I left my hometown in northern Germany on a Monday morning in April, just before sunrise. A year and more than 50,000 kilometers later, with no longer fresh looking clothes, scuffed boots, some scratches and a dusty face, I arrived in Mumbai, the capital city of the Indian state of Maharashtra. It was a Sunday evening long after sunset.
Read more →What I might have missed out on exciting jungle safaris in Dandeli, was more than offset by an adventurous motorcycle ride through the jungle. I was initially of the opinion to follow a generally used road through the forest. But the more my current position deviated from the original GPS track, the more “interesting” became the ride through the jungle.
Read more →I don’t know when I first heard of Kolkata, but as long as I can remember, I always inevitably associated the name of the city with the name “Mother Teresa”. Thus it should not surprise that my visit to the home of 15 million people was primarily dedicated to the life-work of this woman. I wanted to know, see and experience what this little woman had built with the simple strength of her faith.
Read more →The story of the Taj Mahal is also the story of great love, it is the story of a shattered family, the story of inconsolable grief and a story about power and influence. Rabindranath Tagore described the gem as “a teardrop on the cheek of Eternity”, Rudyard Kipling as “the embodiment of all things pure”, while its creator, Emperor Schah Jahan, said it made “the sun and the moon shed tears from their eyes”
Read more →India is incredible in many ways: Incredibly colorful and beautiful but at the same time so incredibly chaotic, dirty and noisy. Incredibly rich in culture and history, and yet so incredible poor, strange and different from the Western world
Read more →It was by far the toughest off-road ride I’ve ever undertaken, and I wouldn’t do it again on a fully loaded GS Adventure. The experience, however, is priceless and by no means would I want to miss these days. It was probably a challenge I was looking for when going into the Himalayas, but it was much more energy-sapping than I had expected
Read more →Poverty in Nepal has surprised me despite the many months I have been on the road. No capital in Southeast Asia is as underdeveloped and has to deal with such poor infrastructure as Kathmandu. Even Phnom Penh in Cambodia and Vientiane in Laos look significantly better than the capital of Nepal.
Read more →Bangkok was a milestone on this journey and to dive in the city with your own motorcycle was somehow special. The traffic is not very much relaxing though but you wouldn’t expect a laid back atmosphere in a metropolis of 8 million people, would you? I had to organize a whole lot of things here.
Read more →It was the third time that I crossed the border to Laos within a few weeks. The first time coming from China and leaving towards Thailand. Afterwards crossing the north of Laos while going to Vietnam and now from the south. Thus, it was also the third time that I had to acquire a visa. The prices were different at all three boarder gates, which leaves a slightly bitter aftertaste.
Read more →Where to begin with when talking about Angkor? In a world of inflated superlatives it gets difficult to find the right words to describe something which is indeed exceptional. Guidebooks compare the Temples of Angkor with the epic proportions of the Great Wall, the detail and intricacy of the Taj Mahal and the symbolism and symmetry of the pyramids. I can not tell whether the comparison is entirely justified, but I can assure you I am not easily to be impressed.
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