Before I start to remember sunsets or the kindnesses of nomads. Before only the staggering beauty of this desert lies serenely in my memory, I must say this - the Gobi is a terrible place!
I feel now, writing from Sainshand, like my body has been tied to a pneumatic drill for four days.
As the road from Ulaanbaatar dissolves into a confusing myriad of jeep tracks, each with its own design on the destruction of skeletal systems, the landscape seems to loose everything that grants sustenance to life. A sparsely populated country becomes almost completely empty. Grass withers. Becomes yellow. Tough. And then disappears completely. Replaced only by rocks and sand.
One becomes aware, here, of the things one truly needs. The water bags, and the packets of food became the most valuable of my possessions. But the lack of people too had an effect upon me I could not have imagined and cannot explain. I have never been so terrified of a natural landscape in my life. And yet, at the end of each day, as I watched the sun set and felt its relentless heat cool, I felt an incredible freedom. No-one could be seen and, though I have never been more than 50 miles from a permanent settlement, I felt completely alone. With enough food, and enough water, when bicycle wheels no longer sink in sand, and the sun no longer stifles, the desert can seem like a very beautiful place indeed. But as water supplies begin to diminish one becomes very aware that one is not Ray Mears - and a gratefulness emerges that some people possess an incomprehensible hardiness that allows them to live here.
I have taken the easiest route possible through the Gobi. The train tracks never lie more than a few miles away and villages stand, tiny against the vastness, never more than a day's cycle apart and always promising water. As I near the Chinese border I am also aware that 300km of this desert remain to be crossed on the other side. It is perhaps, the most exciting part of my journey so far, but the Gobi is a place which makes you appreciate the richness of other places. And it is a place I will be happy to leave behind...
Hello. My name is Sam and I'm trying to cycle round the world to raise money for Shelterbox. If you want to donate or find out more about the charity that would be brilliant. Just click on the links below.
Sunday, 26 July 2009
Saturday, 18 July 2009
Airag!
The dust of the city was gone. And the sheep for sale by the roadside. And the goats tied to rusty pick-up trucks. So too the chimneys' smoke, the crowded bus stops and the windowless breeze block walls. The cacophony of squealing brakes and lisping voices, of traffic whistles and loud abrasive beats fell no longer upon the ears, but lay distant and quietened - a vague recollection of a saturated sonic landscape.
Above the dryness of the empty steppe, the heat of the air swelled and grew humid. The light, spattering rain, from the gathering, darkened clouds, promised downpour and soon enough I found myself away from the road searching for a place to camp. The sandy earth drank, thirstily, the heavy, cooling water.
Only several hours later did the sun again make its presence felt. The light, warming rays came, accompanied by a beautiful, mourning voice - singing outside my tent. I went outside to meet Mungo - a malchin, or herdsman. As we sat around my phrasebook I learnt of his family; his two brothers and his parents, with whom he lived, and I tried to explain what I was doing. We shared sweets and apples as he played, fascinatedly with various parts on my bike. I felt very welcome in this new and ownerless land.
A little while later, making coffee outside, I was slightly startled to notice a horse, galloping towards me at a great pace. At the last moment the horse was pulled to a halt and another herdsman jumped down from the saddle. The furious pace of his arrival was quickly replaced with an apparent friendliness and I was once again to be found sharing fruit and chocolate - flicking through pages of Mongolian words. Pointing often, as my pronounciation seemed to rob the phrases of all meaning.
The new herdsman told me that he lived alone. And pointing to the clouds, still dark in the sky, invited me to spend the night in his ger. Excited by my first opportunity to gain an insight into the life of a Mongolian nomad, I was happy to contribute a little money towards buying some airag - fermented mare's milk.
It was only as he began to rip my tent pegs from the ground that I noticed a drunkeness was already well established within my new acquaintance. Time, perhaps, to be on my guard, but certainly no cause for panic.
My tent was packed and my bike loaded. Ready to ride to my new friend's ger. It was at this point that he turned. Pushing my bike to the ground and motioning to hit me! He swung his fists and bizzarely grinded his teeth. Jumping away, I stared perplexed at this change of behaviour. He stepped over the bike between us and, smiling, hugged me tightly, drunkenly. And, though the wetness of his lips did not find a welcome cheek, I was happy not to know his fists.
Resolved in my decision that it was time to leave I picked up my bike and said goodbye. Again he pushed my bike to the floor and the drunken scene continued for several minutes.
It was a great relief to watch him, finally, clamber upon his horse and trot away. Towards his ger, with my five thousand togrog in his pocket. He had covered just a few metres when he turned and, again, galloped towards me - lashing wildly with his horse whip as I dived out of his path. Now masterful and confident in his skills as a horseman he span around - swinging again for my scrambling body. Perhaps half a minute of this pantomime ensued before his former character surfaced. Smiling again, he motioned toward his ger and indicated that I was welcome as his guest.
"Bayta" I said. Goodbye.
Adrenaline filled as they were, I was able, over the following 15 miles of escape, to put the event into perspective. He was a drunk. And a crazy. But his aggression never crossed effectively into violence and, after regularly checking I was not being followed, I was able to sleep surprisingly well... imagining he was furthering the investigation into his personality crisis over several cups of airag.
... sorry again, really I will try next time for brevity...
Above the dryness of the empty steppe, the heat of the air swelled and grew humid. The light, spattering rain, from the gathering, darkened clouds, promised downpour and soon enough I found myself away from the road searching for a place to camp. The sandy earth drank, thirstily, the heavy, cooling water.
Only several hours later did the sun again make its presence felt. The light, warming rays came, accompanied by a beautiful, mourning voice - singing outside my tent. I went outside to meet Mungo - a malchin, or herdsman. As we sat around my phrasebook I learnt of his family; his two brothers and his parents, with whom he lived, and I tried to explain what I was doing. We shared sweets and apples as he played, fascinatedly with various parts on my bike. I felt very welcome in this new and ownerless land.
A little while later, making coffee outside, I was slightly startled to notice a horse, galloping towards me at a great pace. At the last moment the horse was pulled to a halt and another herdsman jumped down from the saddle. The furious pace of his arrival was quickly replaced with an apparent friendliness and I was once again to be found sharing fruit and chocolate - flicking through pages of Mongolian words. Pointing often, as my pronounciation seemed to rob the phrases of all meaning.
The new herdsman told me that he lived alone. And pointing to the clouds, still dark in the sky, invited me to spend the night in his ger. Excited by my first opportunity to gain an insight into the life of a Mongolian nomad, I was happy to contribute a little money towards buying some airag - fermented mare's milk.
It was only as he began to rip my tent pegs from the ground that I noticed a drunkeness was already well established within my new acquaintance. Time, perhaps, to be on my guard, but certainly no cause for panic.
My tent was packed and my bike loaded. Ready to ride to my new friend's ger. It was at this point that he turned. Pushing my bike to the ground and motioning to hit me! He swung his fists and bizzarely grinded his teeth. Jumping away, I stared perplexed at this change of behaviour. He stepped over the bike between us and, smiling, hugged me tightly, drunkenly. And, though the wetness of his lips did not find a welcome cheek, I was happy not to know his fists.
Resolved in my decision that it was time to leave I picked up my bike and said goodbye. Again he pushed my bike to the floor and the drunken scene continued for several minutes.
It was a great relief to watch him, finally, clamber upon his horse and trot away. Towards his ger, with my five thousand togrog in his pocket. He had covered just a few metres when he turned and, again, galloped towards me - lashing wildly with his horse whip as I dived out of his path. Now masterful and confident in his skills as a horseman he span around - swinging again for my scrambling body. Perhaps half a minute of this pantomime ensued before his former character surfaced. Smiling again, he motioned toward his ger and indicated that I was welcome as his guest.
"Bayta" I said. Goodbye.
Adrenaline filled as they were, I was able, over the following 15 miles of escape, to put the event into perspective. He was a drunk. And a crazy. But his aggression never crossed effectively into violence and, after regularly checking I was not being followed, I was able to sleep surprisingly well... imagining he was furthering the investigation into his personality crisis over several cups of airag.
... sorry again, really I will try next time for brevity...
Thursday, 16 July 2009
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