Other trips


Other trips can be accessed by clicking the following links:

2014
Germany, Poland, Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey, Israel, Jordan and Copenhagen

2015
Hawaii, Australia, Indonesia, Singapore, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, Malaysia, Nepal, India and England

2016
Latvia, Lithuania, Ukraine, Slovenia, Serbia, Bosnia, Croatia, Montenegro, Kosovo, Macedonia, Albania, Greece, Egypt, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, Ethiopia, Kenya, S. Africa, Zimbabwe, UAE and Denmark

2017
Panama, Colombia, Ecuador (inc. Galapagos), Peru, Bolivia, Chile (inc. Easter Island), Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Mexico.

2018
France (Paris and Lourdes), Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Spain, Andorra, Morocco (Tangier), Portugal and the Netherlands (Amsterdam).

2019
New Zealand, Australia, Ireland, Great Britain, Antarctica, Patagonia and Paraguay.


Wednesday, October 2, 2013

En route to Beijing at long last!

9/12: Left on 7:15 am train for China, a 32 hour journey, and saw our friends Dale, Debbie and Elaine again. They were in the same compartment as we were; you may recall from earlier blogs we had initially met them on the walking tour of Moscow our first day there and several times since as we all traveled on the Trans Siberian all across Russia. 

  • New terrain for us: plains, plains and more plains, then a lengthy stop at Choyr (population of 10,100); saw a statue of the 1st Mongolian cosmonaut and a former Soviet air base, now closed.
  • Had a 4 plus hour stop at the Chinese border in part b/c the Chinese train gauge is different from that used in both Russia and Mongolia; since the Chinese axles or bogies are 3.5" narrower, each carriage had to be individually elevated, (while we were all in them), old bogies removed and new ones put on.  Everyone took masses of pictures as you might imagine even though the whole process didn't start til after 9 pm.
  • Crossing the border, first thing we heard from a tannoy speaker was "Ladies and Gentlemen and Friends: You are about to have a new journey.  Have a nice trip!"
  • Then blasting again from the tannoy, oodles of songs at incredibly high volume:  Love is Blue was one of them we recognized.
  • Passports and immigration forms were collected but no one searched our compartment, our bags; we were all surprised how the border crossing was such a non issue in terms of security especially as compared to what we've become accustomed to in the States these days.
  • Had our first very hazy views of the Great Wall about 9 am on 9/12; couldn't wait to go hiking on it in a few days from Beijing!  The whole terrain was very mountainous, so there were scads of train tunnels (one of them was several kms long) to go through as we neared Beijing. It seemed like everyone had their faces glued to the windows in the compartment's passageway to get a glimpse of what life was like beyond the train.
  • Had to say goodbye to Dale and Co. at the overwhelmingly huge Beijing train station as Beijing was the end of the road for them before returning to Florida 
  • Our first experience with the craziness of the size of Beijing and thus its traffic was waiting a good 35 minutes to get a taxi to our hostel; well worth the wait as our hostel, Beijing Downtown Backpackers, was a real gem located in one of the capital's most famous hutongs, i.e. alleyways.
  • The alleyway was theoretically a pedestrian street although you could never walk more than a few steps without hearing car horns, the roar of motorcycles and mopeds, bicycle bells beeping. 
  •  I have never seen crowds like we saw and experienced in Beijing with people jostling for every inch of space on the roads, sidewalks, everywhere.  We got used to do it very quickly in part because we had to, but it was a sea change from our days in the countryside of Mongolia!
  • Some pictures and I'll call it a day!
Aboard the train from Mongolia to Beijing!



Our Chinese train: not very comfortable compared to Russian trains. 




The changing of the bogies.

I don't think this security guard moved an inch the whole time we were there!


Look ma: no feet!


First glimpse of the Great Wall.
Saw lots of wind farms.




Our Beijing hostel.


Our "street" a couple of hours before it became all but impassable every night.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

FINAL post from Mongolia, I promise!



Figure I better close out my post from Mongolia as we're nearing the end of our stay here in Thailand and Mongolia was 3 countries ago on our trip!  I just "can't" be writing about Mongolia from Cambodia - that would do me in for sure!
  • We had made this 2nd tour or trek specifically to see and spend 2 nights at  Erdene Zuu (E.Z.) Monstery; it was the first monastery in Mongolia, built in 1586, and  2000 monks lived there; E.Z. means the 1st Image of Buddha and also the 3 Treasures: Buddha, Lama and Sutra.
  • Had gotten to Kharkorin too late on Sept. 9th to see EZ so walked the 10 minutes or so on dirt roads/paths from our ger "camp," i.e. all of 10 or so gers, to the monastery; positively breathtaking views b/c of the immensity of it and b/c it's in the middle of nowhere really.
  • Steven, Valerie (our sidekick or perhaps she would refer to us as HER sidekicks, not sure!) and I spent several hours walking around the immense complex of buildings, relaxed a bit back at our ger and went back to the monastery for another look see later;
  • All 3 of us were feeling pretty washed out mid afternoon as we'd obviously eaten something the night before that didn't agree with our stomachs; we had considered ourselves to be so lucky before then b/c we'd had no problem with any of the food but  our dinner the night before of spaghetti about did all three of us in for the next few days.
  • 9/11: lit a small candle in our ger for all those affected by the horrific events; then, on our way back to UB, stopped for a camel ride on the sand dunes as part of the tour; while waiting for our camels to arrive at the camel ger camp, we waited inside the ger; I didn't realize it but Valerie picked up on it right away that the ger family had both a Shaman's altar with robes, including a headpiece,as well as a Buddhist shrine. 
  • I had taken photos of the altar and shrine (not knowing what the former was) when the ger woman was not inside; when she came back in, Valerie asked her about it, and the woman IMMEDIATELY pulled the coverings down over both the altar and shrine.  Valerie made me promise to send her my photos as she hadn't taken any inside.
  • It was an "interesting" camel ride to put it mildly: we think our camel guide was pretty intoxicated and shouldn't have been trying to guide us; I had a bruise on my right leg til a couple of days ago from where the stirrup was way too tight; wish you could help me out here, Christine, with my camel/horse gear!
  • Steven's camel had a huge and deep bloody gouge (from a wolf bite, we think) on its right flank that Valerie got her foot in - yuck; all three of our camels were tethered together so that I was holding onto Valerie's rope attached to her camel and she was holding onto Steven's, etc; seemed fine initially but when one camel moved in one direction, we all did!  
  • Our "guide" was totally unaware of what the camels were doing as he was walking on ahead though holding one rope; he didn't speak a word of English which was an issue when we felt very unsafe.
  • Valerie was scared out of her wits the whole time and also well before we even got near the camel ger camp, so we had to do a lot of wheedling to get her up in the first place; she had never, I think, been up on a horse so was damn near petrified at the prospect of getting up on a CAMEL!
  • My camel brushed up against a tree trunk and my right leg above my ankle got badly scraped; I think I will have another scar but WHAT  a story to relate how I got this one!
  • Having said all this though, it WAS exciting and we're all glad we did it.  I was able to take some good photos while riding the camel; I will spare you the ones of the empty sky or the blurry ones when I was being jostled about and wasn't able to focus!
  • Other impressions: only saw one fast food restaurant in all of Mongolia and it was KFC; have NEVER in my life seen so many pregnant women: there must have been some pretty cold nights back last January, methinks!  Pollution is so bad in UB, that drivers aren't able to drive their cars one day a week based on their license number.
At ticket area, just inside Erdene Zuu Monastery;  the stone lions protect the temples.
The view of EZ as we walked to it from our ger.

Outside Erdene Zuu Monastery at Kharkorin Village.


One of the doors at EZ - the blue prayer "scarves" were everywhere all over Russia, Mongolia etc at all  Shaman ovoos and Buddhist temples.

More views of inside the monastery walls.

Valerie and Bolga, our wonderful driver, from Khongor Guesthouse in UB.

Another turtle rock, albeit a tad smaller than the last one: this was at EZ.

I saw Steven a gazillion times this trip doing this same pose, i.e. getting something out of his fanny pack or putting tickets away in it!

View of many of the stupas at EZ.

Immediately outside the entrance to EZ: not sure if any of the postcards I mailed from the "post office" will get to where they're supposed to go; the post office was really a souvenir shop!

Another view of Erdene Zuu to show you the size and scope of it!





Me, before it too cold in our ger!

Almost nighttime by our ger at EZ.
Yaks on the side of the road.
Our camel ger hostess.

Valerie inside the camel herder's ger across the room from the altar and shrine.


Valerie making sure!
Covering all the bases with the shrine to Buddha.
The first one atop the camel.

Valerie atop a camel for the first time and not exactly thrilled with the idea either. I wonder if she'll ever get up on an animal again after her experience riding the camel AND getting her shoe covered in
camel guts to boot!

Notice the deformed humps on my camel - did it ever make it tough to hold on!




View from atop the camel.
Sand dunes - as close as we got to the famed Gobi!
Sand dunes - as close as we got to the famed Gobi!