A. Gansu/Xinjiang Border
B. The Turpan Basin The Turpan Basin is the lowest, hottest place in China yet thanks to an ancient system of irrigation the area is home to China's most abundant and tastiest grape varieties. In the arid plains on the basin's edge, latticed brick sheds are used to dry the grapes in the hot, dry conditions.
D. Borto-Ula Pass The G30 road from Turpan to Kashgar passes first through a steep north-south mountain valley, the winding road tracing the path of a dry riverbed between high, magnificent peaks. The midday sun struggles to reach the depths of the valley in places as you wind through bend after bend.
E. Halik Mountains Flat, salt-crusted plains suddenly heave themselves vertically into impressive corrugated folds.
G. Kalpinchol Tag An awe-inspiring sight just east of Kashgar, these rows of multi-coloured mountains actually made me think of something very small, reminding me of the scenes made from layers of coloured sand in a tiny bottle.
I. Kumtagh The Ghez Dariya canyon climbs higher and higher, past a military checkpoint, until you arrive finally at this unexpected windswept sight. The mountains on the far side of the man-made lake are actually imposing sand dunes of silver-coloured sand rising from the aqua waters - soon to be the head waters of a hydroelectric scheme.
J. Lake Karakul Worth every bump of the long ride from Kashgar and every bit of the high-altitude headache you'll have when you arrive, Lake Karakul is simply magical. Reflecting the snowy peaks in its crystal clear waters and dotted around its edge by small Kyrgyz villages, it's a place of clear, clean air, yurts and yaks. Breathtaking.
K. Taklamakan Desert And then there's this: although the Southern Silk Road doesn't take you through the formidable Taklamakan Desert it does skirt its edges. West of the city of Hotan it's about as bleak as it gets with dust hanging heavy in the air, blocking the sun, and dust storms flaring on every bend in the road. If you could see through the dust it would look just like the scene below - flat infinities of gravel and grit.
L. Washed-out Bridge In the parched country south of Cherchen is a winding river bed, filled with smooth, rounded stones suggesting that at some point in the river's past the water flowed hard and fierce. Not now. Now the river is completely bone dry, but some time recently a raging torrent passed through, tearing away part of this bridge. It was kind of worth driving all that way and having to turn back just to see this scene.
M. Astin Tag A mountain pass climbing to almost 4000m separates Xinjiang from neighbouring Qinghai Province. It's spectacularly beautiful, with the colour of the sky and the mountains intensified by the rarified air. A fitting departure from the magnificent countryside of Xinjiang. I'll miss it.Labels: China road trip, travel