Gaz supply
Tut! Border!
Little boat bridge
Mosque & river
Fire station
Shimkent nights
Café family
Sign our fridge!
Garage
No fuel at the inn
Abandoned
Bust
The Kazakhstan road gang
Andy, Cat, Matt
Portrait of a team-mate
Luxury toilet block
Highway services
Time for a good scritch
Best slow down for this bit...
Loadsamoney (and camera shake)
Arrival in Atyrau
Fashion guru
Off for a swim?
Take the ladder
Mosaic tower
Mosque complex, and rehearsals
Caught me!
Teasing with the police
Half-hearted procession
Rehearsals
We can still see you, lads
No, you're definitely going to need better riot sh…
Samarqand mosque complex
Dome & tower
Vuun scary vaiter
I don't know what this was when it was alive
The English abroad
Cultural tour
FU...
Getting arty
Navigation check
Wrong road
Autumn fishing
Fisherman in context
Tally-ho! Best wheel forward.
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
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150 visits
Car-signing session


The car ended up with a gooood many signatures, including some scored out as we nearly started a war between Kazakh and Uzbek border guards who took to insulting each other's countries by means of their graffiti on our car!
Here, this is the staff of the hotel which was located for us by a drunken policeman.
He'd found us at the side of the road, and offered to help. Sadly, it turned out that he wasn't a good guy at all. After careering around in the dark with only his blue flashing lights and no headlights (and the blue flashers only when he thought we might need them, like when he hared off around a corner), he found us a hotel. The rooms were $30 a night (for a double). He wanted $100 for his trouble! But the twit couldn't quite say so, and kept saying it was his birthday instead. So I lined us up and we sang "happy birthday to you" at him. I have seldom seen such a look of contempt on a face. He ended up being packaged off with $10 for his petrol and a guilt-trip "salaam alekum" from me.
Here, this is the staff of the hotel which was located for us by a drunken policeman.
He'd found us at the side of the road, and offered to help. Sadly, it turned out that he wasn't a good guy at all. After careering around in the dark with only his blue flashing lights and no headlights (and the blue flashers only when he thought we might need them, like when he hared off around a corner), he found us a hotel. The rooms were $30 a night (for a double). He wanted $100 for his trouble! But the twit couldn't quite say so, and kept saying it was his birthday instead. So I lined us up and we sang "happy birthday to you" at him. I have seldom seen such a look of contempt on a face. He ended up being packaged off with $10 for his petrol and a guilt-trip "salaam alekum" from me.
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