Dry and dusty but beautiful – Chundzha / Shonzy to Charyn Canyon

Today’s ride on Komoot 

I had muesli and coffee in my room after a  slightly restless night. I didn’t like the guesthouse, not the people in it and not Chundzha particularly. Not that there’s anything wrong with the place.

First sighting of these guys – horse power meets petrol power

I actually started the day with a better attitude than last night and I’m glad I did.

I was on the road around 8:30 and immediately thought “is that a headwind” ? It wasn’t. At worst today, it was a crosswind.

Monument overlooking a shallow part of the canyon, about 30kms from the spectacular section

I had a decision to make at Charyn Canyon after 50kms. If I felt good, I’d look at the canyon, have lunch and head out. Otherwise I’d camp near the river down in the canyon.

I passed them when the truck overheated. Here they go again

My first job was to get some petrol for my stove. I stopped at the first gas station but it was literally just a gas station. That’s no good to me. There was a petrol station not far up the road. As I pulled in, there was a truck with a few horses in the back, saddled and ready to go. It looked so strange and I’d see them a few more times today.

 

I asked for 600ml of petrol for my stove. Initially the answer was no but pleading then begging always works and in a few minutes I had my fuel, more water and somehow, all was right with the world again, because I was now self sufficient.

Back on the road and it was dead straight, dead flat and dead flaming boring. It was meditative though. I came to a statue of a falcon, then dropped into a wide canyon and I assumed that this was the start of Charyn Canyon. 

The canyon from above

A bit further on, the map said I had a left turn which I wasn’t expecting. I didn’t expect a dirt road either. Initially it was fine. The change in direction meant I had a tailwind and I was moving along at the same pace as on the road.

It got a lot worse with lots of corrugations that completely covered the road and a few soft patches. I thought I’d probably get much worse roads later in the trip, so it didn’t bother me.

It dragged on and on and I was tired by the time I arrived at the entrance gates to the canyon around lunchtime and parked This Moment.

The canyon looked stunning from up above and I thought it’d be great to camp down near the river – decision made. Then I had to decide which overpriced food to get for lunch from a snack bar. 

It was stinking hot. I didn’t want to be down in the canyon with no shade and crowds, so I stayed at the top for a few hours with crowds. I went for a walk to some of the viewpoints – stunning. There was also a restaurant that made a good coffee and I had a call with Cathie while letting the sun and heat die down.

The Polish guys

Eventually, I made my way down the steep path to the walking path and rode into the canyon. It’s amazingly beautiful. That explains the crowds. I met some Polish guys who were just as amazed as I was at the scenery, and finally arrived at the river. Still plenty of people here though.

I noticed some backpackers with camping gear – Simona and Johanna form Italy and Germany, and talked with them. As the crowds thinned out and the sun disappeared, I looked for a campsite and surprisingly found a level grassed patch and got organised. I also met Sam and Natalie from the US who camped nearby.

Dinner was pasta with a tin of tuna and vegies and some pre-melted cheese, courtesy of leaving the bike in the sun for hours. The five of us sat in a shelter and talked before retiring.

Pasta, tuna etc. and (pre-melted) cheese. It was a hot day

Leave a Comment

Scroll to Top