Friday, October 22, 2010

Kutaisi, Motsameta and Gelati, Georgia

29th September - 5th October 2010

Despite arriving so late in the night, we were welcomed in and shown a nice room (although with two beds) and Djalma stayed up to talk to Giorgi a bit before crashing out.

From Kutaisi, Georgia

We spent the next days chilling out, the rough feeling that started in Ushguli turned into a horrible cold so I spent lots of time in bed. We did find a bit of time to wander round the town, through the fruit and veg market and up to the main sight of Georgia's second largest city, a Cathedral under renovation. On our second to last evening there we met some characters, Anne, a brash, loud, determined Australian and a big Swiss dude with a fondness for Thailand (make what you like of that), the two did not get on at all and we had a very awkward dinner with the two of them and us. The next night we had an English couple Martin and Nicole, to diffuse the atmosphere along with a couple of bottles of home-made red wine from their cellar. It was a really nice evening and the Swiss guy was so drunk that whatever Anne rambled on about didn't annoy him enough to take much notice of her. We went to bed fairly late but with plans made for the next day to go out to the Monasteries at Gelati and Motsameta.

From Kutaisi, Georgia

We had breakfast together and just before we left, decided to pack up and follow the road to Borjomi from the Monasteries. We drove to Gelati first, it was a beautiful building, or set of buildings with working going on that some of the padres were occasionally overseeing done. The views from the site weren't quite as good as the LP had us believe but it was pretty and inside the church was lovely.

From Motsameta and Gelati Monasteries

We strolled around a bit before deciding to drive to Motsameta which was also under construction. This little set of church buildings was built on a rocky outcrop and although we couldn't see much around the surrounding rocks and trees were beautiful. We left soon after arriving – there wasn't all that much to see, an old lady pushing a broom round was more interesting than the church itself. We drove for a couple of hours before Martin dropped us off at a town not all that far from Borjomi and we said goodbye. They drove off in one direction and we strolled away in another – they were driving to Australia, doing almost the same trip as us but in a big 4x4 and properly equipped.

From Motsameta and Gelati Monasteries

We eventually flagged down a car and got dropped off in the pretty green town of Borjomi.

Ushguli, Georgia

26th - 29th September 2010

From Ushguli, Georgia

Our police driver took us to three different guest houses before we found a half decent one, through muddy streets dotted with tiny little piglets. We wandered round the tiny little town sitting at the bottom between hills and across a river. Ushguli was full of run down houses with broken windows if they weren't missing completely, houses with missing roofs or topped with charmingly irregular pieces of natural slate and all scattered randomly about muddy rivers for paths. The rain herded us back into the house, we ate, watched a film and slept.

From Ushguli, Georgia

The next day was glorious, blue skies white puffy clouds and crisp clean mountain air. We had our breakfast early, asked the owner of the guest house to make us a packed lunch – she had no idea what that was so we got a lump of cheese, a cucumber, a couple of tomatoes and a wedge of bread to do with what we liked, and off we set. The glacier was a four hour round trip but we made it last for a good eight hours, it was a gorgeous day and the trail was all flat – hooray! We basically walked followed a single flat valley, passing a cowgirl with her herd, a man with a couple of horses collecting hay, hillsides covered with trees in flaming shades of red and orange as well as green and yellow. We crossed the river a couple of times, it flowed directly from the glacier and was the best marker for the trail. About half an hour away from the glacier we were called across the river, we thought for tea, but it was some Russian border guards who took our details before waving us on our way.

From Ushguli, Georgia

We stopped and had made some sandwiches on the way and once we got there. It was incredible seeing one up close but it was all grey and dirty, not the pristine white I hoped for (but didn't expect). The stream was torrential and it gathered in pools around red rocks which turned the water and covered the sand in a bright orange rust – I blended right in. Djalma had the wonderful idea of climbing up round the side over loose rocks and then further up the valley sides with only dirt, loose stones and a prayer to get us up. All this in an effort to see some fresh snow, before long but not as soon as I should have done, I stopped and turned to go back, slipping and falling and swearing a whole lot on the way back down. We made it back to the bottom after a lot of worrying – it really wasn't the best place to go climbing (I was wondering if we had not learned our lesson in Al Hoceima, Morocco well enough to be learning it again) and I stopped swearing at Djalma's rubbish ideas long enough for him to give me a hug and then we set of in the direction of home. We scrambled back down over the lose rocks, it all took a lot longer going down than going up ever seemed to and walked the rest of the way back on very wobbly legs.

From Ushguli, Georgia

The next day we rested although it was mainly from laziness rather than a real need for recuperation, it was another beautiful day and after doing our washing and hanging it out to dry we got a big 2l bottle of beer and drank it with dinner – the most delicious lamb shashlik ever – before sleeping like babies.

Feeling slightly worse for wear the following morning we were up early to walk/hitch to the next village before going onto Kutaisi. It was raining like a mother which lifted long enough for us to think we had a good chance of walking without getting too wet. We ended up getting an expensive lift from a guy in town and halfway to our drop off point we caught up with a nine car caravan, 20 odd Israelis on holiday, and managed to hitch a lift with them instead. We spent the next ten hours driving to Kutaisi, further on than we expected to get for the next two days. They were a really friendly bunch of people and nearly everyone spoke amazing English. At some point in the afternoon we all pulled up and they started unloading tables, chairs, stoves and cooking equipment and made macaroni with tomatoes, sweetcorn and bacon along with a salad, we even had pudding – chunks of bread dipped in chocolate spread. It was one of the nicest rides and definitely the longest.

From Kutaisi, Georgia

We said goodbye after arriving in Kutaisi at around 10.30pm and left to find a room in Giorgi's Guesthouse.

Mestia, Georgia

20th - 26th September 2010

After a long walk from one side of Zugdidi to the other and out of town we got a lift which took us back into town and then back out again, adding a couple of hours to our travelling time, the driver was really friendly wanting to know if we wanted to eat anything and buying us bottles of coke when we stopped. He dropped us off at the road going to Mestia where we sat and waited with the police for a good hour trying to flag down all the cars passing that way. We eventually lucked out with a friendly Georgian guy who took us all the way to Mestia. It took almost five hours round the un-tarmacked roads in his old car, but he and Djalma managed a good conversation. We stopped off along the way and he got us all a bottle of beer, a delicious light beer called Karva, he downed his in under ten minutes but didn't seem affected by it thank god although he did tell us at the end of the ride that the brakes weren't working properly and he was really worried, all's well that ends well and I was happy that he didn't tell us until we had arrived in one piece. He drove us to his friends house and from there they sorted us a room in a guest house with a local, Kate and her husbands family. We ate together – plenty of cheese, bread and more beer.

From Mestia, Georgia

We set out the next morning for the shortest mountain trail, it should have taken four hours but after losing the trails twice, going far out of the way and then doubling back and generally being quite slow, it took us almost nine hours. The trail up was really steep and views weren't that special, I moaned almost constantly on the way up (man, I feel sorry for Djalma) but when we did eventually make it to the top, the views were stunning. Our picnic of grapes, pears and cheesy crisps kept us going, just. We sat down at the top of the hill/mountain and looked out at snow covered peaks and forest covered slopes, it was stunning and the photos we took compensated for the tiring slog to get there.

From Mestia, Georgia

The walk back down was considerably easier and not nearly as steep although the last section as down a scree slope which shifted dangerously underfoot, I fell over a couple of times but kept most of my tears at bay like a big girl. Our legs were so wobbly by the end, well actually before the end, that it was a miracle our knees didn't buckle underneath us. We watched the moon climb out from behind the mountains while the sun set but not for long, it was dark by the time we reached town but we stopped to pick up some wine to have with dinner before wobbling to bed. The wine was shocking but dinner was al-right and we snuggled up and watched a film trying to ignore our bodies.

From Mestia, Georgia

The next day was absolutely painful but we did manage a walk round the village to loosen up our muscles, the town was being rebuilt but most of the work was round the square and behind the houses facing the main street the buildings were dilapidated, sometimes inhabited sometimes not and the streets were full of pigs, cows and dogs as often as people. We walked through town in the streets behind the main through-fare dodging the pigs and taking pictures of the many watch towers the area is famous for. We had a delicious dinner with soup and potato filled bread with some more wine before a film. We ambitiously planned another trek for the following day with horses but the weather was awful and we still hurt from our exertions so the following day we hung around the house.

From Mestia, Georgia

The next day began with ominous clouds and some rain but cleared up soon enough for us to take out the horses, Kate made us a packed lunch and we set out on the 30km round trip to the top of the hill on the opposite side of town.
What a painful, wearying day. Our horses shied away from the heavy lorry traffic and mine burst into a short gallop going past a concrete mixer much to my horror, I managed to rein him in but spent the next ten minutes telling myself everything was okay and that there was no need to get off the horse and walk despite my thoroughly bruised bottom.

From Mestia, Georgia

We made it up the hill without too much drama although my horse was quite slow and we lagged behind Djalma a lot. At the top of the ridge we followed the track to the TV tower, a spot which looked out over Mestia and other villages in the region, it was beautiful if very similar to what we had seen on the first hike. We bumped into some Czech hikers who were trying to find the route back to the town marked on the map, we couldn't find it either and we decided to follow the path we had come up even though it was longer. By this point I was so weary and more than a little afraid of my horse which basically did what it wanted to and had stepped on each of my feet, heavy bugger. On the way back down, which was heavier going on the knees and legs than on the way up, Djalma's horse decided to lag behind while mine had a prolonged burst of energy and had to be stopped from trotting the whole way back. Djalma and I became separated when his horse just stopped and refused to move, he had to get off and pull his mount down the road by force, meanwhile we were shouting to see if each other was okay, I got quite panicked after I reined in to wait for him to catch up and my wilful horse decided to play get the rider off, I couldn't keep the damn thing still to get down, instead I clung on for dear life while it jumped about trying to shake me off, eventually Djalma came round the bend and I was so relieved I started crying, he held on to the reins while I got off, sorted myself out and cried some more. I didn't get back on after that despite the late hour and increasing darkness, and Djalma led both the horses and me all the way back into town. We were an hour late for dinner but someone was waiting for us in the square and we got some more wine, to help us relax, and had dinner back at the house. My knees were utterly done in, the wonky stirrups and being tense the whole time hadn't helped and my whole body ached, I promised myself that I wouldn't go near a horse again unless it was as meek as meek could be, and even then probably... absolutely not. Djalma thoroughly enjoyed the day being more confident with horses than me and kept both me and the horses calm on the way back down.

From Mestia, Georgia

The next day I was in unbelievable amounts of pain, the bruise on my bum was so big I didn't even need to use a mirror to see it, what that says about the size of my bum or my bruise I don't know, and the bruises on the inside of my leg from a little piece of wood on the stirrup strap looked like I'd been poked about seventeen times, all the discolouration did get me lots of sympathy and kisses from my relatively fine husband. We took it easy and were invited by Kate for coffee and home-made cake, a lovely substitute for lunch, we watched films trying to find the most comfortable position lying on the bed so we didn't need to move our aching bodies. Later on in the afternoon we went for a walk to try and loosen up and made our way down to the river separating the town where we sat and talked about our dream house, well I told Djalma how I thought it should be, and as it was the best possible vision he had to agree with me.

From Mestia, Georgia

The next day was still painful but we packed up, paid up and said goodbye to Kate before heading off down the road hoping for the best (a free ride) and expecting the worst (having to walk to the next town). It was beautiful passing by the villages dotting the mountain sides but fortunately enough for us we got a lift before the flat road started winding up and round the hills. I didn't realise I was trying to flag down a police car until they pulled up and then we were in and on our way to Ushguli.