Days 22-23: Frozen Lake in the Gobi Desert

in #travel6 years ago

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We found the Ger camp in the dark and asked for one of the yurts ($6). It was really cozy since the yurt was heated with a wood fire, and it felt so great to finally be out of the wind, cold and sand. There was so much sand everywhere! From our hair to our clothes, to our food bag, and every small crevice of everything!

We changed clothes and tried to brush off as much sand as possible, then cooked dinner and warmed up by the fire. In the morning, we drove over to the frozen lake by the dunes to watch the sunrise.

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It's truly incredible that even after almost 12 years of traveling, the Earth continues to surprise me with its beauty. A frozen lake in the desert and ice streams between mounds of grassy sandhills standing in front of 20 meter high sand dunes- who ever knew that that even existed? :D

We drove back to the yurt after sunrise and noticed some unhappy camels.

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The ropes tied to their nose piercings were so short that they couldn't lift their heads when they were standing up.

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We also heard that one of the camels in the Ger camp was attacked and eaten by a wolf.
I wonder if that camel was tied up as well...

Of course, someone by the yurt came out and asked if we wanted to ride these camels. Neither Felix or I would ever want to contribute to the abuse or exploitation of animals, so we kindly said no, but I also thought about the reason that this situation exists in the first place..

Some camels are tied up and given the minimum that they need to live on, waiting for tourists to come around and ride them. This happens because it's the easiest way for locals to make money. It's all a part of the money game. And the problem is intensified by over-tourism, which is what inundates the Gobi Desert in the summertime. You can try to teach the locals all you want about why you should treat camels better, but the truth is, if you don't remove the reason that abuse exists in the first place, you will have little chance of doing anything but patch work to improve the situation. This goes for all animals, forests, coral reef systems, and basically everything on Earth that's suffering from human exploitation.

So, if you pay for a packaged deal, someone will most likely pick you up from Ulaanbaatar, drive you to the desert, show you all the most popular spots, and take you on a camel ride. You have no control over how the camel you paid to ride is being treated. If you say no to the camel ride, you still already pre-paid for the environment that keeps the camel pierced to a two foot rope.

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...Then we hit the road back to Dalanzadgad.

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We stayed in Baatar's yurt one more night ($4) and found the public shower ($1). It was so nice to finally get the rest of the sand off our bodies :). We weren't sure where we would go next; we thought about camping in the Yolin Am Canyon or the mountains by Dalanzadgad, but Baatar freaked us out a bit with all of his wolf stories. Apparently there are a lot of wolves in the Gobi.

Next thing you know, we hear a knock on our yurt and in comes a big tall happy French guy :) We immediately bonded with our Mongolian travel stories and he invited us to the yurt next door for some beer.

In the yurt there was also a Filipino guy who was riding a motorbike around Mongolia on his own- in November :D

Both Bryan and Zach were struggling with the cold. Bryan slept alone in a tent, and sometimes had to stay up all night collecting horse poop to keep a fire going and not freeze to death. Zach would sometimes loose feeling in this hands while riding his bike in -20° or so. Both were really interesting people. Bryan actually managed to sort-of hitch through the desert. He met an Argentinian couple who had been traveling for six months on only $1,000, and they managed to bargain a cheap ride from from Bayandalai to the desert. I think they were dropped off there and then roamed around on their own for 10 or so days.

That's the thing about traveling "off season", you get to meet real travelers, not just tourists on vacation. Bryan started traveling when he was 15 and had some crazy stories. I can't repeat them all but you can check out his site if you know French ;)

These guys also gave us some good advice about the canyon- they said, "DO IT!" :) They told us that it was very beautiful and that you should not be afraid of wolves because in Mongolia, there are only lone wolves, and a lone wolf would never attack a grown human, let alone two humans together.

So we packed up our stuff and got ready to hitch to the canyon in the morning.

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Total expenses of Days 22-23 in Mongolia: $12.00
$10- yurt (2 nights)
$1- shower
$1- Khushur (meet dumpling)

Total expenses so far of 23 days in Mongolia (including the price of getting to Mongolia):
$272.00

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That's a great deal on the yurt... sucks about the camels tho !tip

Phenomenal photos. I can't wait to hear more about your adventures. 🍻

thank you! :)

frozen lakes in a desert? How much more epic can that be?

Your posts never cease to amaze me, so glad I stumbled on your profile. $272 for 23 days wow wow wow that just shows just how much can be done on a budget, we're all just see inflated values of things and want overpriced living and travel

yep totally. Thanks @chekohler :)

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@davedickeyyall wrote lately about: #Themorningbowl Gets Wet Feel free to follow @davedickeyyall if you like it :)

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I feel bad for those camels, they could at least have a longer rope. It reminds me of this one thing I heard some people do with elephants, when elephants are babies and are going to be used to carry things (or some use that would require them being tied every now and then) they have a strong, metal, hand cuff-like object on the elephant's leg that's attached to a strong pull. The elephant babies pull and rub their skin raw to (unsuccessfully) try to escape. When their older and stop trying to escape, their tied with twine to a stick because if they feel a pull of resistance, they'll give up, because they weren't able to before. That's what the picture of the camels' situation reminded me of.
I don't know what can be done to stop it, but refusing to pay to ride on camels that are treated like that will probably work if everyone else does the same.

I don't think that will do it because most people have already prepaid to ride them, so if they refuse to ride the camels they will still have prepaid for that camel's environment (being tied to that rope) plus, to be real, all people refusing camel rides will never happen. That's what happens all over the world with the abuse of animals, ecosystems, poor humans, almost everything. And that's why I said that if you want real change you have to think bigger. See this book to get a better idea if it's really something that interests you: https://www.tromsite.com/2016/03/money-game-beyond/