Dienstag, 17. September 2013

Day 89 - 92: the very south: 4 steaming days for 200km

So, Thursday before noon was the plan, over 500km in 24h. Highways in Iran are not bad (the drivers are in compensation), so we rushed through once again, making Iran a country to outscore Turkey in terms of our km/day average.


"Shahids" are soldiers who died in the Iraqi-Irani war in the 1980s. They are remembered and honoured as "martyrs" by putting up their portraits on the main roads of basically all Iranian cities and villages.

We had a blind passenger in Kalimero.

The more South we came, the longer the lanes at gas and diesel stations became. At this one - the last before Bandar Abbas - about 100 trucks were waiting, every single one with tanks of about 1000l capacity. We played the stupid tourists and received 20l after long discussions and explanations.

Not only Diesel, also Gas is a much-wanted good.


In the humid, rather unspectacular port town Bandar Abbas, we made it just in time to the ticket agency. 80€ for 2 persons, and 440€ for the car is an expensive price for a 12h-boat ride. Monopoly gets paid. 
In front of the office, we had a joyful sighting: a German Unimog (named Simba) was waiting, and we met the 2 overlanders from Munich, Peter and Jenifer inside the A/C-cooled office while Kalimero and Simba exchanged their stories outside.
This meant, having to spend 60h (and hopefully not more) in this hot climate NOT alone. The 2 arrived the day before and slept on a parking ground on the coastal line.
We had Kalimero washed, some food reserves stocked up and started looking for the overnight spot. Cruising up and down the shore line (hmmm, we had seen more beautiful beaches), a guy suddenly ran on our street line towards us. Nothing special in this country, Michi reasoned and honked (adapted to Iranian driving style). But this guy was different – European. It turned out that Andy and Frank, the two DAF-drivers we travelled with in Turkey and Armenia, were in town for a reasonable touristic reason: the India visa takes 10 days here, and 21 in Tehran. Andy had seen Kalimero when sitting on the beach smoking water pipe, chased to find a taxi and had a wild pursuit (Kalimero is faaaast!), to finally catch us when we u-turned.
So, were 6 people in Bandar Abbas, waiting for Iranian or Indian buerocracy to continue our travel plans. Andy and Frank had found a sufficiently clean hotel with own showers, WiFi and A/C-rooms for the bargain price of 10€ for 2 persons. At 40° and 90% humidity, it was not a hard decision what to do.


Simba and Kalimero in downtown Bandar Abbas.

Peter and Jen, the 2 Unimog drivers.

Frank and Andi, the two DAF drivers.

Our 5* Hotel. The gym, Jacuzi and Wellness area was just about to be constructed.

After 2 chilling/chilled (literally, with A/C set at 16°) nights, we then started at 7.30am to fight the battle against buerocracy – willing to spend the day at the port (our vessel was scheduled to depart at 10pm). It turned out we were very lucky to be not alone, as Michi and Peter fought on the front, while Katha and Jenifer suffered while guarding the cars.

The principle was simple: get your VIN checked, compared to your papers, compared to your Carnet de Passage. If correct, get a customs check, and park you car in front of the ship, so that others can still pass. Then, wait for passport control, get your emigration stamp, board the vessel with the car. But, Iranian buerocracy was more than this.



These 2 pieces of paper are necessary to go to the car and get a bottle of water and a book. Every line on the back took about 5 minutes of dicussions and phone calls.
Unfortunately, we were not allowed to film in the port. However, we found a movie that represents quite well how this simple-seeming procedure takes place in an Iranian port, with Iranian customs:

(to those of you who don't understand the language of what's happening: don't worry, neither did we)





It took us until 3pm until we seemed to be successful in at least having tickets, our carnets stamped and processed, and finding us in an A/C „departure hall“ with Simba and Kalimero parked in front. We have to mention that we had the extremly precious help of a local agent who does car import and transit regularly and waited for his vessel/“his“ 5 cars to arrive. He knew exactly where to go for which of the 723 stamps, whom to ask, where to get photocopies etc etc.

Thank you, Omid, it would have took us until late evening at least without our help.
Plus, we still don't know whether you normally have to pay diesel tax when leaving Iran. We did not – but we collected a fair number of stamps and signatures in the official noon break, knocking on door, discussing (Omid) or smiling and saying „Salam“ politely (Michi&Peter).

Many brand new cars were unloaded at the port.

But, as we learned from Omid, were not allowed to be imported to Iran (due to the embargo). The cars were for transit to Azerbaijan or Iraq) and were immediatly loaded on car transporters.
The main export goods in the port were fruits and vegetables, loaded on antique vessels to go to the UAE.


Well, we considered 8am to 3pm was an easy warmup in waiting, so we decided to do some Iranian math 4 hours later.
- The federal ferry company's web page (a masterpiece of HTML programming ) gives out cryptic numbers that we interpreted as 10pm as ferry ETOT. 
- Our tickets said 9pm, and 
- the customs officer told us we should start boarding at 6 or 7pm.
So, we picked 7pm as a good time to move to the next hall, where our passports should get stamped. Turned out to be a difficult task, considering that Michi currently has a beard while the person on the photo of the passport he presented has none. After 2 perplex minutes, the police officer then finally proceeded and gave him the emigration stamp, accompanied with a gesture of surprise/non-understanding/non-knowledge (we saw this one often during our time in Bandar Abbas).


The iAtollahs overlooking all border crossings.
Done with the stamping at 8pm, we then were allowed to wait another hour before going out to the car. Sitting in the car, the open ferry mouth in front of us, we were told that the remaining 3 cars had to be unloaded before we can load ours. This took another hour, during which about 15 cars departed from the vessel. We drove Simba and Kalimero on board, just to find that the imported cars were on the 2nd floor, with about 40 pieces left (which continued to be unloaded).


Three Turkish trucks and some Iranian stone/marble plates were to be loaded in between Simba and Kalimero.

We sat at some wooden benches at the back of the ship, had dinner inside the A/Ced passenger compartment, and went back to the wooden benches to sleep (choose between 35° outside and 15° inside).
 
It was until 1.30am that we should wait for departure, finally heading to UAE. Soon, the first officer was very kind to offer us the „VIP area“, a saloon with 20° A/C where we were allowed to sleep on sofas. What a relief after this long day! Generally, the staff on the ship was very funny and extremly helpful. This helped us to keep in mind how 98% of all Iranians are, at least when they do not have custom- or car export-associated tasks.
After very interesting invitations to the main bridge (getting explained the radar and the steering mechanisms – we don't have photos, we are not spies!), we finally pulled into Sharjah harbour at 11am (at least somewhat relaxed).

Katha enjoying her last minutes of  compulsory headscarf..

And a last Iranian Kabab grilling



In Sharjah, we were allowed to pay our ferry fees (what a pleasure!) and do another customs marathon. This time, it was less stressful, as UAE harbour workers (generally of Indian subcontinental origin), policemen and custom officers (generally Persians or Thai/Phillipinos/etc) or custom officials behind thick glass panels (generally Arabian) all spoke and understood English, and all procedures were normalized without having to know or bribe the right people.


Still, the procedure was very simple in principle:

get your arrival paper by your shipping company (after paying – needless to say that the Federal Iranian Ferry company does not want Iranian Rial, they want UAE dirhams. So go to the ATM first. Wait, it's behind a security line, so get a police officer to accompany you)
apply for a security investigation (get stamp)
pay for application (get signature under stamp)
tell will to pay for investigation (get piece of paper)
pay sum, calculated by dechiffring the code on the little piece of paper (get payment certificate)
get stamp on your inital paper by showing payment certificate
give initial paper to officer, go to the car, show him VIN
get stamp and your VIN written on your intial paper
go back to Customs, present your carnet and the inital (now with VIN) paper - wait 20min - get your carnet back
get another stamp from your shipping company, that you have done customs
with this stamp, pay the port fees (handling etc) and get your (final?) stamp
get a gate pass that you may finally leave the port area, as you have paid your freight, paid the port fees and done customs

Of course, this process could be very efficient and done in 1 hour. Provided everybody is working, and you do NOT have to change buildings for every single step. And these buildings are built close to each other, and not 1km apart.
But, neither was the case, so it was 4.30pm before Kalimero's wheels finally touched UAE territory behind the last gate.






Samstag, 14. September 2013

Day 84 - 88: the south: Yazd, Persepolis and Shiraz

After Isfahan, we drove on (past another huge Carrefour-style „hypermarket“ - but no, we resisted to enter this time) to the desert city Yazd. On the border of huge Iranian deserts, we looked at the picturesque adobe city center with its characteristic wind towers. Again, in the sun it was quite hot, but any shadow was relieving and the dry air was amazingly comfortable.


Roadside impressions


A typical windtower in downtown Yazd.

Wooden mosque door, centuries old.

and even older.

Under the shady arches, it was remarkably cool.

Construction work. Buildings are still built with the traditional clay method.


A mixture of clay and straw is used to cover bricks.

A local blacksmith.

Imam Ali, whom you can often see on wall, trucks etc. His role as successor of Mohammed was the reason for the Shia-Sunni split.

A little girl's proper praying instructions.

As a proper housewife, Katha is shopping pots and pans.

A famous temple of the Zoroastrians is located in Yazd.

with an eternal flame, a woodfire that burns since 1500 years.

The temple itself is rather neutral and a sharp contrast to all the mosques.
We stayed at a newly renovated guesthouse 25km outside of the city, and for a bargain price we slept in the courtyard and enjoyed the breakfast. With Kalimero standing/driving in the sun all day, we preferred cool air over the 35° interior, and the atmosphere was truly one of a kind.

Kalimero in front of the old Faraj fortress

Smoking water pipe in the courtyard (4 walls --> no headscarf) with a French-Chilean couple.

Waterplays in the courtyard.
Mahsoud, the owner of the Guesthouse, spoke perfect English with quite a British accent, and was also a maniac Land Cruiser desert driver. He told Kalimero some tracks where he had not to fear his unexperienced, wet-behind-the-ears owners would get him stuck, damaged or lost. So after a visit to the city, Kalimero drove his 2 surprised passengers on a straight, GPS-guided line from the main road 20km to some sand dunes just at the border of the desert. Michi intervened to drive some loops and wroom-wroooom donuts on a dry lake and surf through sand pools, but it may have appeared more like a 4-year old in the middle of a Sandkasten than like an experienced offroad driver.






We enjoyed the remoteness of the desert (no head-scarf, no t-shirt, showering naked outside the car!), gazed at the stars and our campfire. After a quiiiiiiiet night, we navigated back to tarmac to get the 500km to Persepolis done.




On the long driving days, we did not want to drink only water or Coke.
We found quite a refreshing alternative: BEER! Of course, alcohol-free, but very drinkable.

an extremly delicious refreshment (and almost a full meal): fresh carrot juice with ice cream.






Persepolis is the city of the Persian rulers around 500 BC, and today an astonishing lot of its detailed carvings are still intact – also thanks to Alexander the Great, who inadvertedly burnt the city down over 2000 years ago. The ashes and following millenia covered the structures and kept them for the afterworld.
We arrived in the evening, just to be woven on a „parking and camping“ ground – well, a huge area of asphalt next to a park. Almost empty when we came at 7pm, the place filled up until 10pm and (usual pitcure in Iran) dozens of families shared our camping space.



Being prototypics German, we stood at the gates at 8am, just when the antique city opened the next morning. Because, being German, we wanted to evade the heat coming in from 10am on (not a single tree in the whole area), and we had hardly use for the Farsi guides. So, we had the place rather empty and could easily look at the hundreds if carved figures and structures. Really amazing, how masonry was advanced 2500 years ago.





The carvings are well-secured nowadays, barriers and defined boardwslks to protect them against vandalism. This was not always the case, as it seems.




50km away from Persepolis, the huge city of Shiraz is found. We were told it was one the most beautiful Iranian cities. We could, however, not agree – large construction sites, deteriorating buildings, and somehow the atmosphere in the city was not the best in our eyes (completely different to Isfahan and Tehran). Our inital 2-day plan was thus shortened to 1 day, the gardens and parks were pretty dry, the city dusty, and the Tourist Inn once again pricier than our usual stays in Iran.


Construction site next to a huge shrine with thousands of pilgrims.

But nonetheless, wonderful mosques can be found in Shiraz.

Katha had to cover up even more to visit some of them.




Even more, the ferry to Dubai runs Saturdays and Mondays (although a travel agency told us Mondays and Wednesdays with a car), and we were advised to try to be there the day before departure: Iranian customs would be notorious for their export buerocracy.
The day before departure is Friday = generally dead streets until 6pm in southern Iran, and probably so is the ferry ticket agency. So, our time plan was even more compressed, and we rushed on to go to Bandar Abbas.