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Showing posts with the label Mongolia

Gorkhi-Terelj national park

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Rock formations of the park. Only 50 km from Ulaanbaatar you can find the Gorkhi-Terejl national park. It's a bit less wild than the rest of Mongolia (you will find tourist camps a bit everywhere), but it's easy to reach from the capital and offers some beautiful landscape. I took a public bus to go there. It was already the low season and the number of bus per day went from 2 to 1. I didn't have any difficulty to find a Ger to sleep during the night. I just went to what looked like a tourist camp and asked. The next day I hiked some more in the park. I really enjoyed the sensation of freedom. You could walk to any place that looked interesting. To go back, I had already missed the only bus to Ulaanbaatar so I hitchhiked. Luckily the first car that came by stopped. It was a group of Korean Christian missionary. They were so nice they even invited my for a late lunch at a Korean restaurant on our way back to the capital. Ariyabal meditation temple.

Gobi: Sky

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You feel tiny when you're standing on the endless steppes of Mongolia with a 180 degree view on our galaxy. People say of Mongolia that it's the Land of blue sky and it is true. But it can also be bright red at sunrise or sunset. And it can have thousands of stars. You never get bored looking at the sky. The trusty Toyota Land Cruiser that took us all around the Gobi desert. Sunset.

Gobi: Desert

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Khongoryn Els. A huge stretch of sand dunes. It's 100 km long. Some place in the Gobi are more arid than other. They often offer stunning geological formations. My favorite was the sand dunes of  Khongoryn Els. Climbing the tallest sand dune and then having the view over the sand, the mountains and the steppe was  breathtaking (literally and figuratively). On one side of Khongoryn Els is a small river. It makes a great contrast between the green around the river and the beige of the dunes. On this picture you can see the sand stretching to the left, but you can't see the end. The place is often called the "Singing Dunes", because of the sound the sand makes when blown by the wind. I didn't really heard them "sing", because it had rained in the morning and the sand was still a little wet. We walked to the top of the highest dune at more than 300 meters. It was exhausting. For every two step forward, you would slip one step back. The...

Gobi: Lifestyle

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Buddhist temple. The Mongolian practice a version that is close to the Tibetan Buddhism. One of the highlight of our Gobi tour was to discover the lifestyle of the inhabitant of the desert. They live mainly from livestock: sheep, goat, cow, camel, horse. They eat the meat and the milk of the animals. I could even try the Airag, fermented horse milk. It was sparkling and sour. I'm glade I could try it, but I didn't ask for a refill. The skin and fur of the animals is used to make clothes and the Ger (yurt). They also sell their animals to make some money and buy what they can't get from the land. It's a harsh way of living with little water, extreme temperatures and having to work 365 days per year (no break when you take care of the livestock). But the nomad we met were always smiling and had an incredible sense of hospitality. They would always give us the best food they had, even if it was something very rare and expensive for them. One of the local family ...

Gobi: Life and death

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Skull of a dead goat. The Gobi desert is full of animals bones. I've spent 6 days in the Gobi desert in the south of Mongolia. It's a place of all the extremes. Temperatures can have 80 degrees of difference, from -40°C to +40°C. It can be completely dry for months then heavy rain can occur, rivers forms and huge floods cover the plains. It's a desert but it's not completely dead. It's full of plants and animals, but life there is harsh. Food and water is scarce. Climate is extreme. Hiding from predators is hard on those huge flat plain. The Gobi is a fascinating place. We were lucky to spot a lot of wild life: a corsac fox, some gazelles, lizards, but the most impressive was to witness a golden eagle hunting down a young gazelle. It was a bloody fight for life. Butterfly chrysalis. It was raining during summer, so part of the desert was green and full of flowers. The pink flowers are wild onions. Goat with her newborn baby. It was beginn...

Trans-Mongolian Railway

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The endless Mongolian steppes. In the morning I boarded the train K23 at the Beijing train station, direction Ulaanbaatar. The trans-Mongolian railway cross Mongolia from the south to the north, from China to Russia. This time I didn't had to get out of the train in the middle of the night to pass the border. The officials of China and Mongolia will board the train and come check your passport. Another thing that happen at the border is the switching of wheels. Mongolia use the Russian standard for their rails track gauge, but the Chinese use the smaller international track gauge. Instead of having passengers change train at the border, they change the wheels of the train. The wagons are brought to a hangar, elevated and the wheel block is switched. You can stay in the wagon during the process and watch the workers. It's interesting to see it from your cabin. Be careful during the passport control and wheels change the toilets are closed. It will last during five hours...