When Carl asked me if I wanted to go bikepacking in Kyrgyzstan, I said no. Kyrgyzstan is so far from British Columbia that when you’re shopping for flights, they take just as long going east as west around the world. But about a month later, I realized it was the perfect excuse to get the hardtail 29”er I’d been thinking about, so I shot him a message saying, “Alright, let’s do it — Kyrgyzstan.” Before we knew it, we had two DV9s on the way from Ibis and realized we needed to get our shit together, buy flights, and figure out exactly what this “bikepacking” thing really entailed. Carl dutifully prepared for the trip by reading race reports from the 2018 Silk Road Mountain Race while I downloaded a GPX track from Bikepacking.com and spent the rest of the summer on kayak trips around BC. By the time our flights to Bishkek rolled around, neither of us had managed any real shakedown trips or even tested our bikepacking setups… but we’d both ridden our DV9s around our local trails in Squamish and had a blast, so we were ready.
One of my bags didn’t arrive, so we spent a day in Bishkek on the phone with a couple different airlines and with the non-English-speaking lost baggage office at the Bishkek airport. The next day, I tracked the bag down — it had been in Moscow — and we picked it up at the airport and hit the road, driving six hours to our start near Lake Issyk-Kul. Our driver — a friend of my partner’s college professor from a trip he did to Kyrgyzstan in 2005 — left us in a pullout on the side of a dirt road in the dark, leaving us hoping that we had everything we needed. And that it would all fit on our bikes the next morning.
![Riding in the mountains](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04238.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=c2ff73ce8054bcd9271893a171842d6a 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04238.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=d19f704223a3787a7576282f0237e275 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04238.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=7955eac098370885994126cf51c6ca15 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04238.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=ca10b02e20e65f3b28cb1ba76d7b3ccb 600w)
![A mountain in Kyrgyzstan](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04489.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=b30384beb8a69288d9885eb893d18fbe 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04489.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=376137910f5334914ec1bade5a1e5a4c 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04489.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=bd50a4a5aa26eb42072addede11aec15 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04489.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=cbb01922959380b1769a245468c55608 600w)
![A lake in Kyrgyzstan](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04434.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=6678b1fd53f9f432c2394e71df613ffb 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04434.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=59444c8e74469e898987ac26f4143198 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04434.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=51c419166658d49294650fc9993d8e29 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04434.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=d7abe8756588a508ba332e310de8935b 600w)
![Trees](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04127.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=5a856b81139540fc31a6468df7efeee3 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04127.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=dbad960ef41212a6814c1d8e9032b858 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04127.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=9aa3c89e24a14202d20356869f5db765 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04127.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=0b79b6e5a42ff1855ab0d6700b7a85da 600w)
Thankfully, in the morning, we managed to rig up all our gear on our bikes and began our climb through a stunning valley surrounded by glacial peaks. It reminded me of parts of Switzerland, but with sandstone walls towering over the glacial streams and yurts instead of farmhouses. A cruisy day of getting used to our loaded bikes, dodging cows, and crossing the occasional stream led us to a camp on the side of a beautiful alpine lake at around 10,000’. We live at sea level and Bishkek is only about 2600’, so 10,000’ made for a rough night, especially for Carl, who – in his enthusiasm about the Silk Road Mountain Race – only brought a half-length sleeping pad and a 40F sleeping bag.
Continuing up towards Dzhuku pass the next day, riding turned to walking, which in turn deteriorated to clumsy variations on “push the bike one step up loose rocks, grab both brakes, use the bike to pull yourself up the loose rocks.” Hike-a-bike with loaded rigs at 13,000’ is tough going. At the top of the pass, the “road” disappeared entirely and we had a long, off-trail crossing on a high plateau, complete with river crossings (sorry bottom bracket!). Not wanting to camp high again, we pushed through to the next pass, putting in a 12 hour day, descending into an incredible, wide-open, grassy glacial valley. Well — it was a 10 hour day until we were stopped by some friendly Kyrgyz folks with a broken down truck picnicing on the side of the road. Two bottles of vodka later, we put in another couple hours of riding, camping at dark. Those two hours might’ve been our fastest mileage of the whole trip.
![DSC05015](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05015.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=fe443ba2c0c21fd8cd0d6b5218487032 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05015.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=e216b2985556c94100b8e88ada8a3232 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05015.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=18710e50df4d447d81b9a3600cee947d 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05015.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=0c9c22afa50e1654e17efae1032750ee 600w)
![DSC04975](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04975.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=64d9e0f801ac1df3e0b6fe8ec8cfe4b7 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04975.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=c4f4679a210b31ea4aeee6e092f90558 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04975.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=076b37eb813ada1c756f601de8e076ca 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04975.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=c62e6be657f4414ea6db8acbafe1ad35 600w)
![DSC04824](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04824.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=7f2a1a28dc62dbf71a221b2d87154994 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04824.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=0a3666e48c4dcb7a5ea3ec066730df16 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04824.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=a63ab306979c0c5005b3c1e019140ee5 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04824.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=019fac3dc21951ccbbea0c6f09cba689 600w)
![DSC04894](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04894.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=9bfd60c1308fb4daf48b132783924caf 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04894.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=ade4f948db789439325beb361ecc3fbd 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04894.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=2085895656b4e13dbb0fe1ab04f7ab25 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC04894.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=c2e39f78367bdb6ae9be1d5933731bb1 600w)
River crossings, river canyons, and rolling green mountainscapes led us down to the desert. We climbed over a dusty gravel pass and descended into a huge valley studded with small agricultural towns, irrigated with the water of two glacial rivers flowing from the towering mountains on the south side of the valley. Hot, tired, and dehydrated, we found ourselves riding in circles around the town of At-Bashi looking for a hotel or guest house. About to give up – Google translate wasn’t getting us anywhere – a couple guys who spoke English stopped us on the street and found us a house to stay at that turned out to belong to a couple who were both doctors at the local hospital. It wasn’t clear if they regularly operated a guest house or not, but it was a surreal experience with great food, eclectic home-décor, and a family photo album of Soviet-era Christmases and med school graduations.
![DSC05161](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05161.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=88041b94635bdb24d5cd9db1a3cdcc53 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05161.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=bde4ea1b8f7c8e51f173db924e2bd374 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05161.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=8e9017ede410fe3f05309cb2b6e87466 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05161.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=b7b35ef5056863570cd34dd359116eae 600w)
![A sign saying Come in for ice cream dear tourist](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05258.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=9a65cb6ae1e311a2ee722bbd8b14a9db 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05258.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=f7957d4448646b2277cc9cb9a518070c 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05258.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=cd409b3391f00df9d4d778980e24522e 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05258.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=82afece2df6ced192d00c13ef243f180 600w)
![DSC05178](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05178.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=91465bace90f1a592982151fbefc59b8 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05178.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=e5ce23c3122c6787819960549ce5702d 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05178.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=670b92283c89ef324a5e90209c91cefd 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05178.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=3bfd5020aa642daadcaba39ac2dfab8d 600w)
![DSC05430](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05430.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=a2315e5300e004d8604ed8b534e3e4c5 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05430.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=0d1e02de4b8ce710660586d13b4cc901 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05430.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=f092503c80dea58ac4ec0ce19601ac1a 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05430.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=bf769c2b4303b12c8b09d933c30312ee 600w)
Another few climbs and descents brought us through the last of the real desert and back into more familiar landscapes. The climb to Song Kol lake travels through a forested limestone canyon reminiscent of northern Utah, culminating in a series of switchbacks that are to gravel biking what Italy’s Stelvio Pass is to road biking. From Song Kol, another 5000’ descent (one of many of that scale) brought us back to a main road where we feasted on chocolate wafers and pastries filled with potato and garlic. Every store in Kyrgyzstan has a bulk cookie section. Even the tiniest bodega-style shop in the tiniest town. Bulk cookies.
![Riding next to the river](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05694.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=a89deb2951bf41b636248f60e322a4f2 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05694.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=9a486e8f762c367249cf40adf696d88c 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05694.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=a565df446e28c3214ab413c67f4b35df 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05694.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=f53462f6eb412ca3f073335a27b8ae23 600w)
![A river](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05632.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=36df6a98e497bdb0233768d796f0f887 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05632.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=7f71b9f134cbb929657220fe0af201db 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05632.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=a79a104a1db12225f86051ee0fc406f9 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05632.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=a367bcec0490c6b876234b6cc8348bfc 600w)
![Kid on a bike](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05827.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=e31f9ecbc547064ba06cbcb510eddc23 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05827.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=e2fd677fdb2d56de52bff0f025afa069 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05827.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=084b2a949b67d6b5283b46203da0b8e5 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05827.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=99de3ef6deb21299ef3de115d408965c 600w)
![Riding the DV9](https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05894.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1600&s=7dead5952d16e4a31c6397ac97082ea5 1600w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05894.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=1200&s=f127bbf2c099010449a655e0db4c0885 1200w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05894.jpg?fit=clip&q=90&w=800&s=7a369f4c50e0454be842c1bd75a6ce61 800w, https://ibiscycles.imgix.net/images/News/Kyrgyzstan-Article/DSC05894.jpg?fit=clip&q=60&w=600&s=bfc85f9f94b83648638f8e54649ddf5d 600w)
We hung a right up the Kokomeren River, which we would follow for the next 100km or more to its source near Karakol Pass. We dodged storms by waiting in yurts and wall tents with friendly Kyrgyz folks feeding us tea and kumis – fermented mare’s milk. Or at least, Carl was still drinking the kumis – I’d given up on it about half way through the trip, my stomach bug finally overcoming my politeness. Here, in the upper Kokomeren valley, the first racers from the Silk Road Mountain Race passed us at 9pm after traveling an incredible 90 miles with over 13,000’ of elevation gain in the first 12 hours of the race.
On our last full day, we tackled the last two mountain passes, riding past and cheering on all the SRMR racers heading the other way, including a quick roadside Squamish reunion (and commiseration) with some friends doing the race. Every report I’ve seen from bikepacking in this area has shown a snowstorm on Kegety Pass. Our trip was no different. Blowing snow and a hike-a-bike so steep and loose that I had to shoulder my bike for significant sections… all as we approached 13,000’ again. The nearly 10,000’ descent through beautiful snow-covered mountains, through a band of forest, and back out into the sunny Bishkek valley made it all worth it, and after one last night camping in the mountains, we cruised dirt canal roads right back into the city.
Kyrgyzstan is a stunning country full of varied terrain ranging from glaciated peaks to dense Asian Spruce forests to wide open deserts, with incredibly friendly people and a brand of central Asian Islamic culture we’re not often exposed to in the West. We saw a wide variety of bikes among the SRMR racers, all the way from a tandem road bike to a full suspension mountain bike, but we felt the DV9s were a perfect tool for the route we did. Light enough to not be cumbersome or feel too slow on the road sections, but beefy enough – and with big enough tires – to ride all the descents, and more than that, to actually enjoy them!