Showing posts with label Syria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Syria. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 December 2007

Palmyra - Damascus (5.993 km)

arriving in damascus

on the road from palmyra to damascus

um... which way...

easy riders

damascus side alley... what a wonderful place. lawrence of arabia used to hang here.


yeah ok, were in damascus


Thursday 29/11/2007 (N 33 30,554' E 36 17,730") Syria just has this amazing ability to resemble a post holocaust planet. in other words, mad max wouldnt seem so mad here. burnt out gas stations and burning tyres on the road. truth is, these people are amazing. they've been so hospitable and friendly here. its been a wonderful surprise. we built some crash bars in a small town. they were too heavy and mine subsequently snapped my 8mm bolt off. the bolt that also keeps my ewgine protected! so i have to drill it out now. couple of trusty cable ties and ill deal with it in cairo. travelled to damascus with michael and werner. found george by chance as always.. on the road without previous plans. in a city of 2 million people we always seem to bump into each other. next stop mmmmmm dont know... a yes... Jordan.

Giovedi 29/11/2007 siamo andati a Damasco (N 33 30,554' E 36 17,730") seguendo la strada che costeggia il confine con l'Iraq. Li' abbiamo ritrovato per caso George e con lui altri tre motociclisti. Ora in tutto siamo in 8, da 8 paesi diversi e ciascuno con le proprie storie da raccontare. Werner (Germania) e Michael (USA) vanno a Dubai attraverso l'Etiopia. Chris (Francia) e Kevin (Australia) arrivano dalla Thailandia e ancora non sanno bene dove andare. Tom (Canada) e George (UK) fanno quasi il nostro stesso percorso fino a Citta' del Capo, ma con tempi diversi.

Colonna sonora: "L'era del cinghiale bianco" Franco Battiato

Tuesday, 27 November 2007

Aleppo - Palmyra (5.336 km)

some kids sussing out the dukes around palmyra

camels love ducatis!

every time we stop loads of people gather around us


Les Krak des Chevaliers

weve already found a cape town sign... in syria!


gareth (beardy weirdy) and helen (moto maiden) from new zealand. bumped into them on the road to palmyra.


Martedi 27/11/2007 abbiamo visitato Les Krak des Chevaliers (N 34 45,357' E 36 17,654') , un castello utilizzato all'epoca dei crociati. Nel pomeriggio abbiamo fatto 200 km in mezzo al deserto fino a Palmyra. (N 34 33,804' E 38 16,185') A meta' strada abbiamo incrociato una coppia di motociclisti neozelandesi che sapeva i nostri nomi e cosa stavamo facendo. Subito abbiamo pensato di essere diventati famosi, ma poi abbiamo capito che altri motociclisti gli avevano parlato di noi. Il bello di viaggiare in motocicletta e' che prima o poi ci si conosce un po' tutti ed alla fine e' quasi come essere parte di una grande famiglia.

Colonna sonora: "Hit the road Jack" Ray Charles

Tuesday 27/11/2007. We arrived at Les Krak des Chevaliers (N 34 45,357' E 36 17,654') around lunch time - with mike and werner. easy ride there. it is an old crusader knights castle from the 1100's. in wonderful nik. a must see. we then pushed on to pal;myra alone. bumped into some kiwis, helen and gareth. they knew our names and stuff, which was kind of weird. but then we heard that they had been travelling with our mate george for the last 4 days. its wonderful, our biker buddy possy is growing and were swopping teamates and wingmen all the time. we pushed to palmyra (N 34 33,804' E 38 16,185') in the dark. saw some military camp sites set up and canons parked off the road in the desert. were only 100km from iraq now. what an unsettling thought.

Antakya - Aleppo (5.156km)

mmmmmmmmmm...

pimp my syrian ride


infidels... red alert!

So we started off our day by visiting the oldest church in the world and being forgiven for all the sins that ive commited to date. not a bad way to start the morning. Yebo we are in Antioch. we then cruised off for siria and eager to get a bit of fresh sin under our belt. after all, what are a bunch of good looking infidels to get up to in an arab country? we arrived at the border and met some bikers going through africa like oursleves. michael and werner from germany. fantastic blokes. we just followed them around doing exactly what they did. turns out michael has already done africa before! after 2 hours at the border, and unbelievably no bribes dished out, we entered syria. we put one foot in this place and it was like stepping into a film. ive seen arab countries on tv often, but actually being in one was awe inspiring. chaos everywhere. we would stop on the road and about 30 people would gather around. people were driving the wrong way on the high way... ill say no more. we cruised through to Aleppo with them and stayed in a great hostel. 6 euro a night with brekkie. petrol costs 4 times less than turkey, makes one want to re-inact the fountain scene from the film zoolander! hoohaa... next stop: somewhere in syria with loads of turban clad geezers.

Domenica 25/11/2007 siamo entrati in Siria. Alla frontiera non abbiamo avuto grossi problemi. Tra tasse e mance ce la siamo cavata con 40 $ a testa. Li abbiamo anche conosciuto due motociclisti tedeschi che vanno fino a Dubai passando per Egitto ed Etiopia.
Sono contento perche' sento che ora inizia la parte migliore di questo viaggio. Gia' in Aleppo abbiamo notato una grande differenza rispetto alla Turchia. Qui ogni volta che ci fermiamo con le moto veniamo subito circondati da una quindicina di persone che inizia a curiosare. Il traffico e' davvero terribile. Sembra di essere dentro un videogioco. Bisogna avere i riflessi pronti per schivare macchine che ti vengono addosso in controsenso, motorini che spuntano da tutte le parti, pedoni che si buttano in mezzo alla strada e animali di ogni genere che vagano per le strade.
E' incredibile, ma proprio mentre sto scrivendo in questo internet cafe in mezzo al deserto siriano stanno ascoltando "take me home country road" di John Denver e sul muro c'e' un grosso cartello con su scritto "In God we trust". Valli a capire.

Colonna sonora: "Take me home country road" John Denver