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Tamchy

Tamchy
Тамчы
Main street of Tamchy
Main street of Tamchy
Tamchy is located in Kyrgyzstan
Tamchy
Tamchy
Coordinates: 42°33′36″N 76°39′0″E / 42.56000°N 76.65000°E / 42.56000; 76.65000Coordinates: 42°33′36″N 76°39′0″E / 42.56000°N 76.65000°E / 42.56000; 76.65000
Country Kyrgyzstan
Region Issyk-Kul Region
District Issyk Kul District
Elevation 1,601 m (5,253 ft)
Population (2009)
 • Total 1,427
Time zone UTC +5

Tamchy (Kyrgyz: Тамчы; Russian: Тамчы, earlier Тамчи) is a village in the Issyk Kul District of the Issyk-Kul Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 1,427 in 2009.

The name used to be transcribed into English as Tamchi, and some local road signs have it, surprisingly, as Tamczy.

Tamchy is located on the north shore of Lake Issyk Kul, between Balykchy and Cholpon Ata on highway A363. To the west is Kosh Kol.

The village stretches for a couple kilometers along the shore of a bay formed by promontories at Kosh Kol (to the west) and Choktal (to the east). A gently raising desert plain stretches for more than ten kilometers north of the village, towards the foothills of the mountain range that separates Issyk Kul basin from the Kemin Valley farther north. Remote snow-covered mountain tops can be seen from the village, and, on a clear day, one can see the Tian Shan mountains across the lake to the south.

A creek flows from the mountains to the shore, bringing fresh water to the village. Along much of its course, the creek is artificially rerouted (and thus locally known as an aryk) to run not along the bottom of ravines and gulches, but on a high ground, so that it is possible to divert water from it for irrigation. However, as the amount of water in the creek is quite limited, only a few square kilometers of land around the village is actually irrigated. Village houses are often surrounded by orchards, apples and walnuts being local favorites.

Tamchy is one of the popular family beach vacation destinations on Issyk Kul's north shore. Much less developed and more low-key than Cholpon Ata, it is popular with both the Bishkek middle class and budget travellers from as far away as central Russia and Siberia. Unlike its western neighbor, Kosh Kol, Tamchy was spared the large-scale resort development during the Soviet era, and its hospitality industry consists mostly of smaller, family-run guesthouses.


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