This morning I have galloped across the Mongolian plain, surrounded by mountains and forests as far as the eye can see, under the huge sky, on a tough little Mongolian horse and it was heaven.
In fact this place is heaven – our gers sit on a great flat grassy area among hills and forest, its a delightful camp, they come and light a fire in your ger in the morning, its hard to put across just how lovely the gers are, both to look at and to be inside (there will be pictures I promise maybe the Russian internet will be more amenable, fingers crossed). The furniture is painted, colourful and cheerful, there are lovely fabric drapes round the bed, chairs and cushions, and you can just sit outside and drink in the view. Its magic!
On arrival last night I walked up a nearby hill and it was good to be alone, high above our camp just revelling in being here. There were scrapings on the ground made by wild boars rooting with their tusks.
On the way here we did the tourist thing and stopped at the massive Ghengis Khan statue – typical Mongolia – if they want to make a monumet they don’t do it in a centre of population where people can pass by every day and with buses and trains to get you there, they stick it, huge and imposing, out in the landscape. Its common to see huge statues of wild animals atop a hill at the entrance to a national park and at one place we stopped at, just outside a town, their big monument to Mongolia was a 20 minute walk up a hill.
Around the Ghengis Khan statue is now a bustle but its jobs and prosperity for people and its beautifully done, a place you could hang out for the day. There was a museum which was, incongruously, all set up to cater for people taking selfies with the exhibits (statues of Ghengis Khan, mock ups of gers and life as a nomad or a soldier, etc) so if you stopped to actually look at something you were shoved out of the way by people wanting to have their picture taken in front of it. Nobody (but me) actually looked AT anything.












