22 April 2008
Eldorado in Bukhara and Disneyland in Khiva
Slow Internet connection speeds simply do not allow any "Ajax"-based applications to run. Blogger, Gmail and Facebook are unusable. Where websites have mobile alternatives (like Facebook at http://m.facebook.com), their trimmed down mobile interface loads OK at 56KBit. But shame on Gmail: Their mobile interface cannot be used from a web browser (at least I could not find anything). Gmail has an alternative "Ajax"-free login (called HTML Login), but that proposed alternative only shows up, when Gmail times out after about five minutes.
The first day in Bukhara, I bumped into a local student - Rustam - who was selling postcards. He offered me to show the city and sites for a small nominal fee. He is eager to learn English and I was eager to view a maximum of things in a minimum amount of time. After three days in Bukhara, I stayed another extra night, because Rustam had introduced me to his friends and family and I was completely immersed in the Uzbek daily life and culture.
Roads at night are pitch black here - there is little to no illumination, even on boulevards. That would not really pose a problem, but the round potholes (somebody seems to do a business with the iron pothole covers) just are open for anyone to fall in. There are a lot of other obstacles as well, so I learned very quickly the word "Ashta Roschna" (which seems to mean "Watch out") this week. Also, I picked up a couple of easy Uzbek words. The reaction by greeting someone here stating "Asalam aleikum" or saying thank you ("Rahmat") is stunning. People's eyes light up and it is almost as if these words might give you a ten percent discount on souvenirs.
Khiva - to make a long story short - is the Disneyland for Mausoleums, Medressas and the like. Everything here is well preserved, abolutely clean and shiny. There is even entertainment for the kids, while parents visit a museum. I met here two Spanish guys and a girl, as well Daniel - an Australian who is loosely following along the same track and whom I met back in Samarkand. All of us actually hated the overdone preservation. But we made most out of it and visited the "inofficial" Khiva, where we shot plenty of pictures of people and how they live here.
Labels: Uzbekistan
posted by Reto at
07:38
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Hallo Reto
Ich bin jeden Tag auf Deinem Blog und war ein wenig beunruhigt eine Woche lang nichts zu lesen. However now I got it. Take care and have a good further trip.
René and the Bernese family
Hallo Reto
Ich bin jeden Tag auf Deinem Blog. Nachdem ich eine Woche lang nichts gelesen habe sorgte ich mich schon. Jetzt verstehe ich es jedoch. Wir wünschen Dir weiterhin eine gute Reise.
René, Eva und Thomas Markl aus dem Bärnbiet.