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会社概要

 

  • 社名ACTIVE AND ADVENTURE TOURS MONGOLIA LLC (INBOUND TOUR OPERATOR COMPANY)

アクティブ&アドベンチャーツアーモンゴル旅行社 「ツアーモンゴル」

有限会社 アクティブ&アドベンチャーツアーモンゴル

  • 会社設立 2001年
  • 資本金 1400万円
  • 代表者 代表取締役 ALTANBAGANA DELEG
  • 業務内容 ●モンゴル全国ツアー(受注型企画旅行)の受注型企画ツアー販売、手配、実施
  • 乗馬体験ツアー、遊牧民と自然体験ツア、トレッキングツアー、各種アドベンチャー、エベント企画販売、文化交流ツアー
  • 個人及び団体の受注型企画旅行の手配
  • 本社 ●#13, 5F, ビル7\1, Macro Center, Erhuu gudamj、7th khoroo, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia

(社員数 ⒕名)

tel. 976-11-354662(代) fax. 976-11-354663

  • 取扱総額 1.5億円 (2014年度見込)
  • 取扱人数 120人 (2014 年度見込)
  • 社員数 ⒕名
  • 取引銀行 TRADE AND DEVELOPMENTBANK OF MONGOLIA, KHAAN BANK, GOLOMT BANK
  • 登録モンゴル国自然環境 ・グリーン開発・観光庁長官登録旅行業第ITO/88”B”

旅行企画・実施   A&A旅行社  ACTIVE&ADVENTURE TOURS  P.O.Box, Ulaanbaatar 13, Mongolia

Tel: 976-11-354662   Fax: 976-11-354663  Mobile: 976-99058467 www.tourmongolia.com  E-mail:info@tourmongolia.com

 

 

弊社の取扱うツアーで体験できること一覧:

  • モンゴル満喫ツアー(乗馬、遊牧民訪問、市内観光などを効率良く組み合わせたツアー)
  • 果てしない大草原での乗馬ツアー(乗馬トレーニング)
  • ホームステイ体験ツアー(モンゴル人の実生活体験:遊牧民のゲルも市民の家にも訪問できる)
  • 四季のモンゴル・遊牧民カレンダーツアー(遊牧民の生活を体験できるシリーズツアー)
  • ハイキングやトレッキングや登山ツアー

「ツアーモンゴル」のトレッキング・ハイキングツアーが大人気!!!気軽に歩ける2~3時間のものから数日かけて歩く本格的トレッキングコース、特に西部モンゴルでの世界自然遺産ウブス湖盆地の絶景を見ながら歩く人気コースなどバラエティ豊富なツアーをご紹介しています。

  • バイクツアー(草原、川、砂丘、モンゴル特徴ある地形を走るバイクツアー)
  • ラフテングツアー(「ツアーモンゴル」では、トール川、オルホン川、オノン川の遊牧民、草原、雄大な山々が見える最高のロケーションにてラフティングツアーを行っています)
  • 犬ぞり・馬ぞり体験ツアー
  • 高原の花畑を歩くフラワートレック
  • ユネスコ世界遺産に登録されたモンゴル最大のオブス湖、岩塩発掘体験、少数民族との出会いできるツアー
  • モンゴル最西端の地で暮らすカザフ族の誇りに思いたい伝統―イワヌシ・鷹匠体験・鷹祭り・
  • モンゴルの大草原の天然温泉・露天風呂体験ツアー
  • モンゴル最大の淡水湖フブスグル、トナカイ牧民訪問、シャーマン
  • モンゴル列車で国境町、国境線を訪れる旅
  • イベントツアー(旧正月・夏の祭典ナーダム、遊牧民祭り、氷祭り、ラクダ祭り、ヤク祭り、鷹匠祭り)
  • CNN観光情報で「2011年世界ベスト観光名所」の一つで選ばれた鳥類の天国テルヒーンツァガン湖でのバードウオッチング
  • フライフィッシング ツアー
  • モンゴル旧都カラコルム遺跡など文化遺跡を訪ねるツアー
  • ゴビ砂漠、恐竜の化石発掘体験
  • 社会福祉・ボランテイアー活動ツアー

The Melding of Modern and Traditional Mongolia

“Chinggis Khaan” in bright red neon affixed to the airport terminal is the first thing we see when landing in the capital of Ulaanbaatar – an apropos introduction to a nation that under Chinggis (1162-1227) and his descendants became one of the largest kingdoms ever recorded. Reaching its zenith in the 13th century Chinggis Khaan (who we in the west know as Genghis Khan) collected the tribes of the steppes, named them Mongols, and with an army of 100,000 skilled horsemen conquered the most powerful civilizations of the time (extending into today’s Russia, China, and Europe). His fierceness as a warrior was tempered by good – he introduced written script in the Mongolian language, religious freedom, and great wealth for the country, and sought to incorporate universal political and economic systems. Today he is a symbol of united strength, law and order to Mongolians.
Rick’s Mongolia Photo Gallery

After stashing our bags at the Kharaa Hotel we walk down Peace Avenue, the main street of Ulaanbaatar (shortened to UB by locals). This crowded main thoroughfare is lined with shops, as well as vendors selling everything from apples to brown cedar nuts called “Samar” from sacks on the sidewalk, or even from the trunks of their vehicles. Everywhere I look locals are cracking these small nuts with their teeth like sunflower seeds, so I purchase a cup full, and although tasty the knack to readily get the nutmeats out of the shells escapes me.

For our first lunch I eyeball a restaurant packed with local people (good sign of good food) and go in to check out the menu. No English. I am about to turn on my heel when a lady who has just finished her meal says, “Can I help you?” The two soups chosen by our helper are good indicators of Mongolians being heavy meat eaters. A mutton soup is like a stew with egg-sized chunks of mutton, and the only difference in the ‘vegetable only’ soup is that the chunks of mutton are smaller – both delicious!

In Sukhbaatar Square our eyes are drawn to the regal Sukhbaatar Square Ulaanbaatar MongoliaParliament House. At its centre is a seated Chinggis Khaan statue in bronze, guarded by two armoured soldiers on horses. At the far west corner of the building is Chinggis’ son Ogedei, and flanking the east is Grandson Kublai.

Rising from mid-square is a statue of Damdin Sukhbaatar on a horse. This “hero of the revolution” was the first to declare independence from China in 1921. The freedom from China was won with Soviet aide, which turned out to be only a trade for Soviet control and the capital being renamed Ulaanbaatar (Red Hero) in honour of the triumph; the Communist yoke lasting until 1990. Other interesting buildings that frame the square are the salmon-pink State Opera and Ballet Theatre, and the National Modern Art Gallery.

Our shopping mecca is the State Department Store, a bland Soviet-style building on the outside, and six floors of everything one could ever need on this inside – like a high-end mall, including a gigantic grocery section (and “yay” a cappuccino café, for our daily eleven a.m. ritual…okay – addiction). It is bustling with the nouveau rich. The “biggie” today in the economy is mining – this land once stomped upon by dinosaurs is mineral rich and extraction is still in its infancy – gold, silver, zinc, copper, iron, lead, coal, uranium, molybdenum…the list goes on.

Within the past two years the increase of people who can afford vehicles has rendered any semblance of traffic order nil. Ulaanbaatar’s population is now over a million resulting in gridlock of epic proportions. The single biggest tourist danger is crossing a street. Even when the cross-walk sign is on, cars turn almost on two wheels within inches between pedestrians. Traffic police attempt to control the flow at major intersections and crossing guards stand with signs on the sidewalk at corners (afraid to venture out on the street), but all are endeavouring to improve this chaos.

Stepping out onto the Steppes

Gers of Mongolian SteppesMongolia’s terrain is mainly grasslands, with mountains to the north and west, and the Gobi desert to the south. Of the country’s 2.75 million citizens 30% are nomadic or semi-nomadic.

We decide on a steppe adventure and after checking out tour operators for our night in a ger (yurt) we decide on Tourist Information Center . Dorjo, who mans the desk, is able to answer all our queries and the center has a catalogue of tours specifying what you will see on each, along with prices.

Undra our guide and our driver Sanjay are outside the hotel when we emerge at 9:00 a.m. Petite and cheerful Undra has a good command of English. Off we go towards the Chinggis Khaan Statue complex at Tsonjing Boldog – 54km from Ulaanbaatar. Out of the city and over a few hills the steppes unfold and seemingly go on forever, sporadically dotted with gers, grazing sheep, goats and cattle, or a lone rider silhouetted against the azure sky.

The highways are dusty and rife with pot holes. Hmmm… potholes are not an apt description; some of these maws could swallow a small car. This has drivers continually swinging into the on-coming lane to avoid the pits, or to veer off onto the shoulder, and when the whole highway is blocked with piles of dirt with a sign sticking up in the middle, this means “detour” across grasslands and onto a side road with even bigger holes. We can only average about 30km an hour.

Chinggis Khaan shines far off in the distance like a giantChinggis Khaan Statue Complex Mongolia mirage under the halogen sun. As we draw near the gigantic 40-metre statue fashioned from 250 tonne of stainless steel rising from the top of the 10-metre museum/visitor’s centre is breathtaking. Astride his powerful horse the Golden Horde leader faces east toward his birthplace. He holds a gold whip in his right hand, which according to legend he found here before his rise to fame, considered a good omen for his future direction. As we climb the steps leading up to this behemoth, Undra says in her quiet way, “There are 36 columns around the base of the statue, one for each of the historic Khaans, from Chinggis to Ligdan Khaan.” This statue was completed in 2008, and the surrounding area will eventually contain 200 gers, arranged in the pattern of the horse brand used by the 13th century Mongol tribes.

We come to the museum doors, only to find a hand-written paper sign that Undra reads – “Closed Saturday and Sunday – No Electricity”. Undra says, “this sometimes happens.” Oh no…we are not so much missing the artefacts inside, but would have liked to take the elevator up to the horses head where a platform brings you face-to-face with the mighty warrior. Oh well, that’s the way it is, and this does not in the least diminish the thrill of seeing this gargantuan art form.

Onward to Turtle Rock which is in Terelj National Park with its high rock mountains, boreal forests of birch, larch, cedars, willow and pine. Stopping beside the popular rock Rick says, “Yup! Looks like a turtle”, while he focuses on finding the best angle for his camera shots. Another notable rock formation high on a cliff replicates “an old man reading a book”. This area is an outstanding setting for hiking, climbing, horse riding, and camping in pure fresh pine scented air under a canopy of blue.

It is next over the rugged terrain (and by this I mean the highway) to Ariyabal Meditation Temple. As I gaze upward Undra answers my question still in thought-form, “The number of steps is 108; the Buddhist significance of the 1 – 0 – 8 symbolises “one – nothing – everything (infinity). Along the way are signs with 150 proverbs of complexity – as is the Buddhist way. Towards the top of the hill we come to a platform with a 3-metre prayer wheel. We take turns spinning the wheel, and watching the pointer attached that stops like a roulette wheel on a specific number from 1 to 150 on the ceiling. This is the proverb that relates to one’s ‘now’ situation, mine is 111. From the wheel the path takes a right turn and I watch for this number. “It is source of suffering if one follows astrology alone.” Food for thought.

The small meditation temple has an aura of tranquility. A golden Buddha looks over all from the back of the room, and 16 large vividly coloured paintings cover the walls. The middle of the room has rows of slightly raised carpeted areas, where monks would sit (if they were here).

All around the outside of the temple are prayer wheels. We spin each and every one. At a suspended bridge; a sign reads “only four people at a time”. I think good karma is keeping it from collapsing as we wait for the bridge to clear from the dozen people giggling across on its thin boards. On the other side is a stone turtle with water trickling from its mouth. Sanjay quickly kneels down and drinks several fills from a convenient bowl at the edge. Undra tells us it is healing water, particularly for good eye sight. I dab a bit on both my lids.

On the dusty road again we arrive at the small community and Our Ger Experience Steppes of Mongoliathe ger where we will spend the night. We see that here, like in UB, the del (traditional loose calf-length tunic with long sleeves) has been mostly traded in for western garb. It is now about two in the afternoon and after we put our belongings in our private ger, we go over to the main ger of our host family. Tradition and modernity are balanced in the nomadic lifestyle of today. A satellite dish stands like a sentinel outside, and inside is a flat screen TV and an electric washing machine, and Okto, the lady of the house, chats with her friend on a cell phone. We are famished, but not for long. Okto spoons out bowls of delicious hearty soup with mutton, cabbage, carrots, potatoes and noodles, plus buuz (steamed dough filled with minced meat and onion) followed by tea and some big thick short-bread-like cookies. We soon learn that all our meals, whether soup or a solid dish, are cooked in the well-worn steel wok that fits over the woodstove/ger heater. This wok is also used to wash up the dishes. Water is hauled from a community well a kilometre away.

Our plan is to go hiking up a neighbouring hill, but the sound of galloping horses and cheering crowds draws us down the street to where a mini-Nadaam is going on. What luck! – since we could not be here for the National Nadaam Festival held annually on July 12th and 13th. Participants come from all over Mongolia to compete in horseriding, archery (once only for males, but now open to females) and wrestling (still only for the testosterone gender).

Although we just missed the horserace, we did catch the five winners being honoured in the traditional way – a drink of airag (fermented mare’s milk), a medal, plaque and for the horse a splash of airag on his backside. The riders are young; one little fellow looks about 5 and a girl not much older.

Local Mini Nadaam Steppes of MongoliaThe wrestling match is about to begin. The men strut out; only one wears the traditional wrestling costume and he puts on a show slapping his thighs and chest. The outfit is comprised of a tight blue Speedo-type bottom, and the top covers his arms and back with an open front showing his bare chest. Undra says, “The folklore about why the chest of a wrestler is exposed is that long ago a strong woman entered the competition disguised as a man, so is an insurance against this happening again.”

About 16 wrestlers move into the circle of spectators in pairs, the winners are pitted against winners. The fellow in traditional costume wins over and over, and each time he wins he raises his arms and soars like an eagle around the national flag to celebrate his victory. Only two participants left; I can see bird-man having his work cut out for him, as his opponent is taller with six-pack abs. This match goes on longer than any other, but somehow flamboyant blue-bottoms makes a quick clever move – and wins the competition.

Shortly before supper Okto’s husband Dashdondog (Dasha for Our Ger Experience Steppes of Mongoliashort) arrives home. He has a dynamic “presence” and a 200-watt-light-bulb smile. When Undra reveals he is a Shaman, I am somehow not surprised. He speaks little English but as soon as Undra mentions Canada, he says “hockey” and tells us through her about his fondness for the sport. His humour is contagious. He asks about our family, and keeps teasing us that he is the winner with two more Grandchildren than our six. I get a chance to ask about the spirits he calls down. Undra points to his well-used drum hanging from the ceiling, saying he brings the spirits down by drumming. She says when they enter his body they speak through him, answering questions or giving advise to those he is intervening for in the spirit’s voice, but later does not recall any of this. He says he deals with 77 spirits for their healing powers and wisdom.

After a fine mutton, veggie and rice mix supper, Dasha goes out to start a fire in the stove in our ger, and wool blankets are placed on our beds situated around the walls. Other than the pillows being rock-hard the bed is fairly comfortable. We both wake up to heavy rain bouncing off the ger roof. We are a bit chilled after the fire goes out, and come morning we move at Superman speed to get ready for the day.

Our Ger Experience Steppes of MongoliaIt is still raining but we can’t postpone the 300-metre trek outside our ger compound to the pit-toilet (an outhouse facility six or more gers share). Of the two horizontal logs to pull back on the compound fence, we only put back the bottom one. Oops! By the time we return three calves have jumped the lower rung and are now munching on forbidden grass, and the race is on between us and two galloping mama cows intent on joining their offspring. We startle them with a holler, and they veer off. We call on Okto and Dasha’s visiting grandson to chase the calves back out.

No horse ride today with the heavy rain, so after breakfast we begin a game of Shagai.
This game is played with dried sheep ankle-bones, of which the four sides are given the names “sheep”, “goat”, “camel” and “horse”. When it is your turn the aim is to plink a specific animal against the same animal without touching another bone – for which you get to keep one of the two bones in the play. Only Sanjay and I have bones left when we clear the table for lunch, so a tie is declared.

Dasha gets out his video camera for a farewell recording of us together. On the way back mud from the rain is added to the potholes, but the dust is down. Coming from higher elevation back into UB we see the capital from a whole new perspective – the roofs of the city are like a colourful patchwork quilt – red, blue, orange, gold and green. Dots of white are the many gers that are now intermixed with the other structures on the outskirts of town. We are tuckered-out but feel good about our special experience of spending time with such a warm and inviting Mongol family, that we will relive again and again.

Back in UB

A cultural performance is on our list of things to do. TheTumen Ekh Cultural event Ulaanbaatar Mongolia Tumen Ekh Song and Dance is held in a crumbling Soviet era building tucked back from the street. Fabulously costumed dancers twirl and leap and display much facial and hand expressions in a series of folkdances. Then an older distinguished gentleman of strong stature comes on stage – the throat singer! Called “khoomii” – throat singing is produced by the shaping of the throat, lips and mouth which results in a number of tones or pitches at the same time. He begins archipelago with a sound like no other, resounding and haunting; the growl of lower tones especially raises the hair on the back of my neck. The ensemble playing traditional instruments joins in. A musical piece with spirited tempo has solo portions from two talented Morin Khuur (Horse Hair Fiddle) players. The contortionist is superb, performing feats that seem humanly impossible. Rick and I concur this is one of the best cultural performances we have ever seen.

Narantuul Market Ulaanbaatar MongoliaOne morning we venture out to the Narantuul Market (known as the Black Market) – a 60 minute walk. The size of two football fields are filled with long rows of roofed stalls with clothes for every age, size and taste, from traditional to top designer knock-offs, leather goods, shoes, boots, luggage, purses, kitchen everything, rugs, ger furniture, saddles, and more.

In a large metal Quonset-shaped building we find one side filled with all manner of cosmetics and jewellery, on the other side meat is being cleavered into chunks, all sorts of sundries, and baked goods that have us drooling. We purchase a coke and a big bag of cookies like we tasted at the ger, then hunt for a place to devour them… hmm, a shady spot beside one of the outside stalls will have to do. No sooner than we break the bag open than an elderly couple flops down on a newly purchased folded rug for a rest. I admire her bright lime green del and his taupe one with a marigold yellow sash as we share our cookies and smiles with them.

Walking toward the exit I see men ladling a white foamy liquid into a communal bowl. I find out from a young lady that this is indeed fermented mare’s milk, which as yet I have not had a chance to sample. Well, I figure, its now or never. I line up in the queue and have the vendor pour some into my empty coke bottle. Hmm, creamy with a bitter rather sour taste – it is definitely an acquired taste.

Another must is the climb to Gandan Monastery, well worth the Gandan Monastery Ulaanbaatar Mongoliaeffort. From 1838 it became an important learning centre for the entire Mahayana Buddhist community, with a dozen dastans (institutes) housing thousands of monks. In 1939, under communist suppression the temples of Gandan were destroyed or used to accommodate Russian officials or made into horse barns. After 1990 an ambitious restoration program began of its temples and institutes. All ages come to enjoy the serenity here, and to feed the mega-flock of pigeons with seeds purchased from little old ladies.

Mongolia surprised us in many ways. The modern shopping centres, an effort to provide signs in English (as well as Cyrillic), the amount of cars, the western influence, and gers equipped with an array of electronics

Outside the city the land is timeless, its vast undulating steppes give a sense of infinity. The Mongolian hospitality is so genuinely and graciously given out in giant dollops as to pluck at one’s heartstrings. This land of mystique frozen to foreigners for so long is now in a rapid thaw, and we will forever be glad we came.

10 Amazing Facts About The Mongols

Mongol-Army-Genghis-Khan-Era-e1381346644155
Mongolia still exists today, but the Mongols who live there now aren’t the ones history books will remember. After all, their ancestors roamed the land on horseback, pillaging and conquering with the kind of mercilessness Vikings could only dream of.
Well, that’s the popular image, anyway. Old-timey Mongols were definitely fearsome warriors, but they were also a surprisingly advanced and cultured people.

10.Mongol Women

Historians tend to portray Mongol men as fearsome and mighty conquerors, but the women are often ignored. This is quite unfair, as in the Mongol civilization it was actually the women who called the shots. While their men were busy being, well, Mongol warriors, the women kept the economy going and held some of the highest positions in their shamanistic religion. This put the Mongol ladies in a position of power that their European contemporaries could only dream about.
The women weren’t just happy with running the businesses and religion, either—the Mongols also had several female rulers. After Genghis Khan’s death, his daughters and daughters-in-law embarked on a series of power struggles that saw various capable women rule their own factions of the Empire, at least for a while (it was a turbulent time).
One of the mightiest Mongol queens was Mandhuhai, a capable warrior with a keen tactical mind. She fought to unite the Mongol kingdoms like Genghis had done, conquering enemy after enemy in a series of victorious battles. When she was in her thirties, it occurred to her she should probably keep her family name going—but she was still busy with her wars. Mandhuhai solved this conundrum by marrying a 17-year-old trophy prince and bearing eight children, all while actively participating in battles.

9.The Postal System

Mongols were wanderers by nature, so efficient communication between their leaders and officers was both vital and extremely difficult. They solved this issue by inventing an incredibly efficient postal system called Yam (or Örtöö, meaning “checkpoint”).
Many foreign visitors, including Marco Polo himself, were in awe of Yam’s size and reliability. It was a vast collection of postal stations, with dedicated messengers delivering mail, intelligence reports, and important news from station to station. These stations were about 24–64 kilometers (15–40 mi) apart, and were kept constantly staffed. At one point, there were at least 1,400 stations in China alone, and the messengers had 50,000 fresh horses at their disposal.

8.Tactics

The Mongols were renowned as effective and terrifying battle tacticians, who honed their skills by fighting a lot. Even famous historical commanders, like Alexander the Great and Hannibal Barca, start to look a lot less impressive when their achievements are compared to lesser Mongol generals.
The Mongols relied heavily on shock tactics. Fake withdrawals, surprise attacks, psychological warfare, and even hostage-taking and human shields were classic Mongol moves. They liked to start a fight by showering the enemy with armor-piercing arrows, followed by a brutal cavalry charge. Often, the enemy would be lured toward hidden archers by a weaker Mongol force that pretended to flee. When attacking large targets (such as big cities, which they could easily take two at a time), they liked to advance on extremely wide fronts, using the Yam system to communicate. They were also experts at siege technology and were deliberately brutal to people who didn’t submit to their rule. This tactical combination made them the premier fighting force of their era.

7.The Silk Road

One of the most ruthless, yet efficient, parts of Genghis Khan’s reign was his brutal conquest of the Silk Road, the main trade route between Asia and Europe, and one of the largest (if not the absolute largest) sources of income for the Mongol empire. Realizing that even his massive army could not fully conquer and keep the 6,437-kilometer (4,000 mi) route, he adopted a secondary strategy. Genghis started destroying every single Arabic and Turkish settlement on the road, until every city and oasis on the whole stretch was either in ruins or on their knees before him. This took a lot of time, and he did not live to see his plan take full effect, but once the Mongols finally gained control of the route, they hung onto it: The Silk Road was entirely under Mongol control for the majority of the 14th and 15th centuries. Surprisingly (considering how it was achieved), Mongol rule was not a death knell for the road. They treated traders well and managed to not only encourage, but actually invigorate, caravan trade between the Mediterranean and China. However, passing through the Mongol-era Silk Road was not cheap: Most of the revenue its trade created went straight into the deep pockets of the Mongols, in the form of various tolls and taxes.

6.Pax Mongolica

Sometimes, when people go to war hard enough, the end result is peace. The Pax Mongolica was a period of peace and prosperity that followed the Mongol conquests in the 13th and 14th Centuries. At that point, Mongols were at the height of their powers. Their empire stretched nearly 15 million square kilometers (9.3 million sq mi) and contained over 100 million people. For reference, the United States has 9.83 million square kilometers (3.79 million sq mi) of land.
Because this vast land was under a common government, with an efficient communication system and booming international trade, the empire thrived and everyone was happy. The fearsome Mongols had actually managed to create one of the most peaceful periods in history.

5.The Golden Horde

One of the most powerful Mongol empires was the Golden Horde, a large kingdom established by Genghis Khan’s grandson, Batu Khan, in 1251. Its name paints it as little more than a massive cluster of savages in tents, but it was actually a powerful, highly infrastructured country with surprisingly modern stone cities, in particular the capital, Sarai-Batu.
The Golden Horde had massive influence on other cultures as well. Presiding over an area that covered parts of modern Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Moldova, and the Caucasus, they were connected with both Muslims and Russians. The Horde gleefully terrorized the Russians, who actually ended up in a secluded Dark Age because of their Mongol neighbors. Muslims were luckier: The traditionally shamanistic Mongol leaders embraced and eventually adopted their religion.

4.Weapons

Nomads at heart, Mongols fought on horseback whenever they could. The horse’s own impressive power was recognized, and the horse was often considered a weapon in and of itself. Naturally, many Mongol weapons are designed for riding. Their swords were curved sabers, easy to handle both on horseback and on foot. Lances, maces, and daggers were also commonly used. Some Mongols used gunpowder as explosive bombs and grenades.

The most common long-distance weapon was the composite bow, a small but sturdy weapon that had twice the range of the English longbow. They used several types of arrows depending on the situation: Some were ideal for piercing, while others were iron-headed and could fly particularly long distances. They even had Hawkeye-like trick arrows. The most famous was the whistle arrow, a hollow arrow that made a loud whistling sound when it was fired. It was handy for scaring the enemy, but even handier for signaling: Mongol hordes were huge, noisy things where shouted commands were hard to hear (especially during a charge), so commanders would fire these arrows as signals for the troops. Fire arrows were also used, as were scare-tactic trap arrows that caused terrifying wounds, leaving the enemy wailing on the battlefield. Armor wasn’t used until the latter stages of the Mongol era. Instead of the chain mail most armies used, Mongols preferred light leather armor that was made by soaking horse skin in urine. They also armored the horses.

3.Tolerance

The Mongols decided very early on that in order to conquer a giant empire, they had to accept the habits of the people they conquered. They were happy to let their subjects keep their religion and important cultural habits and actually actively encouraged this with things like tax reductions for priests. Since Mongols themselves had a very open and relaxed attitude toward religion, this cost them practically nothing—and provided a valuable tool in keeping the conquered nations content.

2.Tatars

Mongols were occasionally referred to as Tatars (or Tartars) by the people they terrorized. This was originally derived from Tata, a name the Mongols call themselves. However, when people realized this sounded a lot like Tartarus, Roman mythology’s variation of Hell, they started calling Mongols Tatars—“people from Tartarus,” meaning demons from hell.
The Tatar name is still in use, though it is not quite as threatening anymore. Today, “Tatar” refers to ethnically Turkish people who mainly live in Russia, Kazakhstan, and Siberia.

1.Subutai

Subutai, also known as Subedei, was one of the biggest reasons why Genghis Khan was able to form the Mongol Empire. He was one of Genghis’s “Four Dogs of War” and the Mongol’s chief strategist. Subutai is considered one of the most brilliant military tacticians in history, and easily the most skilled general in an army already full of insanely skilled and fearless leaders.
Subutai pioneered the use of siege weaponry and military intelligence. He always found out what tactics the opponent used before devising his own, which enabled him to come up with the most effective counterattacks. He constantly taught himself new things by consulting with engineers and wise men alike, until he became a whirlwind of military knowledge that was thought to be completely unstoppable.
When Genghis Khan died during the conquest of China and his son Ogedai replaced him, Subutai continued to serve him. Together, Ogedai and Subutai turned their attention toward Europe. They defeated a few armies and were just gearing up to invade Central Europe when Ogedai died in 1241. In a massive stroke of luck for Europe, his successor, Guyuk Khan, removed Subutai from the European front for political reasons and sent him to China. Subutai, 70 years old at the time, obliged, battling in China for a year before returning back home to die of old age.

Via: Pauli Poisuo

 

 

The Silk Road Camel Caravan

The Silk Road Camel Caravan

The Silk Road is the oldest trade route in the world that connects east to west. Known as caravan road, the first caravan started around the year of 100BC, with the shimmering fabric from China to the Mediterranean. According to the evidences of the historical and scientific researches, part of ancient Silk Road had been crossing through the Gobi Altai Region of western Mongolia. Today, nomads who live in this region, offer us an unique trip to experience a caravan culture while enjoying the camel riding trek.
Length: 16nights / 17days
Tour starting: 06th of August
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Journey to UNESCO World Heritages

Journey to UNESCO World Heritages

Joining in this tour offers you a great opportunity in exploring mystical places of Mongolia that listed in UNESCO World Heritage. And the tour allows you to experience the authentic culture of different ethnic groups of Mongolia who inherited their tangible and intangible heritages alive from the generation to generation.

Length: 16 nights / 17 days
Tour starting: 05th of june
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Biking through the epic trails

Biking through the epic trails

Our bike trip is truly an adventurous discovery, exploring through the birthplace of Great Chinggis Khaan the founder of the Biggest Empire the world ever known. You will enjoy and explore many of the famous historical heritage sites, traditional life of nomad herders and Buryat ethnic Mongolians while riding along the pristine landscapes of Eastern Mongolia as challenging yourself.

Length: 13nights / 14days
Tour starting: 07th of June

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The Open Spaces of Mongolia

WE TOOK THE 36-HOUR TRAIN RIDE (RATHER THAN THE TWO-HOUR PLANE RIDE) from Beijing to Ulaanbaatar. The cars had been made in Germany and were surprisingly comfortable; the food was really quite edible. On the way my traveling companions and I saw much of the Great Wall and some of Hubei and Shanxi provinces in north-central China. Then we passed through the endless flat monotony of Inner Mongolia, which is, Tibet-style, an autonomous region of China. In the next cabin was a 20-year-old Mongolian Buddhist monk (he joined the monastery when he was eight) who had been studying in India and was returning home for the first time in five years. He was sharing his quarters with a German management consultant, and next to them were a 21-year-old graduate student of Russian from North Dakota and a retired English teacher from Cleveland. There was a Polish novelist who wore five wristwatches in No. 5. In the next car were several Russians and Chinese, a few Mongolians, an outrageously beautiful French couple who didn’t speak to anyone, and some Hare Krishna from Slovenia who were trying (unsuccessfully) to convert us all.

After two days we arrived in Ulaanbaatar, capital of independent (a.k.a. “Outer”) Mongolia. Mongolia is a country one-sixth the size of the United States, with a population of about 2.5 million. Most of the people are nomadic, living in wood-framed felt tents and herding sheep, goats, yaks, camels, cattle, and horses. They do not have paved roads. They do not, in general, use electricity or own cars. They practice, as they always have, Tibetan Buddhism; in fact it was the Mongolian ruler Altan Khan who coined the title Dalai Lama more than 400 years ago. Many of the temples and monasteries, despite 70 years of Communism, are now thriving.

Though Mongolia has a literacy rate of almost 90 percent, and an impressively well-informed population, outside the cities the way of life is much as it was at the turn of the last millennium. The country has important copper and gold mines and is the world’s leading source of cashmere, but remains curiously immune to modernism and to full-fledged industrialization. After almost 80 years as an “independent” Communist buffer state between Russia and China, Mongolia has recently established democracy, and in the last election, despite the limited number of polling stations and the vast distances between them, more than 90 percent of the eligible population voted.

FROM ULAANBAATAR THE GUIDES AND I DROVE THREE-QUARTERS of the way toward Kharkhorin before setting up our first night’s camp in a big field near a ger, one of the low-slung tentlike structures in which Mongolians traditionally live. In the morning, we woke to the sound of horse traffic. I sat up, pulled aside the flap of my tent, and saw a tall man wearing a long side-buttoned coat of blue velvet, tied at the waist with a yellow silk sash. I stumbled into wakefulness, half dressed, and followed him to the ger, where he gave me cheese and butter and a slice of fresh bread. Such hospitality is automatic in this nomad country, and endlessly delightful to a Western visitor. I tried his horses, provoking amused delight from the little boys and girls, who at the age of four could ride, and at six move more self-assuredly on their mounts than I can walk. An older child, perhaps 16, came to look at our car and gestured to the inside of the door with the bemused air of an action hero on an alien spacecraft. I showed him how one could rotate the handle to make the window go up (he thought this was amazing); and I showed him how if you push down the lock, people can’t open the door from outside (he thought this was hilarious).

We arrived in Kharkhorin on the first day of its Naadam celebration. Mongolians are usually friendly, but are at their best during this ancient festival of sports, which occurs in the height of summer (Naadam takes place July 11 through 13 every year). The number of horsemen we saw heading across the roadless countryside, and the bright colors they wore, told us which way to go even before we had spotted the first of the distant pavilions. As we came closer we picked up on the crowd’s excitement. The jockeys had set out near dawn, and there were more than 200 horses in the morning’s race. At least 600 others were parked in rows, and the spectators sat astride their mounts the way Western audiences sit in grandstands. Everyone was eagerly waiting for the first glimpse on the horizon of the winning stallion. The men and women mostly wore long robes, called del, often of velvet or brocade, tied at the hip with silk sashes of brilliant yellow and crimson and green. Saddles were ornamented with silver, and many of the riders had silver crops and chatelaines. Colorful hats, some trimmed in fur, crested in points like steeples. A few hotshot adolescents who had drunk too much airag (Mongolia’s specialty, fermented horse milk, which is what one might call an acquired taste) were riding fast, and from time to time the crowd had to part before them. Children and the elderly were pushed to the front, while the rest of us on foot strained to see over their heads. The air rang with speculations, with greetings, with family arguments and plans.

At last the first horse came through, and the cheering erupted. We parted to make way for an endless line of runners-up, all bearing jockeys aged four to seven. They cantered through the crowd and slowed only in the distance. Ribbons flew from the bridles. The winner was taken to a nearby field, where a lama in a flowing robe and a yellow pleated hat blessed him in the name of the Buddha. Everyone was laughing, and some began singing, and all the joy was for old and new friends alike. We received invitations–translated by our guide–from every Mongolian we met: Come into our tent, have some of our airag, have a fried piece of dough, some cheese. They struggled to communicate over the language barrier, swore brotherhood with us, gave us their hats to try on, taught us exuberant words in Mongolian.

The next morning we watched the wrestling, which took place closer to town. Silk tents were pitched in a great circle on a greensward. Cavalry kept the crowd more or less in order, though periodically spectators rushed forward and threatening words were exchanged. The judges sat under a blue canopy adorned with white sacred symbols. Music played loudly; people jostled one another for good views or shady spots. One by one, the wrestlers came out in long leather del, paraded past the cheering crowd, then removed their coats to reveal hand-embroidered wrestler’s garb. Each solemnly performed an eagle dance around a judge, then slapped the front and back of his thighs (thwack! thwack! and thwack! thwack!). Next, partners began sparring according to ancient rules, striving not to touch the ground except with their feet and the open palms of their hands, while forcing their opponents, with a hair-raising mix of weight and precision, down to the ground.

Nearby, the archers were competing, firing slender arrows over a long meadow. The men shot from a back line; the women, in white silk, stood a few feet closer to the targets. On another field was a pick-up game of polo. There were small stands selling cakes, carpets, or radios. The hillside that formed the backdrop for the events was a wash of color: the revelers had pitched a small village there. The smell of meat cooking on open fires mixed with the scents of curdled airag and the wild thyme that the wrestlers were trampling; the whole place took on an aroma unlike any I had known. Once more, the Mongolians were overwhelmingly friendly; I could have lived for five years on the hospitality they offered. I took a picture of one man who looked particularly noble in his saddle, and he swept me up onto his horse with him. From that lofty height I watched the sport as his friends asked me questions and gave me cow’s-milk liquor.

We left the Naadam, and as we traveled deeper into Ovorhangai province (Kharkhorin is on its northern edge), the paved roads stopped. Mongolia is a magical place, but travel there has its drawbacks. Imagine the worst dirt road you’ve driven. Now envision the worst stretch of that road; now that worst stretch in the rain; now that worst stretch in the rain immediately after an earthquake. You see in your mind’s eye one of the better roads in Mongolia.

We drove through muddy fields where it was impossible to see the road, and we forded rivers when our driver thought the bridges looked unstable. It was rough going, and more than once we had to get out to push our car–or to assist others whose cars had given up along the road.

But despite the wild jolting, the magnificence of that drive will stay with me forever. The great hills were nearly mountains. There were, however, no trees; and grazing animals had cropped the lush grass so low that it was as smooth as a golf course. We were on top of the world, so far as we could tell, and it was every bit as good a feeling as the cliché would have you believe. A brook flowed through the bottom of a valley, and yellow flowers bloomed all around. Slender columns of smoke came from the chimneys of ger here and there. Herds feasted on the vegetation: yaks and cows and sheep and goats and even the occasional stray camel from the Gobi, and astonishing numbers of horses running free. There were no predators and no hiding places; the feeling was of sublime peace.

Every so often a herdsman would come into view, smoking a pipe, watching his flock; children played and laughed by the water’s edge. Women emerging from their ger surveyed the scene with satisfaction as they arranged trays of cheese on their roofs to dry. Eagles circled overhead in lazy patterns, while smaller birds flew lower. Marmots darted from their holes and scampered in and out of sight. Here were stretches of earth that had been neither exploited nor deliberately preserved, that were almost as innocent as our planet in its prime. I have never encountered a terrain that was at once so magnificent and so unthreatening; there was no evidence of the monstrous force of nature here, only the golden, the light, the perfect.

Many visitors to Mongolia cross parts of the country on mountain bikes. Others ride on horses, as I was to do later in my trip. It is not easy terrain, but you want to be close to the land.

Of all the animals of Mongolia, I loved the yaks most. Large and inept, with vain faces and a gratuitous leg-obscuring fringe similar to what you’d find on a Victorian sofa, they moved with the disgruntled self-assurance of old ladies elaborately done up in tattered versions of a bygone era’s fashions. A few spry creatures waved their absurd fluffy tails in the air like parasols, or darted daringly across the road, mad great-aunts with spring fever. Most of them eyed us dubiously, offering no physical threat but preserving an air of mild disapproval. They liked being photographed; they would gaze straight into the camera and blink, flirtatiously.

Almost none of the land in Mongolia belongs to anyone; it never has. You can drive over any part you want; you can pitch a tent wherever you like. A herder in the Gobi Desert said to me, “When I move my ger, I feel the exhilaration of possibilities and freedom. I can go anywhere, put my house anywhere, take my flock anywhere, except maybe some few little places where they built a city.” He stopped for a moment to pour me tea with camel’s milk. “Tell me,” he said, “is America also a free country?” For the first time in my patriotic life, I found that question difficult to answer. One-third of Mongolians live below the poverty level, but when I talked about the American dream, he said, “Why would a son want a different life from his father’s?” I asked about his young children, who were playing underfoot. “I am sending them to school,” he said, “and if they want to be politicians or businessmen, that is up to them. I went to school and I chose to remain a herder; I hope they will make that choice also, because I can imagine no better life.”

The fashionable wisdom is that capitalism has won out over Communism, but I left Mongolia persuaded that these two systems had never been opposites, that the real opposite of both is nomadism, a way of life as close to joyful anarchy as humankind will ever reach.

WE STOPPED SEVERAL TIMES FOR GAS AS WE TRAVELED SOUTH toward the Gobi. The desert starts gradually: bit by bit the plants become sparse, and then the land flattens. The smooth, glorious grass fades away. We drove for hours and hours across Dundgovi (Middle Gobi) province, which was dull and bleak. Then we came to Omnogovi (South Gobi), where the sand was even and yellow, vegetation almost entirely absent. An hour or two later we arrived at one of the Gobi “forests,” full of plants with thick stems and thin leaves, like old driftwood stuck in the sand and decorated with arugula. The color was very strange and very beautiful. And after that the real desert began, flat and without ornament of any kind, and vast, vast, vast.

We spent the night at the Bayanzag–a region known as the Flaming Cliffs–where great crumbling formations of limestone, bright red and warm gold, frame and reframe the desert around them. The wind brayed at us through tunnels carved into the cliffs. In the distance we could see snowcapped mountains. There were fossils everywhere, as though the dinosaurs hadn’t bothered to clean up when they moved on to their next campsite.

We decided to spend that moonless night with some camel herders, which involved simply stopping at their ger and introducing ourselves. The camels of Mongolia are friendly, and they don’t spit at you as Arabian camels do. They are curious creatures that turn to follow you as you pass. Their two humps are topped with tufts of long fur. When they lack water, their humps droop like aging bosoms. At night, they howl–an eerie sound, like the spirits of purgatory crying out.

I liked the herders at once. There were a brother and sister and their spouses, none older than 25; their parents, who’d recently departed after a long visit, were encamped within a day’s ride. The couples invited us in and readily answered our questions. So I learned that camels are easier to take care of than sheep; your flock will not mix with others. You let the adult camels roam during the day, but you stay with the babies and yearlings and guide them home in the evenings. The mothers return to be with the calves, and the males follow them, so the herd stays together. Camels yield good wool, and they can manage with infrequent meals. The herders told me that about five times a year they pack their ger onto their camels to seek better grazing land.

We had by then learned basic ger etiquette, so we knew that men sit on the west side and women on the east, that you are always given something to eat and drink, and that it’s rude not to try what you are given. Usually you get milk tea, made with tea, salt, sugar, and whatever milk is on hand (this time, camel milk), and often you get airag. The herders made us soup from dried mutton, and we added some onions and potatoes. These items were new to them. The onions they liked; the potatoes they found “disgusting,” complaining that they “had the texture of dirt.” At night, a ger is usually lit by a single candle, and in the flickering light we talked until it was late, and the children started dropping off on the floor. Not wanting to use the only beds in the ger, we returned to our tents just outside.

The next day the rain began. It seemed unfair that there should be heavy rain in South Gobi province, where the annual precipitation is about five inches. It seemed particularly unfair that it went on for three days, making the road we took as we headed back toward Ulaanbaatar virtually invisible and barely navigable. It seemed utterly unfair that our tents were not waterproof as guaranteed and that none of us ever quite dried out. And it seemed cruelly unfair that I had gotten sick from something I had eaten at the Naadam and that it was now kicking in with a vengeance. I felt as though I were a dry-clean-only item in a mobile washing machine, in which I was tossing around getting damper and damper. We got stuck twice. We jacked up the vehicle, checked the tires, tore up nearby plants, and established traction by laying the branches underneath. I had just finished reading the manuscript of a friend’s novel, and its pages did very well for getting the wheels re-engaged. The earth might as well have been made of marshmallow.

FOR THE FIRST HALF OF OUR TRIP WE ENJOYED CAMPING AND DRIVING and staying in a different place every night. But now we’d had enough of it, so we flew north to stay in Khovsgol province for the rest of the trip. It’s hard to write about Khovsgol in a fittingly superlative tone after having described Ovorhangai’s beauty. Khovsgol was just as beautiful and very different. We took a bumpy four-hour jeep ride to Khovsgol Lake National Park. Having a national park in the middle of Mongolia is like having an urban development zone in midtown Manhattan, but in principle it means that hunting is forbidden, which explains why the wildlife is particularly plentiful there. Khovsgol Lake contains just under 2 percent of the world’s fresh water; it is enormous, lovely, dark, and deep. On its banks are fields of wildflowers so brilliant you might think you were looking at a shoreline of butterflies. All around the lake are steep mountains. There are no buildings with foundations anywhere.

We stayed at a resortlike ger camp called Toilogt, where we had a wonderful view of the lake and a very attentive staff who provided every service. Each morning we decided whether to take a boat ride, or go hiking, or ride horses, or ride yaks (which no one who had a horse would ever choose to do except for the novelty of it). Some evenings the waiters performed traditional Mongolian music. While we ate, the staff would light a fire in our ger stove, so when we returned everything was toasty and welcoming.

I’d heard of the Mongolian reindeer people, the shamanist Tsaatan, and had always wanted to meet some. The 500-odd members of this race tend to keep far from the beaten path; anthropologists and devoted travelers often have to ride three or four days through the woods northwest of the park to find them. We were in luck, however; a Tsaatan child had spent the night nearby, and he agreed to lead us to his cousins. We were told it was an hour’s drive and then a three-mile walk. We had not fully understood that it was a three-mile vertical walk, but we climbed gamely with our seven-year-old guide and a few relations he had gathered in the valley–assimilationists who had turned to goat herding. We followed the course of a mountain stream that runs into the lake. As we ascended, the view opened up behind us. From time to time the boy would point out a bear’s cave, or an eagle, or a deer.

After about three hours of hiking we found ourselves above the tree line, and on the crest of the mountain we could just make out a tepee and a herd of animals. Soon we were at the encampment of the reindeer people. In their dwelling we were given the usual warm welcome, reindeer-milk tea, some nasty cheese, and fried biscuits. (“Done in reindeer fat?” I asked the oldest woman. She reached behind a cabinet. “We prefer sunflower oil these days,” she said, showing the bottle.) Along the side of the tepee were various practical hooks made from antlers, and a few reindeer-skin bags. We asked about a small bundle, hanging opposite the door, of feathers, ribbons, dried flowers, a duck foot, and part of an antler. We were told that it was a magical device, and it was made clear that further questions about it were not welcome. The boy who had brought us said that his mother was a shaman.

Then we went outside to see the animals: three snow-white reindeer and 27 brown ones. I’d always thought of reindeer as inhabiting an eternal December; these had shed their heavy winter coats and seemed happy with the afternoon sun. They came over to rub their noses and heads against us: their antlers were furry and sensitive, and we soon discovered that they loved to have them scratched. The father in the Tsaatan family saddled one up and let me try it out. I found that reindeer are very difficult to ride. They prefer that you not grab their antlers when their swaying trot threatens to pitch you off their backs.

The next morning, back in the valley, we rode horses. Given a choice between Mongolian and Russian saddles, we chose Russian–the Mongolian wooden saddles look about as comfortable as rocks. We rode along the lakeshore, and then through the pine woods, which, carpeted in close-grazed grass, resembled groves rather than the forest primeval. It was a protective landscape and they were beautiful horses, and the smell of wildflowers was with us all the time. When we finally came back, saddlesore but contented, to a dinner of roast lamb, we felt we had earned our supper in the most pleasurable way possible.

I WAS GLAD TO RETURN TO ULAANBAATAR, WHICH IS A FUNNY, mixed-up city, with grand Neoclassical Russian buildings, one of the world’s most important Buddhist monasteries, and grim housing from the Communist era. The “four-star” hotels, however undeserving they were of such status, were a welcome comfort after our stay in the countryside. There were several pleasant restaurants, and a pretty park with elk in it behind the president’s house. We saw an exhibition of avant-garde Mongolian art and walked around the ger settlements, where almost half the city’s residents live. The expat community in UB (as Ulaanbaatar is commonly called by foreigners) has its own meeting spots–the weekly cocktail parties in the British ambassador’s back yard, and Millie’s Espresso, owned by the wife of an American businessman. It’s a perfect place for a slice of quiche and a glass of white wine, and not a drop of airag! The Westerners who live in UB are economists, diplomats, a few artists, lawyers, businessmen, and sociologists–and all adventurers.

Many of the Mongolians in UB are elegantly dressed, often in Western clothing, occasionally in hip, updated forms of Mongolian garb. They often carry cellular phones. There’s quite a scene at the big disco in the center of town, where young couples dance until dawn.

We went to the Hustain Nuruu National Reserve, outside town, to see the wild horses. We visited the National Museum of Mongolian History, whose astonishing displays of historic costumes and jewelry and wigs make the Paris runways look tame. We bought antiques; the authorized shops sell them with export papers, and you can buy fantastic objects for almost no money.

Throughout the city, there’s an amused, ironic view of the Cold War government, whose monuments are all over; in the former Lenin’s Museum, a Turkish restaurant has opened under the 80-foot-high mosaic of Lenin. When I walked in, I saw two signs: one on the wall that said, WORKERS OF THE WORLD, UNITE! and the other on a freshly whitewashed stand that said, DRINKS HALF PRICE BEFORE 6:00! UB is not really a commercial city, but it is lively, changing, aware of the modernity that the rest of the country appears to have escaped.

In 1931, a third of Mongolia’s male population lived in monasteries, and the nation’s wealth was concentrated in Buddhist holy places. Stalin’s thugs destroyed almost all of these, but a few remain. The most splendid is the Gandan Monastery in UB, the biggest monastery in Mongolia, at the center of which is a Buddha almost 100 feet tall, enclosed in a tight-fitting pagoda. Dozens of monks in long robes offer prayers inside and outside, and the aura of peace is strong even with the crowds of noisy tourists shoving through. I ran into my friend the monk from the Beijing train, and he greeted me with warm smiles and talked excitedly about his family.

We had also visited the great monastery in Kharkhorin, named Erdene Zuu. Aside from Gandan, Erdene Zuu is the most spectacular and holy monastery in Mongolia, and it felt more ancient, less touristed, more hallowed. The monks there, ranging in age from 6 to 90, strolled through the unkempt courtyards in long red robes; inside the temples others chanted prayers, beat drums, and lit candles in front of golden Buddhas carved by Mongolia’s great 17th-century king and sculptor, Zanabazar. Worshipers made offerings and pressed their foreheads to images of the divine, then turned the prayer wheels. For $2, you could get the monks to offer special prayers for you and your livestock.

I loved each of the places I went in Mongolia, but I think the essence of the country is far more important than the sights; it doesn’t matter where you go. Anywhere in Mongolia (outside UB) you can see what you need to see, which is an innocent landscape and an immutable culture. Afterward, if you especially want to explore the Gobi or Khovsgol or find some yaks, you can go ahead and do that too. In China, the people take a curious nationalist pride in the idea that no one else will ever penetrate the complexity of their society. Russians believe that their despair is a state no Westerner can attain or affect. Mongolians, however, seem gloriously clear about their place in the world and are delighted if you want to join them there. You get a feeling in Mongolia not simply of history, but of eternity.

Source: http://www.travelandleisure.com,  July 1999 By Andrew Solomon

 

Testimonials

Testimonials

Many thanks to your special arrangement and perfect organization. This trip we covered three part of Mongolia including Western Mongolia with Eagle festival

HOW TO APPRECIATE MONGOLIAN NATIONAL WRESTLING

 

It is Naadam time in Mongolia –a nomadic festival celebrated at the very least for centuries, and an important time for Mongolian wrestlers and horse-trainers, horse-riders and archers. The naadam tradition is truly ancient in its origins, predating, perhaps by millennia, the rise of Chinggis Khaan (Genghis Khaan) in the early Thirteenth Century. Naadam can be equated to the original Olympic Games of ancient Greece.

During the summer months, local naadams are held all over Mongolia. The biggest of them is the State Naadam held every July in Ulaanbaatar. Only the State Naadam awards national wrestling titles to successful participants. Among all Naadam’s sports, the easiest to understand is archery. And you can easily see how horseraces are run – for kilometers over the open steppe. However, many foreigners are confused by Mongolian wrestling and may find it boring or too long. On the contrary, wrestling is actually the most interesting and entertaining Naadam sport. Every Mongolian understands and follows wrestling with a passion.

Here is how to follow the fun side and the intricacies of Mongolian wrestling.

 

When the Naadam opening ceremony ends, and wrestling begins, you’ll see many wrestlers walking out onto the green field making eagle and falcon movements. That means they are about to start their first round of wrestling. In the usual 512-wrestler tournament, there will be nine elimination rounds of wrestling over two days. Or, during big anniversary years, there will be 1024-wrestler tournaments, also over two days.

In each succeeding round the number of wrestlers decreases by half because only the winners of a round go on to the next round. So, why are hats important at the first round?

For one thing, it makes watching the first round of 256 wrestling match-ups easier. Look at the wrestlers’ hats while they dance, walk or bow to the nine-white-horse hair-banners.

Wrestlers’ hats have red strips hanging down. And some of the red strips also have yellow lines on them. Watch those guys! The more yellow lines they have, the higher ranking they are. Try to memorize the guys you want to follow because they leave their hats in the hands of their coaches whenthe wrestling commences.

When a higher ranking wrestler wins, people appreciate them, but when they fall or get strongly challenged, the real naadam starts!

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