Silk Road Trilogy

Travel stories from landscapes, architecture and the quiet traces of ancient routes.

The Silk Road is not a single journey, nor a single landscape.
It unfolds in contrasts — through silence and monumentality, vast emptiness and intricate detail, places that feel almost untouched and others shaped to impress.

What I found along this route was not only history, but variation.
From the stillness of Kyrgyzstan to the elaborate architecture of Uzbekistan, and finally the open horizons of Kazakhstan, each place revealed a different rhythm of the same story.

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More than 90% of Kyrgyzstan is covered by mountains, shaping a nomadic way of life that still influences how people move, live, and eat today.

Many of Uzbekistan’s most iconic monuments were heavily restored in the 20th century, especially during the Soviet period and after independence. Cities like Samarkand, Bukhara and Khiva are not only ancient — they are also carefully rebuilt interpretations of their past.

Charyn Canyon stretches for about 154 km and is often compared to the Grand Canyon for its dramatic rock formations shaped over millions of years. Its most famous section, Castle’s Valley, is known for its towering, naturally sculpted formations.

Beyond Central Asia

Azerbaijan

My Azerbaijan travel stories unfold in a place where oil, fire and history quietly coexist beneath a modern skyline.

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Azerbaijan, 2025.

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