Thankfully, we spend the night at the half decent Turkmenbashi Hotel in an airconditioned room albeit with comical 1500 way shower head and gurgling plumbing.
We hear that the ferry will not be leaving tonight because the winds are over 10km/h. when will it be ready t leave? No one knows. so we wait.
The captain and some of his henchman are at the gaping mouth of the cargo ferry obviously full of oil blackened train bogies and demand our passports as well as USD$140 each. We reluctantly gave him our passports which he assured us would be returned upon arrival. We were told the price was USD$90 and wouldn't pay more, and he agreed, surprisingly.
Squeezing past the cargo hold of train bogies we made it up steep rusting stairs and were showed to our cabins, if you could call them that. This was no Queen Mary. The mattresses were the oldest most decrepid I'd ever seen, the toilet did not work and more water leaked out of the shower hose rather than the head and the lights did not work until the lady banged it hard. Thankfully though we could open the porthole window to allow some fresh sea breeze before the smells from the adjoining sewer became too apparent as it ran past our malfunctioning toilet.
Grateful to be on board, we refused to pay another $USD2 for clean sheets and lay down to rest very carefully in our silk sheets probably amongst frustrated bed bugs gnawing on their chomps to get to our warm flesh and to be lulled to sleep by the ferry slowly chugging out of port. We were on our way to Baku and only 12 hours later we'd be there! so we thought.
In the middle of the night, we were awakened by huge clanging which made Stephanie wake up with a start and start praying. I was too tired so just lay there listening. The gentle roll of the ship noticeably stopped. We were only half an hour out to sea and we had anchored and not moving an inch so we just lay there trying to sleep in the silence.
Nevertheless, we savoured the once in a lifetime crossing, and it was made even more enjoyable shared with a sturdy 23yr old Norwegian and comical 22yr old French backpacker who shared with us their incredibly vast library of travel experiences and wisdom together with their dwindling supplies of dry biscuits and melon. Still, we talked longingly about luxury cruises we would take in the future and of Club Med and touring Fiji on jetskis :) But this is how we crossed the Caspian.
What a creatively composed and descriptive post, honey! It brought back memories of those fateful 2 days crossing the Caspian. What an experienced to be treasured for a long time to come. Loved reading your reflections!
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