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TRAVELLER HUBS FOR THE LONG HAUL ACROSS ASIA
by
Mark Elliott
Photos by Patrick Spinks
Muesli, Vegemite and banana pancakes. Less than fifteen years ago I remember my excitement at eating these "delicacies" on Bangkok's Kao San Road, served up with a liberal helping of travel tips from fellow diners. Today at Kuta, Kao San and right across South East Asia these 'favourites' are hard to escape. Meanwhile making conversation above the din of video screenings has become increasingly difficult. Asking other travellers in Thailand for some practical advice now seems about as natural as asking a stranger in a pub if they'd like to buy you a beer.
Information? It's in the book. The Bible. The Lonely Planet. Fortunately, not all of Asia has become so overwhelmed. On the less trodden road from Azerbaijan to Kyrgyzstan to Xanadu to any village that the guide books neglect, sharing insights remains a passion. Best of all there are a few little towns or specific hotels whose quaintness, isolation,
or lack of practical alternatives has turned it into something of abackpacker cross-roads. In any one of the places listed below, you are
likely to find enough travellers to give you the latest tips on war zones, border hassles and great things to see, without feeling you've walked into your local boozer. And secretly, I' ll admit that every now and again, after some full-on cultural immersion, the traveller's oasis feel can be a necessary tonic. OK just one banana pancake then.
AZERBAIJAN
Baku:
You'll rarely see a tourist but hundreds of western expats drink in the bars and cafes around the very cosmopolitan Fountains Square just beyond the attractive city's ancient core. At present THE meeting place is after 10pm at Escobar. But for sheer cool and great pizza try the Jazz cafe, or for medieval atmosphere, dine at the antique Caravansarai.
NB None of these is cheap, but after the dismal $3 hotels elsewhere
in the country, you deserve a break.
CHINA
The people's republic has more than its fair share of traveller meeting
places. The constant renovation of once cheap hotels has left several
bigger cities with only one or two realistic budget choices. Meanwhile
the small size and idyllic settings of Dali, Yangshuo and to a lesser
degree Jinghong keep these arch traveller hubs as surprising islands
of backpackerism in an increasingly commercial tourist industry. Anyone
staying in Guilin when they could be in or near Yangshuo has more money
than sense.
Chengdu: The
Traffic Hotel is THE place for scheming routes to Tibet and the only
realistic budget dorm choice now that the Black Coffee has stopped hosting.
Don't be palmed off with New Dali (Xiaguan).
Kunming: The
Camelia Hotel is the classic meeting place and conveniently plays host
to the Burmese and Lao consulates, but for travel tips try the little
cafe called Wei's Place not far from the Kunhu hotel (which also has
dorms).
Jinghong: Xishuangbanna's
transport hub. Even if you stay at the much expanded Banna Hotel, the
Good Companions Guest House/Restaurant is a good place to meet other
backpackers with recent information on the state of the roads and borders
in Laos.
Urumqi: In summer
the Hongshan Hotel stuffs backpackers like sardines onto the floorspace
of vacant meeting rooms. Hardly luxurious, but you can't help talking
to the bodies around you who might be setting off next day for Kazakhstan.
Xiahe: A lot
of interesting folk vie for the beds near the gurgling stream in the
Labrang Guest Houserquote s formerly monastic dormitories. You may
see the same faces in Langmus, Zoige and Songpan.
Xian: Xian is
packed with tourists. "Mum's Home Cooking" (along with the spookily
similar "Dad's Home Cooking" next door), are street restaurants filling
the open space opposite the former Renmin Hostel. Travellers discussions
here revolve around the hilariously poor package trips to see the Terracotta
Warriors and the days spent waiting for a hard sleeper train ticket
out of town.
Yangshuo:The
little town has nothing going for it in terms of architecture but the
food, the prices and the magnificent Karst pinnacle scenery are unbeatable.
INDIA
India has a traveller culture all of its own, and dozens of hangout,
chill out and space out locales. Try Hampi, Pushkar, Manali, Rishikesh
or Jaisalmer for starters rather than fighting off the touts of Agra
or Jaipur.
INDONESIA
While the world watched Jakarta and several Sumatran cities self destruct
in February 1998, the peaceful paradise island of Bali remained as calm
and quiet as ever, just four times cheaper as the value of the rupiyah
went through the floor. Indonesia is an amazing bargain at the moment,
and the relative lack of tourists means that there's a new-found sense
of camaraderie amongst those who've not been scared off. Avoid Kuta
and the tourist beaches unless you want to surf near the Hard Rock Hotel,
and head for peaceful Lovina beach. Ubud is delightful, but even in
the heat of the troubles, attracted too many tourists to make it a real
meeting place. The other unparalleled traveller meeting point is the
restaurant of the Crater View Inn at Mt Bromo, Java which, as its name
suggests sits at the gigantic volcano's outer lip. Since breakfast is
included in the room fee, everyone that watched the sunrise gets the
opportunity to swap tales over a jug of breakfast coffee.
IRAN
Don't believe the hype. Iran is absolutely fabulous - as long as you
are a) able to get a visa, b) not an alcoholic c) don't like showing
off your body (which for women claustrophobically includes wrists, ankles
and hair). No dancing, but chess has been legalised. The very lack of
entertainment means the handful of travellers tend to talk and make
the most of the country's amazing variety of attractions. And as of
November 1998 it seems that visas are going to be much easier for everyone.
Bam: The Tourist
House is an unmarked building 2 mins walk from the fire station. Everyone
seems to find eventually. It's Iran's only relaxed, youth hostel style
guest house where women can walk around without the normal "bagging
up" . Traveller tip books here overflow with information so if you've
time to take notes, you'd barely need a guide book for the rest of the
region. Bam itself is a brilliant oasis town which has one of Asia's
most awesome mud citadels.
Isfahan: Iran's
most glorious city has plenty of accommodation choices, but friendly,
relaxed management and rational pricing means that knowing backpackers
converge on the Amir Kabir Hotel. English speaking guides and taxi drivers
have caught on and tout gently outside.
Tehran: Don't
waste your valuable visa days on the traffic jams and pollution of Tehran.
You can bypass it altogether thanks to direct buses between Tabriz and
Isfahan. If you insist on a visit, the most popular budget accommodation
is inexplicably the Khazar Sea but the Shiraz (next door) and many other
options in the Khomeini Sq uare area are arguably better value.
NEPAL
On any of the main treks you'll probably find more travellers than you'd
hoped to. However, Kathmandu is an unbeatable melange of live music
pubs, ancient temples, patisseries, Newari architecture, carpet shops,
tongba dives and chanting retreats. As is immediately apparent in the
Thamel district of the city, the economy revolves around tourism yet
does so with such a winning smile that it is all too easy to stay a
week or two (or four months in my case).
PAKISTAN
Contra-intuitively, Pakistan is much more dangerous than Iran and travellers
of either sex are prone to sexual harassment. The refreshing exception
is the stunning northern mountain area which reaches its spectacular
climax around the ancient Karakoram kingdom of Hunza. The main travellers
centre is the village of Karimabad with dozens of little guest houses
and a superb mountain backdrop. Or walk 1/2 hr to quieter Altit where
the Altit Lodge has great local meals, an extensive hikers's tip book
and the owner can take you up to the "Eagle's Nest".
TURKEY
Istanbul is awash with tourists - to meet the student-backpacker crowd,
a useful first stop is the top floor bar of the Orient hostel in the
Sultanahmet historic/budget accommodation area. Downstairs for the free
belly dance show. Cappadocia is also firmly on the tourist map (though
a stay in one of Goreme' s cave rooms or "fairy chimneys" is still delightful).
If you head out to Yaprakhisar or Ihlara, you're likely to find a smaller
but more discerning band of travellers.
UZBEKISTAN
Police states don't lend themselves to "hanging out" . But Uzbekistan'
s great sights are isolated enough that you're likely to see the same
faces watching sunset at the Regisatan (Samarkand), sipping tea at the
Lyab I Khauz pool (Bukhara) and at breakfast in Khiva's excellent value
hotel/homestay Orkanchi.
VIETNAM
Throughout Vietnam most travellers are following the same basic route
and you're likely to meet time and time again in the "traveller cafes"
such as New Darling in Hanoi and Sinh in Saigon. The Sinh Cafe's open
ticket bus service to Hue via Dalat, Nha Trang and Hoi An is almost
de rigeur. Sapa: Hikes, cool mountain air, colourful hill tribes, log
fires in cheap hotel rooms and the Saturday night "love fest" have turned
Sapa from forgotten hill station to cosy backpacker centre in the last
couple of years.
Mark Elliott
is the co-author of Asia Overland, a route and planning guide covering
35 countries (including all the ex-Soviet states) with practical tips
on border crossings, visas, cheap accommodation etc as well as providing
instructive travel anecdotes, language notes and a dozen alphabets.
It is intensely graphical with a remarkable 452 maps and schematic diagrams.
It is also the only up to date guide to deal with the Caucasus countries
of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia. For Great Deals on Airfares, Click Here
For information on Thailand and Khao San Road, Click Here
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