jim65wagon
Well-known member
SO, YOU WANT TO GO TO PAKISTAN?
This was the question our son-in-law asked us last summer. While I do admit, Pakistan was not on my short list of places to visit, I couldn't say yes fast enough. I love to travel, to see new places, it's exciting and this time we would be sharing the experience with our daughter and her husband. Pakistan may not seem like an obvious choice for one to visit at random, but this visit wasn't really at random. Our son-in-law, Umar, was born in Islamabad, and over 12 years ago, said goodbye to his family to seek his education and fortune in the United States. Of course he has kept up with them through facetime, and they did visit once for Thanksgiving and once for their wedding. Over those 12 years he met, dated, and then married our daughter, received his PhD in Electrical Engineering specializing in antennae (otherwise known as the magic science), camped with us in the wilds of the Virginia and West Virginia mountains, and tasted the delights of venison, biscuits and gravy, and chicken and dumplings. Then he loaded up his GX470 with their belongings and towed a U-haul to California, where he would begin his career as an antenna designer for a drone company. He had to move to California because our daughter had moved out to Stanford to study for her own PhD in Neuro-Biomedical Engineering and we couldn't let her be alone all that time.
So, when Umar asked us if we wanted to go to Pakistan, it wasn't just for fun. He wanted to visit his family, but he really wanted us to see where he grew up and to show us the beauty of his homeland as we had shown him some of the beauty of ours. Of course there was no way we could disappoint our new found son by saying no, and like I said, I love to travel, I love an adventure. I'm ready, Elizabeth is ready, Let's go!
THE PLAN
Upon hearing the emphatic Yes from us, Umar got right into the planning, and stated that he would take care of the itinerary, booking the lodging, the vehicles and sourcing the airline tickets. All we had to do was give some input on those items and provide the money for our share of all that. No problem, we would just spend a couple of extra months working so we could save up the travel funds. That is one of the benefits of full-time travel, with no house payment and no car payment it makes it fairly easy to save some extra money to go have fun.Fast forward to about January of 2024 now. Beth and I have saved up the money for our portion of the trip and we were currently finishing up an amazing trip through Baja California (The CrowsWing Finally Lands in Baja). We would be meeting Umar's family (his Mom, Brother, Sister, her husband, and their two children) in Islamabad and they would be joining us for the entire trip, along with his two best friends from college, Mike and Eric. All in all that's a total of 12 people who would now be traveling around Pakistan together. That's quite a crowd to wrangle up!
Soon we all received this email from Umar:
"If you are receiving this, Congratulations! You have been selected to travel (at your own will) to the under-rated country of Pakistan!
Gorgeous terrain, mouth watering food and a new culture await your explorer's spirit!"
What followed was a very precise google document laying out a very detailed itinerary, necessities of travel to Pakistan (how to get a visa online, which vaccinations to get, a budget for buying foods and souvenirs, how to get an e-sim for your phone, etc) and a potential travel route. The trip was to take place the last week of May and ending the second week of June, nearly three weeks worth of the sights and sounds and food of Pakistan.
So many people were coming along for the trip, most of whom have not gone camping ever in their lives, meant that this trip was not going to be an overland style camping trip. We'd be lucky to get in a good hike or two by the end of it. (so, if you're here for a truly overland adventure, you're going to be disappointed; if you're here for a decent story of a trip to a new and less visited country, stick around) Over the next few months, through a large group chat and a few zoom call sessions, we all hammered out the details of the trip. In the end, along the way we'd be staying at (variously) an AirBnB, a Glamping Yurt, a Geodesic Dome, a couple of hotels and one fancy resort. The mode of transportation to haul 12 people and their luggage? A 20 passenger bus piloted by a driver with nerves of steel.
As the months progressed Elizabeth and I worked a short stint in Texas (February and March) and during this time we filled out the forms on the PakVisa website to acquire the much needed E-Visa. Things we needed for the Visa included: photocopies of our Drivers Licenses and Passports, photos of each of us, a statement confirming that we would not be visiting Kashmir or Azad Jammu, proof that we were US citizens with employment, the Citizen Number of the person we'd be visiting in Pakistan and an invitation letter from that same person. Umar's Mother provided the last two bits of information to complete our applications. After all the forms were filled out, turned in and $60 sent for processing fees, it was only a matter of hours before each of us received a confirmation email with our approved (for 45 days) E-Visa attached. It is my understanding that US citizens can get a “Drop-In” Visa when they just show up at the border, but we had the time and it was really easy to get the Visa online.
After receiving the Visa confirmation, Beth and I killed the rest of our time awaiting the trip by visiting:
Indiana (for the solar eclipse),
Tennessee (for camping and hiking with our friends Jay and Debbie),
Pennsylvania (visiting Beth's family), Virginia (visiting our son), and
North Carolina (visiting Jay and Debbie while fixing Jays Flippac camper that had delamination issues, and a few days camping on Cape Lookout National Seashore).
While we were in North Carolina we took the time to get our travel vaccinations. There was a long list of vaccinations recommended, we managed to get four of them. Walgreens provided us with the Covid 19, T-dap, Pneumonia and the Hepatitis A&B combination vaccines.
By this time it was the middle of May and we were ten days away from our trip. It was time once again to move on, we were scheduled to stay and visit with more friends (paddling the rivers and visiting wineries) in Fredericksburg Virginia.
They had graciously offered to not only let us stay on their property, but we were able to leave both our truck and the teardrop in their driveway and they would drop us off at the airport and pick us up the night we got back! It's good to have good friends!
Those 10 days went by in a whirlwind (not unlike the whirlwind tour of the east we'd experienced since we'd left Texas in April). The day before our flight we did laundry and packed our bags. We knew we'd be in a wide range of weather conditions so we packed warm weather clothes, cold weather clothes, down jackets, hats, sandals, and hiking boots. Neither of us packed shorts –- Pakistan is a conservative country and we did not want to cause any anti-American reactions as best we could. Along with phone charging cords and bricks, our camera, sunglasses, kindles and downloading videos and books to keep us entertained on the flights.