Sunday, August 30, 2020

A Farewell Bicycle Tour around Georgia (June 2020)


Guillestre, August 29, 2020

Segurigera varia (crownvetch)

It's a day of torrential downpours here in the southern French Alps, so it seems as good a time as any to catch up on some long-overdue blogging.  The fact that it's the end of August and this will be my first post of the year tells you a great deal about how 2020 has been for travel and for feeling in the mood for blogging!
Vanessa atalanta (red admiral)

I am catching up on a year's worth of overdue trips (Svaneti, Armenia, Panama and the Tour de Georgie), and I'm moving in reverse chronological order, so I will start with the bicycle tour I undertook two months ago as a farewell to Georgia.  I first arrived in Georgia in 2009 on my bicycle, and my second visit in 2011 was also on a cycle tour, so it seemed an appropriate bookend to two wonderful years of teaching in my favourite post-Soviet state to take a couple of weeks and ride around to several places that I had missed over the years to give closure to my Caucasian adventures.

Commelina communis (Asiatic dayflower)

Small tortoiseshell butterfly (Aglais urticae)
To set the stage, Terri and I arrived back in Tbilisi in early January after three fun weeks exploring Panama with my sister Saakje, her partner Henkka and my mom.  (There will be a Panamanian post soon, I promise.)  The winter in Tbilisi was bleak, with almost no snow to be found anywhere in the eastern half of Georgia's Caucasus mountains, and hence no skiing.  In early March, just as the world started into a coronavirus lockdown, Terri flew to New Zealand for what was supposed to be a six-week trip but which turned out to be a five-month separation.  The international school at which I was teaching closed its doors and turned to online "learning", which I found soul-destroying and futile. 

Dactylorhiza umbrosa (marsh orchid)
We were never locked indoors the way that French, Spanish or Italian citizens were, and Georgia did extremely well at containing the spread of covid-19, but it was a long, bleak period of uncertainty.  Georgia cut off essentially all international flights in March and sealed its land borders, meaning that when the school year finally ground to a halt in mid-June I was unable to leave the country, and was still cut off from Terri.  Our elaborately-laid travel plans (a road trip through Iran, hiking in Armenia, then time in Canada and Bali before a September return to South Africa to start driving Stanley around the continent) were completely impossible, and I had no idea where or when Terri and I could be reunited again (New Zealand wouldn't have me, Georgia wouldn't have Terri, and Canada originally wouldn't have Terri either, although then it had a change of policy which meant that we would have 2 weeks of expensive and annoying quarantine).  It seemed like a good time to get out of Tbilisi, shake off the mental cobwebs and lockdown gut that I had been accumulating for the past few months, and see whether a change of scene would do me some good.



Riding to Ghebi

Uplistsikhe from a distance
I pedalled out of Tbilisi on a blazing hot morning on June 16th, leaving Tbilisi along the dangerous and unpleasant main expressway for a few kilometres before turning off onto the secondary road that runs west along the Mtkvari River from Mtskheta to Gori.  It was a long hot 70-kilometre slog, with little in the way of scenery to redeem it other than a distant view of the ancient cave city of Uplistsikhe shimmering in the heat haze on the opposite bank of the river as I approached Stalin's home town of Gori.  I found most hotels in town not accepting guests thanks to strict anti-coronavirus health measures, but eventually I ended up in a slightly upmarket motel with a swimming pool to soak away the dust and heat fatigue.

Samtsevrisi fortress
The ride the next day was through unfamiliar territory, as I continued along the south side of the Mtkvari on a series of secondary roads through prosperous farming country and past a rather scenic medieval fortress at Samtsevrisi.  Eventually I crossed back to the north bank and branched off on a gently climbing and very scenic road over a low pass that led downhill towards the bleak manganese mining town of Chiatura.  I passed up a couple of good campsites in hopes of a perfect campsite, and ended up instead after 98 kilometres at a suboptimal spot overlooking what seemed to be an abandoned derelict ore-processing plant.

Soviet Realist art in Chiatura
The morning of June 18th, I awoke to crashing and banging and the sound of heavy machinery starting up, and I realized that the ruined factory was in fact still very much in operation.  I ate breakfast and watched the ore dust billow out of the holes in the roof and the broken side windows, before descending to the road and continuing on my way.  I rode through town, climbed steeply out the other side in extreme heat, and saw an unexpected sight:  a couple of Westerners pedalling a fully-loaded tandem touring bicycle.  Given that Georgia hadn't allowed in any tourists in months, this was a surprise, so I stopped to chat.  It turned out that Nina and Hugo had in fact arrived in Georgia in early December, having cycled from France, and had spent the past six months working at a tourist hostel in Martvili.  They were headed to Tbilisi on their first cycling excursion since December, hoping that land borders would open at some point soon so that they could start riding back to France (their planned trip to Mongolia having been torpedoed by coronavirus).  I commiserated with them, and then shared the unwelcome news that they had just pedalled several kilometres uphill in the heat past the Katskhi Pillar Church which they very much wanted to see.  I left them to decide whether they would turn around and return to the church or not, and set off downhill myself.

Katskhi Pillar Church
I had visited Katskhi once before, back in 2015, but it's so spectacular that I didn't mind seeing it again.  There's a perfectly adequate view from the main road, but I bumped along a dirt track to get closer and obtain a better angle for photographs.  It's like a little piece of Meteora, Greece dropped into Georgia, except that there's no easy way up around the back.  This part of Georgia, Imereti, is characterized by steep-sided limestone gorges, and this pillar is pretty sheer or overhanging on all sides.  Two tiny churches sit on top, built in the 9th or 10th century and abandoned several centuries later.  The climbing route to the top was forgotten until a mountaineer and a writer led an exploratory team up in 1944.  In the 1990s, after Georgian independence, a Georgian monk named Maxime took up residence like a modern-day Simeon Stylites.  (I visited the church of the original 5th-century Simeon Stylites outside Aleppo, Syria in 1999, and the church of the 6th-century Simeon Stylites the Younger outside Antioch in 2009, as well as the precipitous cliff-top Ethiopian monastery of Debro Damo in 2010, so I was glad to add to my collection of pillar-dwelling ascetics.)

My Lost World swimming hole and campsite
I realized as I pedalled away that there was another less famous church atop a steep limestone pillar not far away that didn't draw any tourists (it's probably easier to get to the top); I was interested to realize that Katskhi was not a one-off unique creation but part of a larger pattern.  I had lots of time to contemplate Imeretian limestone that afternoon as I rode off the map and into a lost world.  I was toggling between several paper maps as well as online Google Maps and offline Maps.me, and none could agree on whether I could ride up a particularly remote gorge  and pop out the other side.  I took a chance, and was glad that I did.  I bumped along increasingly rugged and unrideable tracks until I reached the Dzusa River and started pedalling up a steep-sided canyon.  I wanted a quiet place to camp, and I found it, beside an idyllic swimming hole alive with butterflies and shrilling frogs and (as I found out after taking a refreshing dip) at least one small water snake.  It felt wonderful to be in such a remote area, far from traffic and people and civilization, and I slept very soundly after 45 hard-won kilometres.

Dense Colchic forest draping the steep Imeretian gorges

A seriously dodgy bridge over the Dzusa River
June 19th found me pushing my bicycle uphill along unrideable dirt and cobblestone tracks and across flimsy-looking log bridges until I left behind the dense Colchic oak/hornbeam forest and the walls of the canyon and emerged into an agricultural valley.  I climbed very slowly until, after several hours, I found asphalt for the first time in almost 24 hours just in time for a very steep climb up and over the final ridge separating me from the town of Tkibuli.  I rocketed downhill into town, found a small restaurant and stuffed myself silly with khinkali (Georgian dumplings).  
Final steep grunt over the pass to Tkibuli

Refuelling stop in Tkibuli
That fuel was needed as the next stretch of the road was a 600-metre vertical ascent up the limestone ramparts of the Racha Range in the full 38-degree heat and humidity of mid-afternoon.  I took it slowly, and steadily ground my way up to a pass before descending slightly to the Shaori Reservoir, which Terri and I had driven past the previous summer, commenting on the camping possibilities.  I found a spot on the lakeshore to put up a tent, cooked up some lentils and couscous and fell asleep early, worn out by the heat and the vertical ascents, even if I had only covered 39 kilometres all day.
The Racha Range towering over Tkibuli

Unusual six-fold symmetry to Nikortsminda Church
The next day I rolled downhill to Nikortsminda Church, one of the architectural gems of Georgia.  Somehow a hexagonal pattern of six naves is fitted into a rectangular building, a very clever design that plays tricks on your senses.  I was impressed that such a complex church had been built in what today is a tiny village.  The landscape got steeper and greener as I descended to the Rioni River at Ambrolauri, the main city of the region of Racha.  From here on the road stayed in the valley bottom as it ascended steadily to the regional capital Oni and its famous synagogue (Jews have been living in Oni for over 2000 years, although almost none of them are left after large-scale migration to Israel), then continued uphill towards my destination of Ghebi.  The road, immaculately paved up until Utsera, deteriorated into muddy misery as it passed through a narrow defile and never really recovered.  I ended up camping just short of Ghebi in a scenic meadow plagued with malevolent flies, having ridden 74 kilometres.
Wonderful carving, Nikortsminda

Nikortsminda Church
June 21st found me pedalling and pushing 4 kilometres further along to Ghebi, a scenic stone-built village in a stupendous location tucked between the 3000-metre peaks of the Lentekhi Range and the 4000-metre summits of the main Caucasus range against the border with Russia's North Ossetia republic.  I was worn out after 5 fairly tough, hot days in the saddle and was glad for a roof over my head (courtesy of Zia, a middle-aged woman running a guesthouse in the village) and a couple of days out of the saddle.  I had made it to one of my primary objectives for the trip, and was happy to relax for a little while by going for a hike.








Ghebi and Upper Racha

Sunny morning in Ghebi, Racha
My first day of hiking did not go as well as I had hoped.  Georgian hiking trails are often poorly marked, and subject to the vagaries of weather and harsh winters.  I had hoped to hike up to the base camp for Shoda, the big peak to the south of Ghebi.  It sounded like an idyllic walk, and the first 20 minutes or so were lovely, hiking through the back streets of the village and along a promising-looking track.  As soon as the trail hit a stream, however, it vanished entirely.  The stream was in full spate, and looked very tricky to cross.  Luckily I met a local man coming the other way who showed me the very rickety bridge that had been cobbled together out of driftwood just downstream.  I thanked him and headed across, but by the time I had reached two more channels of the river, all semblance of a path was gone.  I could find neither trail markers nor any sign of a track, and ended up casting around for a while before settling down for a lunch of leftover khachapuri and cheese.  It was a pretty spot, full of colourful butterflies and wildflowers, and I whiled away a happy hour before turning around and returning to Zia's for a hearty supper.

Early-morning light on the peaks south of Ghebi
The next morning, after a long sleep, blissfully uninterrupted by torrential rain in the night, I found a party of four Tbilisi-ites who had arrived late.  They had climbed up to Udziro Lake, the same iconic Racha hike that Terri and I had done the previous summer, and like us, they had been hammered by awful weather at the top.  I set off for another day hike while they wandered off to smoke a large joint and then start the drive back to Tbilisi.  

This hike was much more successful.  I walked north along a river valley that led directly towards the wall of glaciated peaks that marked the Russian border.  Again it was sunny and pleasant and a profusion of wildflowers lined the dirt road that led to the tiny semi-abandoned settlement of Gona.  As I passed through the village, I ran into a Border Police post where I was politely but firmly told that I couldn't go any further along the valley.  I sat atop a boulder and ate lunch, watching the clouds over the Caucasus grow steadily darker as I wrote up my diary.  When they got sufficiently menacing, I shouldered my daypack and started back downhill, arriving back in Ghebi just before the heavens opened.  I hadn't seen quite as much of this northwestern corner of Racha as I had hoped, but what I had seen had been lovely. 

Zia, my hostess in Ghebi
(It was just as well that I saw Ghebi when I did, as several weeks later massive floods swept away the road between Utsera and Ghebi so completely that it would be at least a month before land access could be restored, and stranded tourists and locals had to be evacuated by helicopter.)




Roads Less Cycled

I left Ghebi early on the morning of June 23rd, determined to make it all the way to Kutaisi, 145 km away, in a single long day.  It looked simple enough, as the road followed the Rioni River all the way, and so would be almost entirely downhill.  It started out well enough, bumping back to the pavement and then racing downhill through Oni and Ambrolauri before continuing downstream to the famous wine village of Khvanchkara (producers of Stalin's favourite tipple) and racing along to the 80 km mark.  Here was where things started to get more complicated.  
The mountains around Udziro Lake, where we hiked last summer
First the road climbed almost 200 vertical metres above the river to avoid an impassable gorge; as I pedalled uphill, I wondered why I was panting so hard.  When I looked at the thermometers on my watch and cycling computer, I realized that it was 44 degrees and that I was overheating rapidly.  I crawled onwards to the next village, then drank bottle after bottle of cold drinks to rehydrate.  Having restored some thermal equilibrium, I then ran into 26 kilometres of unpaved road which took hours to navigate, as it was rutted, covered in places with freshly-laid soft gravel that was impossible to ride, and generally a nightmare to cycle.  As the sun slipped lower in the sky, I began to despair of getting to Kutaisi, but there were no good options for camping or staying indoors either.  Finally I hit pavement again, did a few more gratuitous climbs high above the river, and rolled into town around 8:00 pm, having been on the road for over 12 hours.  I found a guesthouse, ate a large supper, and collapsed into bed.

The rather vertical landscape leading to the Zekari Pass
The next day was shorter, but not necessarily easier.  I wanted to get to Akhalstikhe, and rather than taking the paved highway the long way around, I planned to go directly south over the Zekari Pass along what I assumed would be a pretty rugged dirt road.  First, though, I had to get out of Kutaisi and into the Lesser Caucasus.  Kutaisi sits at an elevation of less than 200 metres and in the summer, it's unbearably hot.  I got off to a late start, and trundled south out of town through surprisingly heavy traffic across a baking agricultural plain.  When I stopped for cold drinks, the thermometer showed 39 degrees and I cast a longing gaze at the blue peaks in the distance.  At the town of Baghdati, the road started to get serious about climbing while still keeping its immaculate new pavement.  It was a pretty river valley, with lots of Georgian families parked along the road for picnics and swimming.  The road led to the hot spring resort of Sairme, and continued to have a perfect asphalt surface.  I climbed 700 metres to get to Sairme, by which time the heat of the plains was a fading memory and I was shivering in a cold, dense mist.  There were no restaurants serving hot food in Sairme, so I settled for cake and hot chocolate before resuming the slow upward slog.  The road turned to rutted dirt just above the resort, and I made very slow progress before finding a flat spot on the edge of the road and calling it a day after 55 kilometres.  As I boiled up some pasta and topped it with tomatoes and sardines, I realized that the night was alive with fireflies, and I sat watching them choreograph their light show before falling asleep.

Getting a bit higher
The next day was a long, hard grind over the Zekari Pass.  I lingered in the tent, waiting for a couple of morning rain squalls to abate before resuming the struggle.  When I finally got going at the leisurely hour of 10:15, I climbed steadily at 5 km/h, watching the landscape change from dense hardwood forest to conifers interspersed with rhododendrons and wild strawberries.  It took 23 km to get to the top of the pass, in open summer pastures, with sweeping views and meadows of wildflowers.  It was cold and windy, so I didn't linger long before bumping down towards Abastumani.  I noticed that despite the fact that the road was a dirt track, most of the cars that passed me were low-clearance two-wheel-drive sedans.  The descent was steeper than the ascent had been, and new road construction made part of it miserable, but I got to the valley bottom just short of Abastumani, found a trout restaurant and settled in for an enormous feed before pitching my tent in a bucolic glade beside a rushing stream after 35 mountainous kilometres
Lovely open pastures at the top of the Zekari

I rolled through Abastumani the next morning, past the reminders of a time a century and a half ago when the Romanov tsars came there for summer holidays.  Now the town is a scruffy construction site full of dust, noise and potholes, so I didn't linger but sped off to the big city charms of Akhaltsikhe, the capital of the southwestern region of Samstkhe-Javakheti.

Riding the Plateau Home

Rabati Castle, Akhaltsikhe

Rabati Castle, Akhaltsikhe
I arrived in Akhaltsikhe at 11:00, found a cheap hotel right in the centre of town, and set off for a poke around town.  My first priority was food, so I was pleased to find a shawarma joint on the main street.  The owners turned out to be an Egyptian-Georgian couple who met while working in Dubai.  They were very proud of their falafels, so they gave me a free sample to eat with my shawarma.  My hunger pangs assuaged, I set off to reacquaint myself with the town, once the seat of Ottoman power in western Georgia.  I had visited once before, in 2009, but at that time the Rabati, the central fortress, was under reconstruction.  It was recently finished and is now a gleaming tourist attraction whose polished facades may owe more to Disneyland than to historical accuracy.  It was a fascinating place to while away a few hours, though, especially in the new Javakheti Historical Museum, easily the best historical museum I've seen in Georgia, full of artifacts excavated from all over the high plateau country of Javakheti.  An early dinner in a restaurant in the Rabati led to an early night
.

Rabati Castle, Akhaltsikhe

Seventh century church at Akhalsheni
Saro megalithic fortress
Over the next six days, I made my way in a slow, meandering fashion back to Tbilisi, enjoying the wide-open vistas and cooler temperatures of Javakheti while trying to see as many historical sites as possible.  I started with a ride upstream along the Mtkvari, through an attractive canyon, past old ruined churches, before turning off steeply uphill to the megalithic site of Saro.  It was starting to rain by the time I got up to the village and found the megaliths, tucked away behind a 7th-century church and a modern abbey.  They were a bit underwhelming, hardly in the same league as Abuli fortress, but still atmospheric.  I made it as far as Khertvisi Castle before throwing in the towel and taking a room in a small guesthouse where the owners were busy boiling down mulberry juice into a thick, sticky syrup called bakmar.

Khertvisi Fortress

Boiling up green mulberries to make bakmar


Vardzia cave monastery
June 28th saw me pedal upstream on the Mtkvari, almost to the Turkish border, to the spectacular medieval cave monastery of Vardzia.  I had visited in 2009, and it was every bit as spectacular as I had remembered.  I had the site entirely to myself for most of my visit, as the few Georgian tourists arrived just as I was leaving.  I had fun clambering around the various chapels and refectories, and found a long, spooky passageway that led from the main church to a point high above.  On the way back towards Khertvisi, I stopped to take pictures of the scattered ruins of Tmogvi, perched high above the river.  Then I turned upstream on the Paravani River and climbed all afternoon steadily uphill for 500 vertical metres until I reached the Javakheti plateau at Akhalkalaki.  I had entered the Armenian-majority part of Georgia in Akhaltsikhe, but Akhalkalaki was much more uniformly Armenian, with more Russian and Armenian than Georgian visible on signs, and the grocery store stocked with products from across the Armenian border.  I had a delicious supper of khorovats, the grilled meat that Armenians seem to do even better than the Georgians, then cycled off towards the Turkish border where I wanted to go birdwatching.  I ended up camped behind a clump of trees after 77 km of cycling.

Kartsakhi Lake

Winter fuel supplies drying in the sun, Kartsakhi
June 29th was a beautiful day for cycling, spent riding out towards the wetlands of the Javakheti Protected Areas.  I rode through isolated, visibly poor Armenian villages out to a spectacular lake at Khartskakhi, right at the Turkish border.  I had hoped to see cranes and storks, but none were to be had.  There were plenty of other species to compensate, though, with great white pelicans, great crested grebes, buzzards, wheatears, egrets, redfinches, warblers and yellow wagtails all making an appearance.  The scenery reminded me of Tibet or Central Asia, probably because of the high-altitude light and vivid colours.  On my retreat to the main highway, I spotted a few white storks at a great distance, along with several eagles and buzzards riding the thermals.  

Stork nest, Ninotsminda
At Akhalkalaki, the beauty of the cycling came to a horrible end, as the entire 18 km of road to Ninotsminda had been torn up into a miasma of dust, construction, traffic jams and chaos.  It was the most unpleasant cycling I had done for years, and I was traumatized by the time I emerged onto asphalt in Ninotsminda.  Ironically, after all the effort to find storks, there were stork families in giant, untidy nests on top of every telephone pole along the main street of Ninotsminda.  I gobbled down some mediocre pizza and turned north to find a quiet campsite a few kilometres from town, where a fox came bounding by my tent at dusk.  

Pelican, Saghamo Lake

Obsidian menhir near Paravani Lake
June 30th was a banner day for megalithic sites and for cycling in general.  The road stayed paved and quiet all day as I swept along past high altitude lakes with pelicans and storks galore, and eventually I reached Paravani Lake, at the northeast corner of which was once the world centre for obsidian, the volcanic glass that was such a major trade item in the Neolithic period.  I walked along ground that crunched underfoot with obsidian discarded by prehistoric artisans.  The Javakheti plateau is flanked by a dozen or more extinct volcanoes which spewed out obsidian in vast quantities millennia ago.  The obsidian area also featured a couple of standing menhirs, monuments to whatever belief system the craftsmen and craftswomen had long ago.

Sizeable chunk of obsidian near Paravani Lake


Larger menhir near Paravani Lake
Avranlo megalithic fortress
From there the road swept around and then endlessly downhill to the Tsalka Basin, another centre of megalithic culture.  I bumped along a dirt track to the village of Avranlo and its megalithic fortress, where I set up camp, had a dip in the river (along with half the population of the town) and settled in for a quiet night's sleep, lulled by the burbling water.





Lodovani megalithic fortress

Lodovani megalithic fortress

Lodovani megalithic fortress 
July 1st, the penultimate day of cycling, featured more sweeping views and easy riding along almost-deserted roads.  I passed through the old Pontic Greek settlement of Tsalka, seeing for the first time the blue dome of the Greek Orthodox church and some scattered Greek language signs.  From there, I climbed steeply over a pass, then rode downhill to the turnoff for Lodovani, my last megalithic site of the trip.  I parked my bicycle, negotiated safe passage past some ferocious sheepdogs, and walked 45 minutes uphill in search of a megalithic fortress.  It took a while to find, but once I had dialled in my search image, I found megalithic structures, mostly graves, all over the top of the hillside.  The ruins were extensive, and it took a good hour and a half to do it justice.  I returned to my bicycle, resumed my downhill progress, stopped in for dinner at a little roadside restaurant, and ended up camping beside the Algeti River for the night after 60 enjoyable kilometres.

Lodovani megalithic fortress

Verbascum wilhelmsianum (mullein, or Aaron's rod)

Looking down on Didgori Battlefield
July 2nd was the last day of cycling, and involved a very long climb up and over the Didgori Battlefield Memorial (site of Georgia's greatest military triumph, back in 1121 over the Seljuk Turks) before descending steeply to the Mtkvari River and the stifling heat of the lowlands.  By 2:30 pm I was back home in Tbilisi, dusty, tired and a fair bit skinnier than I had been two weeks before, and happy to have done my first long bicycle tour in four and a half years (since my trip with Terri through Paraguay in February, 2016).  I had covered just under 1000 km in 14 days of riding, climbed 17,650 vertical metres and averaged a rather measly 12.7 km/h over the trip, testament to the amount of slow, steep climbing that I had done.
Didgori Battlefield, two hours from home.



Verbascum speciosum and Echium vulgare

Friday, December 13, 2019

The 2010s: A decade to remember

Tbilisi, December 12, 2019

A mere 19 midnights separate me from the first day of 2020, the third decade of the 21st century.  (Yes, I know; the century should really start in 2001, but who really thinks that way emotionally?)  It is hard to believe that I have been blogging on this site intermittently for just over a decade now.  A few days ago I did my year-in-review post; now it's time for a decade in review.

One of the more terrifying aspects of getting older is that not just months and years pass by, but decades, without me being really aware of how long I've been alive.  This year was full of thirty-year anniversaries:  the Tien An Men massacre and the fall of the Berlin Wall were both pivotal moments in my conception of the world, with the gloom and menace of the Cold War suddenly replaced by an exuberant, giddy freedom in Eastern Europe, while the Chinese Communist party stamped on humanity's face with a jackboot.  I was barely 21 when those things happened; now I'm 51 and the optimism of December, 1989 has morphed into the dystopian ethnonationalism of Hungary, Poland and the United States, while the Chinese state's relentless authoritarianism has plumbed new depths in the repression in Xinjiang.

So I think that the spinning of the decades counter on our calendar is a good time to take stock of what I have been up to for the past ten years, mostly from the point of view of travel.  I don't have much time to write this, so it will necessarily be a cursory summary of a lot of travelling!

2010--The post-Silk Road Travels

I welcomed in the 2010s in Malta, That same morning I hopped over to Italy and rented a car to explore Sicily, a fabulous corner of the world, before making my way up Italy with a stopover of a few days in Naples, once one of the richest cities in Europe and now a poster child for urban decay, although blessed with Pompeii, Herculaneum and smaller amazing Roman ruins.  I then headed into Venice on my bicycle for the symbolic final ride into the city that Marco Polo returned to in 1295.  

After a brief skiing and job-hunting trip to Switzerland, where my sister Audie was living (and still lives), I hopped a flight to Ethiopia in early February for a cycle tour.  I spent two and a half months exploring Ethiopia's mountainous landscape and ancient culture, and dodging incessant rockthrowing by a substantial fraction of the youth of the country.  I also crossed (by public transport) into Somaliland and Djibouti before looping back to Ethiopia after my hopes of getting a Yemeni visa were shot down.

In late April I flew with my bicycle back to Canada to find a job offer from a school in Switzerland waiting for me.  My mother had taught at Leysin American School from 2001 to 2003, and now I was about to follow in her professional footsteps for the second time (after my miserable first international high school teaching experience in Egypt in 2004.)  After a few months of relaxation in Canada, including a car trip out to Newfoundland for my mother's 70th birthday, I flew off to Switzerland in early August.

2010-2015--The Leysin Years

I ended up spending five years teaching in Leysin.  It wasn't a fabulous school (despite the eye-watering tuition fees) but it was a wonderful place for an outdoors enthusiast like myself to be based.  I lived in a century-old building that was once a tuberculosis sanatorium for the wealthy of Europe (Stravinsky and Tsar Nicholas II of Russia both visited in the glory days), with an unbeatable view out across the Rhone valley to the Dents de Midi and (on clear days) a tiny sliver of the peak of Mont Blanc.  The skiing in Leysin was decidedly sub-par most weeks of most years, but there were always places to explore via ski touring.  The cross-country skiing was excellent, and in the fall and spring the road riding on a racing bicycle was incredible.  There were tennis and squash courts, and great hiking to be had.  It was a busy schedule, with teachers worked absolutely to the bone, but I generally always had energy for adventures whenever I could fit them in.  I ran the pub quiz in our village pub for almost the entire 5 years, which was great fun and an intellectual break from trying to hammer physics and mathematics into my students.

That first fall I mostly explored around Switzerland, by bicycle and on foot.  I stayed in Switzerland for the Christmas break and tried to ski (although it was the beginning of an epic months-long snow drought).  I also ran into a sporty New Zealand woman named Terri who turned out to be a wonderful partner in exploring the mountains and the world, and who is still with me nine and a half years later here in Tbilisi

2010 new countries:  Ethiopia, Djibouti and Somaliland (or Somalia, if you don't regard Somaliland as de facto independent).  

2010 year-end country count:  93


2011
I prowled around Switzerland all winter in a fruitless search for decent snow.  Eventually my supplications to Ullr the snow god were answered and enough snow fell for two weeks of excellent ski touring cabin-to-cabin in the mountains with some of my similarly skiing-obsessed colleagues.  



That summer I spent the entire break cycling from Tbilisi, Georgia (where I am typing this now) to Tallinn, Estonia, via as many of the ex-Soviet and Eastern European countries that I could.  I rode through magical Svaneti tragic occupied Abkhazia to Sochi in Russia, where Terri flew out to join me for a couple of weeks of hard cycling along the Black Sea coast, through Crimea (then part of Ukraine), Trans-Dniestria and Moldova.  Terri had to return to work, but I kept cycling across Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, Poland, Ukraine again, Belarus, Lithuania, Latvia and finally Estonia.  I covered 5500 mostly flat kilometres and really fell in love with the countries I was crossing.
In the fall Terri and I got away hiking most weekends, all the way into early December since it didn't snow at all in the autumn.  When it started snowing, though, it didn't stop and we had a memorable ski season.  

At Christmas, I zipped off to the Persian Gulf to explore (very briefly and superficially) the UAE, Qatar and a tiny corner of Oman, before returning to Leysin for New Year's.

2011 new countries:  Denmark, Abkhazia, Russia, Ukraine, Trans-Dniestria, Moldova, Romania, Slovakia, Belarus, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, UAE, Oman, Qatar.

2011 year-end country count:  108

2012
The winter of 2011-12 was epic for skiing and ski touring, probably the best of my five winters in Leysin.  Spring break was spent doing more ski touring before finally retiring the skis and taking out the bicycle.



The summer vacation was spent in the highest mountain ranges of the world.  Terri and I flew to India and trekked through the magical mountains and plateaux of Ladakh for a memorable month.  Again Terri had an earlier work deadline than I did, so I flew off to Kyrgyzstan to indulge my Reinhold Messner-inspired fantasies of mountain climbing.  I had had my eye on Peak Lenin and Muztagh Ata for years, so it seemed like a good time to try my luck.  My luck wasn't in on either peak, with terrible weather, heavy snowfall and poor conditions.  I decided that really high mountains weren't really my thing and flew back to Leysin to start my third academic year.




That fall I finally made it to Slovenia, the one Balkan country that I had not yet properly visited.  At Christmas I decided that I needed a bicycle tour, so I flew down to Lome and spent three weeks cycling around Togo and Benin.  It was a good  bike trip, but I didn't really warm to the two countries as much as I would have liked.  It was my first taste of West Africa after several trips to the north and east of the continent, and I resolved to come back one day to explore in much greater depth.

2012 new countries:  Slovenia, Togo, Benin

2012 year-end country count:  111

2013
The 2012-13 winter was also fabulous for snowfall in the Leysin region, and I had a great winter of skiing, ski touring and cross-country skate skiing.  Terri and I had a March break that overlapped for once (we worked at different schools with very different schedules) and we had hoped to do a week of ski touring.  Instead it suddenly stopped snowing at the end of February, and after waiting with crossed fingers for a while, we eventually booked a last-minute trip to the Maldives instead.  It was slightly self-indulgent, but it was also a reintroduction to diving for Terri, which proved to be a great thing for our future travels together.

That summer we set off together for Iceland with our touring bicycles.  We had a wonderful time exploring this tiny gem of a country, even if Terri did find the steep hills on dirt roads a bit challenging and annoying.  Then Terri returned to work and I flew to Canada for the first time in three years, visiting my mother in Ottawa, my father in Thunder Bay, my sister in Jasper and my friend Greg over the border in Montana.  The summer vacation was not yet over (I loved my epic summer holidays in Leysin!) and I returned to Europe to try my hand at a new (for me) form of bike touring:  riding a racing bike, travelling ultra-light and sleeping indoors.  I cycled from Avignon back to Leysin over as many Tour de France cols as possible (Galibier, Izoard, Agnel, Iseran, etc), then returned to southern France with Terri for another week of cycling.



That fall, the start of my fourth year in Leysin, did not go well.  I was teaching five different fairly challenging IB science and math courses, and I burned out spectacularly from overwork.  Not long after a long weekend in Dublin with Terri, I ended up having a minor nervous breakdown in early November and being sent off on medical leave for a few months, during which I went exploring Gran Canaria by bicycle and Laos by motor scooter.  It was a sobering reminder of my own mortality and of how unsustainably hard I was working at LAS.

2013 new countries:  Maldives, Iceland, Ireland

2013 country count:  114

2014
I returned to work after Christmas on a reduced teaching load and had a reasonable time of it, although it was a miserable ski season.  A few skiing friends and I spent spring break skiing in the Dolomites in Italy which was an incredible time, although I couldn't ski the last few days because of an incredibly sore back.


That summer Terri and I decided to take it physically a bit easier than usual since we weren't sure how recovered I was from my breakdown.  I flew to Bali via a brief visit to sad, ruined East Timor, and then Terri and I spent a month diving our way around Indonesia, with visits to Bali, the Togean Islands and the amazing Derawan Archipelago and its manta rays.  Terri had bought a small house in northeast Bali a few years earlier, and it made for a perfect base for our expeditions. After Terri's inevitable return to work, I stayed on, exploring the Solomon Islands and expensive, dangerous and deeply unpleasant Papua New Guinea before crossing back into Indonesian New Guinea for a few weeks of birdwatching and diving. 


That fall was the start of my last year at LAS.  I had already decided that I was going to leave, but LAS' deeply autocratic First Family had decided that I needed to be forced out, which didn't make the final year much fun at work.  Luckily it was a charmed autumn with perfect weather almost every weekend and a never-ending series of hiking and biking weekends that lasted almost into December that left me with a permanent grin and indelible memories of the fall colours blanketing the Alps.

I flew off that Christmas with three colleagues to show them the Japanese powder that I had been pining for during the many snow droughts of my Leysin years.   

2014 new countries:  East Timor, Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea

2014 year-end country count:  117

2015
After some epic skiing in Hokkaido, I returned to Leysin for my final ski season there.  The snow was miserable for most of the winter, and when it did snow, I nearly got myself killed in an avalanche that took away quite a bit of my skiing mojo.  During spring break Terri and I flew to Georgia for a few days of skiing which reminded me of how much I liked this small, historic country in the Caucasus.

2015-18:  Three Itinerant Years

Mid-June saw me say farewell with affection and great memories to my colleagues and friends in Leysin and to the outdoor playground of the Alps.  Terri and I headed off for a month of cycling down the Danube, followed (for me) by sailing and cycling in Finland and Norway while Terri finished up her 15th and final year at Kumon Leysin Academy.  When she was free, we abandoned the bicycles and set off on foot to trek in the Pyrenees and then the mythical GR20 hiking route in Corsica.  Terri flew back to Switzerland for her Swiss citizenship ceremony, and then we were off, both finally free of work and commitments for the foreseeable future.

We visited our families and then rendezvoused in Ushuaia, Argentina for the extravagant splurge of a lifetime, a trip to the Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the Antarctic Peninsula on the MV Ushuaia.  Despite a fire on board on the first night, and having to dodge between South Atlantic hurricanes on the return journey, it was an incredible, life-altering trip that always seemed to have a David Attenborough voice-over playing in our heads.


After that, we started cycling north through Patagonia, stopping to hike in places like Torres del Paine and El Chalten.  We said good-bye to 2015 in a little town along the Carretera Austral, the little-used dirt road linking the remote communities of southern Chile.

2015 new countries:  Finland, Sweden

2015 year-end country count:  119


2016
We kept cycling north in early 2016, finishing on the island of Chiloe.  After a few days visiting friends in Santiago from my year of working there in 1999, we took an interminable bus trip to Paraguay with our bicycle and spent a few weeks cycling there before ending our South American sojourn in the genteel urban settings of Buenos Aires and Montevideo.

From here we switched continents.  We had talked for years about driving a 4-wheel-drive through Africa, and now it was time to put the dream into action.  We flew to Zambia where we spent several weeks working at Olive Tree Learning Centre, Terri's school that she helped establish in an impoverished shantytown in 2006 and which she has been supporting and growing ever since.  A group of Japanese students from Terri's former school flew down from Switzerland to meet us and do a service trip for which they had raised a large amount of much-needed funds, followed by a wildlife safari to incompable Chobe National Park across the Zambezi River in northern Botswana.

Afterwards we flew to Cape Town and started searching for vehicles, preferably already fitted out for overland exploration and camping.  Just as we were starting to despair, we got tipped off about a vehicle for sale in Johannesburg, and flew up to inspect it.  It was love at first sight, and so Stanley (as in Henry Morton Stanley) entered our lives.  

Most of the rest of 2016 was spent driving Stanley around southern Africa.  We explored Kruger National Park, then cruised through southern Mozambique before being turned around by civil conflict further north.  We drove back to South Africa, survived a potentially deadly car crash and then (after repairs) drove north into tragic but beautiful Zimbabwe for a month.  We popped out into Zambia and then turned east into Malawi before returning to Zambia, where we explored the north before heading down to Livingstone and spending more time at OTLC.  Finally we headed south across the wildlife paradise of Botswana before popping back into South Africa.

We took two-month break from Stanley from late October to mid-December, doing some tour guiding in Greece and some road-tripping through the Balkans before flying to Madagascar and its enchanting, endangered lemurs.

It wasn't until nearly Christmas that we were back in South Africa, picking up Stanley after some expert improvements had been made at Blinkgat, the camper manufacturer who had first put Stanley together a couple of years earlier.  We spun down through Swaziland and into KwaZulu-Natal, where we welcomed in 2017 in a wonderful wildlife refuge, Bushbaby Lodge.

2016 new countries:  Paraguay, Brazil, Uruguay, Zambia, Botswana, South Africa, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Madagascar, Swaziland.

2016 year-end country count:  130

2017
The year started with some of our favourite bits of Africa.  We drove south through KwaZulu-Natal and the Orange Free State and drove across the breathtaking mountainous country of Lesotho before getting tired of the rainy season and bolting north towards Namibia.  Namibia was incredible, and we had many unforgettable nights camped out in the depths of the Namib desert or the semi-desert just inland of it.  All good things must come to an end, though, and what ended this idyllic period was a summons home to Thunder Bay, where my father was trying to recover from aggressive thyroid cancer.  We drove across the Caprivi Strip for one last visit to OTLC in Livingstone, then bolted back to Windhoek to store Stanley until we could return.

The next few months for me were a blur, as my father's recovery stalled and then a terminal decline set in.  He died at the end of June, and most of July was spent cleaning out the house where he had lived for 46 years (and where I had grown up and returned to for three decades after leaving home).  At the end of July my mother and I drove to Ottawa with a U-Haul of family heirlooms, and I flew off to Bali to rejoin Terri.

We spent the rest of the year in Indonesia, doing a lot of scuba diving and (in my case) learning how to take underwater photographs of the strange and wonderful creatures that live on tropical reefs.  I was also hard at work finishing the manuscript of my Silk Road cycling book.  In mid-November I crossed to the next island to the east, Lombok, and spent three weeks training to become a scuba instructor.  It was an intense course, but I passed the exam and set off immediately with Terri for jobs in Raja Ampat, the legendary diving area off the western tip of Indonesian New Guinea.  The job wasn't all it was cracked up to be, but it taught both of us a lot, and we got to dive almost every day with manta rays, which is a priceless experience.  We said farewell to the year on tiny Arborek Island in Raja Ampat, after a whirlwind 365 days.

2017 new countries:  Lesotho, Namibia

2017 year-end country count:  132

2018
Terri and I said goodbye to Arborek early in January, glad for the experience but keen to move on.  We stopped off in Ambon for some memorable muck diving, then returned to Bali for a month of heavy rain and occasional diving.  I was still hard at work writing, and in early February I finished the first draft of my manuscript, just in time to fly to New Zealand for 2 months of exploring with Terri.  We covered much of the North Island of the country, more than a quarter century after my first visit there in 1992.  We hiked, biked, paddled and drove around many of the incredible natural sights of the country, and were amazed afterwards at how much we had seen.

A very brief sojourn back in Bali, and then we were off again, flying to Namibia to pick up Stanley.  We had had some serious problems with Namibian Customs about Stanley not having the right paperwork (we thought he did!!) and so we had to move him to storage in South Africa.  We decided that we should explore Namibia in greater detail while we did, and we ended up spending six memorable weeks in the Namibian desert, camped out under the stars, looking for elephants and zebras and giraffes.  Eventually we drove down to rainy Cape Town and put Stanley into storage there.

While we had been in New Zealand, I had accepted a job offer to teach in Tbilisi, so when we returned to Bali, I packed up my possessions and flew to Canada to visit my mother and then, at the end of July, on to Tbilisi.

2018-2019:  The Tbilisi Years

I had always enjoyed Georgia during my three previous trips to the country (2009, 2011 and 2015), so I was looking forward to living there full-time.  Terri and I spent the late summer and autumn exploring the beautiful mountainous regions of Tusheti, Khevsureti and Mtiuleti, with fall break in the enchanting western region of Svaneti, then loaded up our expedition van (Douglas the Delica) as the Christmas break began and headed off on a three-week skiing roadtrip.  We welcomed in the New Year in a small homestay in the frosty mountains of the Goderdzi Pass area.

2018 new countries:  none (first time since 2005!)

2018 year-end country count:  132

2019
I've just written a long blog post looking back on this year, so I will be brief about this year's travels.  There were a number of (generally disappointing) ski weekends north of Tbilisi, a week in France skiing with my sister Saakje and her partner Henkka in March, some fun camping weekends in the spring and then a summer of mountain exploration in Kyrgyzstan and back here in Georgia.  This fall we drove around Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh (now renamed Artsakh) and today (in a few hours) we are flying to Panama for a Christmas get-together with my mother, Saakje and Henkka.

2019 new countries:  Panama

2019 year-end country count:  133

I hope that the 2020s will be just as active, if not more so, in terms of exploring new corners of the globe.  With a new and much longer-range installment of Stanley's Travels coming up starting in September, 2020, I hope to add a lot of the countries that are still missing from my collection.  I still have roughly 90 countries left to visit; I would love to have that total down closer to 30 when I'm writing the next installment of the decade-in-review.