TRAVERSE Issue 14 - October 2019 | Page 74

down on hidden valleys, it was like we trotted back in time. Yurts were surrounded by livestock, children washed in streams and young boys and girls raced around on horses. There was no electricity and no connection to the outside world - just nomads living off the land. But while ancient traders had as much time as they needed to traverse the 8000-kilometre Silk Road, we had visas to think about. So, we made our farewells to our nomadic friends and left (on two wheels) to explore the rest of Kyrgyzstan’s many twists, turns and epic landscapes. It’s a raw, rugged land and feels more remote than Tajikistan. It’s dubbed the ‘Least known about country in Central Asia’, and for good reason. Kyrgyz- stan doesn’t rely on tourism; a huge proportion of its people still live an ancient nomadic lifestyle and you can ride for hours without seeing another soul. The greenery dried up as we moved through Kazakhstan. It was slowly replaced by long stretches of yellow and flat lands, canyons and a great vastness. As we approached Mongolia - a country we dreamed about for the last 10 years - did the grass return. More excited than four- year-olds at Christmas, we crossed the border and started our journey to Ulaanbaatar over the great Mongo- lian plains. It’s like an undiscovered frontier. We crossed hundreds of kilometres of grassland peppered with wild camels, eagles and horses, along thousands of dusty trails running through the country like beating veins. The tracks switched between thick mud, gravel and rivers that swallowed the road whole. As we reached the glistening Gobi Desert the trails turned to deep sand. Mesmerised by the dunes we stopped, set up our tent and gaped at the desert as it spread into China and marked the start of the Silk Road. The Silk Road flourished under the Mongol Empire. Genghis Khan TRAVERSE 74