




Bucketlist: Blue Domes of the Silk Road
Walk into the blue-domed cities of the original Silk Road, before everyone else does.
The Silk Road was the original influencer route, and Uzbekistan is where it still looks the part. Over six nights you trace the fast rail spine that everyone books wrong: Tashkent to settle in, two nights in Samarkand for the jaw-drop, two nights in Bukhara for the soul, and back. Samarkand gives you Timurid scale, the Registan, the blue-tiled climb of Shah-i-Zinda. Bukhara gives you the lived-in city, trading domes and tea houses and a caravanserai you actually sleep inside. Between the monuments you go where the group tours do not: a paper-maker's workshop, a suzani atelier, a private merchant-house dinner, a hammam at the end of a long warm day. This is not a five-star-luxury trip and we would never sell it as one. Uzbekistan wins on beauty, history and atmosphere, and it wins hard. What you get is the best boutique-heritage stays on the route, the light timed right, and a small tribe of people worth travelling with.
About the trip
Some places you visit. Samarkand and Bukhara, you fall into. This is the Silk Road at its most cinematic: turquoise domes against a hard blue sky, tiled necropolises you have almost to yourself at dawn, and old-town evenings that slow everything down. 15 people, 6 days, one blue-and-gold adventure through the cities that traded silk, ideas and stories for a thousand years. Handpicked founders, creators and the endlessly curious. You bring the wonder. We handle the Afrosiyob trains, the merchant-house dinners, the craft ateliers and the golden-hour timing so you are always in the right place when the light is best. Your trip, your pace, none of the logistics.
Cultural
Moderate
Trip highlights
Pick your date. Takes 5 min.
7 Days from
₹1,65,000
per person - taxes extra
Talk to a CuratorVisa support: Checklist, forms and appointment help.
30% hold: Hold your invite now. Balance later.
Curated room: Max 15 travellers. Profiles before payment.
People you'll meet
The first cohort is being curated.
We show people here once enough travellers confirm. No filler faces, no weak interest counts. This edition is being shaped one invite at a time.
What's included
All 12 experiences in itinerary
1 night at Hotel Marwa Tashkent Pool&Spa + 2 nights at Rayyan Hotel Samarkand + 2 nights at Turkman Madrasah XIX Century Hotel + 1 night at Hotel Marwa Tashkent Pool&Spa
The Afrosiyob high-speed train is the backbone: business-class carriages carry the whole tribe between cities in comfort while the desert slides past.
Private coach and cars handle every station run, airport pickup and old-town transfer, so nobody is ever hunting for a taxi., Inside the old cities you walk, which is the point: Bukhara and Samarkand reveal themselves on foot, at your pace.
12 meals · 6 breakfasts, 3 lunches, 3 hosted dinners
Your visa, handled
ExCo's concierge runs the Uzbekistan visa application for you.
Your Gameplan
The soft landing before the wonder
- Land in Tashkent, where your guide meets you in arrivals and whisks the tribe to a calm design-led hotel near the old town to shake off the flight.
- If the timing works, wander Chorsu Bazaar under its great turquoise dome, a riot of spice mountains, dried fruit and bread, or ride the Tashkent metro, a Soviet-era art gallery disguised as a subway.
- Gather for a welcome dinner as the sun drops, meet the fourteen strangers who are about to become your Silk Road tribe, and set the tone for the six nights ahead.

The first sight of the blue city
- Board the Afrosiyob high-speed train and watch the steppe blur past at 210 km/h on the two-hour glide from Tashkent to Samarkand, the heart of the Silk Road.
- Step into Gur-e-Amir, the tomb of Tamerlane, where a ribbed dome of deep turquoise sits over the conqueror who built an empire from this city.
- Save the best for last: the Registan at golden hour, three vast tiled madrasahs facing each other across a square, then linger for the free evening light show when the crowds thin and the whole facade turns electric blue against the dark.

Where the tiles tell stories
- Beat the tour buses to Shah-i-Zinda at opening, a narrow avenue of blue-tiled tombs so intricate they stop you mid-step, best in the soft early light with almost nobody else there.
- Stand under the enormous portal of Bibi-Khanym Mosque, then dive into Siyab Bazaar for pomegranates, non bread and the non-stop theatre of a working Uzbek market.
- Sit down to a plov lunch the way locals eat it, the national rice dish slow-cooked over fire, then get your hands dirty at a Samarkand paper-making workshop where mulberry bark becomes silk-smooth paper the old way, before a last blue-hour return to the Registan.

Into the city that never hurried
- Take the short, scenic Afrosiyob leg from Samarkand to Bukhara, trading Timurid grandeur for a lived-in old town that has barely changed in centuries.
- Check into a restored 19th-century madrasah in the heart of the old city, sleeping in what was once a Silk Road scholar's cell around a still courtyard, and let the pace drop to match the town.
- As the light goes gold, walk to the Po-i-Kalyan complex and stand beneath the Kalyan minaret at dusk, the tower so beautiful that Genghis Khan reportedly spared it.

Craft, tea and a merchant's table
- Climb the ramparts of the Ark fortress and stand before the delicate brickwork of the Samanid Mausoleum, a thousand-year-old masterpiece that survived being buried in sand.
- Lose an hour in Bukhara's covered trading domes and the suzani and ikat ateliers, where embroidery and cloth are still made by hand and a good piece follows you home.
- End the day with a private merchant-house dinner in an old courtyard home, the food arc's high point, followed for anyone who wants it by a traditional hammam.

One last morning on the road
- Take a slow craft-and-food morning in Bukhara, a final tea in the old town, a last look at the domes, maybe the ceramics you have been circling all trip.
- Board the Afrosiyob back to Tashkent, the longest and most relaxed rail leg, and let the Silk Road roll out behind you one more time.
- Come together for a farewell dinner in the capital, trade the week's best moments, and swap the numbers that will keep this tribe together long after the trip.

You leave, the blue stays with you
- Enjoy a final Tashkent breakfast and a slow morning before your transfer, with time for any last-minute bazaar find.
- Your guide runs you to the airport in a private car for the evening flights home, no scramble, no stress.
- Fly out with a camera roll full of turquoise domes and a group chat full of people you did not know a week ago.

Our Favourite Stays
We work with these or similar hotels to ensure a stylish and comfortable stay every time.

Hotel Marwa Tashkent Pool&Spa
Hotel Marwa Tashkent Pool&Spa in Tashkent offers family rooms with air-conditioning, private bathrooms, and modern amenities. Each room includes a work desk, minibar, and free WiFi.

Rayyan Hotel Samarkand
Your Samarkand base for two nights: a warm boutique stay with a garden, a sun terrace and a pool to come back to after the monuments, close enough to the Registan to fold an evening walk into the day. Rooms are quiet and easy, the kind of place where the tribe spreads out over breakfast and plans the day that's coming.

Turkman Madrasah XIX Century Hotel
You sleep inside real Silk Road history: a restored 19th-century madrasah in the heart of Bukhara's old city, its arched cells now warm, quiet rooms around a still inner courtyard. Step out and the Kalyan minaret and the trading domes are a slow walk away. Mornings start with bread and tea in the courtyard; evenings end with the old town going gold just past your door.

Hotel Marwa Tashkent Pool&Spa
Hotel Marwa Tashkent Pool&Spa in Tashkent offers family rooms with air-conditioning, private bathrooms, and modern amenities. Each room includes a work desk, minibar, and free WiFi.

Bucketlist
Curated adventures across the world for people who want to vibe, connect, and cross off epic dreams
“I have never seen someone do their job with so much passion. The facilitator's energy and care were the biggest factor.”
Aadish Aggarwal
June 2026 - Bucketlist: Blue Domes of the Silk Road

Have questions?
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