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The world’s ninth biggest country is one of its last great
travel unknowns. Though the outside world is gradually becoming aware of
Kazakhstan, largely thanks to its oil and the antics of that
pseudo-Kazakh Borat Sagdiyev, few have really explored this country of
vastly varied attractions.
Easily the most economically advanced of the ‘stans’, post-Soviet
Kazakhstan is reinventing itself as a uniquely prosperous and modern
Eurasian nation. The leafy commercial and social hub,
Almaty, has an almost European feel with its quality hotels, slick boutiques, chic cafés and streets thick with BMWs and Mercedes.
Astana,
in the north, is being transformed at quickfire speed into a
21st-century capital with a unique mix of Islamic, Western, Soviet and
wacky futuristic architecture. President Nursultan Nazarbaev, who has
ruled Kazakhstan since Soviet times, doesn’t encourage political
opposition but is managing to forge a peaceful, multiethnic nation –
which makes him on the whole pretty popular.
Around the fringes of the great steppes where the once nomadic Kazakh
people – still famed for their horse skills and unique equestrian
sports – used to roam, Kazakhstan presents an array of surprising
adventures. You can trek on foot or horse in the spectacular Tian Shan
or Altay Mountains, watch flamingos on steppe lakes or discover
mysterious underground mosques near the Caspian Sea. Community
ecotourism programmes in some of the most beautiful areas enable
travellers to stay with village families at affordable cost.
With travellers still rare here, a foreign guest is usually treated
not as just another tourist but with real hospitality, and locals will
often go out of their way to help you. Enjoy it while it lasts!
Show in Lonely Planet
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