The Mangystau region of Kazakhstan is jaw-dropping in a way that's hard to describe until you're standing in it. Multicoloured canyons, vast salt flats, chalk formations, Caspian coastline, Bactrian camels wandering across the steppe. It feels genuinely alien — because it used to be.
The Ustyurt Plateau, which dominates the region, was the floor of the ancient Tethys Ocean over 100 million years ago. As the ocean receded and tectonic plates shifted, the seabed was pushed upward, leaving behind compressed limestone, chalk and clay formations layered in extraordinary colours. You can still find fossilised shark teeth and sea urchin skeletons in the cliff faces. Wind and water have been carving the plateau ever since.
In June 2026 we head into the Mangystau for the first time, an exploratory expedition to find the routes, the camps, and the hidden gems. The June trip is full. The full adventure launches in 2027 and we're taking names now.