People live in all parts of Mongolia, including the Gobi desert. In
the desert there are mainly nomadic families. They graze their
life stock for a couple of weeks in one area and then move on to
another place. We visited several local families in different parts
of the country. A family usually has a couple of gers and some
life stock. Outside of the few cities people live almost exclusively
in gers. Even in the cities many people put up gers instead of
houses. The gers are tents that can be taken down in about ½ hour
and put up in 1 hour. They are usually nicely decorated and quite
comfortable. In the winter they add a few more layers of felt or hide
to the ger to insulate it. I wood burning stove provides the heat.
People there still get around mostly on horseback, although many have
motorcycles too. For life stock they have horses (still their main
mode of transportation), cattle (often yaks), goats and sheep. Except
in the northern parts they also often have camels, the two-humped
bactrian variety.
During the Russian period, almost all of the Buddhist monasteries were
destroyed and tens of thousands of monks were killed. Only three
monasteries survived, one of them was the largest one in Kharakhorum,
Erdene Zuu Hiid. Kharakhorum (Kharkhorin) was the ancient capital of
Mongolia under Genghis Khan.
The monastery in Ulaan Baatar was another one that survived. Buddhism
is now coming back. Mongolian Buddhism was influenced very much by
Tibet. This can be seen in a lot of the older paintings in the few
monasteries that were left by the Russians. There was also some
influence from India in some of the paintings.
On one occasion I saw a Mongolian culture show. The music is
different from other countries that I have visited. One part of it is
very unusual: The throat singing. It is done by men in a very high
voice. It takes long training to become good in this type of
singing. The acrobats are, as usual, quite impressive. They
reminded me of similar performances in China.
Almost all roads in Mongolia are just tracks. Only around Ulaan
Baatar are a few paved roads. Driving over those tracks can be
bone-jarring at times. When the track didn't go in the right
direction we just drove where we wanted to go without tracks. This
worked quite well in the Gobi desert with plenty of flat areas, but
was a little more difficult as soon as you got into mountainous
areas. There were very few bridges, mostly we just drove through the
small rivers. Driving under these conditions takes its toll
on the vehicles. Our drivers had to fix something almost every
evening. They were pretty good mechanics and were able to get
everything working pretty quickly. We had only one major fatality,
the Mitsubishi bus, whose engine gave up. They had spare parts flown
into the Gobi desert, but couldn't fix it in time. They replaced the
bus with a Russian jeep so we could continue with the trip.
Throughout Mongolia you see so-called ovoos. These are sacred mounds of stone
and other stuff with blue khadags (prayer scarves). They are
shamanistic symbols. It is customary to walk around an ovoo clockwise
and through stones or other objects on the mound for good luck with
the journey. Our drivers did this regularly whenever we stopped at an
ovoo (which was very frequently, since they are everywhere).
Sukhbaatar Square in the center of Ulaan Baatar. (595k)
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One of the Russian style monuments with an ovoo next to it. It was
an interesting contrast between the huge monument and the shamanistic
ovoo. (805k)
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There are lots of ger suburbs around Ulaan Baatar. The gers are
usually surrounded by wooden fences. These fences are there to
provide protection from the wind. Strong winds are blowing most of
the time, in the winter they can get very fierce. (872k)
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Throughout Mongolia people there is a mix of people in traditional
Mongolian clothes and in western style clothes. Outside the cities
people wear a lot more traditional clothes. (726k)
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This lady had a cell phone and was sitting somewhere in Ulaan
Baatar providing public phone service. There were quite a few of
these entrepreneurs in the city. (823k)
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There were several Internet places in Ulaan Baatar. Outside of the
capital however, there wasn't anything like that. (877k)
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Outside of Ulaan Baatar, this is what towns look like. (859k)
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One of the villages we saw in central Mongolia. (832k)
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A man in traditional Mongolian dress, including the pointed hat. (701k)
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An old man from one of the families that we visited. (570k)
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A woman with one of the families in the northern parts of Mongolia.
There is a large number of women that I found very attractive in
Mongolia, quite different from what I saw in China. (759k)
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Local entertainment. (631k)
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A group playing traditional Mongolian music. The man with the base
was the throat singer. (854k)
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A mandolin player in traditional festive clothes. (838k)
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A young girl doing acrobatics. It was quite amazing how she could
tie her body into knots. (804k)
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A herd of horses with a herder on horseback. (726k)
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The herders carry a very long pole to direct the animals. When
they want to catch an animal they have a noose at the end of the long
pole. (729k)
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A rider on his way to somewhere. The horses are quite small, but
they cover good ground when they get going. (792k)
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A saddled horse with one of the colorful Mongolian saddles. For some
reason they tie down the horses overhead. The horses can't reach the
ground when they are tied like that. (900k)
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Horses at a watering hole. (524k)
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The cattle in Mongolia are mostly small yaks. They are better suited
for the long, cold winter than our cattle. (880k)
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A camel herd in central Mongolia. (659k)
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The camels in Mongolia are the two-humped bactrian camels. (637k)
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Camels are used as draft animals as are cows. (806k)
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One tribe in northern Mongolia raises reindeer as their main type of
animals. (825k)
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They had tied down the sheep in a long line for milking. (749k)
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Goats are curious critters. This one was very interested in what was
in our car. (733k)
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There were carcasses of life-stock everywhere. This one had just
the skin and bones left. Mongolia had an extremely severe winter
2000/2001. Many of the dead animals died during that winter. (912k)
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Sometimes all that was left were scattered bones. (1054k)
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A waterhole in the Gobi desert. (584k)
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Watering was done either by hand of with one of the animals. This was
one of our drivers showing us how it is done. (572k)
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There are many Stone Age relics in Mongolia. This was not marked,
but the circular row of stones with the pile of stones in the center
was obviously artificial. We saw pictures of Stone Age sites in the
museum that looked very much like this site. (871k)
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Stone age Monument. There was a family camping there. They had traced
the carvings with paint. This is not graffiti, it seems to be common
in Mongolia. These monuments still are significant for Mongolians.
(1125k)
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These are the ruins of one of the monasteries that the Russians
destroyed. Over a thousand monks lived there when it was still
alive. (925k)
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The remains of one of the buildings in the destroyed monastery. (818k)
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One of the buildings in the Bogd Khan Palace in Ulaan Baatar. (788k)
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Closeup of the paintings on the door of the Bogd Khan Palace Doors. (885k)
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The Bogd Khan Palace with the city scape in the background. (835k)
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The Erdene Zuu Hiid monastery in Kharakhorum. There are 108 stupas
around the monastery, 108 being a lucky number in Buddhism. (783k)
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One of the stupas at Erdene Zuu. (802k)
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The main temple in Erdene Zuu. (939k)
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A temple in Erdene Zuu Hiid. This one is the oldest in the
monastery, it dates probably from the 17th century. (877k)
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A sign in one of the temples with various scripts. The bottom part
is the old Mongolian script, with one row of Chinese at the very
bottom. As far as I know the top two rows are in Tibetan. I don't
remember what the next two rows are. (925k)
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A Buddha statue in one of the temples. (1123k)
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A daemon figure. This is a female daemon. You can see a dismembered human
body at the bottom. Some of these daemons were not very nice
people. (947k)
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Turtle rock in Kharakhorum. Four of these rocks marked the ancient
perimeter of Kharakhorum. (986k)
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Prayer wheels in the Ganhan monastery in Ulaan Baatar. People walk
by and spin the prayer wheels as part of their prayers. (784k)
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A Buddhist monk on the cell phone. (873k)
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Buddhist monks in the main monastery in Ulaan Baatar. They ring that
gong in regular intervals. (653k)
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Camp of a nomadic family in central Mongolia. (833k)
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A single ger in the Gobi desert with life stock. (416k)
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A group of gers just after sunrise in central Mongolia. (960k)
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A scene at a ger camp. (717k)
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A single ger in the Gobi desert. You can see that there is almost
no vegetation. And still the life stock can feed for a few days before
they move on. (561k)
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A typical ger. The ger has a wooden door and a wood frame that is
covered with felt and fabric. To keep everything in place they wrap
rope around the vertical walls. The top is open but can be covered
with a flap of cloth to keep the rain out. (817k)
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The inside of the ger of a local family that we visited.
Everything is nicely decorated and painted, the floor is carpeted.
The two posts hold up the central ring of the roof. (879k)
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The local family that we visited. (955k)
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A Mongolian saddle. It is made out of wood. Notice the silver
buckles right where you are sitting. Ouch!! I heard horror stories
about how uncomfortable these saddles are. (1081k)
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The reindeer people in northern Mongolia use these types of tents. (983k)
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These were the vehicles that our group used and the drivers of the
vehicles. (901k)
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This was our camp in the Gobi desert. The large tent is the kitchen
tent. (875k)
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The Mongolian cook, preparing our meal. (765k)
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We managed to buy beer often enough, but how to keep it cold? When we
had a mountain stream around, it was no problem, otherwise you just
have to get used to drinking warm beer. (1009k)
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Instead of hotels there are ger camps like this in a lot of places. I
stayed in such ger camps half the time instead of staying in the cold,
wet tent. (1130k)
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It rained a lot. This is a view of our camp in the rain in the Gobi
desert. (705k)
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This is one of the roads that we took. (720k)
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The tracks along which you drive tend to multiply. Anytime there
is too big a hole in one track, people just make a new one next to it.
Here you see an example of such a spread-out road. (744k)
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Coming up a mountain track. (792k)
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Lots of dust, especially in the southern desert areas. (682k)
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An I mean LOTS of dust. The whole valley was filled with dust blown
up by the vehicles. (647k)
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The heat created impressive mirages over the flat parts of the desert. (519k)
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We had to stop many times with flat tires. (683k)
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Fixing a flat tire. They had it down pat, it happened often enough
with the road conditions. (811k)
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This tire had a big hole in the sidewall, so they stuck the valve of a
bad inner tube through the hole to plug it. (638k)
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Something broke in the oil distribution system. It took the
drivers a few hours to fix that. We went ahead with two of the
vehicles to our camp and the others followed once they had fixed the
car. (814k)
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The Russians built some roads and bridges, but they are not
maintained very well. We had to go through the river again to get
around this one. (978k)
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Driving through a swamp area with water spraying. We got through
this one OK. (793k)
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We did not get through this one. The Landcruiser got stuck in the
mud here. It was rescued by the Mercedes which had locking
differentials and could pull even on muddy ground. (663k)
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Again the Mercedes came to the rescue when the Pajero got stuck on
a big boulder while fording this river. (1163k)
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One of the ovoos, the shamanistic stone mounds that you can see
everywhere. You can find all kinds of stuff on these ovoos, including
bottles, car parts, crutches, animal skulls, sometimes even
money. (749k)
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Crutches and other stuff on one of the ovoos. (1013k)
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In the northern parts of Mongolia the ovoos are much neater. The
stone mound inside is the same, but it is then covered with wooden poles.
This one was one of the nicest ones with a fence around it. (771k)
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