Our train didn't leave Bukhara until late afternoon on Tuesday. In the morning after breakfast we went one last time to the market. This is where Nika helped Sophia buy her outfit. See below. Sophie got the floor model of an outfit and really bartered her way to a price that was more affordable. Nika bought a similar outfit when we were in Samarkand.
The outfits are quite striking on both girls.
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Sophie with her prize! |
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Sophie and Nika in their outfits. |
After visiting the bazaar, we hung out on the plaza for awhile, got some lunch, and then got picked up by our cab driver from the day before and got taken to the train station. The train station was full of foreign tourists getting ready to get on the fancy train to Tashkent.
Our train was a slightly less fancy train. When we were getting ready to get on the train we saw a group of returning sportsmen who were met with a band (horns and drums) and great fanfare. The sports group had loaded up with bread in Samarkand, which is famous for its bread. It was quite a sight.
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Waiting with a bunch of tourists. There was a big group of American tourists who were going through Central Asia with their last stop in Kazakhstan. |
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On the train to Samarkand |
In Samarkand we got two taxis to our hotel. They got split up, but we managed to meet at our hotel which was centrally located in town. The hotel itself was interesting. The floors were covered in rugs and the clientele mostly seemed to be religious folks from various areas of the world. We had a room on the first floor and the girls had a room on the second floor. It was about 8:00 p.m. and dark when we arrived. We checked in and then walked out and found a restaurant to eat in - a little Italian cafe a few blocks from the hotel.
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Upstairs where girls had their room (lots of nice rugs on the floor). |
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We had nice breakfasts at all of our hotels. Lots of good fresh fruit. |
After we woke up, we ate breakfast at our hotel and then went out walking to explore. We had mapped out our day, planning on having a relatively light day of walking and seeing since we had gone quite hard in Bukhara for three days.
Our hotel was in the center of the city and so walking to the main sites was very convenient. Our first stop was at the statue of Timurlan (Tamerlane), who was a warrior who became the most powerful Muslim Leader of the 14th century. His statue was in a traffic circle near our hotel and his mausoleum complex was just a few blocks away.
The Mausoleum was very commercialized - a number of tour buses pulled up at the time we were there, so it didn't have the same feel as some of the complexes we saw in Bukhara, which were quieter and more reverent. Temirlane was a pretty horrible human being, so maybe reverence was the right feeling anyway....
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At the mosque/mausoleum complex. |
After visiting the mausoleum, we walked to "registan", the old center of the city which was the area of the kings. The whole complex included a number of mosques and Madrasahs as well. We were really impressed with the parks and walkways throughout the center of the city.
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Walking to registan. |
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Looking out at Samarkand. |
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Approaching Registan. |
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Amazing inlay work on the restored buildings. |
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Registan from the front entrance. |
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Mosque. |
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Lexa and Papa resting on a bench. |
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More amazing tile inlay work inside a mosque. |
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Nice inner courtyard in the rear mosque complex. |
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Furniture and other crafts. |
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Mama and Polina posing. |
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Veronika posing (one of just a handful pictures of her since she was our main photographer for the trip). |
We really enjoyed the registan complex. We learned that one of the leaders, Ulugh Beg, had built an observatory in the 15th century. His work was the basis for a lot of later astronomical work by astronomers in Europe, including Copernicus. There was a really neat museum with displays about the science and about his life.
We saw a bunch of weddings while we were there. In fine Soviet tradition, the wedding party goes and gets photographs at all the landmarks. If I was getting married in Samarkand, I'd go get my picture taken at Registan as well. I got my picture taken with my wife, but it was 17.5 years too late!
After walking through the complex, we stopped at a little outdoor cafe and bought ice cream and water to eat. Everyone was very happy about that.
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Ice cream break. Notice the nice park behind us. |
After our ice cream break, we took a walk to the main bazaar in town: the Siyob Bazaar. It was down a nice road. It had everything that we wanted and needed and we loaded up on treats (nuts, fruits, and local candy) for us and for others.
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The bazaar with a selection of nuts and fruits. |
We ate lunch with the locals at a local shwarma place and walked back to the hotel. After resting for a few hours, we went out for dinner. Yulia had looked up a restaurant, but we couldn't find it, so we went back to where we had eaten the night before. We saw a sign for "KFC" and were curious. A woman came out of the cafe and told us that they had KFC there. We took a chance. We were the only customers and it was a bit dark. We were not sure because the prices seemed high (they were for massive portions it turns out). We ordered KFC (which was just fried chicken) and some other dishes. We ended up with a nice meal for a good price and a very interesting experience. We have real KFC in Kazakhstan and I'm not sure that they want their name appropriated this way in Uzbekistan!
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"KFC" |
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Our "KFC meal" |
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Famous Samarkand bread. |
After dinner we returned to our hotel. We had an early start scheduled for the next morning. Our whirlwind stop in Samarkand was over. We really enjoyed the sites there, but felt that one day was enough to see them. We were glad to have the more authentic experience for longer in Bukhara, but Registan and the parks in Samarkand were truly beautiful and impressive.