When it eventually started to get a little cold, we still had an hour until the taxi driver would pick us up. And since there was no way to sit somewhere warm, we walked along the only road that led out of the village, towards our hopefully returning taxi driver.
We felt like we were on this icy country road forever, surrounded by wild horses, the sound of a stream, and the loudspeaker calls of the village mosque.
And although almost all of the 8 old cars that passed us stopped and offered us a ride, we politely declined, kept walking, and trusted our taxi driver and his comfortable, heated, and almost new car.
But then, a few minutes before the agreed pick-up time, a silver, much too fast family car came towards us and almost drifted during the turn to bring us back to Karakol.
And that's exactly what we've noticed so often in Kyrgyzstan: the people are incredibly helpful, reliable, and friendly. They are happy that we want to get to know their country and try to communicate with us, even though we don't speak Russian and they don't speak German. And if they have been to Germany before, they proudly talk about it. Whether it was for work in Frankfurt or as a soldier in Potsdam, Magdeburg, and Dresden.