Giles Whittell
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Why doesn't anyone go to the most beautiful country in the world? It's far away, but so is Thailand. It's poor, but so is Cuba. Not many people speak English, but nor do they in Glasgow. And unlike any of these places it has lakes, mountains, ancient culture, saffron, dried apricots and raw tobacco to blow your mind.
So why don't people go?
I refer to Kyrgyzstan, of course, and I have a theory. Kyrgyzstan is unusual in being surrounded by territories that are also almost never visited for fun (eastern Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan). It's not a useful staging post for getting anywhere else, long-haul no longer being by camel.
And on the rare occasions when it has cropped up in the news since 1991, the news has been off-putting: a couple of climbers kidnapped; rioting after a democrat got locked up for winning an election; a lease for the US Air Force on a base near the capital soon after 9/11.
All this is desperately unfair. A long time ago I tried to do something about it by writing two books on Central Asia that aimed to lift the lid once and for all on Kyrgyzstan's beguiling specialness, but clearly no one read them. Since then the place has haunted me. Literally and genuinely, I dream of it. The dreams used to come every few weeks. They are less frequent now, but no less vivid. They always take me to the same place, deep in the mountains, where a big stone refuge stands at a branching of the ways, and the ways lead to opposite shores of a huge inland sea fringed by lush meadows and, above them, peaks hung with bright white glaciers.
I want to go back, but it's difficult with three small children, one of them a baby. So I thought I'd take them virtually, right now. Here are the highlights of the holiday we didn't have: we flew overnight to Bishkek, British Airways, non-stop, no hassle. My old friend Nikolai Shchetnikov met us at the airport in a Niva 4x4 and we headed straight for the Osh bazaar to load up with Frisbee-shaped lepeshka flatbread and a bag of those apricots.
Thence to the Ala Archa gorge. Where else can you be in pristine alpine wilderness half an hour from the international airport? We unpacked into a log cabin for two blissful days of stream-damming and piney air.
Day 3: Nikolai picks us up and drives us back down the gorge, east along the foothills of the Tien Shan, and back into the big mountains where the road winds up to Lake Issyk Kul, the inland sea of my dreams. Bigger than Lake Geneva, fed by a thousand rivulets of meltwater, it never freezes - it's so deep, it's warmed by the centre of the Earth.
A swim. A picnic in Nikolai's brother's cherry orchard. Then onwards and upwards round numberless dirt hairpins to Son Kul, a perfect disc of water lying 10,000ft up in the legendary summer pasture of the Kyrgyz nomads. They still come here to pitch their yurts and graze their animals, but there's an extra yurt for us, with a felt-lined cot for the baby and placid, sleek brown horses tethered outside for the rest of us.
There is nowhere on Earth like this. We stay a week, then head home knowing there is also no way that words can do it justice. Maybe that's why no one comes.
Extreme Continental (Gollancz) and the Cadogan Guide to Central Asia, by Giles Whittell, are both long out of print but you might get lucky on abebooks.com
I liked the country so much that I wrote a guidebook to it (Kyrgyzstan: The Bradt Travel Guide). It is, indeed, gorgeous. Jens is wrong - it's not Russia: visas are easily available, its cheap when you get there and the people are friendly. More beautiful? More welcoming? I can't think of many.
Laurence Mitchell, Norwich, UK
Do us all a favor and stay home if you are not up for an adventure, fresh food and wild nature. Yes, do stay home if you care about toilets, forgot how fresh food tastes and used to travel on a packaged deal. The stars at night will blind you and strangers will go out of thier way to host you.
Naz, Washington, USA
Kyrgyztan is indeed beautiful, very friendly people, amazing landscape...but you have to prepared for it, its not well prepared for tourists (yet) ! if you go to this area - don't miss tajikistan either !
Chris Hellmayr, Austria, Istanbul, Turkey
Krygyzstan and many of the other former Soviet countries don't actually welcome tourists - expensive to get to and stay at and difficulty with visas (esp Kazaksthan). Corruption is rife and human rights non-existent. There are far more beautiful and welcoming places in the world.
Jens, London,
Have been living in KG for 4 months. Great place to visit if you are a nature lover and an adventurer with a strong stomach.
As far as the tourist industry, it will not progress (just like the broader economy) for the next few generations until the population drastically changes their mentatily.
Foma B., Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan
yeah you are right we still have a long way to progress, but say me where else you can find the wild and so beatiful nature?
Kyrygzstan is paradise...
Everyone should visit Kyrgyzstan
Mederbek, Istanbul, Turkey
Kyrgyzstan is very beautiful country! :)
Isken, Krasnoyarsk, Russia
I've lived in KG for four years. Bishkek has more and more quality hotels. The Silk Road Lodge isn't bad, nor some of the other small but Western style hotels popping up. KG has a ways to go, but the are making steady progress. But I'd agree with the author that KG is a very beautiful country.
Montie, Kara Kol, Kyrgyzstan
Having spent 2 years in Kyrgyzstan, I can guess why it has not yet become a tourist mecca. In Bishkek, the capitol, there are a few quality hotels. Elsewhere, you will be out of luck unless you are a camper. While western style toilets are fairly common, most are still the hole in the floor. etc
Bill Heaphy, Harpswell, ME, US