Sunday, 19 August 2012

Erzurum, Uzungöl, and Sümela Monastery

Erzurum

Erzurum was quite a shock. A very clean city with somewhat behaved traffic with shops and other facilities. It even had a McDonalds somewhere (we checked, but went to Burger King instead!). Hadn't seen a city like this for a long time, and I'm not sure if I'm counting Dubai. There was a Shell petrol station too which is something I don't remember seeing after Singapore (I'm sure they have other brands represented elsewhere).

We stayed two nights and saw a couple of the sights, and to get things washed and charged after a couple of nights camping. But then we stayed an extra night because it was the first time we had proper internet for a long time and everything wanted hundreds of updates and I could finally upload my photos.


Canonballs in a room of the Erzurum Citidel.

The tower in the Erzurum Citidel.

Steep stairs up the tower.

The view over Erzurum

This is a big winter ski resort town, that's one of the resorts in the distance there.

The large mosque in the background, a small one in front. The "two minaret mosque" was being restored, it's the famous one but I didn't get any photos of it covered in scaffolding. 

A Mongol school built in the 13th century. Both minarets had collapsed and they only rebuilt one. The chairs and tables were set up for a concerts for Ramadan/Ramazan.

Inside the Mongol school. Each room showed items from the period. All the doors were very low and we asked the attendant why, and it's so you have to bow when entering the room. Should have realised that, thought it was just inconvenience. 

Uzungöl

After Erzurum we set off towards Uzungöl. The photos of the place made it look European, but we're still in Asia. So it was worth a look!

Vespa making it up a large hill.

We followed the road from 4 lanes to 2, then down to single lane through this village, then it turned to dirt...  I assumed we were still going the right way.

A cloud... It was very windy here and hard to keep the bike in a straight line. This was at about 1800m and Uzungöl was on the other side of those mountains.

Found a fork in the road! The GPS wanted to take the 45km route  but there was another shorter 28km road, lets try that!

Vespa made it up here too.
Riding in the cloud wasn't too bad at first. We were over 2000 meters but it wasn't wet for a while, just windy and cold. Once we crossed over 2400m and onto the other side of the range it got a lot wetter and colder. The road was wet and it was clay in parts so very slippery.

We just dipped out of the clouds here after going through a very slippery patch of mud (glad I have these tyres now). Also we're about 1km from Uzungöl but it was about 10km to get there as the road kept winding back and forth down the side. The road isn't in the GPS so we could only see distance to the town. I just wanted the road to stop!

The lake at night. The clouds moved in...

One part of Uzungöl. We stayed down that end in a hotel. Not the best camping weather.

As close as you can get to Turkish coffee without your eye getting wet.

mela Monastery

After Uzungöl we headed out of the mountains through some awesome valleys all the way to the coast. I went to put the GoPro on my helmet but it wasn't charged. I didn't stop much for photos because I was enjoying the ride too much too! 



The black sea coast! Finally at sea level again! We've had many many weeks above 900m! And it's finally a decent temperature at this elevation rather than the 40-47 degrees on the Persian Gulf.
The road along the coast is a large 4 lane highway with a lot of tunnels going through hills instead of around them. Very easy to cover distance but very boring and not many places to stop or get down to the water. Once we got to Trabzon we headed back up into the hills again to get to Sümela Monastery. Our Intention was to camp to save some money, but once we got up there we found they had bungalows right near the Monastery. We asked about the price but it was 140 lira, slightly too high at ~$35 each for the night. We were planning to go down the hills a little further to find somewhere cheaper but then it started raining.

While we were wondering what to do during the rain we got to talking to a Turkish truck driver who had met another Australian motorcyclist who was travelling round the world. The thing about this other motorcyclist though was that he was deaf and mute. That would make things more difficult!

While talking to this guy we decided to stay a little dry and elected to stay in the bungalows for the expensive rate. As we were leaving the truck driver he wanted to come over and help us get the room and said he knew the owner. With his help we got the room for 100lira, $25 each. That's better! We tried talking more with the truck driver through hand gestures and someone who could translate who occasionally showed up.

The monastery way up there on the cliff.

Some forest next to the bungalows.
The next morning after the rain had stopped we did the walk up to the Monastary. It didn't look that far, really...

Half way up...
Many many many steps later we got to the top!

Inside the complex. Student and guard rooms on the right. The bakery and cave where the virgin mary image appeared on the left.

Looking down from the monastery. That group of buildings there at the bottom is  where we started the walk from...


Inside one of the guard rooms.

Some of the frescoes on the outside.

Showing you how to play a song on the guitar.

The roof of the cave.

More graffitied frescoes and a door

The door to the monastery.
After the Monastary we packed up and headed down to the coast. The road along the coast was more fun this time, going through many more tunnels, some up to 2km long. Along the way we stopped to get some lunch at a shop along the highway, but because it was still the last day or Ramadan they weren't making food. We looked around the shop for things we could buy to make a sandwich but not knowing the language is difficult. The girl running the shop showed us some of the cheese, and then started gathering things like bread and tomato and some luncheon meat. We had it all together to pay for and leave, then she heads off out the back with it all and comes back with two sandwiches! Success! I like Turkey! We paid for our sandwiches and then headed off down the road to eat them to hide away from those fasting (still not sure of how Ramadan works in Turkey, don't want to be insulting anyway).

We followed the road as far as Tirebolu where we found a camp ground right on the rocky beach. They also stocked beer! We were set for the night! Of course no photos, because I was concentrating too hard on the beer.

Tuesday, 14 August 2012

Photos of Iran and some Turkey photos and story!

More photos from Iran, this time not on facebook. Also there are more photos on facebook from the last time I got to upload them. They are here and here.


Isfahan
Imam Square during the day.

At night just before the evening prayers.

More fountain action.

Looking toward the mosque.

Si-o-se Pol.

Hamedan

One of the oldest cities in the world! Didn't see much though.

The central square (which is round) looking up one of the streets. 

A small village out of Hamedan where we stopped for petrol.

The road north to Zanjan.
Not much of Zanjan 

This car needs a wash.

Some of the traffic chaos from out of the hotel window. When four or five cars gathered from the road on the left they would all push out as a group to get across this other busy road. Meanwhile there are people just walking or riding anywhere they like through the middle of it. Most of the people on bikes carrying small children.

Road to Tabriz and Camping after the Earthquake.
A broken bridge on the way to Tabriz

Riding through tunnels and valleys like this for hours that day, fun! The longest tunnel was about 800m. I didn't stop for too many photos as there were military near most tunnels.

Stars from the campsite.

More stars over some radio installation. But lets never tell Iran I took photos of that, whatever it is.

Baked beans for dinner.

Campsite view in the morning.
Turkey

After the usual rip offs from money changers (they wanted 24000Rial to the $, the market rate is 19000 everywhere else) we went up to the crazy Iranian side of the border. I think we got mafia help as some guy came up and said his job is just to help tourists cross. He ran off with all the paperwork and we were out of there quite quickly but only 50lira down ($25). On the way out of one room there was a lot of people blocking the door and I was squeezing through and a guy behind kept pushing me, I told him to stop pushing but he kept doing it. Kept saying he was mafia and then followed us around the rest of the way out. Well... Glad to be out of Iran then. 

On the Turkish side everything went much better. There was a lot of confusion because I insisted on changing from my Australian passport to my UK passport. This saved $40US in visa fees but the police were confused, and then the customs office was confused ("You are british citizen? But Australian Bike?"). I did get in to Turkey however and this should be the last visa I need on the trip (unless I stray outside the Schengen Area). We had to walk back and forth between a couple of offices to get the visa and insurance but it was an easy process compared to recent crossings.

I'm now in my 11th country, after completing my 16th border crossing! Hopefully the worst borders are all behind me now!

Mt Ararat. This photo is about 3500m of it. You can see it from a long way away.

Our camp site for the night. It was VERY windy, and because it was Ramadan this area was used at sunset for all the families to celebrate the evening feast. Little did we know this went on till around midnight, but the wind was so noisy until then anyway. The next morning we find there's a better camp site up the hill filled with overlander travellers, mostly French and German though.

The mountains east of the camp site. Somewhere up in there is Noah's Ark apparently. It's marked in the GPS!

Family taking their cows for a walk in the morning.

Some of the castles built into the mountains above the better camp site.

A river I stood in to cool down my feet for a while.

One of the valleys the road to Ezurum goes through. The road surface was a bit iffy though, lots of tar which had a sticky top layer but was still liquid underneath. The bike did not like riding in a straight line on that.

Your new wallpaper. You're welcome. Northwest Iran and Northeast Turkey are big sunflower growing regions.
We're in Ezurum to stay in a hotel and charge and clean everything, then it's off to the Black Sea coast to camp and save more money. Turkey happens to be quite expensive. This room is $50/night, petrol is $2.30/L (In Iran it was 35c/L), and meals are around $5-10. 

We got through Iran quite cheaply at about $800 each for 3 weeks. I had prepared for it to be more than double that!

Over here in Turkey things are much better though, if slightly more expensive.

Monday, 13 August 2012

More theft, Helpful villagers, and Earthquakes


I'm now in Turkey in Erzurum! We'll be here for a few days to get things fixed up before heading off to camp along the black sea coast. So far Erzurum is clean, lots of shops, and has moderately good traffic behaviour. There are also things like Internet and McDonalds. So very different to Iran, it's very disorientating.

I'm still sorting through photos from Iran too. But for now some more Iran story time!

Theft Number Two

I stopped in the town of Qeydar to wait for Drew again (because Vespas are slow). Knowing I was in a small town alone again I sat on the bike to wait this time. I locked up everything I could and put the keys in my pocket while still sitting on the bike. I'd learnt my lesson from last time.

Of course in this small town I stand out like a giant flashing dollar sign however.

Two guys on a bike stop and start asking me questions about my bike, all on Farsi of course. They were pointing to different parts of the bike and discussing amongst themselves and then asking me questions. Every time they ask something I reply with 'no farsi!'. Then they move to the back of the bike and keep up the questions, but I'm not looking that way and my right mirror has my helmet on it so I can't see them too well. Another guy in a car rocks up on my left and starts trying to talk to me and of course, 'no farsi' to him. At this point the two guys are sitting behind me just out of view while I'm doing my best at not communicating with the guy in the car. One of the bikeguys(tm) gets on their bike and starts it and then the other walks past quickly holding something under his shirt. Curious. I didn't see them carrying anything when they got there. But carguy(tm) is still trying to talk to me. I reach behind me and sure enough the cap to the PVC pipe is now lose. They've taken the stainless steel water bottle that was in there.

The water bottle I don't care about so much, but the fact that they're doing this right in front of me is very annoying. I make my displeasure known to the guy in the car, who doesn't understand me at all.

After more time I'm now surrounded by about ten people all discussing me amongst themselves. They limit questions to me though because they know I don't speak farsi by now. I try to explain to the group what the first two guys did through angry arm waving but this is all lost on them. I forget to say the word 'theif' but I'm not sure if this would have helped as every other word I could think of when trying to explain what happened didn't translate either. One of them goes of to get someone who can speak English because they want to talk to me it seems. Meanwhile, the thieves have returned and so has my colourful language when telling them they're no longer welcome.  Everyone standing around is wondering what is going on, but the thieves know what they've done and they turn around to leave again. This time I remember I should get the number plate but I'm not that fast at reading farsi numbers and there's about eight of them, they're gone before I can figure out the first three digits.

The English speaker turns up but he doesn't know the word theft, so it takes a while to explain that this is the second time In Iran that people have stolen from me and returned and that I'm not happy I'm part of this new game. After explaining to him a few times he gets the message and then everyone else in the group now knows why I'm not happy. Englishspeakingguy(tm) is embarrassed that this has happened and he asks if I want to go to the police. I decline because they won't speak English either, and it is just a water bottle (this time). But still they all just hang around chatting while I'm suitably annoyed.

By the time Drew has turned up there's about ten cars and more bikes all stopped so people can come over and have a good look at me. I inform Drew of what has happened and then we go to leave. But since we're such a large event they have to start reversing cars for us to get out. Another town I'm glad to get out of.


Helpful Village

Vespa's have small fuel tanks, so we stop in a small village to find fuel. We asked a few people and they gave vague arm waving directions and we set off where they pointed. Somehow we were missing where to go each time but Drew ends up down at a park where all the older villagers seem to be gathered. He asks which way to fuel and they start explaining again but realising there's no common language one of them gets on his bike and we follow him to the petrol station. He waves and rides off as we arrive.

When leaving the town there was a guy and his son on a motorbike who was carrying a pipe across the bike which length was the same as the width of the road. They had to stop when there was a truck blocking a lane. They turned slightly to let us pass but they were laughing at the absurdity as much as we were.

Once just outside of the town I stopped to get a photo. A car pulls up and a family from Tehran gets out just to have a quick talk to us and say hello.

Not everyone is a thief in Iran!



Earthquake!


We'd stayed in Zanjan the previous night but it's pretty nondescript. After fighting traffic through the town we decided to try the expressway which goes all the way there. On the entrance ramp there is a sign with all types of slow vehicles in red circles, no strike through the middle of any though so not sure what it meant. We decided to give it a go and see what happens. A little up the road there is a toll booth and Drew asked a policeman if it was OK to be on the road, he seemed to think so. Then he asked if we needed to pay a toll. The answer looked pretty vague, but we rode through one of the unused toll gates and no one seemed to care.

60km of freeway and it was booorrriiinbngggg. It goes the full 280km to Tabriz but I had to get off it because I was falling asleep. We got off at the next stop for fuel and took the much quieter free highway that runs close to the expressway. Because of the mostly empty roads I decided to put my headphones in after a drink stop. I haven't been using the headphones on this trip overseas because I like to have some hearing. I think with the altitude changes the bike is running poorly and with my reduced hearing I didn't hear the bike stall when making a turn. I lost my balance and dropped the bike. First time on this trip! ( happened many times before though).

Lots of cool roads though the hills with tunnels and nice vallys. Very enjoyable riding day In Iran, finally!

We got to tabriz and navigated through the traffic mayhem to a hotel. The hotel was charging a fairly high price but we decided to stay because they had internet. Once we had stuffed all our belongind in the room we went downstairs to abuse the internet for a while. All of a sudden I feel a very large sway and then more and then everyone starts running for the door. We all gather in the carpark watching cars shake around and have the odd feeling that the ground is still moving, even though it may not be.

Survived my first earthquake it seems!

It dies down after a while and then everyone goes back inside. We stay downstairs, but near the door just in case.

Then the second one hits but this one feels a lot bigger. I casually remove myself from the building (I don't want to trip and get stuck!). On the way out I really noticed the steps moving around this time, but with everything moving and no steady reference points it's a very odd feeling. We stayed outside a lot longer this time watching everyone move their cars away from the building and people standing on the street wondering what's going on. Eventually people start going inside but we hold out for a bit longer. We were wondering what we'd do if we can't get to our stuff. The bikes were parked in the garage under the building and everything but the clothes I was wearing, my phone and laptop was upstairs in the room. And the hotel had our only form of ID. I note that in future I should always carry my wallet with me (and a copy of my passport?).

After about half an hour we managed to get on the internet again from outside and found out there'd been a magnatude 6 earthquake about 60km east of Tabriz. The day after the news said that there were two separate earthquakes, one 6.4 and another 6.3. The first was 50km east of Tabriz and the second 10km closer. That explains why the second one felt stronger.

Eventually the  ground seemed to stop shaking, or our perception of it stopped at least.

We thought about our options for a while and we had all our camping gear (in the room). We decided we'd get our stuff from the room and leave to camp somewhere. Waking up to the hotel shaking around us wont be pleasant.

So we dashed upstairs packed quickly and rushed the bikes out from the garage and got out of town. On the way out every petrol station had almost kilometre long lines out, not sure if that was normal or everyone was expecting the apocalypse again (Tabriz is a biblical city after all, it's meant to be the gateway to eden).

We tried finding a few spots on the way out of town but everywhere seemed industrial or had villagers follow us wherever we went. Eventually we found a spot a short way from the highway and set up camp there.

In the night I could still feel more shakes. Apparently there were more than 40 aftershocks just that night. At least in my tent nothing would trap me.

Tuesday, 7 August 2012

A small amount of bad people in Iran

I was sitting in a park in Alīgūdarz waiting for drew to catch up. I'm using my phone to check out places to stay in Dorud when a car stops near my bike then reverses up a bit. A guy in the back says 'salam' (hello) then he says something else but I say 'no Farsi' to him. He gets out of the car comes over and shakes my hand and then says the thing again but I say 'no Farsi' again... Then he puts his hand in my phone and tries to take it. I tell him he can't have that, thinking he just wants to write something in it to help translate. He tries grabbing the phone again, and again I tell him again that he can't have it. Then he shows me some coins in his hand and then tries grabbing the phone away again, but I've got a good grip on it so he can't get it no matter how hard he tries.

Another person in the car says something and then he gets in the car and they take off. I'm sitting there wondering what just happened and decided to take note of it all in my phone.

While writing down this strange occurrence on my phone the same car stops near my bike again. This time the guy gets out of the car and I put my phone in my zipped pocket so he can't get it. He comes over and says something and looks sorry and then he asks that I type this number into my phone that he's trying to tell me. I tell him my phone doesn't work here and I'm not getting it out again for him to make a grab at. He seems to give up but he goes past my bike on the way to the car. When he's at my bike he unzips my tank bag top pocket (see through) and takes out the Spot GPS messenger. As he unzipped the bag I got up and ran over to catch up but I only got to the car as it was driving off with him in it. Well of course I'm now annoyed, a few people who saw what happened came over but none spoke English so I wonder if I should get the police, but I have no details on them and forgot to get the number plate with all this happening.

Lucky they didn't take the GPS or the bike (which still had the keys in it, you can usually trust people here). If they use the Spot they give away its location anyway, and if they use the SOS button they'll have police/ambulance come after them. So good luck with that. My only concern would be getting to some internet access so I can let the company know it has been stolen. After lots of loud complaining to people I give up and put all my gear on and get on the bike but I decide to wait and see if drew catches up. Then I notice a car coming up and it was them again! The guy in the front if the car had his hands on it this time and he's still trying to talk Farsi to me and I'm using the most colorful language I can to let them know they're idiots but I'm not going over there away from the bike so they can get near my stuff again. A kid who had witnessed all of this got it from the car and then came back to give it to me. And they drove off again. The one in front was saying sorry out the window I think but I couldn't hear him over how loud I was giving them the middle finger. I guess they couldn't figure out what it was or what it does so gave it back? What just happened...

There were four people in the car so I have no idea what I could have done if they actually wanted to take my stuff. Way to make me wary of everyone and spoil Iran...

I put the spot messenger in my pocket, thanked the kid, then got out of there in case they come back again. Outside of the town Drew catches up and then we keep going to Dorud.

In the Dorud we're looking for a hotel that's in the Lonely Planet but the directions given in the guidebook are very vague. We stop in the middle of a busy road next to some taxis and some people come over and start talking to us in broken English (and us in broken Farsi). We ask where the hotel is and I show them the name on my phone and they take my phone to have a discussion about the name, luckily they're trustworthy and I get it back. They say the hotel is down the road after the second roundabout via a series of strange hand gestures. But one of them is a taxi driver and gets in his taxi and has us follow him to the hotel. Once we get there he points us to the driveway in then he waves and heads off. Didn't want payment or anything!



I had some extremes of people interaction in Iran Yesterday... Note that a majority of people are helpful and nice, but only takes a few to spoil it. We have strayed off the main tourist trail though so perhaps we'll run into more of the bad types in future.

Sunday, 29 July 2012

The Saga of Sharjah and the Clever Rhyme at Bandar Abbas


This one's a long one... Just detailing getting the bikes from the UAE to Iran. It's a long annoying process which I'd recommend for anyone who's bored.

There's no photos on this either, they're all over at Facebook in this album here. It was the only thing I could reliably upload photos too from Iran. Everything else is blocked or too slow to access. The story starts back in Sharjah at the Golden Beach Motel...


We were told to drop off the bikes at the port early because there was some overtime for workers involved if we did it late. So After breakfast at the hotel we go to drop the bikes off at the port. The port was only 1km away from the hotel so it was quick to get there and back. We ride over to the main gate and show them the paperwork and after some discussion we're let in and we head to building number 6. No one is about but we can see the ferry behind it so we go look and park the bikes to try and find someone. Another guy walks over and after some dumb discussion were following his car over to the opposite side of building six. Now more discussion ans we're off again to where we were before. Still no one here, more discussion and the guy we were following makes a phone call. And then we're back over to the office where he took us on the other side of building six. I can see where this day is going.

We park the bikes and go in to get some paperwork sorted. There was a very sweary happy Indian guy from Mumbai in the office that helped us out a bit. After it was all done we kept the keys and went back to the hotel to waste time before immigration.

The next thing we were told by the ticket office was to be at the port at 2pm where we'd go through immigration, then put our bikes on the ferry and then we'd be away! How it actually went down was very different.

We departed the hotel just before 2pm and headed to the terminal and find a bunch of people gathered around the "Port Khalid Passenger Departure" building as it is clearly signed. We get through the door and everyone is just looking at us oddly. One of the people at the desk points at us and then another speaks up and tells us this is a secure port and that we can't come in there. So I show him my ticket and he says to go out of the departure building and in though the main gate (or so we understand from his instructions). So we walk to the main Gate and we're called over by security. We show them the ticket and then they point is back to the departure building. So we go back again get inside again and Drew asks the guard where we should be but they keep pointing back outside to the main gate. Eventually after some frustrated loud talking were shown to the waiting room next to the departure building. In here the room seems naturally divided into males and females for some reason. Wait number one of the day to see if this is the correct area.

After a while Drew gets bored and walks off to find someone to help. He comes back saying were in the wrong area an he has a guy with him and we head off over to the main gate again. This time we get into the office and we start asking where we are supposed to be and they point over to the waiting room again. We ask where immigration is and then they say its in the waiting room, but then they offer up another location for immigration. This introduces all types of confusion and eventually we settle on being back at the customs building at 5pm because that's when they're supposed to open. We get a taxi back to the hotel to use the phone and call the agent and to use more internets.

We call up the agent and he can't hear properly but he tells us to be back at the port where his person will find us after we clear immigration so we can load the bikes. He also said that immigration will be open in another 10 minutes at most.

We give it half an hour before heading back. Once we get back to the “Port Khalid Departure Building” and they again direct us back to the waiting room. We stick around and ask some other official looking people but they say to go back to the waiting waiting room too. After an hour of waiting a door finally opens on the other side of the room and everyone rushes towards it. We wait it out, boat isn't suppose to leave before 9pm and that's 4 hours away at this point. Once we get up to the door we show passports and he says “boarding card? I get my ticket out and show him and then he says “No no boarding card!”. Well that's confusing. One of the helpful Iranians sees our confusion and explains whats going on. He takes us over to the “Port Khalid Passenger Departure” building where there is a small office in the corner issuing boarding cards.... Yup, the building we've been in three times before and each time they told us to go to the waiting room had something in that we needed to do.

If you think that airports are horrible inefficient places you should try going through a sea port once.

We go back into the waiting room but find the door to immigration has just closed and it will be another 15 minute wait. We picked a spot to sit and then some old lady in a burka comes over and tells us to move so her family can sit there in the mostly vacated waiting room... We move and I loudly exclaim that I was sorry for sitting in her spot but the sarcasm went unnoticed (by her, everyone else in the room looked suitably dumbfounded by her actions). We sit somewhere else and get talking to a guy next to us. He helps us through the rest of the process and guides us through improper hand signals in Iran after some questions (thumbs up, some people will take offence. 'ok' hand very very bad, much like Brazil I hear).

Once in immigration its another wait and then a stamp and then we're loaded into a bus to travel the 100 meters to the boat. We're deposited outside the boat and then we ask someone what happens with the bikes. No real answer but we go off in turns to get the bikes from where we parked them earlier in the day (about half way to the immigration office) and ride them over to wait.

Someone who seems like they're running this loading of BMW's and Mercedes onto the ship directs us to park just near the entrance. We tie them down and move them as close as possible to the edge and then it's upstairs to find a relatively empty passenger cabin. We each take a set of three chairs and get comfortable for the long night ahead. They're still loading cars and trucks on the decks below so its a long time before we actually set off.

While still in the port food was served at around 7pm. The boat didn't actually depart until 930pm. We'd been sitting on a boat that hasn't moved for 2 hours, did they load all the passengers first for some kind of efficiency reason? This is going to be a long journey. Someone told me it will get to Iran tomorrow at 8am.

The lights go off around 11pm, and I manage to get a couple of hours sleep with the help of earplugs. The three seats I have to myself are very uncomfortable no matter which way I try and sit/lie on them. The lights come back on at 4am for food, unsure if it was for everyone or just for those fasting during Ramadan, some people seemed to go get food, others didn't, I opted to wait until 9am to get food where I was told I had apparently not wanted to have breakfast when asked earlier (news to me).

At 11am we are finally docked in Iran. And good too because I'm bored of everything on my laptop and phone and what they can do without Internet. We take the bikes off the ship to the front of the immigration building closest to the berth. I take in only what I had on the ship with me, the rest of my belongings stayed with the bike (important later...). We then sit inside patiently to see what happens and how fast the queue is moving (slow).

Once we get up we're the last in line. While I'm there a guy comes over from his office and starts talking to me. He started asking me why I am here, where am I going, for how long. I thought he was just a taxi driver or tour guide because I'm used to this line of questioning from India. He asks where I am from so I say "Australia", but I think with the accent and his, he misinterpreted this as "Israel", which would be very bad indeed. He repeats what I thought was “Australian?” a few times and each time I said yes, but each time I guess I said yes to “Israeli?”. There's a bit of discussion about and he goes through my passport and after a bit of confusion he can finally see Australian written all over my passport. Looks like I was just mistaken for the enemy in immigration.

Once through immigration we had to head to a small office and sit outside it because we had vehicles. We'd been following a father and son from Germany who are driving a car back home from Qatar, but at this point they had disappeared, they were a handy guide on where to go next. After half an hour of waiting outside this small office some official looking person calls us over, who then hands us over to a less official looking person who we walk right through customs with, and then follow outside to a port office building next door where we pick up a bill of lading copy (already holding onto the originals). Now we have to go to the shippers office outside the port area to get some more paperwork and then come back to clear the bike through customs. Sounded simple! (And if it was the story probably would have ended here).

We head out the gate and find a taxi and then ask the driver if he accepts us dollars, sounds like he says yes and shows us the rudest way possible to show two with your fingers. We jump in and for some reason we've passed Team Germany and they jump in too. Once the taxi stops we try to pay on US$'s but this is met with blank stares. None of us have local currency, but the driver eventually accepts 20 Dhirams from Team Germany.

Inside the this building its rather straight forward: ask for office, go there and ask again where the office is, go there and ask again, arrive at office. We get some more papers, then its downstairs to a copy room, then over to another room to wait for more paperwork. And wait we did. More than an hour passes and I use the free time to exchange some currency (500us$ = 6150000 rails, at the very bad bank rate. At money changers on the street you can get almost double that). And then I run out of things to do because I used my phone to death the night before when I couldn't sleep.

After the hour ticks over and we get our little slips of paper back in Farsi and we all get a dodgy taxi back to the port again. This time we have the local currency and it costs 50000rials. We ask around for customs again and no one can find them in the building. Failing to find anyone here we go over to the office that told us to go to the shippers and no one here really knows what's going on either. Eventually the same guy who told us to go to the shippers comes out and he looks at the documentation and says its the wrong one. But then he runs off before we can ask what exactly we need. He also mentions customs being closed for the day, but tells us to go to the shipping office and get this new paperwork (whatever it's called). We start walking for a taxi and then the guy appears in a car beside us gives us a high speed lesson in Iranian driving to the shipping office. We ask what about the bikes and he tells us we can get them at 8am tomorrow... Well that's not the best. Because we thought it was a five minute process to get the bikes out we left a lot of our crap on the bikes, stuff that will probably be damaged in the sun all day, and things like a change of clothes (I'd been wearing the same clothes for 4 days). He kicks us out and then he flies off at high speed.

At the shippers office theres lots of paper flying around but no one is telling us what is going on. I've zoned out because of hunger and no sleep and stopped following people around so closely. Inside one of the offices Team Germany has left, then Drew has left, and then when someone else is talking about paperwork I happen to get one of the slips out which someone else spots and takes me over to the bank, where I find Drew again. We end up having to pay some fee that no one seems to be able to explain to us. It's only $5ish, but we're still in the dark as to what's going on. Then it's back in to another office to get some more documentation. Team Germany leaves the office early to see if they can get hold of customs and get out of here (they were only planning a two day drive through Iran into Turkey). We wait for our documents to be completed and then go outside to try find a taxi during the 2pm peak hour rush of Ramadan.

There's a lot of discussion in the taxi as to where we are going and the price the driver wants to charge but eventually with the aid of the Persian-Farsi app on my phone I'm able to communicate the distance and the amount it should cost, which he agrees with (6000 is what we were told, totally ripped off twice in taxis so far). Once at the port however we try to give him a 10000 rial note for change, but he said no and pointed to the 100000 note. Well it turns out he was talking in Tomans (I think that's the word) which is the local name for 10Rials. Most people will quote prices to you in Tomans, so we've learned. This journey had cost 60000Rials.

Inside the main port building it's all rather dark but we run into the guy who took us over to the port offices and we get him to call a friend of his who can translate for us and then we get that person to talk to security who reluctantly lets us through the building out the door to the bikes so we can get a few things that might not survive in the sun and secure the bikes for there overnight stay. Looks like the bikes will have to wait another day.

We get another taxi and tell him to head to Hotel Amin which was a decent sounding place according to the LP (but who can trust it really). We spot Team Germany walking out of the port so we get the taxi driver to stop and ask them what happened. They said they have given up and will try get it out tomorrow. Team Germany jumps in the taxi and we all head to the hotel for the night.

The evening is spent gaining lost sleep and eating local foods (which seems to be pizza or burgers) and a quick walk around our first Iranian city. It's still hot here. The erratic driving and general condition of the place reminds me of Malaysia or the Eastern European places I've seen on TV, just with added heat. On the walk we heard some scream and then turned around to see a guy shoving and pushing a female driver who may have just hit him or his wife. Not to sure what happened but I considered it unwise to be a foreigner (possibly Israeli looking) staring at what was going on there. From up the street we could see a large crowd gathering but it was all gone when we came back.

The next morning after a quick breakfast we met up with Team Germany, checked out of the hotel, and then headed out to the port again to try get the paperwork completed. Once at the port we went into the big building first to look for customs, no one seemed to know what we were looking for. Outside we were directed to the correct customs building that was covered in scaffolding and had “DOWN WITH THE U.S.A.” posters above the doorway. Inside this anti-US office you'll find them using lots of software from a very large US company. Mixed messages here.

Team Germany starts off the process and someone goes through the documents. After about ten minutes the customs officer gathers all the documents together to tell Team Germany there is a problem with one of the forms. It turns out that in the rush following Team Germany yesterday there was one bit of documentation missing for our bikes. Assuming the worst voices get raised immediately. I leave Drew to it for a bit as it is probably unwise to be yelling at a customs agent while looking vaguely Israeli.

The bit that was missing was a “Release from Warehouse” document which we were able to get form the port office next door. However the bikes were never in a warehouse, they were pushed off the boat and left directly in front of the passenger terminal. You could also see them from the port office but they were having none of it.

Armed with this new bit of paper we marched back into customs and started the long wait to get the carnets stamped. Team Germany were away after about an hour but we seemed to be there a lot longer. I went over to the desk once Team Germany collected their documentation and stood there to make sure other people stopped interrupting him. After he was done I raised my hands in celebration and he said “Welcome to Iran”. But then he asked me to go to the opposite side of this waiting area to another desk. This time they wrote all the details in a large book for some reason. They handed all the paperwork back and then he said “Welcome to Iran” and I thought we were actually done now! But I was wrong. He told me to go to one office, and then to another, then we were done. I asked him to write the names on a bit of paper so I could show people where I need to be.

We headed out and found the first office, which was meant to be a gate pass office we think (still not sure, no one explained). Inside we handed the documentation to someone and then waited a very very long time for them to finish processing others documentation and get to ours. In this time Team Germany had appeared again and they were armed with a helper. They got in and out while we were waiting. Once ours was processed we got a new bit of paper with a bar code on it, however once drew got his I mentioned that they both had the same number under the bar code, well this caused more confusion between them and after another long wait we had two separate bar codes. We were then to proceed to the second place on the note we were given earlier where we were told it would be the last step to getting our bikes! Hooray!

Inside the port office we dumped all the documentation on the desk and they picked out the bits they wanted. They did whatever they did for about half an hour and called us over. This time we had to pay a fee for loading and unloading of the bike. Well, that was curious. We loaded it on to the boat, and we also unloaded it and parked them were they remained overnight. We argued over this but it's a standard port charge and in the end it was only $8ish for each bike. We took this paperwork and asked them to let us out to the bikes. But nope, apparently there was another office to go visit and they told us to go back out to the gate pass office to get another stamp on the documents. We argued again that we'd already been out there and they had given us stamps. Through all this arguing we'd managed to gain our own helper from within this office. The helper had managed to acquire a driver which made walking the short distances a lot easier. He took us back out to the gate pass office and in there was some discussion and I can't remember if there was any paperwork changing hands.

After the gate pass office for the second time it was back to the car and over to the entry side of the port where we had to go through security, they saw us white guys in the back (one looking partially Israeli) and we turned around. Now we had to get security passes.

In the security pass office the passports were handed over but then a copy of them was needed. The helper ran off to do this (also astounded a the processes required here and he works in it). He came back armed with passports and copies and we had our security pass written out and then it was in to the secure area to another hidden office. There was a lot of documentation being done here and then we were told we had to get the bikes weighed which is what the bar coded papers were for. We finally get our hands on the bikes and ride over to the weigh station where the helper is waiting. Drew rides up on the platform and waits. And waits. Then the helper comes out and asks for passports. Then we wait some more. And some more. And then finally the helper comes out and says we have to pay 50000rials for both bikes, after mine wasn't even weighed. Who knows what that was for.

We head back to the hidden warehouse office and the paperwork is done over a long period of time while I rearrange all my gear, some of which I'd been carrying around all day after checking out, the rest had been strapped to the bike.

We're finally told all the documentation is done and we're free to go! Drew heads off towards the gate and I'm just a little bit behind but I'm following the helper in another car. We get to the security gate and the helper gets out hands over some paper and points to us then we're good to go!

Then we get closer to the gate pass office and the helper gets out again. We follow him over and then we go inside. The helper is moving between two rooms and arguing with people. But after some discussions in the office the helper finally comes over says we're free to go! Hooray! The bikes are free! I thank him for his help and told him we would never be able to do this by ourselves. I start putting on all my gear and then he runs out and tells us
that actually we're not free and there's one more thing to do.

So now apparently there is a problem with the paperwork or the computer system or something. All that I could get out of him was that somehow the computer system was expecting three bikes. Perhaps it was because of the bar code problem all the way back in the morning where I noticed we got the same numbers.

At this point it's after 2pm, so if they need any other offices they'll be gone and whatever stuff up this is might mean we would have to come back the next day to sort it out.

But after another half hour and more discussions we're free to go again! I'm starting to suspect that when each of these people says “welcome to Iran” they're doing it sarcastically. Outside we again thank the helper for his help. One of the people in the office comes out and security at the gate happens to call over to him about us, I assume he tells them to let us through it's all complete and good. So we get on the bikes and head out but then security tells us to stop and go into their office. ARGH.

Again the gate pass office guy says something to security and we're away, actually outside the port! Hooray! For real this time! We head over to get petrol and then it's back to the hotel because it's too late and too hot to go anywhere now.

Welcome to Iran.