Stratigraphy and petrology of the lava sequence in the rift escarpment between Oldoinyo Lengai and Engare Sero Canyon, Tanzania
Abstract of my diploma thesis
In 13 months through Asia: temples and forts, beaches and volcanoes, mountains and gorges… India Landing in Mumbai ⋅ Goa ⋅ Kerala ⋅ The Indian Restaurant ⋅ Temple, Temple, Tamil Nadu ⋅ Give me school-pen! ⋅ Hampi ⋅ Hyderabad ⋅ Ellora and Ajanta ⋅ Gujarat ⋅ Udaipur ⋅ Mount Abu ⋅ Jodhpur ⋅ Jaisalmer ⋅ … Continue reading “13 months as a backpacker through Asia”
The beautiful royal cities in the Kathmandu Valley in Nepal
This national park lies in the lowlands, on the fringe of the Ganges plain. From a canoe I see marsh crocodiles and the long-billed gavials, as well as various birds. The jungle walk was less impressive, but at least we saw deer, a king cobra and (through binoculars) a sloth bear trolling in a clearing … Continue reading “Chitwan”
Views of the Himalayas from Nepal’s trekking capital
Trek (3 weeks) around the Annapurna Massif (Annapurna Cirquit) and up to Annapurna Base Camp (Nepal)
Ten years ago, the CPN (Maoist) surprised the world by declaring a “Peoples War” and launching thousands of attacks on police stations in a short period of time. Today, the guerrillas control large parts of the country, especially in the west. And even in the capital, government buildings are blown up from time to time. … Continue reading “Not a dinner party: civil war in Nepal”
Pagodas, temples, squares and alleys
From Lhasa to Kathmandu — in one week by jeep, via Gyantse, Shigatse and Everest Base Camp
A city with thin air, pilgrims at the Jokhang Temple and the Potala Palace
A trek in Tibet from Ganden Monastery to Samye Monastery: over two high passes in 4 days
Lake Nam Tso is exactly what you imagine Tibet to be
Teahouses and pandas in Chengdu, salt and dinosaurs in Zigong, temples and mountains on Emei Shan and the giant Buddha statue in Leshan (China)
Surreal landscape in Hunan (China)
Cruise through the gorges of the Yangtze (China)
For around 2000 years, Xian was the capital of China regardless of the ruling dynasties. Accordingly, the city and its surroundings are full of ancient temples, gates and tombs. One of the most interesting buildings is the Great Mosque, it looks like a Chinese temple, the minaret like a pagoda. But the main reason to … Continue reading “Xian”
Cave temples with Buddha statues and an old town (Shanxi, China)
The city is criss-crossed by wide avenues lined with skyscrapers, but in between there are still remnants of the hutons, the old neighbourhoods of low, grey brick houses, where old people drink tea in the shade or play board games in the narrow alleys; coal sellers cycle their wares to customers… The centre of the … Continue reading “Beijing”
More or less wild sections of the Great Wall with mountainous ups and downs between Huanghua and Mutianyu
Around Yangzhou, once again, cone karst at its finest – admittedly quite similar to the corresponding landscapes in northern Vietnam or southern Thailand. The best thing is to cruise through the landscape on a bicycle (if only it weren’t so brutally hot), because between the rocky limestone mountains everything is flat. I was less prepared … Continue reading “Guilin cone karst”
Macau and Guangzhou (Canton)
Ascent of Gunung Agun and various temples, lakes, volcanoes and rice fields
On an islet between Bali and Lombok (Indonesia)
This volcano is situated in the very east of Java. The crater is filled by a greenish sulphuric acid lake. A huge sulphur body has formed near the shore, brown hot sulphuric steam rises hissing. When the wind carries the cloud towards you, breathing is almost impossible, the acid bites your eyes and nose. Some … Continue reading “Kawah Ijen”
Volcanoes in the East of Java: Views into the Tengger Caldera with the steaming Bromo and ascent of the active Semeru with up-close ash eruptions
Why not go for a tandoori chicken from Java to Kuala Lumpur? The real reason, of course, is that my Indonesia visa has expired. So I spend one night in a minibus from Yogya to Jakarta (the train was unfortunately fully booked), fly to KL and back the next day. One night on the train … Continue reading “Visa Run”
On the volcano with active lava dome (Java, Indonesia)
Fascinating temple at the foot of Mount Merapi, not far from Yogyakarta (Indonesia)
You may have seen mud pools in a volcanic area, where the mud boils away like porridge in a pot. The “mud volcano” Bleduk Kuwu (3 h north of Solo, Java) is a bit different: the cool mud looks like a huge fresh cow patty, in the middle a gas bubble the size of an … Continue reading “Bleduk Kuwu mud volcano”
In the capital of Indonesia and at a volcano in the west of Java
By outrigger boat to the volcano in the Sunda Strait between Sumatra and Java (Indonesia)
Bad luck in a holiday town on Sumatra (Indonesia)
Lake in a caldera on Sumatra (Indonesia)
Without incident I cross the notorious (pirate) road from Melakka to Medan on Sumatra by ferry. I’m really looking forward to Indonesia’s many volcanoes, but first I watch semi-wild orangutans (they were released near Medan) in the jungle, climbing up to us through the trees and begging for bananas. For general reassurance: my route does … Continue reading “From Malaysia to Indonesia”
Island with British Colonial Town and Chinese Temples in Malaysia
Tea Plantations and Cloud Forest in Malaysia
Old town with Dutch colonial buildings in Malaysia
In the capital of Malaysia
Jungle in Malaysia
Diving and snorkelling on an island in Malaysia
I have just arrived in Kota Baru, in the north-east corner of Peninsular Malaysia. Tomorrow I’m taking a boat to the Perhentian Islands. Read on 13 months as a backpacker through Asia Ko Pha Ngan Ko Tao Krabi
The sky is cloudy and almost every day there are one or two heavy monsoon showers – it’s obviously time for me to go to Malaysia, because the rainy season is already over there. But when it clears, the limestone cliffs shine beautifully in the sun. A bar on the beach has new furniture made … Continue reading “Krabi”
The charming 15th century ruins of this town (and of Si Satchanalai, another one a little further north) are set in a large park that blends into the green of the surrounding hills. As you would expect, it’s all about Buddhist temples and monasteries, stupas of all shapes, sitting, standing, walking Buddhas…. The kingdom of … Continue reading “Sukhothai”
The much-vaunted flair of Chiang Mai is somewhat relative compared to Luang Prabang, but there are some pretty corners and a few nice temples. An image for the gods is the “Fuck off wankers” shirt by the punk band Exploited, worn by the boy sweeping the floor in front of the golden pagoda. To praise … Continue reading “Chiang Mai”
Earplugs, helmet, life jacket: with the speedboat I race from Luang Prabang up the Mekong for 6 hours (through, how could it be otherwise, wonderful scenery). 8 people fit in the boat – with so much space that the legs hurt. Somewhere in the Golden Triangle (no opium fields in sight) I cross the border, … Continue reading “From Laos to Thailand”
Hammock paradise by the river in the mountains of Laos
We went to the Plain of Jars, where hundreds of cubic metre-sized monolithic stone jars (made of sandstone) are lying around. Around 2000 years ago, they were probably used for burial. Read on 13 months as a backpacker through Asia Vang Vien Luang Prabang Muang Ngoi Neua
The old royal city of Laos
Caves, hammocks and cone karst in the backpacker mecca of Laos
Si Phan Don in southern Laos
Almost 21 hours on the bus catapult me from the cold north of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam to the hot south of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic. Hardly bearable without sleeping pills. Actually, it should have been only 19 hours, and the fact that the three of us end up in a damn slow … Continue reading “From Vietnam to Laos”
Between Pagodas and Ho Chi Minh: In the Capital of Vietnam
From Hanoi over mountain roads to Sapa in the northwest of Vietnam
Cone karst island world in the north of Vietnam
Citadel and Royal Tombs in Central Vietnam
Old town in central Vietnam
In southern Vietnam
In the metropolis in the south of Vietnam
At the floating markets (Vietnam)
I travel by boat from Phnom Penh down the Mekong to Vietnam. At the border we have to go into a quarantine room and pay a few cents (very effective against SARS…), the luggage is x-rayed (even at this tiny crossing) and finally we continue to Chao Doc in the Mekong Delta. I immediately take … Continue reading “From Cambodia to Vietnam”
In the capital of Cambodia
… It’s tough, kid, but it’s life … Some time has passed since the album of the Dead Kennedys came out and not much noticeable remains of the Khmer Rouge era. The mine victims playing music in front of the temples in Angkor or begging on the beach in Sihanoukville recall of the many unmarked … Continue reading “Holiday in Cambodia”
Angkor: hundreds of temples from the 9th to 16th centuries are scattered across the plain here, Angkor Wat is only the best known and largest. Depending on the whim of the respective ruler, they are dedicated either to Buddha or Hindu gods, but in any case to the god-king at the same time. In most … Continue reading “Angkor Wat”
After I finally got my visa for Vietnam, I set off at dawn by bus towards the border. Four hours of driving on good roads. At the border, men, women, children pull fully loaded wooden carts into the neighbouring country and back, on the Thai side a large market offers all kinds of consumer goods … Continue reading “From Thailand to Cambodia”
Old town with beautiful temples near Bangkok (Thailand)
So much for plans: as the Vietnamese consulate is on holiday for a week, I’m stuck for the time being, or rather I can’t leave for Cambodia until half a week later. So I’m going to take a trip through central Thailand first, because what am I going to do in Bangkok for so long? … Continue reading “Bangkok”
Diving off the island in southern Thailand
Dance and relax on the island in southern Thailand
In fact, my train from Varanasi arrived in Kolkata 10 hours late. So I didn’t see much of this city, which seems pretty dilapidated to me. At least I had my beard scraped off my face and got a “modern hairstyle”, so now I look more normal (boring?) again. The flight to Bangkok (after the … Continue reading “From India to Thailand”
In the holy city on the Ganges (India)
Thoughts on India and Tourism
This small village, completely removed from any city, is home to some of India’s most exciting temples – known mainly for the many erotic depictions dating back almost 1000 years. Better than the Kama Sutra. All the possible and impossible positions stand in stark contrast to modern Indian society, where (except perhaps in Bangalore, Mumbai, … Continue reading “Kama Sutra in Stone: The Temples of Khajuraho”
Temples, a river and pleasant tranquillity (India)
There is a striking disparity of poverty in India: the South is clearly richer, perhaps most clearly shown in the fact that almost everyone here has a mobile phone. There are slums, but in the north even “normal” parts of the city look almost like slums and poverty is obvious. Everything is much dirtier, more … Continue reading “Disparity of poverty in India”
A stark city, packed with people, an unbelievable chaos. The best thing is to sit on a cycle rickshaw and watch people go by. It’s hard to move forward, sacks of chili or whatever are being unloaded from other cycle rickshaws or bullock carts everywhere, men with all kinds of beards and headdresses, women in … Continue reading “Delhi”
On some days I hate India. Yesterday the day started with me having to wait an hour for my cereal because it had been forgotten. Then I went to pick up the laundry I had dropped off the day before. I had stressed that I needed the bag again – “yes OK, no problem”. Of … Continue reading “Getting into a paddy about India”
In the fog – quite frustrating after weeks of cloudless skies. The Taj Mahal is really not without reason the most famous building in India, built by a Mughal king for his 2nd wife. The best of the 20000 workers had their fingers or hands amputated afterwards so that something so magnificent could not be … Continue reading “Agra”
Safari im Ranthambore Nationalpark