Fortunately the next few days were wonderful, the following morning I rode to Song Kul, a smaller lake 3000m up in the mountains. Wonderful place, absolutely no development, only herders who bring their flocks up for the summer pastures. The road up to the lake is 60km long and after passing the last village about 25km in it turns into a narrow dirt track that climbs up to 3500m before descending to the lake.

At the top of the pass it was snowing slightly, but as I descended to the lake it stopped and I found myself in presented with magnificent views of the lake ringed by snow capped mountains. The tourist yurts had been taken down for winter and I had the entire place to myself as far as the eye could see. I rode across the grass towards the lake and set up camp and cooked dinner. Absolute silence, didn't meet another soul and when night fell the stars were incredibly brilliant and close. Was woken up a few times during the night by herds of horses galloping across the pastures.
Sunset at Song Kul:

All packed up and ready to start the day:

In the morning I took a different track down from the lake, this one was even rugged - narrow switchbacks with loose rocks, and barely wide enough for one car. Once again I didn't meet a soul until I made it down to the valley, and then only herders bring their flocks down for the winter. In the valley the road surface turned flat and smooth and I was able to ride through it standing on the pegs at 40mph.A feeling of absolute freedom to be out there alone riding across a landscape like that, the pictures just can't do it justice.
The road down from Song Kul:



A Kyrgyz traffic jam:

Later in the day I rode south to Tash Rabat, an ancient caravan stop on the Silk Rode close to the Chinese border:

This was another really peaceful spot, I rode up into the mountain behind the site and set up camp:

The next morning I awoke to find my tent surrounded by a herd of yaks with their shaggy winter coats on full display:

These guys also wanted to say hello:

Yak dung for winter fuel:

A cyclist had recommended a dirt and gravel route across central Kyrgyzstan linking Tash Rabat and the city of Osh that would save me from having to return north towards Bishkek and linking up with the main road. The first part of the road from Tash Rabat to the town of Baetov was very rugged and isolated:

Just where you don't want to have a flat, so of course at the top of a mountain I had my first flat tire of the trip. The tires have tubes, like a bicycle, so I had to take the rear wheel off and change the tube. As I'm doing this a flock and a herder pass me and start down the mountain, a few minutes later a second herder shows up. Completely drunk, almost falling off his horse. He starts to talk to me in Kyrgyz and grows louder and louder and more insistent. I have no idea what he wants, but I'm starting to get quite annoyed at this point - then he starts trying to charge me on his horse and threatening me with his whip! I keep backing away and start yelling and the first herder comes galloping up and after a bit of a struggle leads the drunk one away.
Set down to work on the tire and ten minutes later I see the drunk herder galloping up the pass! He escaped from the other guy who didn't notice or care I guess, this time he was even more belligerent and started to aggressively come after me - on the horse the entire time, he tried to dismount but was too drunk. I wish he had been able to because I would have knocked him out, but with him on the horse there was nothing I could do, I didn't want to get close because I was afraid he'd use his whip so I just kept backing away. Then he knocks over the motorcycle and I start to get really angry and also worried, because he's shown no sign he is going to back off and is becoming even more aggressive, continuing to try and charge me and hit me with the whip.
I'm starting to think I'm going to have to really hurt him to get him to stop because he is showing no signs of letting up and it is impossible for me to ride away or outrun him, my only option was to pick up one of the large stones on the road and hit him hard in the chest or head, but that could obviously have seriously hurt or even killed him which could have gotten very messy. Just then a third herder shows up and after a long struggle is able to lead the drunk away.
After that stupidity I fix the tire and ride down the mountain, as I pass the drunk he starts after me on his horse! I can only go so fast because of the switchbacks in the road and he almost catches up to me before one of the other herders catches him. A real nightmare, alcoholism in rural areas has probably been the worst part of this trip everywhere. In some places I don't even like to stop on the side of the road or in villages because most of the men I meet are drunk and can get belligerent very quickly.
Later in the day I have a second flat rear tire! These take forever to fix, because it is almost impossible for me to get the wheel back on the bike on the side of the road. Awful design, its an impossibly tight fit and two hands just isn't enough. Fortunately I meet a farmer who gives me a hand and I'm back on the road after an hour of so. As I'm riding a car of 4 young guys wave me down, they step out bottles in hand and which is my signal to immediately take off. I started to think that this wasn't a good place to camp so in the next village I asked around for fuel and a place to stay. I was led to a young couple who sells benzine of unknown quality out of their house, pouring it out of a pail into the fuel tank. They also offer to host me and I spend the night there. The next morning they ask me what I want to pay - I offer 600 som, a generous offer, most homestays are around 350-400, and hand them a 1000 som bill. Of course instead of giving me change the price instantly turns to 1000 som which is more than I paid for a hotel in Bishkek. Between the drunk, the dodgy police, and getting ripped off I started to have a bit of a sour impression of the people...
A familiar sight:

The next day two more flats. The patched tube from yesterday gave out after about 50km, at this point I had no tubes except a spare front tube which is larger than the one normally use in the rear. I stuffed it in, and less than 30km I had another flat! At this point I see I'm 15km away from a town so I say screw it and ride on the flat. Bad idea - I hit a hole the rim is bent to hell and of course the tire gives out completely right before the town. Some kids helped me to wave down a car though and I left the bike and took the wheel and tubes to a tire repair shop in the town and patched the tubes and beat my rim back in some semblance of a circle with a hammer.
With that down I was back on the road and found myself riding a crazy mountain pass, seriously not for someone afraid of heights. A narrow dirt track, loose stones and rocks, sharp corners, washed out in parts, and on the side a sheer drop hundreds and hundreds of meters.
Let's hope she holds:

You can just make out the road hanging on to the side of the mountain:


