Christopher Wizda

Christopher Wizda · Central Asia & Turkmenistan · Ulaanbaatar

Analysis, programs, and education, from Alaska to the Karakum.

Over fifteen years across the Circumpolar North, Russia, and Central Asia, working in Russian, Turkmen, and Mongolian. I analyze Turkmenistan and the Caspian, build and run international-development programs, and design curricula and train to prepare community members for their endeavors. Start with the track that fits what you're after.

Open to consulting, research, and speaking engagements, as well as the right full-time opportunity.

~15 years of engagement in Central Asia and Russia Listed Researcher, Oxus Society Member, ASEEES Columnist, Trade Finance Global Russian C1 · Turkmen A2 · Mongolian B1 · Slovak A2

Three ways in

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Answer a few quick questions. You will get a tailored, copy-ready summary of the capabilities that fit, the evidence behind each, and what I could deliver. Everything traces to real work; reasonable extensions of proven skills are labeled as such.

Analysis, in public

Writing

My weekly work runs on three threads, with a deeper catalog of posts and articles behind them. Everything links out to the original.

Mondays

AI & Methodology

How I use AI in research, where it breaks, and how I keep it honest, model audits, anti-fabrication scaffolding, and source verification.

Wednesdays

GIS & Satellite

Reading the region from orbit, georeferencing imperial maps, Sentinel imagery, and tracking infrastructure and corridors.

Fridays

Thematic

Energy, trade, governance, culture, and history across Turkmenistan and the Caspian, the wide-angle thread.

The Karakum Brief. My newsletter on Turkmenistan, the Caspian, and Central Asia. New editions land on LinkedIn. Subscribe on LinkedIn →

Post archive

Every post, grouped by theme. Brief summaries pulled from each piece; tap a title to read it on LinkedIn.

Culture & Heritage

Colors of Turkmenistan No. 12: Darvaza Flame Orange

The series finale: the Darvaza gas crater's orange is soot incandescence at roughly 1,000 to 1,400 degrees, not the faint blue of cleanly burning methane.

GIS & Mapping

Colors of Turkmenistan No. 11: Garabogazköl Ivory

Reading Turkmenistan's salt-crust ivory from orbit, where the chalky band ringing the Garabogazköl lagoon meets NDVI and the Repetek reserve.

GIS & Mapping

Colors of Turkmenistan: Karakum Tan and Saxaul Olive

Why the Black Sand desert reads pale tan from orbit, pairing satellite color with the saxaul olive seen on the ground across the Karakum.

Culture & Heritage

Buff, Rust, and Red: The Iron Oxide Spectrum

Day nine of the series: how one mineral, iron oxide, yields three of Turkmenistan's most iconic and unalike colors, separated only by temperature.

GIS & Mapping

Ashgabat's Marble White, From Orbit

Pointing Sentinel-2 at Ashgabat and at Mary to measure the marble-white capital from space, the city with the world's highest density of white marble.

AI & Methodology

The Lapis Ultramarine Test

An AI test built on ultramarine from lapis lazuli, the blue once hauled 1,200 km from a single Afghan valley and worth five times its weight in gold.

Culture & Heritage

Turquoise Crowns of the Karakum

How turquoise crowned the great medieval mausolea of Merv and Köneürgench, from the 12th-century dome of Sultan Sanjar visible for miles across the desert.

GIS & Mapping

Mapping the Black That Took Three Countries to Make

Tracing the trade behind Turkmen carpet black, an iron-tannate chemistry brewed from walnut, pomegranate, and oak gall that crossed borders to reach the loom.

AI & Methodology

When AI Knowledge Fades Like 19th-Century Yellow Dye

Pairing larkspur yellow, the dominant yellow of 19th-century Central Asian carpets, with a test of how AI knowledge thins on niche, under-documented detail.

Culture & Heritage

The Desert That Produces Exactly One Fiber Color

How the Arvana dromedary, Turkmenistan's native camel, gives weavers one natural fiber color, from pale red to deep mahogany, drawn straight from the Karakum.

GIS & Mapping

The Indigo Road Vanished Twice

Tracing the indigo trade route into Turkmenistan, the one carpet color weavers always had to import, using an 1895 Russian military map to capture a vanished road.

AI & Methodology

Asked 4 AIs to Visualize 200-Year-Old Color Chemistry

Giving four models the same brief, to visualize the chemistry behind the deep red of a 19th-century Tekke carpet, and comparing what each one built.

GIS & Mapping

The Geography of a Palette

Mapping fifteen of Turkmenistan's signature colors back to their environmental sources, treating geography and color alike as data with real provenance.

GIS & Mapping

What If the Satellite Is the Echo, Not the Source?

Inverting the usual GIS assumption, treating a source-anchored color atlas of Turkmenistan as the truth and the satellite image as a low-resolution echo.

AI & Methodology

Building an 878-Color Atlas of Turkmenistan

From a bee-eater's wing to Ashgabat's marble, building a source-anchored atlas of Turkmen color with hex codes traceable to a real species, plant, or place.

GIS & Mapping

Mapping the Forgotten Origins of Turkmen Natural Gas, 1950 to 1976

Turning the early, under-covered history of Turkmenistan's gas industry into an interactive map of where the sector actually began.

AI & Methodology

How Should Turkmenistan Maximize Gas Export Revenue, 2027 to 2037?

An AI experiment on Turkmen gas strategy that surfaced a $15 billion principal-agent trap across the Line D, Trans-Caspian, and TAPI options.

History & Geopolitics

Gokdepe 1881: Reconstructing the Siege

A five-panel georeferenced reconstruction of the 1881 siege of Gokdepe, placing Skobelev's assault on the ground using primary Russian sources and imagery.

Trade & Corridors

Bridging Empires: Crossing the Amu Darya

The Farap to Turkmenabat bridge across the Amu Darya as more than steel and concrete, a century of geopolitical ambition and regional integration.

AI & Methodology

Load-Bearing Claims: AIs on Turkmenistan's Bridges

Giving four AI models the same deep-research prompt on the history of Turkmenistan's bridges, and watching how each handled sourcing and verifiable claims.

Culture & Heritage

How Central Asians Build Identity, One Car at a Time

Cars as identity across Central Asia, from Turkmenistan's Camry street names to the wider region's distinct automotive cultures.

AI & Methodology

AI Can Find the Boar but Not the Butterfly

An AI test on local Turkmen car knowledge, where models surface the obvious but miss embedded detail like the Camry nicknames negotiated on the street.

Culture & Heritage

Cars, Brides, and Desert Pride: Cars in Turkmenistan

Why Ashgabat runs on white cars, how each Toyota Camry generation earns a street name from its taillights, and how the car wove itself into Turkmen life.

Geography & Earth Science

The Caspian Sea's Declining Water Levels

Why the Caspian's falling level deserves attention, with imagery showing the Hazar shoreline receding about 800 meters and pressure mounting on Turkmenbashi port.

Energy & Resources

Turkmenistan, TAPI, and American Cooperation

A note on Turkmenistan signaling interest in American cooperation on the TAPI gas pipeline, and the mutual potential if opportunities open for U.S. partners.

Horses & Equine

Counting the Turkmen in Chaffetz's Raiders, Rulers, and Traders

On a horse kick, a look at David Chaffetz's history of the horse and how often the Turkmen, the Akhal-Teke, and the Teke and Yomut appear across its pages.

Culture & Heritage

Turkmenistan and All Things Turkmen: The Unexpectedly Delightful Theme That’s Been Recurring in My Life for 11 Years!

Without seeking it out, Turkmenistan has been weaving its way back to me again and again over more than a decade.

Culture & Heritage

Echoes of Nisa: Reimagining Heritage in Ashgabat’s White City

A first flight to Turkmenistan in 2014 and the ancient Parthian capital of Nisa, set against the reinvention of national heritage.

Culture & Heritage

From Yurts to High-Rises: Urbanization in Turkmenistan

One of my favorite films is the 1970 Soviet classic 'White Sun of the Desert', following a Red Army soldier near the Caspian Sea after the Russian Civil War.

Culture & Heritage

Patterns of Belonging: Tribal Identity in Turkmenistan

Ever since taking cultural geography at university, I’ve been fascinated by how land shapes people.

Culture & Heritage

Insights from My Management Experience in Turkmenistan

Earlier this year, I started my first high-level leadership position as Country Director, which was both exciting and daunting given the evolving situation affecting US int…

Culture & Heritage

Fruits of the Loom: Turkmen Carpets

When thinking of Turkmenistan, the iconic carpet immediately comes to mind.

Culture & Heritage

Weaving Economic Value: The Turkmen Carpet's Role in National Diversification

When I was preparing to leave Turkmenistan, I brought my carpets to the Turkmen Carpet Museum to obtain the necessary paperwork for export.

Culture & Heritage

The Aristocrat and the Guardian: Power of Turkmenistan’s Animal Symbols

In Turkmenistan, animals are more than folklore or ornament.

Culture & Heritage

Currency of Turkmenistan as a Cultural Narrative

Let’s start the year off with hopes of good fortune by talking about money!

Culture & Heritage

The Manat and the Algorithm: Digital Capital in Turkmenistan

On January 1, 2026, Turkmenistan formalized a comprehensive legal framework for virtual assets.

Culture & Heritage

The Marble Capital: Architecture and Urban Identity in Turkmenistan

Ashgabat’s transformation into the so-called “White Marble City” is one of Central Asia’s most striking urban narratives.

Culture & Heritage

Turkmenistan’s Urban Shift: Beyond the White Marble of Ashgabat

Turkmenistan has crossed a quiet but meaningful threshold.

Culture & Heritage

Gul Logic: Tribal Symbology as a State Blueprint in Turkmenistan

Turkmenistan’s modern identity is often viewed through its rapid architectural transformation, yet its most resilient infrastructure is not made of concrete, but of lineage.

Culture & Heritage

The Aksakal (yasuly) Principle: Age as Authority in Turkmenistan

Across Turkmenistan’s deserts and mountains, respect for elders remains a cornerstone of social life.

Culture & Heritage

The Ene Principle: Silent Architect of Turkmen Heritage

Beyond the formal structures of authority lies a deeper, more intimate power: the ene (grandmother).

Culture & Heritage

From Madder to Cocoon: Turkmen Textiles

When people admire Turkmen carpets, their attention often goes to pattern.

Culture & Heritage

Strength and Harmony in Turkmenistan

In my previous reflection, I explored the cultural architecture of peace in Turkmenistan, from "amanat" (trust and sacred safekeeping) to "sulh" (reconciliation).

Culture & Heritage

Every piece of jewelry has a story. But a Turkmen bracelet may carry the story of an entire people. 👨‍👩‍

For centuries, Turkmen pastoral nomads crafted silver bracelets set with carnelian and sometimes turquoise, not just as adornment, but as portable wealth.

Culture & Heritage

Architecture tells the story of a nation, but behind every landmark are the minds who dared to imagine it

This conversation with Ruslan Muradov is a reminder that understanding architecture means understanding the people behind it.

Energy & Resources

Natural Resource Geography of Turkmenistan

Turkmenistan's scale is immediately striking at 488,100 km²; a tad bigger than the state of California.

Energy & Resources

Salt, Brine, and Strategic Advantage: Turkmenistan’s Mineral Wealth

Using “sea salt” while cooking in Turkmenistan added a surprising, straight-from-the-source twist to my meals, especially intriguing since I had never associated the countr…

Energy & Resources

Turkmenistan: Bits, Bytes, & Blue Flames

Building on my interest in the vast, untapped potential of Central Asia, Turkmenistan’s emerging digital policy agenda, signals a noteworthy geopolitical pivot.

Energy & Resources

Turkmenistan's Natural Resource Portfolio Developments

As 2025 progresses into 2026, Turkmenistan is executing major developments across its three resource pillars.

Energy & Resources

Marble and Megawatts: Turkmenistan's Electricity Infrastructure Journey

Turkmenistan sits atop some of the world's largest natural-gas reserves, and its electricity system reflects that abundance: nearly all power is generated by gas-fired plants.

Energy & Resources

Turkmenistan's Forgotten Solar Science Legacy

Turkmenistan averages 2,774 hours of sunshine per year, with roughly 300 sunny days and solar irradiance of 700-800 W/m².

Energy & Resources

Walnut Money, Oil, the Nobel Prize & Turkmenistan

In 1873, Ludvig Nobel sent his older brother Robert to the Caucasus to find walnut wood for rifle stocks.

Trade & Corridors

From Silk Roads to Trade Corridors: Turkmenistan at the Crossroads

As one of the few foreigners who may have traversed Turkmenistan end to end by train, I felt a sense of adventure echoing the journeys of the ancient caravan routes.

Trade & Corridors

Turkmenistan Banking: From Silk Road Finance to State-Led Digitalization

Turkmenistan’s banking history is a story of centralization and continuity, tracing a path from Tsarist-era imperial finance to the Soviet monobank, and into today’s state-…

Trade & Corridors

Turkmenistan's 2026 Pivot in Global Logistics

🛤️ Middle Corridor: Beyond the Port Awaza Trilateral Summit: In August 2025, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan held a landmark summit in Awaza.

Trade & Corridors

Turkmenistan Rail (1880-Present): From Imperial Frontier to Eurasian Corridor

As one of the few foreigners to have traveled across Turkmenistan end to end by train, I wanted to dig into the country's railway history.

History & Geopolitics

Turkmenistan at the Crossroads: Neutrality, Energy, and Regional Strategy in C5+1

How an energy-rich, permanently neutral state uses the C5+1 platform and regional strategy.

History & Geopolitics

From an Ohio Farm Boy to Mar-a-Lago: 153 Years of America's Most Overlooked Relationship

In light of the Chairman of the Halk Maslahaty & National Leader of the Turkmen People G.

History & Geopolitics

The Edge of Two Empires: Serhetabat

At the far southern frontier of Turkmenistan, geography and geopolitics have always moved together.

History & Geopolitics

Peace Concepts in Turkmen Culture: From Sacred Trust to Permanent Neutrality

Written while conflict unfolded across the border in Iran and Afghanistan, a look at Turkmen peace traditions from amanat, the sacred guarantee of protection, through customary reconciliation to the country's UN-recognized permanent neutrality.

History & Geopolitics

From Bow to Border: Turkmenistan's Modern Security Architecture

In my last two posts, I explored how Turkmenistan's culture wove peace and martial readiness together, from archery and belt wrestling to concepts of trust and reconciliation.

History & Geopolitics

International Women’s Day 2026: Celebrating Turkmenistan’s Female Heroes

On this Women’s Day, let's honor the Turkmen women whose courage and leadership have shaped this nation in war, labor, culture and family life.

Horses & Equine

The Yomut and the Horse: Power and Identity in Turkmenistan

The Yomut are one of the five great Turkmen tribes spanning the southeastern frontier of the Caspian Sea and near Khiva, the Yomut homeland forms a strategic arc from the B…

Horses & Equine

The 6th Gul and the 3rd Hoof of the Turkmens

The Goklen (Gökleňler or Goklan) are a quieter tribe and the “6th gul” as there are currently five on the flag but they are a unique cornerstone of Turkmen history.

Horses & Equine

Three Horse Economies, Three Economic Models: Thoroughbred vs. Arabian vs. Akhal-Teke

In global equine trade, horses follow three very different economic playbooks.

Horses & Equine

Turkmenistan’s Akhal-Teke Training Method 🏋️‍

In Turkmenistan, training the legendary Akhal-Teke is not merely a sporting discipline, it is a state-supported cultural system rooted in nomadic survival, modern veterinar…

Horses & Equine

Came across this fascinating post on “horse diplomacy”

From Nikita Khrushchev gifting an Akhal-Teke to Elizabeth II, to Saparmurat Niyazov presenting one to John Major.

Geography & Earth Science

Turkmenistan: Geography of Extremes

Coming from Alaska, I have a liking towards open spaces like tundra.

Geography & Earth Science

Rivers in the Desert: Turkmenistan’s Agricultural Resilience

Driving around in Turkmenistan and seeing farms growing everything from wheat to vegetables to even rice once up north in Dashoguz, I wondered how do you grow food in one o…

Geography & Earth Science

Life Between Sand and Sky: Turkmenistan’s Wildlife

Traveling across Turkmenistan, I often kept an eye out for wildlife along the way.

Geography & Earth Science

A Concise Guide to the Regions of Turkmenistan

Beyond political borders, Turkmenistan’s five velayats form a living dialogue between Silk Road civilizations and landscapes that demanded endurance, adaptation, and imagin…

Geography & Earth Science

From Footprint to Flash: Turkmen Wildlife

When observers scan the arid ridges of the Kopetdag or the plateaus of Badhyz, the landscape often appears still.

Geography & Earth Science

Earth, Water, and Time: Turkmenistan's Underground Rivers

Standing above the Kopet Dag foothills, you might spot circular depressions stretching across desert toward a green patch.

Geography & Earth Science

Archaeology in Turkmenistan

Beneath the shifting sands of the Karakum Desert lie lost civilizations that once rivaled Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley.

Geography & Earth Science

Earthquake Hazards and Active Faults in Turkmenistan

Today, a magnitude 5.2 earthquake struck western Turkmenistan near Oglanly at a shallow depth of 10 km (damage hasn't been reported yet), a stark reminder of the seismic ri…

Geography & Earth Science

Mud Volcanoes of Turkmenistan

About 30 active mud volcanoes line the Caspian coast, stretching across a 300-kilometer chain from the village of Esenguly to the Cheleken Peninsula.

Food & Daily Life

Melons of Turkmenistan: More Than Just a Fruit

My favorite fruit is the melon; nothing compares to the taste of a fresh one.

Food & Daily Life

Melons and Money: Turkmenistan’s Sweetest Economic Symbol

Turkmenistan is home to some of the world’s most celebrated melons.

Food & Daily Life

Melodies of the Karakum: Turkmen Music and a New Year’s Playlist

As we approach the final days of 2025, it is the perfect moment to delve into the rich, rhythmic tapestry of Turkmenistan’s musical heritage.

Food & Daily Life

Turkmenistan’s Two New Years

As the world counts down to 2026, much of the globe sees January 1st as a singular reset button, in the heart of Central Asia, time itself is plural.

Food & Daily Life

Turkmenistan’s Quiet Food Export Story

The other day, I had an unexpected find in Ulaanbaatar’s Narantuul Market while I was shopping in preparation for Mongolia’s Tsagaan Sar (Lunar New Year)- chocolate bars ma…

Food & Daily Life

Fire, Meat, and Flour: Turkmenistan's Culinary Heritage

A dash of Caspian sea salt and spices over camel meat, washed down with fermented camel's milk among herders in the western desert as the sun set while the herd returned fr…

Food & Daily Life

Why Isn't Turkmenistan at the 2026 Winter Olympics?

Turkmenistan's Olympic story is one of patience and perseverance.

Food & Daily Life

Lunar New Year & Ramadan: The 2026 Calendar Overlap

In early 2026, two of humanity's great cultural rhythms converge.

Food & Daily Life

What is Nowruz, and why does it matter in Turkmenistan?

Every March, over 300 million people across dozens of countries mark one of humanity's oldest shared celebrations.

Food & Daily Life

Rituals and flavors of a Turkmen Nowruz

Weeks before the spring equinox, Turkmen families begin preparing for the new year.

Food & Daily Life

Nowruz, Turkmenistan, & the Turkic World

From the Bosphorus to the Altai Mountains, over 200 million people speak languages that share the same ancient roots.

Language & Folklore

The Turkmen Language

Turkmen is a unique language spoken by ~seven million people, it belongs to the Oghuz branch of the Turkic family, a sibling of Turkish and Azerbaijani.

Language & Folklore

Mythology of Turkmenistan: Cryptids, Dragons, and a Hero

Turkmenistan holds one of the richest folklore traditions on Earth.

Profile & Meta

77 Posts, 8 Articles, 1 Book, and One Country I Can't Stop Writing About

A retrospective on turning a 2013 study-abroad encounter into one of the largest English-language public knowledge bases on Turkmenistan: three posts a week, eight articles, and a book editorial role.

Profile & Meta

From Moscow to Ulaanbaatar: How Deep Regional Engagement Built Actionable Expertise

A fourteen-year arc across Russia, Central Asia, and Mongolia, and how sustained language immersion, fieldwork, and roles from American Councils to Peace Corps to UN work built actionable regional expertise.

Profile & Meta

🌍 A Fourteen-Year Journey of Regional Expertise

This article chronicles my fourteen-year journey of deep regional expertise across Russia, Central Asia, and Mongolia 🇷🇺🇰🇿🇰🇬🇹🇲🇹🇯🇺🇿🇲🇳.

Profile & Meta

Between Turkmenistan & Mongolia

Going from Mongolia to Turkmenistan & back has offered me a rare insight into their shared connection & similarities; ~3 years in Mongolia, ~11 years of Turkmenistan recurr…

Articles, briefings & books

Publications

Selected work across outlets. Each entry links to the publication or piece.

Talks, interviews & appearances

Speaking & Media

Public speaking, radio and forum appearances, and selected media. Recordings are on file; ask for a link or I can point you to the public version where one exists.

A decade and a half with the region

Experience

Grouped by the kind of work rather than a straight timeline, followed by awards and the conferences I've taken part in.

Awards & Honors

Conferences & Forums

Beyond the desk

Field Range

Bush-plane ground school, Arctic survival, EMT certification, mine-safety training, and satellite remote sensing: the unusual range behind the analysis, gathered from Alaska to the Karakum.

About

Christopher Wizda

Central Asia analyst, researcher, educator, and writer based in Ulaanbaatar, with Turkmenistan and the Caspian region as my primary specialization. My work builds on more than a decade of engagement that began with undergraduate research in Kyrgyzstan in 2013 and grew through Turkmen language study, regional fieldwork, service as a Turkmen delegation liaison at the 2015 Special Olympics World Games, contributions to the UN E-Government Survey, and leadership of American Councils' operations in Turkmenistan as Country Director.

Today my work runs across three areas: research and analysis on Turkmenistan, the Caspian, and wider Central Asia, combining open-source research, GIS and satellite imagery, and AI-assisted multilingual analysis of energy markets, trade corridors, governance, and culture; international education, teaching IB Business Management and Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies; and select consulting on country analysis, cultural research, program design, monitoring and evaluation, and stakeholder engagement.

Earlier experience spans research and project contributions for UNICEF, UNDP, UNCDF, ITU, and UN DESA, management of a 20-plus-person team and a multimillion-dollar grant portfolio, teaching in Russia and Mongolia, and private-sector work with Boeing, Honeywell, and Kinross Gold. If your work touches Central Asian policy, Caspian energy, Eurasian trade corridors, or cultural and historical research, I would welcome the conversation. The best way to reach me is on LinkedIn.

On the record