Istanbul to Kathmandu
A Year on the Hippie Trail
Setting Off
I pushed down the last of my gear to clear the soft top then zipped up the bag. The sound of the zipper closing had more finality to it than quitting my job or getting the few visas I knew I needed to get here in the U.S. rather than abroad. And, frankly, the sound terrified me because the adventure that lay ahead of us became so suddenly real. This happens to me every time before a long trip. But this one was different. It had no timetable, no date set to come home. We would take a plane from New York and land in Istanbul. Then the “plan” was to figure it out from there. As of this moment, the only thing we had to stick was the landing. And the Turkish pilot would be in charge of that.
We guessed we’d be gone a year overland to India. I couldn’t imagine we could last much longer than that with $1100 each in American Express Travelers Cheques. That currency isn’t current anymore. No one will accept them even if I had them. I’m stunned AmEx still sells them since you might as well be waving around Confederate dollars. But that’s what we stashed in money belts to our waists. Passports. Yellow health cards. Fake student IDs we’d gotten in Greece the year before.
My girlfriend, Edwina, was slight, just the slip of a girl. She was naturally white blond and pale. If you thought she wasn’t tough, though, you’d misjudged her. Oh, she was sweet and that would be your first takeaway on meeting her. But she was tough when she needed to be and had quickly agreed to join me on this…what, safari? Quest? Who knows? It was 1971; we were 23.
We were leaving when Europe could be had by the budget traveler for $10/day. But do the math. It nets out about a quarter of that or $2.50/day. This could only be done east of the Bosphorus.
Just a year earlier, I’d come back from an unguided—my mom would say “misguided”— year in Europe to work in New York City. No other plans. Clueless. When I landed, I had $7.36 in my pocket, I’m not lying. My hair was halfway down my back. I had only rags on my back and in my bag. I chose New York because my girlfriend was living with two other young women in a swank—for me, anyway—building on East 9th next to the Village. They agreed to let me stay on the floor for two weeks until I found work. I will never understand why they said yes. The apartment was absurdly crowded without me but, at least, the women could flow around one another without the opposite gender putting up fences. When I arrived, we seemed to all become sardines in a small can. It didn’t help that one of them was gorgeous.
Preface
Prelude: Gotta Go
Chapter 1: Packing Up, Setting Off
Chapter 2: The First Leg, Getting There
Section I Turkey
Chapter 3: Istanbul
Chapter 4: The Pudding Shop
Chapter 5: Istanbul to Tehran
Section II Iran
Chapter 6: Tehran
Chapter 7: Tehran to Shiraz
Chapter 8: Tehran to Mashhad
Section III Afghanistan
Chapter 9: Masshad to Herat
Chapter 10: Herat to Kandahar
Chapter 11: Kandahar to Kabul
Chapter 12: Kabul to Bamiyan
Chapter 13: Bamiyan to Band-i-Amir to Mazar-i-Sharif
Chapter 14: Back to Kabul
Chapter 15: Kabul to Peshawar to Lahore, Pakistan
Section IV India
Chapter 16: Lahore to Ferozepur, India
Chapter 17: Ferozepur to Delhi
Chapter 18: Delhi
Chapter 19: Delhi to Agra and the Red Fort
Chapter 20: The Beautiful Vale of Kashmir
Chapter 21: Trekking from Pahalgam to Kolahoi
Chapter 22: Oh, the Places We Did Not Go
Chapter 23: To the Southern Tip and Back
Chapter 24: Goa (Calangute Beach)
Chapter 25: Bombay (Mumbai)
Chapter 26: Aurangabad (Ajanta and Ellora)
Chapter 27: Delhi Redux
Chapter 28: Benares
Chapter 29: Benares to Kathmandu
Section V Nepal
Chapter 30: Kathmandu
Section VI The Return Home
Chapter 31: Going Home