Day 14: Mongolian Hospitality

in travel •  6 years ago 

_dsc8527 12.jpg

We wanted to get out of Ulaanbaatar ASAP because neither Felix or I are big fans of huge overcrowded cities or spending money. And the city is so polluted that I felt like I was getting sick just from breathing. See this article.

We got out of the city center by sunset but only managed to get a few km away, to a wealthy neighborhood called Zaisan. We watched the sunset from a huge monument on top of a hill in Zaisan, which explained perfectly why Mongolians were so nice to me :) (I'm Russian, if you didn't know that ;))

_dsc8236 5.jpg

_dsc8241 6.jpg

_dsc8246 7.jpg

I’m not a fan of hitchhiking in the dark (especially at -10), so instead of trying to get to Gorkhi-Terelj National Park, we decided to camp on the outskirts of Zaisan, where we knew there were some small hiking trails.

We paid for a cab to take us 5 km up the road towards the hiking trails *($1/each), and pitched our tent in the dark, in some closed down Ger camp.

The view was pretty cool-

_1230069 1.jpg

Nobody bothered us at night, although it was funny to see hikers going up these trails in the morning as we were getting out of our tent :)

We walked back down to Zaisan and started hitching east. It didn’t take long for us to find the most epic ride of the entire trip. A young guy picked us up, didn’t speak a word of English or Russian. He understood where we were going (about an hour drive) and offered to drive us all the way there. We confirmed that he was not a taxi driver before we got in the car (by saying “ugui taxi” (no taxi)) so it seemed like a bit of a strange (or overly nice) offer, and we got a bit confused.

Then he called a friend who spoke English and had the friend translate that he wanted to drive us to the national park, leave us there, then pick us back up from the same place when we wanted to go back to Ulaanbaatar! The friend also added that he didn’t want money or anything, he just wanted to help us out. He’s a nice guy. We were a little bit shocked by the situation but, of course, we thanked him and accepted.

So he drove us all the way to the national park for free, dropped us off, and said that he will come back for us two days later at 3pm.

Now that's Mongolian hospitality.

We thanked him a lot, waved goodbye and made our way up some beautiful rolling hills for sunset.

_dsc8506 9.jpg

_dsc8509 11.jpg

_dsc8507 10.jpg

Then we found an amazing camping spot overlooking the valley between two huge boulders.
Set up the tent. Made a fire. Cooked dinner.
I think I need nothing else in life.

_1230509 4.jpg

www.bigworldsmallsasha.com

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

Incredible. It seems that people in the poorest countries are often the happiest and friendliest ones...

Totally. Because it's not money or material things that make people happy, it's relationships and experiences.

That would be a very select few countries. Do this in Africa and I am pretty sure you will not make it out alive.

Интересное у вас путешествие. :)

Спасибо)

Hello. we make a travel dapp. It’s based on steam.
If you write posts through trips.teem , This will be uploaded to steemit at the same time. (It seems like a Steemhunt)
It is still trial, but we hope many people will be interested in using it.
Thanks. (we’ll give you a extra voting.) https://en.tripsteem.com

thanks!

I love Mongolia and I really like these landscapes. Wonderful place that I think people should visit once in their Life. For sure!
Thank you to share with us this content and I hope we will be able to read others on your Channel.
Steem on!

Posted using Partiko Android

Howdy!
I've upvoted your post
it's just a small upvote, but I hope it will serve to help you and the steem community to grow ;)

Loading...