did just as well camping in that storage room of a gas station as in the temple I’m showing you here. But obviously some places are more made to be shown off in a blog than others. This Taoist temple being one of them.


At first glance this place didn’t feel very welcoming…


But it quickly turned out to be run by the sweetest people ever!


My first ever temple overnight – check!

I was about to make way up my highest mountain pass to date, but it never really felt like such a big thing. Gradients were always mild and the roads flawless. So instead of focusing on a beating heart and complaining legs, I got to enjoy the surroundings and blue skies full on.


At 4 000 meters. Snowcapped mountains AND sand dunes?! Why not, I guess…

Even if I had had to work remarkably little for it, reaching the top of Kunlun Pass was amazing. Once again I was now standing on the highest point of my life, after which I knew the actual Tibetan plateau would be awaiting me.

Coming down from the pass I got a good night’s sleep in the last village on the ‘highway’ I was on, and then started off the next day by taking a left. A turn that in my mind symbolised the beginning of the plateau that would now be my home for the upcoming weeks.

From having shared the road with a bunch of loud and stinking trucks, everything went silent. As if from nowhere, I now again got to ride with that magical feeling of having the world all to myself. The cold combined with me not being able to wipe the smile of my face left me with a more or less permanent brain freeze – and all was good.

Very, very good.

I had been ready for scenic landscapes and stunning views, expecting what I guess could be described as a 2nd Pamir experience. And I was far from disappointed. What I hadn’t been ready for though, was the wildlife I’d find up there. Crazy! Hundreds upon hundreds of wild animals, everywhere and every day.


Do you know these fellows?


Curious, but always ready to rush down their underground tunnel systems

Also, there was more or less constant presence of animals giving away that there (despite the lack of villages) were people around. Occasional yurts dotted across the grasslands told me the same thing.

On this trip there are few things I’ve enjoyed as much as the big highlands. This time surely was no exception, though at the same time it was the most demanding one yet. Not because of the cycling itself. The roads were constantly smooth as silk and winds were not at all an issue in the way it has sometimes been in the past. There was really only one challenge here. The cold.

As soon as the sun was out, days were nice. Not warm enough to start peeling layers, but never with temperatures making the cold an issue. Though on days when the sun decided never to show up, things ended up a bit on the chilly side.

Really didn’t stop this place from being totally gorgeous though.

And obviously – sun or not – the nights on 4 000 – 4 500 meters ASL in November are freezing. With night time temperatures hovering around -15 °C I generally crawled down my sleeping bag wishing for the morning to hurry up. And the space in mentioned sleeping bag I was sharing with everything from batteries to food and bottles of water that also needed protection from the cold.

It’s not like they’re comfortable, but I still really enjoy these things. Anything (well, most things) that add to the feeling of adventure are more than welcome in my book.

There is one thing I enjoy even more though! Something that also tend to come more frequently as the conditions become harsh. Frequent readers of this blog might already know what I’m referring to. Homestays. Despite barely having a population, my ride across the plateau of western Qinghai would turn out to consist of many.

The whole thing was a bit like experiencing Persian hospitality with Pamir views. Food, shelter & amazing company came in from left and right, and thanks to the incredible people along my way I was always taken care of in the very best of ways.


One of the first families that invited me (with Dad behind the camera)

As most kids don’t give a crap about things like language barriers, they quickly tend to become my best friends and teachers when staying with families. In nomadic Tibetan families they tend to have lots of little ones running around, making these evenings the best ones ever.


Morning goodbyes – a completely useless part of the day…

Already beforehand I knew I would love this ride. But by this time I had more than actual proof for it. There is simply nothing like riding mountains. This whole adventure is about freedom. But the feeling of it never gets nearly as intense as when I’m up there, soaring among the clouds.

Best part about this though, was that I still had just only gotten started.

Until next time,

Fredrika

By |November 30th, 2015|Asia, Travel Logs|

An Unexpected Friendship

However monotonous and eventless my desert and plateau ride was – it still wasn’t. Of course there are a lot of stuff I skip when sharing this journey with you. Partly due to me wanting to still have a few gems to tell when I get back, but in all honesty mostly due to my sometimes quite overwhelming laziness.

Here’s one I’d like you to know about though. One that turned from being a funny detail one day to an ongoing source of joy through the Chinese nothingness.

Here’s A Qiang!

(And no, I have no idea how to spell his name correctly)

One of those days when the headwinds were doing what they could to throw me all the way back to Sweden was when I first found him. The little guy with that everlasting smile on his face.

Thanks to the perfectly straight road and his high-vis pannier covers, I had seen him already from a far. Or I had seen something. After the better part of a year on the road I’ve had time to see the most bizarre things on and along the road, and by now I tend to accept pretty much anything as reasonable road-decoration.

By the time I reached him, I had had time to consider the possibility of that bright yellow thing over there being everything from an uncommonly extrovert local motorcyclist to a spaceship. I was even kind of suspecting that the whole thing might just be a mirage.

But a cyclist? No, that would just be too out of there.

Turned out however, I was very much in luck.

Because sure enough – there he was!

As with most Chinese people I meet, A Qiang didn’t speak a single word of English. And unfortunately his understanding of my pretty sad Chinese efforts were next to none as well (I really can’t blame him though). This however didn’t stop a new, and highly comical friendship to start taking shape.

So what if you can’t really speak to one another? If two cyclists bump into each other on the road (especially if this road happens to be situated in the middle of a huge desert) – you will camp together. Having company for dinner is nice, regardless if you can discuss local politics or not.

The next morning when we started off cycling together and rather quickly got separated, is when you would have thought this anecdote had come to an end. Where A Qiang turned into another micro chapter that would probably never be spoken about with anyone. But as I’m writing this, you already know this wasn’t the case.

I don’t know how likely or unlikely this was, but in the end we came into and left each others lives a bunch of times during the upcoming week and a half. And let me tell you it was fun! As we couldn’t really speak, and didn’t really have the same way to go about our days – we never really rode together. But in the end we still met and had lunch or camped anytime one managed to catch up with the other.

I still don’t know much about A Qiang. And he doesn’t know much about me. Our ways of communication – which generally needed support from maps, photos or hardcore charades – surely limited the possible topics of conversation. I think it’s sure to say there were a lot of ‘Me, Tarzan. You, Jane’-type of conversations going on there for a while.

Still. After spending a few nights cooking, relaxing and star gazing together with someone – even if most of it is in silence – a friendship will take form. This one was a particularly odd, but yet such a nice one.


A Qiang showing his around China route…


…of course with a chopstick for extra stereo-typicality!

Somewhere up on the plateau, we one evening ended up getting invited to stay the night at another one of those industrial areas that I wrote about in my last post. An evening that like others of it’s kind included some great people, and we were both falling asleep smiling, happy to be saved from another freezing night outside.

What made this overnight unique though was the morning. The breakfast, to be exact.

Chinese breakfasts are a lot different than anything I’ve stumbled upon before. But as I was quite used to them by now, that was not the thing. These guys had a little add on to theirs that kind of stood out to me.

A shot.

Yeah, that was one shot for me an A Qiang. Three or four for themselves. As some kind of fatherly gesture they were very strict with us not taking another one (as if any of us was even remotely tempted) – considering that we would soon be off on our bicycles. That they would just as soon be jumping into their tractors to start of today’s work didn’t seem to cross anyones’ mind.

Crazy world.

In the end, this particular morning would turn out to be mine and A Qiang’s last one together. And in all likelihood the last time we’d ever meet. Of course we didn’t know it then, but in hindsight I have to say that if there ever was a perfect morning to start off with a horribly strong shot of Chinese liquor – it was this one.

Cheers!

(Or as A Qiang would say – Ganbei!)

Fredrika

By |November 16th, 2015|Asia, Travel Logs|

Birthday, Plateau & A Right Turn

This post starts off where the last one ended. On a chilly but beautiful morning by the edge of the Chinese Taklamakan desert. A morning where I finally got my first glimpse of these.

The last bunch of days in the desert I had been longing for them more and more. I knew that in time China would give me more than my fair share of mountains, and that it could be wise to enjoy the easy cycling my days still consisted of. But by then I was kind of done with easy. And definitely done with sand.

Up was a couple of days climb to my first ever Chinese mountain pass. 3600 meter ASL might sound like a lot, and I guess by all means it is. However getting up there was remarkably easy. Coming in from Central Asia – used to climbing the dirt road Kamikaze passes of Tajikistan – surely played a role in what a breeze I experienced the whole thing to be.

‘Does it even count as climbing, with easy gradients, air full of oxygen and smoothly sealed roads like this?’

After a day of slowly gaining altitude I set camp just a couple of hours from the pass. Next day I would for the first time wake up as a 24-year-old, and figured that saving the pass would be a suitable birthday present to myself.

What my first on the road birthday was like? Different! And awesome.

Though however odd the day might have been – I didn’t have to miss out on too many things of what I remember my childhood birthdays at home to have consisted of.


Breakfast in bed (bag)


I’m an October kid – it’s supposed to be cold!


The sun soon brought some nice temperatures…


…and I got to cash in my present with a clear blue sky!

To top the day off, I crossed my first province border, leaving Xinjiang for Qinghai. Finally I really got to feel some sense of progress, and in other words – this was a good day.

Now one might think that things would really be changing from here. But to tell you the truth, they really didn’t. At all. Once up on the mountain plateau (around 3000 meter ASL), I was hit by just the same monotony I had had company for the last weeks. The only real difference being that most of the sand was exchanged by some kind of gravel, and naturally that the temperatures were now considerably lower.

Luckily, the slap-in-the-face camp spots also joined up the plateau.

I guess everyone has a limit where you’ve just had enough. By now I think I was getting closer and closer to mine, and the cycling started feeling more like a chore that anything else.

No matter how many hours I put into it, I could barely see myself moving on the map, and China slowly started to feel just as overwhelming as it’s supposed to do when you’re stupid enough to go at it on a pushbike.


Waiting for tired cyclists to throw in the towel?

Then – just like always when I need that extra push, life heads straight out to give it to me.

Now this sign might not tell you much. But really, this one made all the difference. This was my first real finish line since starting my Chinese ride. This was…

A turn.

The first actual turn since starting off in Kashgar. Weeks – and thousands of kilometers – ago.

Right for Golmud. Gosh.

No matter what logic would tell me – this was all I needed. That the turn itself was something like a one second event, and that the sign clearly stated that I then had another 359 km before anything else would happen, was completely irrelevant. I was in fact making progress, and this another proof of it.

The last few days into Golmud were good ones. Nothing revolutionary happened, but my head was back into appreciating things by default – and I no longer had to make an effort in order to have a good time. I guess at least some of you know what I mean?

I enjoy my own company a lot more when my mind is set like this. When I unconsciously look for the good stuff. They’re always there of course. But it’s so nice to see them also without necessarily be looking for them.


My first proper prayer flags!


Now this is a menu even a foreign cyclist can understand! (It’s a whole wall)


Even the views started to show up again

Daytime temperatures were still comfortable, but as the nights started getting colder and colder, the prospect of camping got less tempting as time went on. What good does the views do if you’re not out to see them?

There was still no civilization to speak of, but as my ‘sleep inside radar’ went on, I ended up having a couple of really weird – and absolutely hilarious – ‘homestays’ with people working at the industrial areas occasionally popping up along the road.

I consider one of my strengths on the road to be communicating with the people I bump into along it. It was long ago since I generally had a language in common with the locals, but it all tends to work pretty well with some basic vocabulary, body language and a lot of will power.

In China however. It’s so difficult. Never before have I had so much trouble with this, and daily I fail miserably with the most basic stuff you could imagine. Nothing works! At times this is obviously frustrating. But it can also be so much fun. With the right people the lack of communication becomes communication in itself, and when everyone just stops bothering with making themselves understood, the good times comes naturally.

These guys spoke Mandarin with me. I spoke Swedish with them. And it was great! Luckily laughter is universal.

Coming into Golmud I was exhausted. Like really, really tired. From home, I had gotten the best birthday present imaginable at the time – money to stay in a fancy hotel.

I mean. The kind where you have your own shower, are treated to a breakfast buffet (the weird Chinese one, but still!) and someone comes to clean your room every day like it’s the most natural thing in the world. Even my bike got it’s own bed, I think that if anything proves that this place was the real deal.

So what do you do? When you finally get inside, after weeks of working for it?

Damaged as I am. I set up the camera…


Me. For the camera.


Me. In reality.

Then, my friends. I spent the upcoming days the only way I knew how.

I spent them resting.

Hard.

Take care,

Fredrika

By |November 10th, 2015|Asia, Travel Logs|

A Desert Photo Bomb

After a few touristy days in Kashgar I was now comfortably settled into my new country, and it was high time to hit the road. Apart from a few days here and there, I had basically spent 3 weeks off saddle, and I couldn’t wait to start pushing those pedals again.

In hindsight – knowing what was up ahead – having that overflowing motivation to cycle would prove to save me a lot of misery the upcoming weeks. Headed East from Kashgar I was taking on the Southern route through the Taklamakan desert, a ride that is far from being made justice by simply being described as… lengthy.

The Taklamakan is the 2nd largest sand desert in the world. I think that sums the whole thing up pretty well.

My previous desert ride through Turkmenistan have among cyclists gotten the witty name ‘The Turkmen Desert Dash’ – which is as suiting as it could be. Now this ride doesn’t have a name like that, mostly since people generally don’t even consider going here. There are many reasons for this, with maybe the main one being that it in many ways is a rather stupid idea.

If the Turkmen Karakum is the sprint – the Chinese Taklamakan is no less than the marathon.

I do agree with that traveling this route on a friggin’ bicycle is stupid. There is no way around that. But that doesn’t mean that it’s not also a completely dreamlike experience incomparable to any other. And even if it wasn’t, I’d go for it anyways. I’m the first one to admit that I’m one of those twisted people who can enjoy a stupid stunt (heading out to cycle around the world, for one) from time to time.

Sitting by the keyboard, I’m hesitant as to what to write about this ride. There is so much to be said, but at the same time I have nothing. I mean – what happened, really?

‘Once upon a time, there was a road. A dead straight and never ending one. And then there was a girl slowly cycling it. The End.’

True story.

But yet again. As always. There was a lot more to it.

In many ways, I feel like this entire ride took place inside my head. Being both the most meditative and (when the winds hated me too much) frustrating experience imaginable. I won’t bore you with the details, but it’s sure interesting what happens with ones mind when it’s given the opportunity to do its own thing, without any real input from the outside.

I guess some people come out of prison talking like this. And for others it’s enough with a big ass desert.

When setting off like this, the days quickly blur into each other and the whole thing becomes more like one constant flow of time and one single experience rather than chopped up happenings and different occasions.

And in opposite to the Turkmen desert, this one really treated me like a lady. Temperatures were always comfortable. Winds were many times pushing me on like never before. Road smooth as silk. There were never any real difficulties, and the whole thing was more about patience than anything else.

Even though some consisted of more camels than people, and others the other way around – the days were in many ways just repetitions of each other. In the very best of ways. It all quickly came down to the very basics, and soon the only thing that mattered was making sure to get enough food and sleep, all the while slowly but steadily making my way forward.

Super monotonous. And I loved it.

Maybe you get it, maybe it just sounds weird.

Either way – here you have a big photo splurge from my time in the Taklamakan:


Headed out of Kashgar. Still clueless of what was coming.


‘Are you sure you want to do this..?’


Soon it was just me and… a whole lot of nothing

The top highlight of this time was no doubt the evenings. To get off the road, with tired legs decide on a camp spot and make dinner just in time to watch the spectacular show the sun was giving each night. That’s just magic.


Mornings weren’t too bad either

But then of course. And this you can apply to any post I’ll ever put up here. All camp spots are not glamorous enough to make you guys at home jealous.


Still had a decent view though!

And what about the road? Well. You know this by now. It was… straight. And very long. These photos are taken with days apart:


I can really understand why they need these signs


Luckily I daily had friendly people stopping to cheer me on

Every now and then I reached one of the oasis towns popping up like if from nowhere. Perfect for stocking up on food, making sure that civilization still exists, and of course, checking up on the cotton harvest.

I really enjoyed those days with some more greenery. Or well – colors. Fall was definitely arriving in high speed, setting the trees on fire.

…And before you know it, you’re always back in the sandy nothingness of Taklamakan. A place I really grew more and more fond of as time passed. Writing this, I do miss the simplicity of life out there.

Many times I felt like the desert simply would go on forever. But as always, things do eventually come to an end. At least if you keep pedaling for long enough. And as I was riding into the sunrise one morning, they were there. At first the light was too bright for me to see them, but it didn’t take long before I realized that they (or I) had actually arrived. I had found the mountains.

Two weeks & 1 500 km. It’s weird how quickly something can go from feeling so permanent to suddenly just end. On one hand these weeks are so easy to describe. You know? I was cycling a straight road from Point A to Point B. Sometimes I had headwind and sometimes I didn’t. That was it.

But like always, and I’ve told you thing one too many times by now, it’s the small things that does it. The details that my diary entries are overflowing with, but that rarely make it to this blog.

Stuff like what real silence sounds like. How good it feels to brush a days worth of sand off your teeth. What it’s like to live purely off of the walnuts you find along the road when you’ve completely run out of food. The feeling of wanting to keep peddling, but only as long as it’s without risk of ever reaching the finish line.

Someday and in some way, I will tell you about these things as well. But when and how, I’ll leave for time to tell.

Until next time,

Fredrika

By |November 5th, 2015|Asia, Travel Logs|

A Whole New World – Again

China. The Middle Kingdom. The world’s most populated country. Sizewise the 3rd biggest on the planet. A place with never ending diversity as it comes to everything from culture and history to nature and climate. China is a whole world in itself. One I’ve never even set foot in before, know embarassingly little about – and whose language(s) I don’t speak a word of.

Sounds like made for a good bike ride – right?

After a chaotic ride to the border, I arrived to get my Kyrgyz exit stamp just in time not get turned down at the door. The day I entered China was the last one the borders were open at all, before they closed completely in favour for the Chinese national holiday & ‘The Golden Week’.

When you’re limited to never moving any faster than your legs peddle, timing can sometimes be tricky – to say the least. This time though, everything truly worked out for the best.

The border into China has a reputation. And it’s not the most flattering one of those. After all the headaches of crossing borders in Central Asia, I was a bit nervous about this one. Apparently – the Chinese customs was even stricter than the ones of the hardcore bureaucracies I’d already been struggling so much with.

In the end, this would not turn out to be true (for me). The crossing did take like 10 hours in the end, but they were only 10 slow hours, not difficult ones.

The first thing that happened as I reached the initiating Chinese border point was that a guard stripped me off my passport. This is standard. Every foreigner who shows up at this border, has his or her passport confiscated. Passports are then handed over to a waiting taxi driver, and the only way to get it back is to pay him for a + 100 km transport to the actual customs spot.

I still have never really gotten a proper explanation as to why this particual border area is so sensitive, but there is simply nothing you can do about it. Do you want to get into China? Do you want to see your passport again? Ok then. Shut up, pay for that overpriced taxi ride – and you will.

True maffia style.

At the border I met the French cyclist Peps, and together with a couple of backpackers we went with the taxi driver who were holding all of our passports hostage. What could have been a couple of hours drive ended up taking just shy of forever. This due to everything from repeating arguments about prices to waiting for the controllers at some military checkpoint to finish their 2.5 hour long lunch break.

When at last, we got dropped off at the customs, we were all pretty tired – but nowhere near relaxed. I mean, sitting in the back of a taxi is only that demanding. Getting pass customs officers though, that’s a whole other story. This was where the actual hassle would take place.

…Or so we thought. In reality, this would turn out to be the smoothest customs since crossing into Turkey (of course, with the exception of Kyrgyzstan).

After all the stories I’ve heard about this border, with people having everything from their chain tools to Swiss knives taken – I was ready to argue my case, play dumb and do some serious kissing up in order to get my stuff across the border. But noone cared about us at all.

In the end we just had to make a quick x-ray scan of our panniers, and I don’t even think anyone was watching the monitor as they went through. So 10 minutes after filling out the declarations forms, Peps and I were standing by the door to exit the building. Still with everything from pepper spray to fresh fruit in possesion. Peps even still had his pretty impressive stash of cannabis on him.

‘Do you think this really could be it?’

‘I have no idea. But let’s go before any of them change their mind!

And we were out.

Still I had just known Peps for a few hours. We had both had our completely different paths up until here. But right then and there – we were companions celebrating like life long friends.

China. From our front door to China. That his was in France and mine in Sweden didn’t matter. We had both gone through deserts and over mountains. Both been fighting ice cold blizzards and frying under tormenting sun. We had made it. China. We had cycled to China.

China. China, China, China.

Say it enough times and even the name starts to seem just as absurd as the ride there.

We were both childishly excited, and laughted, shouted and danced (yes, of course you can dance on a bicycle) our way to the road that would eventually lead us to our first city – Kashgar. After a good night of camping, we started off our first full day in China. And this was a particularly good one to have company.


The Chinese made sure to give us a proper welcome to the country


Can’t even remember the last time I rode a road smooth like this


Peps – the ornithologist – in his element

My first few days in China could make up a book in itself. But I’ll keep it short.

Kashgar, Xinjiang. This is China. But still not really. For me it was a whole new world – but at the same time I still had one foot in Central Asia. This is Uighur region. Where Uighur people live. Speaking – and living Uighur. This is a muslim people with their very own culture and history. The only thing that they really have to do with China, is that they happen to live within it’s borders.


Riding into Kashgar. A lot of Uighur – and a tiny bit of China

For me this was the perfect introduction to the country. Coming in from Kyrgyzstan, there was so many things just screaming China. But still not. Still I could get by with using my Turkish, Uzbek & Kirgiz vocabulary – as Uighur is also a Turkish language. Still there was plov and lagman served as the main meals. Still I felt at home.


Kashgar night market. A hungry cyclist’s dream.

Staying in one of the youth hostels, I ended up spending a couple of more days than planned. Meeting up old friends from Central Asia, and making new ones travelling in the opposite direction. This was a good time.


Once the Kashgar people were also cycling. Now they have upgraded.


Sold outside a pharmacy. I wonder for what they’re used?

A lot of the times I feel kind of like my mind is falling behind my movement. Constantly there are so many new impressions and experiences. And before I’ve had the chance to wrap my head around the first one, the second and third have already come and passed.

In hindsight I felt like the time I spent stationary in Kyrgyzstan was so good for me. It give me time to actually digest what had been going on the last couple of months. My head had had time to catch up with reality, and I was entering China with what I can only describe as a clean mind.

Instead of thinking back on what actaully happened yesterday, the day before that – or even last week. I was now in the present. Completely in the experience – as it happened. I don’t think I had really realised it before, but in Kashgar I could really tell that it was a long time ago since I truly could do just that.

Now. I just had to start cycling.

Fredrika

By |October 29th, 2015|Asia, Travel Logs|