In the morning all seems well around the camp site and I grab my camera to take some pictures in the early morning light.


I hope you enjoy the next picture because it may have be the most expensive one I ever took.

I see the shifty guy from last night going in the direction of my tent and I think he is probably up to no good. I walk back around the lake to my tent as quick as I can and when I get there my boots are gone from inside the tent. He removed my fuel bottle and stove from the boots and took nothing else at a first glance. So I grab my phone and walk around, trying to find the guy, which I eventually do. I confront him and he of course denies it and he doesn’t have the boots on him. This goes back and forth for a while in front of some other guys and I’m not sure if they are with him or not. I decide that it is probably not a good idea to get physical with the other guys around. My phone doesn’t work either. So I take a picture of him and the license plate of his motorbike.

When I walk back to my tent a couple from Tehran asks me if I need any help. Both of them speak very good English. After they pack up their tent we drive to the next village and ask if anyone knows the guy, showing the picture on the camera. No luck. We ask the guys at the little lakeside restaurant and they say he is not a local. Crap. So we call the police and they show up half an hour later. Meanwhile two of the kids who were standing with the guy in the morning say they saw him with the boots and say they’ll chase him but they return later empty handed.

When the police show up we explain the situation and they want me to follow them to the Station, some 18km away. The police underdog gives me his boots for the ride to the station, because all I have left is my flip flops. I get to ride the curvy road with the police clearing the oncoming traffic for me. Nice! At the police station it gets a bit comical as I don’t speak Farsi and they don’t speak English. There is a TV running with the Iranian version of the Wiggles. The Iranian Wiggles don’t look like they are having much fun, rather like they have been forced by torture to do this.
More and more cops show up and want to see the pictures but they don’t even put a trace for the plate number out or make an attempt to get copies of the pictures. Well, there is no computer in the station. They give me some lunch though. They don’t ask for the make of the boots, or price, or anything. I realize this is a waste of time and at least I get them to write a “report” which I may be able to use for my insurance. This is done manually on a scrap piece of paper. After a few hours all is done and I leave my phone number and email address (they didn’t ask). In all fairness I have to say that the cops back home probably would have cared even less. The cops drive me to a store where I buy some patent leather shoes for 17 bucks. They insist on me getting a receipt, which again is a lengthy procedure. After we return to the station I leave for Alamut castle.
It’s a beautiful ride all the way to the ruins of Alamut castle, one of the Assassins castles which was destroyed in 1256 by the Mongols.



It’s a steep 20 minute climb up to the ruins of the castle which sits on a narrow ridge at 2100m.


Coming back from the castle I look at the local voting station. Election posters right on the building have been painted over but you can still make out the pictures.

I talk to some people and show the picture of the thief but nobody knows him. The people I talk to make it clear that they are Ahmadinejad supporters.
I ride back

to lake Ovan and show the picture of the thief around the little restaurant again. I leave my stuff there and walk around the lake looking for the thief. I’ve read enough crime novel to know that they always return to the scene of the crime
On my way back a car comes speeding toward me and the guy tells me that they have the thief and he drives me back to the restaurant. Sure enough it is the guy but again he denies everything. The locals want to call the police but I ask them to wait. We tell the guy that others have seen him with the boots but that I will give him my new shoes if he returns the boots. He doesn’t budge and we eventually call the police.
This time they show up with two cars and the big boss is among the cops. They talk to the guy and the boss slaps him in the face. He doesn’t admit anything and they cuff him and lead him away. There is no Iranian version of the Miranda rights. They want me to follow them again to the police station. Off I go in the dark and in the rain.
When we arrive at the station they say something like “10 minutes boots back” with the thumbs up and lead the guy away. Half an hour later they drive away with him and I think they go to fetch the boots. When they come back after only 10 minutes I know something is not right. Now they say “one hour”. I realize they are just overly confident in their interrogation techniques. There is bit of a good cop, bad cop routine going on. Meanwhile I talk to the young cop underlings outside. Turns out they are doing their two year, mandatory military service with the police. Some of the guys have university degrees. Every time I ask them if the thief has admitted anything they avoid an answer. All throughout the night more and more uniformed and plain clothes people show up, handing in their firearms. Just before midnight I get kicked out unceremoniously. They tell me that I must stay in the hotel and come back next morning at 9. They won’t even let me leave my bike in the police compound.
The hotel turns out to be the second floor rooms of the only restaurant in town. A very gritty affair. The bathroom is even worse than the one at the police station. After some tough negotiation I at least get the price down to a bearable level. The bike has to stay on the street. In the morning there is nobody around and the place is locked. I yell until a feisty old lady shows up and lets me out. When I get to the police station they won’t let me in and try to send me away. I just wait outside and finally at 10am they let me in and we are best friends again. The thief is handcuffed to the flagpole in the courtyard. He has now admitted to stealing the boots but has already sold them. The cops take the statement they gave me yesterday away again. Slowly the station wakes up and one after another the young kids who sleep at the station get up. Eventually they get some breakfast and offer me some to. I’m not very hungry and give the rest of my food to the thief, which they don’t like too much. Eventually a relative of the thief shows up and all of us walk to the building next door, which turns out to be the court. So I find myself in front of a judge and have absolutely no idea what is being said. The Tehranies who helped yesterday gave me their phone number in case I need some help. Only problem is that my phone only allows emergency calls since yesterday although it has a full signal. I suspect it has to do with the election. It takes me a long time to convince them to call the number for me and even then it takes many attempts on the antiquated phone system. The story is that they think they can get the boots back by noon the next day. I’m doubtful that they can but decide to give it a try. I ride back to lake Ovan and pitch my tent again.
The next day the father of the thief is there and we all go to court again. As expected the boots aren’t there. There are a lot of people arguing and I have no idea what is going on. It takes me a long time to get them to call the Tehran number again (my phone is still blocked). They argue with my man in Farsi and then hang up. This is getting comical. They talk to the translator but don’t let him talk to me. Well, long story short. What transpires in the next few hours is that they want me to wait for a few more days and I tell them I can’t and then we start to negotiate how much he’ll have to pay me. I rather take some cash now than wait for a larger amount later. So we agree on $100 and the father dashes off to get the money. Once he shows up we go back to the police. They handwrite another statement, which I have to sign with a thumb print. Lots of handshakes and mercies. As I understand it, the thief will be released from the prison in Qazvin they transferred him too. This is a bit of a relief because I’m not sure how severe the punishment would have been according to Islamic law. He is just a kid who has done the wrong thing and a few nights in cell and the rough police treatment will hopefully be enough of a wakeup call.
The next hour I spend trying to get a copy of that statement. They won’t give one to me. Finally the police write something else, which the judge tears up. I get pretty loud and the judge is now ready to make a copy. There are some technical issues with the copy machine and when we are ready to press the button the top cop storms in and argues with the judge. No copy. With much arguing I get them to write something down and I leave as quick as I can before they change their mind again.
This was quite the experience, frustrating, comical, and Kafkaesque at times. Of all things that can happen on a bike trip, having your boots stolen is pretty minor. When you travel you will have to leave your stuff at times and you have to make a decision what you carry with you at all times. Obviously passport, money, bike papers and so on. Boots are not high on the priority list. Who’d steal somebody’s smelly boots? I got my 100 bucks for a pair of pretty battered boots that started to feel a bit tight after they got wet a lot earlier in the trip. Now I’ll have to concentrate on how to replace them.
By the way, the last time I had something stolen it was a pair of shoes too. 15 years ago I was traveling from Belize to Guatemala when the chicken bus came to a screeching halt and everyone shouted and pointed at me. When I got to the front of the bus they pointed to a guy who had taken my shoes out of my backpack on the roof. People just as poor as the thief had seen him and decided to stop him. They gave me my shoes back and asked me what I wanted them to do with the thief. I thought if I joke and tell them to shoot him someone will pull a gun and probably do it. So I just told them to kick him off the bus. We were in the middle of the jungle a long way from anywhere. So all things considered I’ve had pretty good travel karma in the last 15 years. Knock on wood.