Hello! I hope this day brings you well-being. I want to share some of the impressions that I gained during my trip to Namangan. Having decided to visit the Namangan State Museum of Local Lore, I was generally satisfied, but one point caused me concern.
As your devoted reader (I have almost all the travel guides to various cities in my collection), I was happy to find a small kiosk inside the museum, which housed the tourist center. There I saw a Namangan guidebook that was covered in dust. We expressed a desire to purchase it, but, unfortunately, the seller was absent at that time. We exchanged contacts, and he offered to meet the next day at 9:00 a.m.
To my surprise, the seller informed me that the guidebook costs 200,000 soums. This caused me confusion, because it seems to me that such materials should be distributed free of charge. I was ready to buy it for less, but the seller explained that this part of the kiosk did not belong to him, and refused to sell. As an alternative, he suggested that I take a picture of the guidebook and print it myself. As a result, I was left without a guidebook.
The situation was resolved only when I arrived in the city of Chartak, where I visited the sacred place "Balik Kul" (Sulton Uvays Qaraniy ziyoratgoh majmuasi). The local museum provided us with the necessary guidebook for free.
I would like to draw your attention to the fact that your travel guides in Namangan are sold for 200,000 soums, which, in my opinion, is unacceptable.
This museum impressed with its stuffed animals. I haven't smiled like that in a long time. The dim light of the first floor creates the atmosphere of the once-collapsed Soviet Union. The museum is large, with several floors.
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Ангелина Никифорова
Level 5 Local Expert
August 23
Of course, it's very sad on the second floor, exhibits from the Soviet era. But the third one is more interesting. A total of 10,000 soums, that is, about 70 rubles. But it's better not to go to the toilet for the faint of heart.
Would you rate how kumgan was translated? "sandstone". apparently from the word cum - sand. Although kumgan, he is also a kumgan in Africa. The millstone was called a grindstone. As it is, I have extracted enough information. I read about the Axicent, which is where I was going