Even though we prefer traveling independently going to the desert on our own didn’t seem to be the smartest move.
So we found ourself on a Sunday morning together with Noemi from France and Jen and Santos from the States, our driver Amrah and our guide Serjii in one of the Russian breads (most robust Minivan ever build) on the way to Gobi.
By that a nicely routine started: eating breakfast (bread with jam, varied with fruits, eggs or cheese (Scheibletten Käse), driving or hopping over mongolian streets (in Europe they would fall in the category of field paths), eating lunch in a small shop in one of the sparse villages (not always easy with vegetarians on board), hopping further over bumping roads, snacking preferable „Schokoladenrosinen“ (import from Germany) and listen either to „Barbie girl“ from Aqua or mongolian pop songs spiced with the drivers voice.
In the afternoon after admiring the landscape from the window in the bus (usually roads were to bumpy to read or do something else) we arrived at the destination of the day and walked around for some time before heading on to the close by family or ger camp, were we stayed for the night. It is an incredible amount of bus driving involved which really underlined the vastness and sparsely population of this beautiful country.
Here the six highlights of our trip:
1. Day: Staying in a nomadic family drinking airag (fermented horse milk, 3% alcohol and very sour) and eating mongolian cheese (in principal dried goats milk and unbelievable sour). We learned the mongolian drinking game, how to milk 20 goats at once and that Mongolians love getting pictures taken of them self.
2. Day: Visiting a small Monastry located at the shores of a oasic flood in the steppe desert. The impressive fact about it is that today 6 but before the communistic depression 1000 monks were living there. Today you can still find the ruins of numerous destroyed temples since only one was rebuild so far.
3. Day: Getting up at 5:30 and being rewarded with a colorful sunrise bathing the valley in warm atmosphere. Being hit by the full power of the desert heat, nearly knocking me out by lunch. 1.5L of water prevented the worst so I could enjoy me first ride in something else than a bicycle, a camel. I can state it is as shaky as the bus rides in Mongolia. We were abandoned by the big sand dune overruling all plans. Our camel guide indicated us to go up (we didn’t brought water nor cameras). We anyway made it to the top and were saved by a Danish couple handing us a bottle of water.
4. Day: Countless hills covered by a thin coat if green grass. During our walk in the „water valley“ we also found us standing in falling water the first time in five weeks. Arriving at our Ger we were still wet and pretty cold.
5. Day: A warm shower (the first since we came to Mongolia) and the colorful and completely dried out white lake. By now my intestines started reacting on the amounts of airag of the recent days and I could not enjoy the day as much as I would have normally. We arrived at the close by ger camp just before the rain started omitting any outdoor activities for the evening. Instead I helped our guide Serjii preparing the vegetarian version of mongolian chuuschuur.
6. Day: We explored an area of weirdly shaped but beautiful rocks, had a look into a cave, where monks meditated for 1-2 years without drinking and eating (can’t really believe that) and walked through an abandoned temple hidden between the rocks. Furthermore this day hold another surprise for us: a cold wind causing temperatures to drop drastically and making me very thankful for the two extra layer in my backpack.
7. Day: And than all the way back to UB with a lot of impressions and new friends.