June 24 to July 5 2016 Beautiful Georgia Part III
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Lovers' Tower |
As we drove
through the valleys of the Greater and Lesser Caucasus mountains, we passed many fortresses
and watch towers evidence of Georgia's key position as a major corridor for the
Silk Road trade in times passed but also a reminder of invading forces. But still today it is a key land passage
between Asia and Europe. More on that a little later for now I want to relive
idyllic days travelling through wooded and craggy mountains where lives four
species of bear, deer, martens, wild pig, jackals, squirrels, countless species
of birds - and glorious wild flowers and herbs! Everywhere along those roads,
and through large towns as well, sauntered cows some with bells tinkling as
they grazed. If they bothered to look at us encased in our zappy 'jeep', it was
but a casual glance as we maneuvered past them. No question of who had right of
way! We passed donkeys towing laden carts as well as bicycle carts. Sleek horses and grizzly hairy pigs chomped
their way through lush grasses, herbs and flowers. Slightly more wary, but only
just, than the laconic cows.
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Ushguli in Svaneti |
We were traveling to Ushguli in the Upper Svaneti region,
the highest continuously inhabited settlement in Europe (2200m) famous for its
medieval watchtowers. In fact Svaneti is the highest inhabited area in the
Caucasus. The views were breath-taking - pristine mountains, deep gorges,
gushing rivers… and roads which are definitely not for the nervous driver or
passenger! Our trusty driver squeezed us past road washouts, collapses and land
slides. All very exciting. I have a small river crystal to remind me of
those valleys.
Svaneti has its own language and fierce traditions going
way back to a time when they lived in those same watchtowers along with their
cattle. Many of those watchtowers have survived thousands of years of the
earthquakes that continue to shake this huge mountain range, and still dot the
valleys and lower slopes. Distressingly there is a push to mine uranium in the
region which will basically shut down the whole unique region of the Svans.
They wait with baited breath the outcome from
'the powers that be'.
On a lighter note, we wolfed down succulent Khachapuri
the traditional Georgian cheese-filled bread and Gebzhalia an ancient dish from
this western region of Georgia. It is made from sulguni cheese a brined
Georgian cheese, in warm sour cream or milk with mint. Yummy! No calories in
any of this of course!
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Our guide Nino with the leader of the Georgian Song and Dance Ensemble who had enterained the night before. |
We left the Svaneti feeling rather sad but headed for
other wonders including Primetheus grotto where we walked for a very long time through
dripping caves of weird and wonderful shapes. That night we were entertained by some
wonderful performers in nation costume playing traditional instruments, singing
and dancing. Then we took in more ancient churches and wandered through a Saturday
morning market where we were assailed by delicious smells and tastes - cheeses,
honey and spices and even chachas remember that fiery grape vodka that cures
every thing from toothache to ingrown toenails whophff! At 10 in the morning it
gets your heart galloping and ready to take on the world which in this case was
simply a stroll in a delightful city park nodding to the local Saturday
morning crowd drinking coffee, reading paper, walking dogs and children. And then for something quite different the following day we journeyed to the
magnificent 11th Century cave town of Vardzia and scaled the towering ragged
cliff which was left after an earthquakes sheeted off the face of the mountain
in 12th Century. It stretches over half
a km along the river Mtkvari and has 19 tiers which contained ~3000 caves serving
as refectories, wine cellars, pharmacy, dwellings and once housed thousands of
troops. It was a huge defense point guarding the passage north as well as a defense against the Mongols.
It has a church dark and almost other-worldly hewn out of rock with amazing
frescoes. We climbed up to all this wonder from the valley floor and explored the whole thing. It will
remain a reminder for me of what I can do if I really want to - it was a steep
climb and descent but I made it albeit it very slowly!
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Vardzia - an amazing climbing experience |
Then we turned for Tbilisi and the end of our fantastic
journey travelling back along the river that Jason and the Argonauts sailed in
search of the Golden Fleece. Truly! We had traversed the few corridors that
Georgia offers as passages between Asian to Europe, explored ancient sites of
great religious and historic significance, clambered through shoulder high
flowers and herbs to visit mountain villages and sample delicious wholesome
foods, shared roads with cows horses and pigs as we crisscrossed this
stunningly beautiful country, sat down to eat with delightful, welcoming
Georgians - and guzzled it's delicious wine. What more could you ask for! Thanks
Sundowners Overland for a wonder-filled experience.
Sadly our planned trip to Istanbul and the Bosphorus, the
Sea of Marmara and the exotics of the souk, mosques and ancient laneways was
thwarted by an 'incident' which left over 40 innocent people dead. It was a sad
ending to our journey ..... but we will return once sanity returns to that old
city.
Thanks to
Bev Edwards, our Personal Travel Manager, who managed so much of this wonderful trip for us so that our dreams came alive. Contact her if you want to do something a little different but you have to have the dream! Email:
bev.edwards@travelmanagers.com.au