Mongolia day 2 – Trans-Siberian, Nomad Ger Camp

Second day with the Nomads and the weather is sunny and warm.  Today we take the short walk to the edge of the Gobi and up onto the dunes.  There is a clear demarcation here between the pasture of the Steppe and the sand of the desert.  And apparently this demarcation is just as clear in the winter when the snow settles on the Steppe but not on the desert.  We have a day trip today to visit  the Erdene Zuu monastery at Harhorin which is one-and-an-half hours drive from camp. This monastery is on the site of the ancient city of Karakorum – the capital of Chenggiskhan.  Built in 1586 it was the first Buddhist monastery  in Mongolia and one of only a few to survive the Communist destruction of the 1930s.  We arrive back at the Nomad camp for dinner followed by drinks with hour host Amrya, the maternal grandmother, Craig, Monica, our guides Jenni and Tom (obviously not their Mongolian names) and one of our drivers.  One bottle of wine, two bottles of vodka and the best part of a litre of whisky are consumed – mostly by Andy and Amrya it seems!  Someone’s going to have a sore head in the morning!

The monastery was partly destroyed by the Communists but four temples and three meditation rooms remain.  One temple is still actively used whilst the rest of the complex has been preserved as a museum.  This is a place of pilgrimage for Mongolian Buddhists and today is a special day.  Many people have come here to perform a ceremony which involves carry the Sutras (holy writings) around the walls of the monastery.  The Sutras and wrapped in brightly coloured silk and are carried in people’s arms, on their backs or slung across their shoulders.

In the active temple the monks are conducting a chanting ceremony at the request of one particular family, and the small temple is crowded with monks and visitors.  The monks sit in rows of facing pews with the Sutras open in front of them, and milky green tea to hand.  This is a noisy affair with the chanting accompanied by lots of crashing of cymbals, banging of drums as well as the sounds of other  instruments.

We spend a couple of hours looking around the monastery before taking a walk outside the walls to see the stone turtle that is one of the few remaining relics of the old city of Karakorum.  Here are the inevitable souvenir stalls selling an electic mix of jewellery, fake and maybe not so fake antiques, knives, Sutras, silver teapots etc, etc.  We are assured by the stallholders that it is perfectly legal to export these antiques, but that seems very unlikely.  I buy a pair of silver earrings and a bracelet for the princely sum of £5.  A quick stop at the stone phallus nearby and then a very late lunch sitting on the hillside over-looking the monastery.

Our ger is the main family home and it is in here that the fermented mare’s milk is made. And this process doesn’t stop just because we are in residence.  The milk is boiled on the stove in the morning and  left to stand on a up-turned stool for the rest of the day.  This is repeated each day until the process is complete.  By pouring laddlefuls of milk back into the pan from a height a froth is produced on the surface which, when left to cool, creates a soft creamy skin that is skimmed from the surface and used as a butter substitute.  This whole process gives our ger a faint smell of sour milk.

The stove sits in the centre of the tent with a flu rising up through the central hole in the roof.  It is extremely effective in heating the ger, but has to be constantly stoked as the cow’s dung burns very rapidly.  So the fire goes out at night and the ger gets very cold.  Our sleeping bags and heavy blankets are only just keeping us warm!

We are up until 1pm drinking and chatting and learning all about how Nomads live out on the Steppe from Grandma.  Andy is very, very drunk!  There’s sure to be a price to pay tomorrow.

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Mongolia day 1 – Trans-Siberian, Ulaan Bataar

Arrive in Ulaan Baatar at 7 am after an exhausting journey.  We are met by our guide who immediately launches into a tour of the city – just what we need after 24 hours on the train.  We want a shower and some breakfast!  We are taken to the war memorial which is the highest point in the city and from which we get a fantastic view of a rather smoggy Ulaan Baatar, and the sight of two huge power stations belching out smoke.  On to the main square where there is a massive statue of Chinggiskhan.  The tour is followed by a shower – in the Japanese bath house of a local hotel – and breakfast.  We then set off on the 7-hour trip to the Nomad camp in the Bayangobi  region, most of which is off road  across the Steppe as the tarmac road is still under construction.  On the way we visit the Gandan Buddhist Monastery which houses the largest statue of Buddha in Mongolia, Migjid Janraisig.  It stands 28m high, weighs 90 tons and is made of copper, silver and gold.  Very impressive!

Ulaan Baatar is famed for being the coldest capital city in the world, but today the sun is shining and it’s quite warm. There are a few sights to see which we will have the opportunity to explore when we return from our stay with with the Nomads and at the tourist ger camp.  But for now our view of the city is limited to rush hour traffic as we head off to the Nomads living on the edge of the Gobi desert.  The Gobi stretches 4000km along the border with China and we will be staying within walking distance of it.  The ride is mostly bumpy and uncomfortable as we cross the Steppe (literally) in a conventional minibus (no four wheel drive for us).  There is a surprising number of cars, lorries, motorbikes and other assorted vehicles kicking up dust trails as they criss-cross the countryside, either on rough tracks or just cross country.  We see several birds of prey circling on the thermals, as well as two vultures stripping a carcass by the roadside.

It is another glorious day and the scenery is truly spectacular with wide open landscapes and mountains rising on all sides.  Every so often we come across two or three gers standing on the plain surrounded by their cattle, sheep, goats and horses.  Even here on the remote Steppe there are petrol stations, satellite dishes and, remarkably, mobile reception.

The Nomads we are staying with have three large gers which are used as living accommodation and two smaller ones for cooking.  There is no running water – in fact no washing facilities – and the toilet is two planks of wood over a hole in the ground.  Water is from a nearby stream.  We are welcomed by our hosts – a young couple with  two children of 5 and 1 – with fermented mare’s milk which is the colour of milk and tastes like rather sour beer.  We are also offered homemade cheese which  is very hard and  very sour – definitely an acquired taste and after a couple of nibbles is surreptitiously tucked away in our pockets!

Also living here are the paternal and maternal grandmothers  and the latter’s son.  All the family have moved out of their living accommodation and are sleepong in the kitchen tents to make room for the six of us (Bryce, Jennifer, Craig and Monica have travelled here separately).  The Nomads  have large herds of cows, sheep, goats and horses which roam around the camp.

Our ger is comfortable and colourful inside – we even have electric light courtesy of solar panels and the family have satellite television (not in our ger though so no football commentary for Andy).  There is a stove in the middle of the tent which burns a mixture of wood and cow’s dung, a large box of which stands by the stove.  The stove is used for both heating the tent and cooking.  There are four very hard beds, some storage cupboards and a vanity mirror in the ger as well as a small table.  This will be our home for three nights.

We were expecting to be eating with the family but it turns out that the guides will be cooking for us which is something of a mixed blessing.  On the one hand we are not going to have the interaction with the Nomads, but we will be able to eat!  We’ve heard from two departing Scots (Marion and Alan) who we met on the journey out here that the Mongolian food is not very palatable.

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Russia day 20 – Trans-Siberian to Ulaan Baatar

All day on the train travelling to Ulaan Baatar, capital of Mongolia.  We had been warned to expect a lot of waiting around at the border crossing between Russia and Mongolia – and it wasn’t an exaggeration.  We arrive at the Russian border around 1pm and we restart our journey after Mongolian passport control at 10 pm!  For most of the time we are not allowed off the train and the toilet facilities on board are closed.  So a strong bladder is required as well as shed loads of patience!

We leave the homestay at 6.10 am for the 7.30 am train.  It’s dark and cold.  The border crossing takes a ridiculously long time.  We had been told to expect a 6-hour wait, but it is more like 9 hours and the toilets on board are closed 30 minutes before we arrive at the border.  Why it takes so long no one can explain, but it involves separate passport and customs checks at the Russian border and passport checks at the Mongolian border.  First the Russian passport officials come to collect the passports.  Once stamped and return the customs officials board the train to check what luggage is in each compartment.  They are followed by the dog handlers.  After several hours the train starts moving again and we naively we think we’re underway.   No such luck;  after about 40km we arrive at the Mongolian border and a similar interminable wait to go through passport control.

It wasn’t until much later that we realised that only two carriages are processed at a time, and then unhitched and are re-hitched at the Mongolian border.  We are in one of the last two carriages.  So at least when we are done we can leave.

The process involves a lot of form filling.  None of the forms are in English and the provodnista can’t speak English.  So there is a lot of shouting and pointing on her part – until in the end she fills in most of the form for us.  God knows what we are putting our signature to!

At intervals we are allowed on the platform to use the station facilities, but these are not open continuously, and to by food from the hawkers.  At the Mongolian border stop this involves walking across the train tracks to reach the platform and no-one seems in the least bit phased by a train coming through on the adjacent track while we stand outside our carriage chatting.

Finally the whole process is completed and the provodnista leads all the passengers off the carriage and along the tracks whilst our two carriages are taken away to be re-connected to the rest of the train which we discover has been standing at the platform all along.  Can you imagine that happening in England?

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Russia day 19 – Trans-Siberian, Ulan Ude

Today is another lovely day – blue skies and sunshine.  Our guide, Andrei, picks us up for our second  day trip which involves an hour’s drive to see Ivolginsky Datsan which  is the centre of Buddhism in Russia.  This Lamestary is considerably bigger and more impressive than yesterday’s and is also still in the process of construction.  The complex  includes a number of beautifully decorated temples, a school and numerous log houses where the Lamas live with their families.  Our tour must be made in a clockwise direction in accordance with Buddhist tradition.  Afterwards we head for an Old Believers village for lunch and to look round the local church and museum.  We get back to Ulan Ude about 4 pm and spend the rest of the afternoon wandering around the city.  Ulan Ude is a pleasant if unremarkable city with the usual pedestrianised shopping precinct which seem to be common in Russian cities.  After dinner at the homestay we try to get cash, but for some reason none of the ATMs will give us any, so we have only £2.50 to see us through the train trip to Ulan Baataar tomorrow – at least we have bought some provisions for the journey!

The Datsan’s temples are typically Buddhist with the tiered roofs with rising corners and are brightly decorated in vivid colours.  Inside the central temples the altar takes up the far wall and every available space is lined with 100’s of incarnations of Buddha’s in all shapes and sizes.  At right angles to the altar are facing rows of seating for the Lamas.  As we walk clockwise around the inside we must ensure that we are always facing the altar which involves walking backwards along the third wall.  There are least four temples on the complex – two are in use, one is just finished and due to open in November and the main temple which is still under construction.  In the central temple there is an amazingly intricate mandala made from coloured sand.  The detail in the design is incredibly fine and had taken two months to create.

There are  many prayer wheels of varying sizes in the grounds which everyone spins as they go by and.the bushes are covered in  100s of faded prayer flags.  It is quite surprising how many houses there are in the complex – all the traditional log construction.   The only brick built building is the school where students come to study for 12 years.  At the end of our tour there are the inevitable souvenir stalls here selling Mongolian clothing and Buddhist trinkets.

The Old Believers village is full of brightly coloured log houses – unusual for Siberia where houses are grey weathered wood with only the fretwork around the windows painted – usually blue or green.  We are shown round the small church and museum by the local priest   The latter is very similar to the agricultural one in the Siberian village outside Yekaterinburg.

Old Believers are a sect of the Orthodox Church who fled to Siberia to escape persecution after the reformation of the Orthodox Church.  They are comparable to the Amish in that they eschew all modern luxuries.  We have lunch in a restaurant here, but as usual the message that there are two vegetarians in the group has not been communicated ahead. We are given what must be a spur of the moment substitute of very sweet rice pudding accompanied by a salad of tomatoes and cucumber followed by mashed potato – a strange combination!

Om mani padme hum

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Russia day 18 – Trans-Siberian, Ulan Ude

Arrived in Ulan Uday at 6.15am – it is dark and very cold!  Ulan Uday is the capital of Buryatia which is a semi-autonomous region of Siberia.  It’s main claim to fame is an  enormous Lenin’s head in the central square.  Buryats are historically a nomadic Asian people who farm livestock.  We are in a homestay just off the main square in a Soviet-built apartment block.  On arrival we have some breakfast  and a couple of hours sleep before leaving to visit a Lamestary (Buddhist monastery) an hour’s drive outside the city.  For lunch we sample typical Buryatia cuisine in a local village house.  The food is delicious and after lunch our host, a very jolly, traditionally-dressed Buryat woman, teaches us some games involving sheep knuckles – just the bones, not the whole sheep!

Our home stay accommodation is very compact (for which read small) and comprises two bedrooms, a very small living room with a sofa bed which when open completely fills the room, kitchen and bathroom.  The flat is clean and comfortable, but basic.  There is no hot water when we arrive (apparently it is routine for the hot water to be off and our host heats a bucket of water for us using a portable immersion heater) and there is no ball cock in the toilet cistern!

Four of us are staying here (we are with Jennifer and Bryce) and Bryce is sleeping in the living room.  So we are not sure where our hostess plans to sleep while we are here – we’ve been told she will just go out!

The entrance to the block is through a very thick steel door protected by a combination lock.  There is also a similarly impressive steel door to the flat itself with a five-bolt lock which has to be locked on entry and exit using a 6-inch, double-sided key turned four times in the lock.  Andy calls it a ‘Peckham door’!  This level of security doesn’t seem to be uncommon in Russia;  we have noticed similar doors on many apartment blocks in the major cities, including our hotel in St Peterburg.

After breakfast and a couple of hours sleep we are picked up by our guide.  We are going to a Buddhist Lamestary about an hour’s drive from the city.  The monastery turns out to be quite small and was built in 1990 to replace the larger original which was destroyed by the Soviets.  The lamestary has a strikingly life-like wax effigy of the Dalai Lhama sitting cross-legged in front of the temple altar.

We are discovering that Siberia isn’t the desolate uninhabited place we misguidedly thought, at least along the route served by the Trans Siberian.  There are many sizeable villages and towns and even  out here the monks can get a mobile signal and have satellite dishes. The scenery around  is very beautiful, and much more dramatic as we travel up a wide river valley with  hills on each side.  Autumn colours are strikingly vivid particularly the golds and yellows that glisten in the sunshine.

Lunch is in the home of a local Buryat family in a traditional one-storey log house, with outside loo and a Ger tent in the garden.  The house consists of two rooms – the kitchen which contains the bed and the living room with a central brick stove which serves to heat the house as well as acting as the cooker.

We are treated to a delicious Buryat meal including noodle soup, meat dumplings (which we help to assemble) a cheese spread made from sour cream and flour, doughnuts, and a locally made spirit.

We have our picture taken in the local costume and then retire to the Ger to learn how to play  sheeps’ knuckle games.    You may be surprised to learn that sheep knuckles have four distinct faces called goat, horse, camel and sheep respectively.  One game involved throwing 40 knuckles on the table and flicking together pairs of knuckles (think subuteo) showing the same face.  If successful you collect one of the pair and carry on until you either miss or hit more than one knuckle. Then the remaining knuckles pass to the next player.  The person with the most knuckles at the finish is the winner.

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Russia day 17 – Trans-Siberian, Listvianka to Ulan Ude

Glorious day, blue skies and sunshine.  So clear that we can, for the first time, see the snow-covered mountains across the lake.  Today we transfer from Listvianka to Irkutsk at 10 am and spend the day there before catching the overnight train to Ulan Ude.  Irkutsk is a very charming and attractive city which retains many wooden houses as well as other historic buildings.   It is situated on a bend of the river and is largely very low rise.  There are more Asian faces here – Lake Baikal is considered to mark the border between eastern Russia and the far east.  We arrive at 11am and drop our luggage in a local hotel for safe-keeping.  We then spend the day exploring the city including the shopping area and the indoor and outdoor food markets.  Catch the train at around 20:30. We are sharing a compartment with Jennifer and Bryce.  Hope Bryce’s snoring doesn’t keep us awake!

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Russia day 16 – Trans-Siberian, Listvianka Lake Baikal

It rained all night and was still raining this morning when we got up for breakfast at 10am.  How nice to have a lie in for a change!  Today we have a free day – nothing to do but please ourselves.  So we are catching up on our blog in the local hotel.  Today we had our second banyah of the stay.  A banyah is a sauna and is housed in a log cabin in the garden of  the homestay.  Our host stokes up the wood fire that heats the stove ready for our banyah at 7pm.  Many homes apparently only have a banyah for washing, unlike ours which has a shower as well.  After enjoying the sauna we wash in an adjacent room, drawing hot water from the stove and mixing it with cold water in a tin bowls to douse ourselves.  The water  runs off through holes in the wooden floor.  All good fun and a very invigorating, if novel, way to get  clean. Eggs again for dinner!

We have found that the there is wi-fi in the local hotel at 150 roubles for an hour but in fact once logged on it’s possible to use it indefinitely.  So we spend about three hours loading pictures and bringing our posts up to date.  After dinner we go back to the hotel for a drink and to load the remaining pictures (it takes a long time!) and bump into two Peters who we’d come across briefly on the train from Yekaterinburg.  It turns out that one is Irish and works in the Irish Consulate in Moscow and the other is from Sunderland, ex-BBC Radio Cornwall and also based in  Moscow working for the English language TV programme ‘Russia Today’.  We sit drinking vodka with them until 3 in the morning.

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Russia day 15 – Listvianka, Lake Baikal

We wake up to rain and mist – a very unpromising start for our all-day hike in the forest.  We debate whether we should go, but after breakfast the weather is brightening up and we meet our guide, Sacha and four other Brits – Adam and Sharon from Liverpool who are also doing a RTW trip – and two women (Louise and ??) who are from Derby and Worksop.   The lake is surrounded by steep forested hills which fall directly into the lake and the start of our walk  is a very steep over one of the hills behind the village.  We are heading for a beach on the other side which involves a two-hour walk through though the woods.  The paths are narrow and  the drops steep – not good for my vertigo!  By lunchtime the sun is out and we can sunbathe on the beach (think pebbles and very cold water) while we wait for lunch to be prepared.  After lunch, we head back hugging the coast line this time, reaching the village after a about and hour-and-a-half.  We are exhausted!  But we spend half-an-hour looking around the market before heading back for dinner.

The scenery is spectacular, particularly as you look down through the woods to the lake.  You could easily think you are by the sea as the waves lap the shore line and there is no sign of land as far as the eye can see.  It’s hard to believe we are actually on a lake.  A few excursion boats chug up a down as well as the occasional speed boat, but generally there is total silence, no traffic noise at all – where can you find that back home?!  There are plenty of berries and mushrooms in the forests and Russians come to forage either for their families or often you see them selling what they have gathered on the roadside.

Lunch is mash potatoes, cheese, sausages, bread and a salad of tomatoes and cucumber – followed by fruit and chocolate.  All washed down with the ubiquitous tea (always without milk), which seems to be served at every meal no matter where you are.

We keep having to remind ourselves that this Siberia!  It seems incredible that we are here and it isn’t cold!

We arrive back at the village about 5pm totally exhausted, but decide to have a wander round the village market which specialises in a strange combination of smoked and fresh fish and jewellery made from local semi-precious stones.

No eggs for dinner thankfully – instead potato and onion dumplings.  Kathy, Noreen and Lance have left and now it is just the four of us.

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Russia day 14 – Trans-Siberian to Irkutsk

Weather is sunny and warm.  Arrived in Irkutsk at 9.10am with an immediate transfer by mini bus to Listvianka on Lake Baikal.  The station is extremely busy bordering on the chaotic and it is here that you realise just how many people are travelling the Trans Siberian rail trip to Beijing.  Irkutsk and Lake Baikal are on everyone’s itinerary, unlike Ekaterinburg.  The transfer takes about an hour and we are staying in what is supposed to be a homestay but turns out to be more of a hostel in a village house.  This is a small village which, by Russian standards, is quite commercialised and clearly caters for both foreign  and Russian holidaymakers.  So it is relatively expensive.  We are on full board but our hosts seem to be a bit stumped by vegetarian food and I am served 8 fried eggs for my first two meals!

Listvianka village stretches along the shore of Lake Baikal and up seven valleys which run at 90 degrees from the shore line.  Our homestay is up a dirt road that runs up one of the valleys.  It is a pretty village and as everywhere there seems to be a lot of building going on.  Once settled in we have a group tour of the local church and the lake museum.  Andy has been chuntering away since we arrived about being herded together with other travellers for the transfer and the guided tour when we should be travelling independently. On top of which we are not staying with a family in a traditional wooden house (an Izbza) as described in our itinerary.  Oh well, we are learning to modify our expectations!

There are seven people staying here and sharing one bathroom!  Lance is from South Africa and is travelling from Vladivostok to Moscow and will later be going to Jakarta to take up a six-month working post there.  There are two British women (Noreen and Kathy), as well as Bryce and Jennifer.  Noreen is a Tottenham supporter so she and Andy have lots to talk about! (Yawn).

Lake Baikal is the largest fresh water lake in the world, containing 20% of the world’s fresh water. The lake is absolutely crystal clear and perfectly safe to drink, enough to provide drinking water for the whole world for 40 years!  It’s 636km long (further than the journey from Moscow to St Petersburg) and about 50km wide and some 1900 meters and it’s deepest.  It takes about 10 hours to travel the length of it by hydrofoil.  So large, in fact, that it can be seen from outer space.

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Russia day 13 – Trans-Siberian to Irkutsk

Second full day on the train. Slept really well, woke up at 8.30am (10.30 local time) having gone through two time zones during the night. The weather started grey and raining, but by afternoon we had sunshine- hooray!!  It is strange travelling through so many time zones and yet the train is still on Moscow time.  What time is our body clock now?  At least we won’t suffer from jet-lag.  Have couple of long 20-minute stops during the day giving us time to get some fresh air and see what is for sale on the platform.  At the last stop it would have been easy to purchase a complete meal – chicken, veggie pasties, noodles, potatoes boiled eggs, tinned meat and fish and salad.  We bought Russian ice creams for 30 roubles (75p);  we are going to eat in the restaurant car tonight.

The scenery is now much more picturesque with hills, farm land and trees.  Apparently after the war 25 million hectare of Siberia were turned over  to wheat cultivation (twice the area of the UK!).

Late afternoon and the sky is blue and the sun is casting a warm glow over the landscape.  It is looking much more promising for our three-day stay at Lake Baikal.

Spent today chatting, writing posts doing a bit of reading, eating and not much else.  Daan and Andy passed the time playing the dice game Yatsee

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