All posts by Stefani

Post cards from…Iran (2), Tehran

16 September: Meeting up with lovely Helle in her Ferdowsi hotel lobby in Tehran
16 September: Meeting up with lovely Helle in her Ferdowsi hotel lobby in Tehran.
23 September: Laleh-zar street, messengers' hub for the bazaar city. Bikes and more bikes...
23 September: Laleh-zar street, messengers’ hub for the bazaar city. Bikes and more bikes…
21 September: Our last days in Tehran, after some very hard decisions we had to make about our next destination in our journey, we continue our explorations of Iran's treasures of sights and cities. National Garden's gates in Tehran.
21 September: Our last days in Tehran, after some very hard decisions we had to make about our next destination in our journey, we continue our explorations of Iran’s treasures of sights and cities. National Garden’s gates in Tehran.
21 September:  We have been very lucky to have had the assistance of some expert car mechanics in Tehran helping us with faults in our diesel fuel lines and repairs yesterday and today. Facing absence of available parts in Iran, they designed and made spare parts for our car while we were visiting Foreign Office department in central Tehran.
21 September:
We have been very lucky to have had the assistance of some expert car mechanics in Tehran helping us with faults in our diesel fuel lines and repairs yesterday and today. Facing absence of available parts in Iran, they designed and made spare parts for our car while we were visiting Foreign Office department in central Tehran.
...Foreign office
… Foreign office

 

Post cards from…Iran (1), up to Tehran

Iran01 Babak Castle
12 September: On the way to Babak castle in Kaleybar, North West of Iran.
12 September: Tabriz... ghajar museum.
12 September: Tabriz… ghajar museum.
13 September: Kandovan stone village, North West of Iran.
13 September: Kandovan stone village, North West of Iran.
15 September: Takht-e Soleiman, remains of Sassanid periods castle and fire temple remains.
13 September: Takht-e Soleiman, remains of Sassanid period castle and fire temple remains.
13 September: Alisadr cave near Hamedan - West Iran.
13 September: Alisadr cave near Hamedan – West Iran.
13 September: Tagh-e-bostan, Kermanshah city. Celebration of victory of Iran over the Greeks
13 September: Tagh-e-bostan, Kermanshah city. Celebration of victory of Iran over the Greeks.

 

Milestone: (crossing the) Persian Gulf

It has been a challenge updating the site while travelling through Iran, mainly because of need of VPN and not spending enough time at an internet cafe to write stories on end. Apologies for not feeding your wish to follow us, we hope to get into the groove again.
We have arrived in the UAE and are living a deluxe life, in an apartment in Dubai for a week before joining my colleagues from October Gallery in Abu Dhabi for Abu Dhabi Art from 1-10 November. But we didn’t arrive here on a whim and a prayer.

We spent two days (!) in the ports of Bandar Abbas and Sharjah. After a delightful morning on day 125 (18th of October) in Firuzabad, the capital of the Qashqa’i tribe, visiting the palace of Ardashir I, we went on our way to Bandar Abbas, the main port in the south of Iran. We passed oil fields in the night with fires coming out of the ground and the sky lit up, through mountains, passing from Gerash to Lar discovering ‘holiday homes’ looking like qanats (water storage places) and learning about their free availability to anyone who needs a place for a night or two. The night spent at a fuel station next to our favourite road sharers: (international) long-distance truckers. We had however, not experienced the heat the south of Iran lives in and so during the night we had to put on the aircon for a few hours to make it feasible to sleep and not become soaking wet. I had never thought I would yield for this practice being quite environmentally conscious, but was so grateful we had the air conditioning of the car repaired in Tehran.
On Sunday we arrived in Bandar Abbas, straight to the port to get information on how to organise our crossing to the UAE by ferry. Unfortunately not a straight forward process (what is ever straight forward in Iran?) such as from the UK to The Netherlands or from Italy to Greece as we had already experienced. So no internet booking and you show up on time with your print out, drive your car on the boat and enjoy the journey in a cabin or chair in the communal space. No, it meant spending a whole day walking 6633 (!) steps, i.e. 5.5 km (pedometer on Saeed’s phone confirmed;)) between offices in port to obtain signatures, make photocopies and distribute them and pay fees left, right and centre. Our whole Monday from 9h till departure at 21h was spent in port. Plus getting frustrated, calming down again, feeling powerless in understanding the ‘system’ (no system is also a system), and running around from pillar to post without pee nor lunch break as deadlines needed to be kept to make sure you would get on the ferry that evening. We were grateful for having visited the port authorities already on Sunday to obtain some information and meet people who offered their assistance for the next day.  We also went to the shipping company, initially to purchase our tickets, but we delayed this till after the car was done on Monday, as we would not be guaranteed the day of departure for the car and then would have spent already the money for our personal tickets. You see, the car was dealt with separately from us as goods/cargo, and not as part of us and so a price to pay separately for the car from our tickets.
On Monday we learned how the port authorities and the shipping company are (not) working together. The people from the shipping company Valfajr, the only shipping company (so no competition), were very helpful and came to our rescue to make sure we would make the ferry for that evening.
Strange things occurred, such as the ticket price for the car from Iran to UAE being $500 (!) but for the return it will be $250, half the price.  Saeed tried his best to explain our previous experiences and the prices charged and went into a discussion, but to no avail. We did receive much collaboration in the end though after having told our story of travelling by car from the UK over the past 126 days and wishing to have a good experience. That Monday however, Saeed was the main ‘runner around’ due to speaking the language. He did an amazing job, getting the job done and making sure we would leave with the car, while I was giving our diary a written update.
On a normal day, Valfajr may ship one car once a week max, this day our car would be in the company of a UAE car and eight (!) rally cars from… The Netherlands! I am not sure if this was a blessing or a curse in the end, we do feel that due to this group, everything took a lot longer than if we would have been on our own. Lovely people however, who were rallying from Amsterdam to Salaleh in Oman; we shared the time waiting together in ports while their leader and Saeed were doing the running around to get things sorted.
After a whole day of running around, the restaurant in the passenger terminal wasn’t open due to having run out of food at lunch time, so we had a delicious fish kebab just outside the port, a good way to say goodbye for now to Iran.
On board it turned out the crew had been made aware of our story of travels and our experiences and it might have been due to that, we were upgraded to a private room with blankets, sheets and pillow to spend the night on the sofas instead of in the main lounge. Thank you Valfajr!

Arrival the next morning was welcomed by driving the car of board first and then go back on board again for a passport check we in the end didn’t receive. The cars first for narcotics check and delivery of Carnet de Passage (CDP). All passengers were taken by bus to the arrival terminal where passports were checked (again). We then were taken back to the cars to complete the first step of many to ensure the release of the car, part of which the CDP needed to be filled in. This took a lot of time as we came after the rally people, so a lot of waiting around. And then the story of yesterday repeated itself: going from office to office obtaining photocopies and forms and paying fees left, right and centre (still not clear why there was an extra $120 agency fee added!). And waiting… In the end we had to even pay an overtime fee of AED135 (approx £23.50) as (certain) people in customs only work till 14h! We had collected the last, most required piece of paper, the Vehicle Gate Pass, at 14h45 and went back to say goodbye to Haidar and Hajar of the UAE car, whom we had befriended, and to the Dutch people. The Dutch people in the mean time, had been invited to share two enormous platters of ‘rice with meat’ with the customs people, a treat they receive once a month and which they share with whomever is around. As we had not had anything to eat till then, we were grateful for them mentioning this feast to us and to the customs officers for sharing it, and so we had a delicious lunch while saying goodbye to our fellow ferry car passengers and were on our way in … Sharjah. What a welcome to the United Arab Emirates!

 

 

Milestone Iran!

We made our first milestone, we are in Iran!
And have travelled through some delightful places such as Jolfa (near the border with Armenia), Tabriz, Hamedan, Kermanshah, visiting Takht-e Soleiman, Ali Sadr caves, Bisotun and Taq-e Bustan.
Driving here is truly madness with having been part of several near-accidents and once even being hit, fortunately only scraped the car.
We visited Babak Castle in the north, for which we had to pass through nomad camps (they make and sell bread, doug – yoghurt drink -, yoghurt, and carpets) and walk for an hour climbing the rocks and mountain until we reached the castle ruins themselves. It is an important historical site as Babak was the one fighting against the Arabs (Islam) and other invasions, being the last crusader/general of the Sassanid period. His weapon was revival of happiness, he kind of invented a ‘new’ religion, the Babak religion of happiness, as he needed to beat the invaders at their own games. The country continues to amaze me.
We are getting to places most Iranians would never make it to, finding not much used roads and driving through the dry, with here and there oasis like enclaves, landscape, with adobe houses along the road.
There was a ‘travellers’ park in Tabriz, kind of a camping with showers, toilets, kitchen, where Iranians put up their tents ((all the same model) the word for tent is ‘chador’) on the concrete while the grass is only used to picnic! The Iranian people are quite easy and laid back in that sense. We are so happy in our own little home, i.e. our car.
We visited the amazing Ali Sadr caves and camped in their car park, cool and quiet, before entering a very poche hotel in Hamedan for internet. Internet connection not very easy, lots of filters and extremely slow.
From the caves we went west and visited the truly remarkable Taq-e Bustan and Bisotun wall sculptures, centuries old. These are from long time before Islam and although everything is being done to discourage the traveller/tourist from seeing the true site, with perseverance and time, wading through the ‘tourist villages’ of traps to spend your money built around them (Ali Sadr caves and Ganjnameh in Hamedan), you’ll find them.
It was a long drive from Kermanshah to Tehran in one day and the beautiful drive through the green vineyards doesn’t exist anymore; no more wine production, so all vineyards raised to the ground. ‘Takestan’, however not green anymore, still grows some grapes which are small, sweet, delicious and become very sweet raisins if not eaten as grape. While we had thought the road through Qazvin would treat us with greenery and scenery, we were disappointed with it having turned into a desert type landscape and we could therefore also have chosen for the motorway through the real desert (but we didn’t as we thought that would be too monotonous!).
We drove till the evening fell, had to do a last stretch of motorway into Tehran. Fortunately Saeed’s parents live in the west, and although we chose a wrong turn initially, we made it in two hours from Qazvin. A warm welcome awaited us.
Now that we are in Tehran, our focus is organising visas for the Stans and getting the car serviced and checked. Once the visas are sorted, we will have a clearer idea about the coming two months.

Roses and Moon Shine and much more…

Our rhythm changes from time to place and day-to-day. It seems there is not just one rhythm we can go by as every country and even every place we visit, ask for flexibility and continuous adjustment. When in Italy, we had found a rhythm which worked well for both of us: we got up early, drove, had lunch along the way, did some shopping at the supermarket on the way, drove a little more, arrived somewhere that we could find along the way, took out our dual fuel stove, made food while preparing the car for the night. We have left the Europeanness behind us and have entered a different world; we are beyond Istanbul, going deeper and deeper into Turkey.

A lot of time is spent on practicalities, logistics and psychological challenges and a lot of the things we wish to do are not (YET) materialising. Hopefully in the near future;), who knows. It all sounded so exciting and adventurous but in reality, as usual, no matter where you are, life is about the day-to-day joys of simplicity: shopping (or tending and reaping your vegetables/eggs), cooking, eating and sleeping. And for us, travelling by car and enjoying beautiful and spectacular sceneries are added to that list. The joys we experience are in the silly, simple things such as comparing prices in countries and between places (diesel, food, sunshades for the car), finding a shower (at a fuel station if need be, going through the male toilet area, as it seems only they have a shower facility, none to find at the ladies toilets) and a good place to stay the night. Wild camping is becoming more the norm now. We need to fill up our water can!

No more camp sites with too many facilities (entertainment programmes!), but after a long drive, a drive through a village of three streets where the children were playing outside, responding to my waiving, and people came out of their houses to see the strangers passing through, we found a beautiful, steep slope; so steep that our excitement and fear were mixed while going down. But then again, our TLC is a 4×4 and should be able to coop with this. And it did (of course)! We set up camp for dinner and the night and as we were in the mountains, had a delightful, long night sleep as for the past two nights in Istanbul on the car park, where it had been boiling hot, our sleep pattern had been quite disrupted.

We are now enjoying a Turkish service station on the way to Ankara. They serve delicious food, have a market and the çay is TL1 (= £0.30) per little glass. They have free, open wifi and we found an extension lead to plug in computer(s) and mobile phone. People are kind, we went to the buffet to get some plates of food, comes the chef over to the table and puts a plate with bread (“Your husband must have forgotten to take it”, everyone takes bread after all) and while we are eating serves us an extra plate of ‘shirazi’ salad (finely chopped onion, cucumber, tomato). The waiter does not just take our tea glasses away, but asks if we want another cup. Ok, sales technique x, but there is a kind of service mindedness and kindness coming from them as well.
Saeed is momentarily outside having a long chat with his brother through Viber, a free app which allows you to phone and text. I find it more useful than Whatsup as you can also call and than Skype, as that seems to be too demanding on my mobile. Check it out, it may be interesting for you too.

 

 

Chronological mumble jumble

You might have been wondering what happened to us and questioning where we are. To start with the last bit, we are in Greece and have spent a lovely few days browsing through this delightful country with its scenic routes we preferred over the magnificent new motorways. People drive kinder than in Italy, it is all a bit more relaxed. We visited the Meteora, 6 of 20 still existing monastries on top of mountains, traveled to Thessaloniki and are now in Alexandroupouli. We’ll visit tonight and tomorrow and continue our travels to Turkey on Friday – Istanbul awaits us!

Although making notes, haven’t kept up the writing since we visited our dear friends in Cana, Tuscany, Italy. But more will come once wifi connection and choice to spend time behind the computer instead of resting, setting up the car/tent area, exploring the environment/city, etc.;).

 

Isola di San Giorgio

My friend Adam had recommended to visit and I was curious. The Basilica, the Monastry of the Cini Foundation, the Glass Museum and unfortunately no time for the glass Tea house.
I took the Vaporetto 2 from Piazzale Roma, a 40min boat journey, and was welcomed with sun and a beautiful work of art by Heinz Mack: The Sky over Nine Columns (http://www.cini.it/en/events/heinz-mack-sky-nine-columns-2), nine golden mosaic columns of over 7 meters, “as a manifestation of the human being standing upright, the column is the earliest element in the history of architecture and forms a direct relation between earth and sky. The golden mosaic consisting of over 800,000 tesserae is an example of the long tradition of local craftsmanship, representing Venice’s early cultural relations between Orient and Occident.”

After reading the information panels at the arrival on the island and perusing the island a bit, I bought a ticket for the tour of the Cini Foundation (http://www.cini.it/en/foundation/storia-della-fondazione).

We spent some time in the gardens of the monastry, which seven Benedictine monks inhabit. A well in one of the gardens and cypresses giving the island in times long passed the nick name of ‘Cypress island’. The Doge (person is chosen for this post, title not inherited from father-to-son) of the island of San Giorgio Maggiore hosted famous guests on the island, such as Frederik I (Redbeard) and Pope Alexander III.

Vittorio Cini constituted the Giorgio Cini Foundation on the island in honour of his son, Giorgio, who died of a plane crash when flying his private plane, to create an international cultural centre that reintegrates the island into the life of Venice.  To give back the past and give a new breath to the island.

The first room we entered hosts the magnificent facsimile of the ‘Wedding at Cana’ by Paolo Veronese, made by Factum Arte (http://www.factum-arte.com/pag/38/A-facsimile-of-the-Wedding-at-Cana-by-Paolo-Veronese). I had known about this work through Adam and to now see it live, was just incredible. A huge piece, of which the guide highlighted many aspects, i.e. imagine you are seated at a banquet in this refectory, sitting on the left side of the room, you observe the painting and notice that the freeze on the top right prolongs on the ceiling the room, so the painting is a continuation of the ceiling of the refectory. There are many more intricacies in this painting, it’s beautiful to see it in its original setting in this location.

From the gardens, we walked to the library entrance, the guide explaining the three different decorations on the columns: one is simple, to free the spirit; the next one is more decorated leading to freeing the mind; and the last columns are so decorated indicating another level of freeing the mind.

The baroque architect, Baldesari Longhena, opened up the spaces between the two cloisters and redesigned the library.
The libraries are magnificent, ebony sculptures on top of the shelves indicating which books are part of a specific section, such as Homerus. A new library next to it, both in use, with over 150,000 books on art and art history.
The last treat on this tour was the Borges labyrinth. In the form of a book, his name and several of his attributes carved into the buxes the labyrinth is made of. A well-spent few hours, to be home at base camp before the lightning and thunders started.

Venizia, Venice, Venetie, Veniz,…

I guess you all get the picture of where we have spent two days of enjoyment walking the bridges, getting lost – but not really as everywhere you go the Piazza San Marco, Ferrovia, Piazzale Roma, Rialto bridge and Accademia are indicated on the walls of the streets -, having too expensive coffee, and taking photos of wonderfully framed views.

After a night of wild camping on a parking, I am becoming more at ease with it, we drove into Venice for the experience of ‘arrival’ over the long bridge going to the island, a splendid view in the morning. Once checked into a campsite where the bus opposite takes a 10 min drive, we were back in Venice to make our way to the Piazza San Marco, the inner heart of the city, going through the little alley ways, small streets and over the many bridges. We ultimately arrived and the necessary photos to prove were taken;).

There is an interesting musical instruments exhibition on in the city, beautiful pieces to be admired and listened to during concerts in the many churches (http://www.interpretiveneziani.com/en/museo-della-musica.php). With a background music of mainly string instruments, the craftmanship of the mother-of-pearl inlays and the wood sculpture were delightful to see.

The next day we were debating to stay an extra day. I am so glad we did as we had another gorgeous walk into town, this time to the Rialto bridge. We managed to get a few good shots from one of the Vaporetto platforms. Finding a bakery where the locals go and a bar where they go too, is not the easiest to find. When paying attention, we found the bakery, but for a cup of coffee, we ended up in a bar along the way where both locals and tourists hang out. Nice, too expensive Americano and cappuccino.
Saeed went back to base and I went to the Isola di San Giorgio.