General

Tour itinerary: Tashkent – Urgench – Khiva – Bukhara – Samarkand – Tashkent
Season: February – November
Days: 8Nights: 7
Price: $ 675
Tour description:

 

Departure dates, 2018
27 February – 6 March 31 July –  7 August
  9 March – 16 March 3  August  – 10 August
16 March – 23 March    14 August –  21 August
23 March – 30 March  17 August – 24 August
6 April –  13 April 4 September – 11 September
20 April – 27 April 7 September – 14 September
1 May – 8 May 19 September – 25 September
4 May – 11 May 21 Seotember – 28 September
9 May – 16 May 30 September – 7 October
11 May  – 18 May 5 October – 12 October
18 May – 25 May 9 October – 16 October
25 May – 1 June 19 October – 26 October
29 May – 6 June 23 October – 30 October
5 June – 12 June 2 November – 9 November
27 July – 3 August 6 November – 13 November

Group size: minimum 2 participants and maximum 6 participants.
We may arrange private or/and individual tours based on the guaranteed departure itinarary with consequent price change

Are you going to join the group? Take this opportunity with our guaranteed tour. Choose the suitable date and send us your inquiry – our tour operator will contact you  shortly. 

 

 

Day 1

Tashkent

Arrival in Tashkent by morning/afternoon/evening flights.

The driver will meet you at the meeting zone of the airport. Transfer to the hotel.

14:00 Check in* ( for those guests who arrive with morning flight, there will be an early check in) .   Time to rest after the flight.

When all the group members arrive at the hotel, meeting with the company representative who will present the tour package .  You will have time to discuss the details with the representative.

Overnight at the hotel.

Day 2

Tashkent – Urgench – Khiva

Early breakfast.

06:00 Transfer to local airport.

07:00 Flight to Urgench (Uzbekistan Airways HY1051)

08:40 Arrival in Urgench Airport. Meet the guide and driver. Transfer to Khiva (30 км) totel to  drop off the bags at the luggage room. Standard hotel check-in at 14:00.

Walking sightseeing tour in the old part of Khiva – Ichan Kala known as “Inner town”. Ichan Kala is the biggest open air museum in Central Asia and consists of the following architectural monuments:  Ata Darbaza (West Gate), Kunya Ark, Muhammad Rakhim-Khan Madrassa, Muhammad Aminkhan Madrassa, Kalta Minor Minaret, Jome Mosque and Minaret, Islam Khodja Madrassa and Minaret, Said Alauddin Mausoleum, Pahlavan Mahmud Mausoleum, the last Khiva Khan Allakulikhan’s Madrassa and Tosh Hovli Palace (there was the harem with 40 concubines) , Caravanserai and Tim Allakulikhan.

Free time. Overnight at the hotel.

Day 3

Khiva – Bukhara

Breakfast.

Transfer to Bukhara through the Kizil Kum desert (475 km). On the way stop to see Amudarya River. Arrival in Bukhara in the afternoon, check–in the hotel. Free time. Overnight at the hotel.

Day 4

Bukhara

Breakfast in the hotel.

09:00 Meet the guide at the lobby.

Full day city tour along the old part of Bukhara including visits to the Mausoleum of Samanids, Bolo Hauz Mosque and the Ark Fortress – the oldest citadel dating back to I century BC, Poi Kalon Square  with Kalon Minaret and Mosque, Mir Arab Madrassah.
There are three trading domes or so called covered bazaars preserved from the XVI century. The bazaars were the centers for trade of silk, jewelry and  for money exchange. Today as well, one can enjoy  traditional bazaar bargains and purchase different souvenirs of a wide range, from small souvenir magnets to the famous Bukhara carpets.
The excursion around Ulugbek and Abdulazizkhan Madrassahs, Abdullakhan’s Tim and a visit to the Caravanserai Sayfuddin which is the Center of Handicraft Development of Bukhara. Magoki Attari Mosque. Lyabi Hauz  , the center of old Bukhara ,  is an architectural complex of the XVII century that includes Nadir Divanbegi Madrassah and Khanaqa, Kukeldash Madrassah and the monument of the famous historical comedian character Khodja Nasreddin .
Dinner with folk show in Nadir Divanbegi Madrassa. Overnight at the hotel.

Day 5

Bukhara – Shahrisabz -Samarkand

Breakfast

09:00 Transfer to Samarkand through  Shahrisabz city.

Short city tour around historical part of Shahrisabz :Mausoleum of Jakhongir in Dor-us Saodat Memorial Complex, remains of Ak-Saray Palace, Dor-ut Tilavat Ensemble with Kok-Gumbaz Mosque and burial vault of Tamerlane’s father.
Continue driving to Samarkand. Arrival in the afternoon. Overnight at the hotel.

Day 6

Samarkand

Breakfast.

09:00 Meet the guide at the lobby.

Sightseeing tour of Samarkand with visiting: Gur Emir Mausoleum (Tamerlan’s tomb), Ruhabad Mausoleum, Registan Square (a heart of the city), Bibi-Hanum Mosque, orient bazaar Siyab, Shahi Zinda Necropolis,  Ulugbek’s Observatory,  Mausoleum of Khodja Doniyor also known as Saint Daniel.

Transfer  to the hotel. Free time.Overnight.

Day 7

Samarkand – Tashkent

Breakfast.

Free day in Samarkand for walking around and taking pictures of  the sights.

Standard check-out  at 12:00

 16:00 Transfer to railway station.

17:00 Depart Samarkand by fast train “Afrosiab”.

19:10 Arrival in Tashkent.

Overnight at the hotel.

Day 8

Tashkent

Breakfast.

09:00  Meet the guide at the lobby.

Tashkent city tour (4-5 hours) includes visiting old and European parts.  Sights to visit: complex “Khazret-Imam” (Mausoleum of  Imam Kaffal al-Shashi, Barak-khan Madrassah, Tellya Sheikh Madrassah, Mui-Mubarak Madrassah), bazaar Chorsu, Amir Timur Square, Theatre Square, Independence Square, Monument of Courage and Memorial to the Victims of Repression.

Transfer to the airport

Late afternoon/ evening   departure flight

Accommodation: 
City Hotels 
Khiva

Old Khiva/ Arqanchi

Bukhara

Kabir/ Kavsar/ Fatima

Samarkand

Zilol Baht/ Malika Classic

Tashkent

Uzbekistan/ Shodlik

OR OTHER HOTELS OF THE SAME CATEGORY

Prices:
Group

Price per person

2 pax

$ 780

4 -6 pax $ 675
Single supplement + $ 110
Tour Price includes:

– Letter of invitation (if necessary) for Uzbekistan visa;
– Transportation throughout the tour, including transfers airport – hotel – airport;
– Accommodation in the hotels on double/twin sharing rooms based on breakfasts;
– Sightseeing tours with local English speaking guides (5 excursions);
– Entrance fees to the museums, mausoleums and other sites;
– Train ticket Tashkent – Samarkand, economy class;

– Dinner with folklore show program at Nodir Devan Begi Madrassah in Bukhara;
–  English speaking staff provided from our company to accompany the group during entire itinerary if the group is minimum of 6 people and up.

 

Tour Price does not include:

– Uzbekistan tourist visa fee paid at the embassy/consulate of Uzbekistan or at the Tashkent International Airport;
– International air tickets to/from Tashkent;

– Air ticket for the domestic flight from Tashkent to Urgench (130 USD per person);
– Fees for the use of photo/video cameras charged separately at monuments and museums;
– Personal insurance;
– Lunches and dinners (except one dinner in Bukhara with folk show);
– Luggage handling at the airports and hotels;
– Tips for porters, guides and drivers.

 

Hotels and Accommodation:
Accommodation on this tour will be arranged in the hotels that are equal to 3 star category. The hotels chosen for the tour feature double/twin sharing and single occupancy rooms with all necessary room facilities like air-conditioning, bathroom with bathtub or shower, refrigerator, satellite  TV and IDD telephone (at least at the reception desk). The price of the tour is quoted based on double/twin sharing accommodation and single room supplement is paid separately as shown above (please see the above mentioned prices).

Transportation:
Transportation service is fully included from the very beginning till the end of the tour.
And type of vehicle varies depending on the number of people in the group:
– a minivan with 14 seats for a group up to 8 people;
– a minibus with 20 seats for a group up to 12 people.

Meals:
Only breakfasts are included throughout. We keep lunches and dinners excluded guessing that you might opt just for a snack or light meal, or even people sometimes don’t have any meal in the daytime having a great dinner instead. So, meals are optional on the tour.

Guides:
English speaking local guides will provide sightseeing tours in each city as specified in the itinerary program. In case the group size is at least 6 and more people, then an English speaking tour leader will be provided who will be accompanying the group and arranging all  activities like sightseeing tours, hotel check-in, meals (if needed) and etc.

 

Available departures

Unfortunately, no places are available on this tour at the moment

Tashkent

Tashkent

Sprawling Tashkent is Central Asia’s hub and the place where everything in Uzbekistan happens. It’s one part newly built national capital, thick with the institutions of power, and one part leafy Soviet city, and yet another part sleepy Uzbek town, where traditionally clad farmers cart their wares through a maze of mud-walled houses to the grinding crowds of the bazaar. Tashkent is a fascinating jumble of contradictions that’s well worth exploring over several days.

Like most places that travellers use mainly to get somewhere else, Tashkent always immediately charm visitors and it’s a surprisingly fun and interesting place, with the best restaurants, museums and nightlife in the country. There’s also plenty of opportunity to escape the metropolis for great hiking, rafting and skiing in Ugam-Chatkal National Park, just a 1½-hour drive away.

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Nukus

Nukus

 

The isolated Nukus is definitely one of Uzbekistan’s appealing cities and gets more visitors relative to its attractive Silk Road cousins. However, as the gateway to the fast-disappearing Aral Sea and home to the remarkable Savitsky Museum – one of the best collections of Soviet art in the world – there is actually a reason to come here, other than taking in the general sense of desolation.

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Khiva

Khiva

A visit to Khorezm will have you flying down the time tunnel to an age of desert caravans, slave-driving Khans and lost empires. Get out of the fairly utilitarian capital Urgench and wander among the series of forts that dot the sands north and east of town. When you tire of castles in the sand head for Khiva, where the World heritage listed walled inner town contains many monuments built when this was the notorious Khanate of Khiva.

Khiva’s name, redolent of slave caravans, barbaric cruelty, terrible desert journeys and steppes infested with wild tribesmen, struck fear into all but the boldest 19th-century hearts. Nowadays it’s a friendly and welcoming Silk Road old town that’s very well set up for tourism, and a mere 35km southwest of the major transport hub of Urgench.

The historic heart of Khiva has been so well preserved that it’s often criticised as lifeless – a ‘museum city’. Even if you subscribe to that theory, you’ll have to admit that it’s one helluva museum. To walk through the walls and catch that first glimpse of the fabled Ichon-Qala (inner walled city) in all its monotoned, mud-walled glory is like stepping into another era.

You can see it all in a daytrip from Urgench, but you’ll absorb it better by staying longer. Khiva is at its best at dawn, sunset and by night, when the moonlit silhouettes of the tilting columns and medressas, viewed from twisting alleyways, work their magic.

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Bukhara

Bukhara

 

Central Asia’s holiest city, Bukhara has buildings spanning a thousand years of history, and a thoroughly lived-in old centre that hasn’t changed too much in two centuries. It is one of the best places in Central Asia for a glimpse of pre-Russian Turkestan.

Most of the centre is an architectural preserve, full of medressas, minarets, a massive royal fortress and the remnants of a once-vast market complex. Government restoration efforts have been more subtle and less indiscriminate than in flashier Samarkand, and the city’s accommodation options are by far the best and most atmospheric in the country.

Until a century ago Bukhara was watered by a network of canals and some 200 stone pools where people gathered and gossiped, drank and washed. As the water wasn’t changed often, Bukhara was famous for plagues; the average 19th-century Bukharan is said to have died by the age of 32. The Bolsheviks modernised the system and drained the pools, although it’s most famous, Lyabi-Hauz, remains a cool, mulberry-tree shaded oasis at the heart of the city.

You’ll need at least two days to look around. Try to allow time to lose yourself in the old town; it’s easy to overdose on the 140-odd protected buildings and miss the whole for its many parts

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Samarkand

Samarkand

 

We travel not for trafficking alone,

By hotter winds our fiery hearts are fanned.

For lust of knowing what should not be known

We take the Golden Road to Samarkand.

These final lines of James Elroy Flecker’s 1913 poem The Golden Journey to Samarkand evoke the romance of Uzbekistan’s most glorious city. No name is so evocative of the Silk Road as Samarkand. For most people it has the mythical resonance of Atlantis, fixed in the Western popular imagination by poets and playwrights of bygone eras, few of whom saw the city in the flesh.

On the ground the sublime, larger-than-life monuments of Timur, the technicolour bazaar and the city’s long, rich history indeed work some kind of magic. Surrounding these islands of majesty, modern Samarkand sprawls across acres of Soviet-built buildings, parks and broad avenues used by buzzing Daewoo taxis.

You can visit most of Samarkand’s high-profile attractions in two or three days. If you’re short on time, at least see the Registan, Gur-e-Amir, Bibi-Khanym Mosque and Shah-i-Zinda.

Away from the main attractions Samarkand is a modern, well-groomed city, which has smartened itself up enormously in the past decade. This process has involved building walls around some of the less sightly parts of the old town, which many consider to have made the old city rather sterile, blocking off streets that have been linking quarters for centuries. While this ‘disneyfication’ of this once chaotic place is undeniable, it’s also true to say that Samarkand remains a breathtaking place to visit.

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