10 October, 2018
The Pamir Highway destroys everything...
So laughed Farik as he gaffer-taped my number plate back on. The pannier rack had cracked a few hours earlier, my electrics had failed and I'd already had two blow outs. At this rate we'd have no bikes left by the end of the trip.
A few days previously myself, my boyfriend Marley and Farik, our Tajik guide, had left Dushanbe, the capital of Tajikistan, for a two-week recce ride along the Pamir Highway, one of the wildest and most scenic roads on the planet. So named because it cuts through the High Pamirs - the fourth highest yet least explored mountain range on earth - the Highway is legendary for its thrilling riding and formidable scenery. It promised adventure, dusty tracks over distant mountains and the chance to be as close to the edge of the map as it's possible to be these days.
The start, however, wasn't quite so glorious. Jet lagged and jangling with nerves, I shakily steered and stalled my rented Honda 250-cc through the Dushanbe traffic, my toes straining to reach the ground. But we were soon riding east in the shimmering heat, grinning with relief at Farik, the capital's blacked-out Land Cruisers replaced by trotting donkey carts, lurching Soviet-era trucks and toiling figures bringing in the melon harvest from the fields. Oddly for an Asian country, there wasn't a single other motorbike.
That night, when yet another blow out and a violent thunderstorm left us stranded in a tiny village, we were taken in by a local family, three generations of whom lived under one tiny roof. Pamiris are among the poorest people in the world, neglected by their government and largely dependent on aid, but here, the guest is king. Nina, the wizened matriarch, fussed around us, laying on an impromptu feast of non (traditional bread), potatoes, eggs and salad, intermittently holding my hand and calling me her daughter, while around us green-eyed children and gold-toothed adults excitedly watched our every move.
When it came to bedtime the three boys slept outside on a raised platform, while I was bustled into the master bedroom to sleep with a young couple, their baby and a dummy-sucking toddler. What an unexpected end to our first day on the road.
The following few days took us through an ever more dramatic landscape of deep valleys, snow-capped peaks and blustery mountain passes. By now, the M41 (as the highway is officially known) had deteriorated to a gravelly track and we were up on the pegs, bumping over stones and weaving around potholes. At times the road would twist through Tolkien-esque gorges of immense depth, great fortresses of rock rearing above, churning rivers below. At others it slung us through wide, lunar valleys where silvery peaks framed the horizon and Chinese trucks lumbered through the sand, enveloping us in dust as they passed. It's a savage, visceral beauty that I've never experienced before.
After the town of Kala-i-Kumb the road met the Afghan border and we followed it, separated only by the rushing turquoise waters of the Panj River, for the ensuing four days. On occasion the Panj meandered wide and slow, but at others times the gulley was so narrow I could literally throw a stone into Afghanistan. There was a certain frisson to riding so close to this other world, and as I waved at Afghan farmers, with their simple adobe houses, hand-scythed wheat fields and neat terraces of mulberry and pomegranate trees, I wondered what their futures held.
At the regular police checkpoints Tajik policemen, tummies straining at buckled belts, laughingly pointed across the river and said "Taliban, Taliban!" But not for a second did we ever feel in danger.
Nowhere did we feel the ghosts of history more keenly than the Wakhan Corridor, a narrow strip of land created during the Great Game as a buffer between the British and Russian empires. Ibex horns were stacked at roadside shrines, Silk Road fortresses stood like sentinels on mountaintops and the windswept hillsides were strewn with ancient Kyrgyz graves. After one lung-bursting walk up to the ruins of a Buddhist stupa, a Wakhi boy furtively offered us a handful of local rubies.
Not for nothing are the Pamirs known as the Bam-i-Dunya, the roof of the world. From the Wakhan Corridor we climbed and twisted north over the 4655 metre Khargush pass, engines straining from the altitude. Fat golden marmots bounded away from our wheels, the only sign of colour in the bleached landscape, and our tyres crunched over sand and gravel. At Murghab, a tatty settlement near the Chinese border, we slept at 3650m, our highest night of the journey.
The environment may have been harsh, but the warmth and kindness of the Tajik people was the defining feature of our trip. Smiles as warm as a summer's day beamed at us from every weather-worn face and I rode, joyous, through villages of shrieking, waving, excitable children. But it's wasn't just the children. Everyone, from bent old women leading their donkeys in at dusk to young men selling apricots in the shade, greeted us with a cheery wave and a heart-lifting smile. In one of the homestays we stopped at, the grandfather insisted on sleeping in an old bus beside our bikes out of respect for us, his guests - not that anyone would have considered stealing them anyway, let alone been able to ride them.
Make no mistake, riding in Tajikistan isn't easy. There's little infrastructure, a distinct lack of luxury, memorable loos, rough roads and significant altitudes. But it's a corner of the world that remains refreshingly untarnished by the tentacles of mass tourism and travelling here has an exciting, exploratory edge. Our two-week recce trip had been everything we wanted, and so much more: we couldn't wait to introduce more people to this sublimely beautiful, soul-enriching place.
Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent is a travel writer and expedition leader. Following this successful 2015 recce trip, her company Silk Road Adventures now runs two-week motorcycle adventures through Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.