Blogs from Bam, South, Iran, Middle East

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Middle East » Iran » South » Bam October 10th 2008

On the way to Bam we stopped off at the market town of Kermar, the gardens of Eram, which reminded me in a really weird way of Annec Castle, only with middle eastern influences, like trees being arranged to provide shade and different architecture. The fountains running aown the slope, flanked by two rows of steps was almost identical. After the gardens we moved on to an old mud city called Rajen, which we had fun climbing about on. I was massively relieved to find an internet terminal at the hotel in Bam, because we weren't allowed to leave it and I really didn't want to go into Pakistan without assuring my family that the only reason I wouldn't be in touch was that there probably wouldn't be anywhere to get in touch in Pakistan. ... read more

Middle East » Iran » South » Bam August 31st 2007

Eccomi a Bam, la citta' devastata da un tremendo terremoto alla fine del 2003 ed ormai fuori dai maggiori itinerari turistici, rimasta comunque tappa obbligata per chi viaggia verso il Pakistan. Qui tutto e' ancora un immenso cantiere a cielo aperto ma cio' che non si e' mai interrotta e' la produzione dei pregiatissimi datteri locali che pendono in grossi grappoli di svariati chili dalle onnipresenti palme che contribuiscono a creare una grossa macchia di verde in mezzo al deserto. Simbolo della citta', e monumento tra i piu' conosciuti dell'Iran, e' L'Arg, la vecchia citta' fortificata circondata da mura, che e' stata anch'essa gravemente danneggiata: camminando al suo interno sembra di ritrovarsi nel giorno seguente il terremoto, infatti la devastazione e' quasi totale e i cumuli di macerie ricoprono ogni angolo; cio' che... read more
L'Arg prima e dopo
Rovine dell'Arg
Bam citta'

Middle East » Iran » South » Bam September 29th 2006

Sometimes during an earthquake it's not only the earth shaking, but also people's lives... hundreds and thousands of them... Many of them for the last time... :( Three years after the earthquake in Bam the city still looks like a front line. Most of the rubble has been moved to the desert, rest just pushed to the side, left to be forgotten... and there is a new city being built in the middle of it all, "even more beautiful" as the locals say. The palms are everywhere and amongst them there is a new "forest of steel skeletons" growing... they slowly transform into new houses, and new history is being written! Three years after the big earthquake in Bam, the city is full of life. Everybody is involved in the process of its reconstruction. One can ... read more

Middle East » Iran » South » Bam August 2nd 2006

Whilst we were in Shiraz we got a message from the Swiss cyclists we had met in Yazd that there might be problems with getting a Pakistani visa in Zahedan. Our hearts fell and we phoned the Pakistan Consulate in Zahedan as soon as we could. They said that the policy had changed since the time we had previously phoned and that there was no way we could get a visa there, we must go to Tehran. We jumped on a bus that night and made it to the British Embassy for a letter of recommendation and then lodged our Pakistani application the next morning. Robin had to write a letter saying why we had not got our visa in London and we had a brief meeting with the Pakistani Consul. He underlined things like 10,000 ... read more
10,000 miles from home!
Arg-e-Bam
The impressive natural waterfall at Estebhan

Middle East » Iran » South » Bam November 10th 2000

"Good morning!", Mr. Hoseyn exclaims enthusiastically as we climb into the car yet another early morning. I don't really like early rise but reply "Sobh beh'khayr" just as energetically. We leave Kerman and drive southeast towards our main goal for the day the city of Bam and its grand citadel, some 200 kms away. As you may recall much of the city was razed by a very powerful earthquake (the official figures state a magnitude of 6.6) in late December 2003 and a tremendous amount of people were left killed or homeless. According to a report on FarsiNet about 43.000 were killed, 20.000 injured and a further 60.000 homeless. I still remember seeing the newsreel on TV sitting at a hotelroom in Taipei. This particular November day though, the sun is high in the sky, the ... read more
On the road to Bam
Driving along the plateau
Bam citadel




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