I had pretty much wrapped up My Spice Buying Expedition in Istanbul, but while I was in the neighborhood I thought I better wander by Bukhara, in Uzbekistan. There is a red-eye special leaving from Istanbul for Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan, at 11:55. pm. I arrived in Tashkent at 7:30 the next morning amidst a major snowstorm. The plane for Bukhara was not scheduled to leave until 3:35 pm, so I spent the rest of the day sitting in the domestic terminal rereading Barthold’s Turkestan Down to the Mongol Invasion, the absolute bible for the history of Inner Asia up until the time of the Mongol irruption. I had rather unwisely left Mongolia without a copy—I have copies of three different editions in my Scriptorium—but having decided I was coming to Bukhara I had amazon.com fedex a copy to my hotel room in Istanbul. It left Amazon’s warehouse in the U.S. at 4:57 pm on a Tuesday and I signed off for it at my hotel at 12.51 pm on Friday, just in time for my Uzbekistan trip. The domestic terminal in Tashkent is unheated—it was 5 degrees Fº outside and not much warmer inside—and there is no restaurant or even a place to get a cup of tea or coffee. I would have given my left nut for a Starbucks. Anyhow, besides Barthold I had my Kindle with 138 books downloaded on it and another 684 in the Cloud, so I did not lack for reading material. Amazingly the domestic airport did have free internet in the departure area—albeit very slow, but still internet—so I could have downloaded from the Cloud or bought some new titles if I needed a quick book fix.
By 2:00 pm at least six inches of snow had fallen in Tashkent. Several domestic flights, including one to Termez, were canceled because of the weather, but finally the flight to Bukhara as announced. But then they had to spent an hour and a half de-icing the plane, so we did not get off until five. You would think Uzbekistan Air would use a small plane for the one-hour flight to Bukhara, but no, they use a wide-body Boeing 767 and it was just about full.
It was 8 degrees above zero Fº in Bukhara when we arrived. Although this is definitely not the tourist season in Bukhara I was not the only tourist on the plane. There was a group of at least 12 people from China who were met by the agent of a tourist company in Bukhara. They had come prepared: some of them had on expedition-grade down parkas and pants. They looked like they were ready to start out on a trek to the North Pole.
It was 6:30 by the time I got my bag and exited the terminal. Waiting for me was my old pal from Komil’s Guesthouse.
My pal from Komil’s Guesthouse (click on photo for enlargement)
He does not speak English, but we caught up on the news in Russian while driving to the guesthouse. I am of course the only guest here. These old mansions which have been converted to guesthouses do not have central heating, but there was an electric space heater in my room and it was quite toasty. I had sent an email to Komil’s earlier ordering plov for dinner and it was ready soon after I arrived. I realized that I had not eaten for thirty-six hours—I had fallen asleep on the Istanbul-Tashkent flight before the meal was served—so the plov—classic Bukhara plov by the way—carrots only, no onions—was quite welcome.
5 comments:
Is that 8 degrees above 0 deg. C or F? OR K?
It's interesting contrasting your commentary with that of a friend of mine, who is currently visiting Colombia. I almost went with her this year - so far I've heard all about some sort of "party bus", so now I'm not regretting not going. She also wrote me about some famous Colombian artist known for depicting his subjects as immensely fat - even the Mona Lisa!
Ever been to Colombia? That party bus sounds like it might be right up your alley. Just kidding, of course.
-a mes
That is 8 above 0 ºF, or minus 13º C. Today the high was 16ºF and the low was 0ºF. Very unusual cold snap for this area. The temperature on this day last year was a high of 36ºF and low of 30ºF. My hotel has no central heating, only an electric space heater in the room. The electricity was off in the whole city all day yesterday, so there was no heat. You could see your breath in my room. Luckily I had my Kindle to keep me warm. I have no intention of going to Columbia or everywhere else in South America. Just not interested.
Well, it sounds like your Kindle is good company. A few drinks on a party bus might make you warmer.
-a mes
No hangover with the Kindle.
Oh, maybe not a hangover, but your vision might suffer, otherwise (http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/how-bad-for-your-eyes-are-computer-screens/2014/01/17/985b90cc-7c98-11e3-93c1-0e888170b723_story.html )
Haven't made the transition to Kindle, yet - something about them scares me. Anyway, in your situation, books would have a distinct advantage over a Kindle: you could always burn books in a last ditch effort to keep warm (not that that would be optimal). Gotta be practical! :)
-a mes
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