hi friends,
here is the scoop. 7 big days of riding from Ulangom to Moron. Lots of desert, sandy roads, a couple really unpleasant climbs, tons of underwhelming ice-cream bars in backwoods towns. Water has been a little tricky to come by but so far a couple of super-nice Mongolian families have helped us out. One day we saw some purple wildflowers, which was cool. Now we're hanging in town getting caught up on calories and internet memes.
The really crazy thing was running into Miles. Miles is this cool guy from Alaska who is on a 3 year around the world bike odyssey. Matt actually ran into him during his last trip to southern Africa when they rode together for a month, looked at lions and Victoria Falls, etc. Anyway, so we're just riding along on this little Mongolian backroad and suddenly there is Miles, going the other direction. So crazy. Of course everyone was super excited and we sat to tell stories and marvel at his impressive beard. He had some pretty crazy stories to tell about biking Central Asia in winter...carried three sleeping bags, etc.
Besides that morale has really sunk to new lows, especially for Ben. Even a healthy intake of ice cream bars and Coca Cola over the last 24 hours has done little to repair a seriously destabilized sense of purpose...he went and bought a bus ticket back to UB, leaving tomorrow. Unknown whether it will actually be utilized... Matt is feeling chipper and is excited to see some absurd monasteries on the way back to the capital. Both of us dream of super burritos and milkshakes. Constantly. And vegetables. Sweet, nutritious vegetables. Maybe put the vegetables in the milkshake, except in a secret way were you would still only taste milkshake. How awesome would that be?
ben and matt
Mongolia Bike Tour. July/August 2012
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
| We bike-herded this camel like crazy. |
| Super beautiful ovoo, made even more sweet by the 3000+ ft descent that followed. |
| Pouring some gasoline, as you do. |
| One day our lives were enriched by some beautiful wildflowers. |
| Bull runs into Miles. Last time they cycled together was in Namibia. So so so crazy. Turn out the world is small. |
| Matt ate a bunch of mutton with this family. |
| Look at how much choice you have! 3 different types of cookies and 2 (!) types of ramen. |
Monday, July 16, 2012
hi friends,
okay, here is some news. we left Olgii four days ago, heading up into the mountains on our way to Ulaangom. There was a lot of rain but luckily we had bought the following items to maintain our strength during the ride through the mountains:
5 cans of John West tuna (Matt)
3 packs of (real!) Oreos (Ben)
Innumerable Snickers bars
Also, there was some pasta.
The rain just kept on falling for a couple days which made our fingers cold and the roads muddy. Per usual, no real "main road" to speak of, just a bunch of interweaving mud and gravel tracts that all seem to generally go in the same direction. Sometimes we felt frustrated but sometimes we felt very excited because the mountains were so huge and beautiful and we kept finding these big crazy lakes. At one point we were stopped at a ger chatting with some nice folks and a van pulled up. Out popped two gringos like us who not only happened to be American but were from SF and lived like a block away from us in the MIssion. Whoa. That is seriously crazy. There was a lot of talking and making of friendship, and in the end they gave us some extra Gatorade powder (big score) and we decided to to meet up back in the city and possibly be friends forever.
The mountains of western Mongolia are sort of overwhelming, both in their beauty and their challenge for cycling. Here's what they look like - huge open meadows with goats, sheep, cows, and camels grazing, gers dotting the green hillsides with little plumes of smoke spouting from their chimneys, sunshine and rainclouds dappling the mountainsides, empta vodka bottles littered all along the roadside...oh wait, I guess it isn't all beauty. But seriously, this place is full of splendor. What's really amazing about this country is the fact that I don't think I've seen a single fence since getting here. I guess it's that nomadic notion of communal land, but it is amazing to see so many families sharing pastures without the need for lots of barbed wire. Pretty cool.
Now in Ulaangom taking a rest day. We had a delicious sauteed beef dinner last night and the Chingis Kahn steakhouse and are looking forward to the corner stores opening up again so we can double our ice cream ration for the day. Distinct possibility of double giardia infection, but nothing a little Cipro won't handle.
thanks for reading.
ben and matt
okay, here is some news. we left Olgii four days ago, heading up into the mountains on our way to Ulaangom. There was a lot of rain but luckily we had bought the following items to maintain our strength during the ride through the mountains:
5 cans of John West tuna (Matt)
3 packs of (real!) Oreos (Ben)
Innumerable Snickers bars
Also, there was some pasta.
The rain just kept on falling for a couple days which made our fingers cold and the roads muddy. Per usual, no real "main road" to speak of, just a bunch of interweaving mud and gravel tracts that all seem to generally go in the same direction. Sometimes we felt frustrated but sometimes we felt very excited because the mountains were so huge and beautiful and we kept finding these big crazy lakes. At one point we were stopped at a ger chatting with some nice folks and a van pulled up. Out popped two gringos like us who not only happened to be American but were from SF and lived like a block away from us in the MIssion. Whoa. That is seriously crazy. There was a lot of talking and making of friendship, and in the end they gave us some extra Gatorade powder (big score) and we decided to to meet up back in the city and possibly be friends forever.
The mountains of western Mongolia are sort of overwhelming, both in their beauty and their challenge for cycling. Here's what they look like - huge open meadows with goats, sheep, cows, and camels grazing, gers dotting the green hillsides with little plumes of smoke spouting from their chimneys, sunshine and rainclouds dappling the mountainsides, empta vodka bottles littered all along the roadside...oh wait, I guess it isn't all beauty. But seriously, this place is full of splendor. What's really amazing about this country is the fact that I don't think I've seen a single fence since getting here. I guess it's that nomadic notion of communal land, but it is amazing to see so many families sharing pastures without the need for lots of barbed wire. Pretty cool.
Now in Ulaangom taking a rest day. We had a delicious sauteed beef dinner last night and the Chingis Kahn steakhouse and are looking forward to the corner stores opening up again so we can double our ice cream ration for the day. Distinct possibility of double giardia infection, but nothing a little Cipro won't handle.
thanks for reading.
ben and matt
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| Throwing up double peace signs above Lake Achit. Naturally. |
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| we drank the lake water. then we got giardia. |
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| Cricket? Scorpion? Both? |
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| Top of the first pass between Khotgor and Ulaangom. Love the cows nestled up in from of this Buddhist ovoo. The blue scarves are offerings to the sky gods. |
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| taking a rest before the descent. |
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| One really big pasture. The cowboy lives on in Mongolia... |
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| about to descend...the road was pretty gnarly on the way down. |
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| dogs in Mongolia are scary. They have lots of fleas and they can give you rabies. |
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| Camels, on the other hand, are awesome. This guy was just hanging by himself next to the road. |
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| No fences. |
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| Lively discussion as to the grammar/syntax of this sign. |
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| Big ovoo before the descent to Ulaangom. |
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| Love seeing these. |
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Sunday, July 8, 2012
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| Ghengis Kahn presided over the greatest empire in history. Mongolians basically worship him. So does Bull. |
| Bicycles on the roof of the bus. |
| Wrestlers at the Naddam festival in Darvi. They try to bodyslam each other. Exciting! |
| Making friends. |
| First day riding |
| Bull points north from a temple in Altai. |
| Wrestlers waiting to get body slammed in the dirt! |
| Sunrise on the Vaca Once. We ate Oreos and watched the sun come up, happy to still be alive. |
| Ben's obligatory semi-surprised self-portrait. At the time, he had no idea how much his bottom was going to hurt in the days to come. |
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