

We arrived at Hohhot (Green City) and boarded our bus to go to a Tibetan Buddhist Temple (had already seen a ton of these in Tibet) so we just wandered around. We then went to an old shopping street next to the temple to see some of the local culture (children playing with pet pig, the local barbershop, Christian church , rocks for sale,
local fruit seller, and, grocery store).




After visiting the temple we headed for the grasslands. The drive was over two hours. The first half was on a nice highway. The second part of the journey was on a hilly road that was under repair. After driving on this road for 15 minutes we turned off onto the grasslands on a small dusty path. It was very bizarre traveling on this large tour bus across the grasslands on a dusty path that sometimes was lined with rocks or white spay painted lines at 2100m above sea level.
The area has so much open space and wind that there are large windmills everywhere producing electricity. Then out on the horizon you could see a little yurt village (our home for the night).




There were about 30 people in our tour group. Each person was greeted by the Mongolian herdsmen with a little ceremony. Each person was presented with a silver cup of hard clear liquor. You were to receive the cup in two hands then dip your right 4th finger into the liquor and raise it to the heavens, then dip the same finger again and point down to the earth, and dip the finger and cross your forehead and then drink the liquor. There is a story as to how this ritual got started but that I will leave to your imagination.
The tour operator then handed out keys to our "luxury" yurts. I think the regular yurts may actually have been better situation. The bathroom attached to the yurt had its drawback (I think you know what I mean and no one used the shower the next day).










After the horse caravaning we watched some Mongolian horse racing and wrestling. There was a large US college group who also visited the same grassland village. They were on a cultural break for their college abroad program in Beijing. The boys and one girl wanted to get into the wrestling action. It was very entertaining and they represented the US well.




There were further activities after 9:00 including a "disco". We were tired from an early morning and decided to call it a night. We were awoken by the fireworks and music but were able to get back to sleep on our rock hard beds and fragrant room.
The next morning we got up to the cool, windy, rainy weather (~50ish) to eat a Mongolian breakfast. There were hard boiled eggs, fried dough, loaf of bread, cold rice soup, and then a plate of fried eggs and a large bunch of bananas was brought to the table. To drink there was milk tea and sweet nescafe instant coffee.
After breakfast BF, WW, and QL decided they wanted to ride ATV's. BF went for the manual one. She had a little difficulty with it but got in out onto the grasslands. A Mongolian herdsmen followed her on a small motorcycle as she had a little bit of trouble with the clutch and shifting. BF and WW went off into the distance where we could no longer see them. The herdsmen came back 10 minutes later on BF's ATV. I was a little worried but he told QL that she wanted to ride the motorcycle and traded with him.
We also decided to do a little archery but with "well used" aluminum arrows that had no fins.

Our guide did give us much better explanation of the life of the herdsmen and how life has changed for them recently. Each yurt has a picture of Ghengis Khan rather than Chairman Mao. Each family typically has 3 or 4 yurts (one for the kitchen, living room, bedroom).
While the visit to the Mongolian people and the grasslands was very memorable and worth the trip, it is somewhat sad to see and hear the changes. Tourism is beginning to be a big industry for the Mongolians and is helping to preserve their culture. Most of the young people are turning to life in the city and leaving the simple but hard nomadic life.
The grasslands are in bad shape right now. There has been a drought for the last 3 years and what should be knee-high grass is just barely covering the dry arid ground. There were dry lakes everywhere and no water to be seen. Our tour guide can remember when the grass was chest high on adults in her youth. 

The rest of the day we drove to Hohhot and then visited a 5 pagoda temple and Muslim mosque. BF and I could have done without those stops as we have already seen enough of these on previous trips.
Then it was off to the airport for the trip back to Beijing. We got back to the apartment by 9:30pm. So it was a busy but very interesting cultural weekend. Like the Tibet trip it was very memorable but I would only do it once. Maybe someday we will go back to Inner Mongolia to visit the Gobi desert or maybe not.......
2 comments:
Cool trip to Inner Mongolia. Always thought it would be an interesting place to visit. Your taxi trip to Beijing Airport brought back memories of my taxi trips in Beijing. Most cab drivers don't speak a lick of English, but I thought they had to learn rudimentary English by the Olympics otherwise they might lose their taxi license?
Henry
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