Follow our adventures as we share our thoughts, impressions and awe at what could be called: Foreign Service's Wide World of Talalay.
Thursday 30 December 2021
A Soviet Cemetery In Tashkent
Tuesday 28 December 2021
Resort Off-season At Lake Charvak
The main weekend getaway area from Tashkent lies a couple of hours northeast of the city at a reservoir called Lake Charvak. The area is good for summer boating and winter skiing. Fall and spring, a quiet off-season.
The empty resort.
Also some cabins, complete with modest supplies. Quiet.
The bounce house, wrapped for the winter. The sports field, unused.
Off-season allows for a little grounds cleanup and ample time for the blooms to fade away.
Saturday 25 December 2021
Our First Holiday In Uzbekistan
We have only been in Uzbekistan for a few months. Here's a little tour of what we've discovered.
Hey, it's a Lada. Turns out, they're everywhere. Cool.
The Solar Furnace. Built by the Soviets. Don't ask. Comrades have gun, will hammer. Part of a WWII (The Great Patriotic War) memorial.
Accomplish enough in your military career and they put your face on a vase. A must have! Yes, it does snow in Tashkent. Once. Pretty.
Wishing you health and adventures in 2022!
Happy New Year!
С новым годом!
Yangi yilingiz bilan!
Soli nav muborak!
Thursday 23 December 2021
Reflecting On The Mighty Physics Of The Sun Complex
About an hour east of Tashkent is a giant James Bond set. What else could a place like this one be?
Some evil villain, building a weapon to take over the universe. Not far off. Depending with whom you talk, where you look, the place is a "solar furnace," a "physics of the sun," or the "Institute of the Sun." Lost in translation.
In any language, the explanation is the same. Find a sunny spot. Create a field of mirrors. Have the mirrors bounce light to a giant, curved mirror, concentrating the sun's rays and heat. Have powerful beam strike something. See what happens. Mind your fingers. Shine and repeat, take notes, go home to dinner, do it again the next day.
The Soviets built the place in 1981, perhaps with the purpose of testing materials for military applications. See if a soldier's underwear can withstand the 3,000º Celsius blast. Today, it's used for industrial purposes. Like seeing if ladies lingerie can withstand a 3,000º Celsius blast. Maybe underwear isn't the best example.
Here's a model of the complex. Mirrors up the hill, the big reflector staring at the field. In the lobby of the office, a giant glass wreath-like bauble.
The rows of mirrors, heading up the hill.
Fiery demo of the power of a concave mirror with a blast of sun. A look back at the giant reflector from the mirror field.
Showing its age. Missing mirror sections and a now unused tech room behind one set of mirrors.
Tuesday 21 December 2021
The State Museum Of History Of Uzbekistan
A modest scope in the naming of Tashkent's main history museum. Anything and everything is welcome. The museum was originally called the Lenin Museum. After 1991, that narrative fell out of fashion and it was time for something a bit more local.
The building itself, built in 1970, is a triumph of Soviet modernism, all marble draped in a woven style pattern. Brutalist box meets delicate, floating lines. The screening style is based on the local design for sunscreens or "panzhara," a nice nod to the region. Tremendous.
Enter through the grand hall. Imposing. Tweak your retinas at the fabulous fabrics. Wild.
A mighty mural. Uzbekistan likes to feature the age of the Silk Road as its defining era, a triumphant time filled with amazing architecture and the reign of Timur. Let the glamor begin.
Thursday 16 December 2021
Random Details Of Tashkent
Keep moving, keep looking.
Advertising the new housing on the old housing, pure envy marketing.
Keeping it homemade, from re-using an old door at a construction site to building a fence from scrap wood.
Upcycle? Re-using a poster of the rotunda in Repression Park. Street light pole with bling.
Tuesday 14 December 2021
Preserving Painter Ural Tansykbayev's Home In Tashkent
A nice way to get a peek at how people lived in Ye Olde Times is to pop into a house museum. Sure, the person who lived there may be famous and you get a good dose of an accomplished biography. You also get some nice period architecture and furnishings.
Ural Tansykbayev was a painter, born 1904, died 1974. He's considered a biggie of Soviet era painters, a leader in communist modernism and a good party member. Tansykbayev was named People's Artist of the USSR in 1963.
The painter and his work.
More works and some of the objects in his studio space. Tools of his trade.
Bedroom and a little sun room, with a collection of the Soviet version of National Geographic.