Wednesday 27 August: Karimabad – Gilgit
It’s only a 3-4 hour drive to Gilgit so we spent the morning in Karimabad. It was a lovely sunny morning, and the scenery doesn’t get any less beautiful.
At the main school the children were all lined-up in the square by the fort for assembly and to repeat the pledge to Pakistan, There were one or two late-comers.
Going back down the main street we called in at the Threadnet Hunza gem school which is sponsored by the Aga Kahn foundation and the EU. The school has 10 young men and 10 young women who learn how to cut and polish precious and semi-precious stones such as rubies, garnets and quartz. Finished items are sold in the school’s shop and other shops in Karimabad, and the students learn a trade which they can practice locally or further afield.
Further down the hill we met an old man sitting in front of a shop. In the shop window were many photographs of him as a young man when he had been in the British army and when he had been an army boxing champion. We stayed talking to him for a while; he was a remarkable old man, and must have been about 80 years old.
At the coffee and walnut cake café we again met the Australian/South African from the bus the day before. He had got to Karimabad about an hour after us – the bus had dropped him at the bottom of the hill on the KKH and he had hitched a ride up, I mean, it’s not as though he was a young hippy – he was in his 50’s. Mad.
It was a beautiful day for the drive back down to Gilgit. Again we stopped at the Rakaposhi Viewpoint café for mutton biriyani – excellent. We met a group of Italian cyclists who, however unlikely it sounds, were cycling the length of the KKH from Islamabad to the Khunjerab pass. In stages of course (!), but completely bonkers!
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