The 2015 WildArt Mongolia Expedition, Part 8: Dorgon Nuur (Again), Jargalant Hairkhan Uul And Back To Hovd

 

Cropped-in photo
Cropped-in photo

We finished our shopping in Chandmani, had lunch and headed east back to Dorgon Nuur. On the way, the “saiga show” started again, with at least three groups crossing our path as they headed north. As always they were too far away for good photos but some of this group of twelve are reasonably ok. Here’s the uncropped version.

More saiga...
More saiga…

The driver drove along the lake edge for a bit and finally stopped on a bluff.

Campsite overlooking lake with whooper swans
Campsite overlooking lake with whooper swans
View to the south
View to the south
I found a nice spot for my tent
I found a nice spot for my tent. My guide is resting a bit before setting up the kitchen tent

Once set up I got out my watercolors and sketchbooks and started to work. It was breezy, but not cold. Also no mosquitos. The late light started to get really interesting.

Reedbeds
Reedbeds
Early evening light
Early evening light
View from my tent looking north
View from my tent looking north

As the sun set, the wind died down and…the mosquitos arrived. Since we were the only living things of interest in the area. apparently every single one within a hundred miles showed up. I didn’t leave my tent unless it was absolutely necessary and turned in early. At some point, probably near dawn, I was awakened by a very odd sound. I couldn’t tell if it was natural or man-made and had never heard anything remotely like it before. But I wasn’t about to poke my head out in the dark, so I rolled over and went back to sleep, probably for an hour or so. When I woke up again it was just barely getting light and that sound was still going on. It was really mystifying. I finally had to look. I zipped open the vestibule just enough to see out and there, at standing head height, just in front of and above the tent was a ball of mosquitos close to the size of a soccer ball. And that was the source of the weird sound. I ducked back into the tent and quickly zipped the vestibule closed. No way was I going out that end. I seriously needed to pee and I wanted coffee so I slathered on the repellent and crawled out of the other end of the tent into a cloud of them that was only “better” ‘compared the packed mass a few feet away . Everything was covered with them…the tents, the Land Cruiser, the cooler. I did what I needed to do and retreated back my sanctuary.

Just another spectacular sunset
Sunrise. I’m amazed that it can be seen through the cloud of mosquitos in front of the lens.

My guide and driver got up a little later and, I think, were equally appalled by the situation. So in a rerun of our last stay on the shores of Dorgon Nuur, we ate, packed up and left. We made a short stop in Chandmani and then drove south around the end of Jargalant Hairkhan Uul.

Chandmani
Chandmani with Jargalant Hairkhan Uul in the background.
On the way out of town we passed this monument
On the way out of town we passed this monument with an argali and ibex

It took a couple of hours to get to the end of the mountain. It was very arid and overgrazed land. The highlight was a “camel jam”.

Bactrian camels
Bactrian camels

We dropped down to the plain and could see the reedbeds of Khar Us Nuur in the distance. Finally we turned northwest and paralleled the mountain. The two sides are very different. The mountain creates its own weather. Rain falls on the southwest face. A rain shadow keeps much, if any, rain from falling on the northeast side. No one lives or grazes their animals on the mountain, even though Chandmani and quite a few herder families live at the base. The entire mountain is contained in Khar Us Nuur National Park’s boundary, but there are herders on the side we were now driving along.

There were sights of interest along our route, including this communications tower. What got my attention was the contrast between this modern high tech installation and the ger at its base.

Tower and ger
Tower and ger

We drove for awhile along a small river and then through a lush green area with a variety of wildflowers.

Green grass and wildflowers
Green grass and wildflowers
Jargalant Hairkhan Uul
Jargalant Hairkhan Uul

I’d been wanting to go to the mountain, which is really a freestanding range with many peaks, since I saw it from a distance in 2006. Between the previous trip a week or so earlier, which you can read about here, and this one, I will have almost completely circumnavigated it. This side was so much more interesting. I was awed by the colors and patterns of some of the slopes we drove past.

Jargalant Hairkhan Uul
Jargalant Hairkhan Uul
Jargalant Hairkhan Uul
Jargalant Hairkhan Uul

As we headed onto the upland slopes to the valley where we would camp for two nights, we passed this ovoo.

Ovoo
Ovoo

The ground became rockier the farther up we went and I grabbed a shot of this local herder’s winter livestock shelter.

Winter shelter
Winter shelter

We entered the valley and I could tell that I was going to like this place a lot.

Valley entrance
Valley entrance

We were finally driving on the barest hint of a “road” over rocks that covered the whole valley floor, some pretty big. There were groves of aspen trees, more than I’d seen anyplace else.

Aspen trees
Aspen trees

We finally came to the end of the road and stopped at a ger. We were fed boortz soup and aaruul and our driver got the latest news from them, which included being told that a snow leopard had killed a another herders’s goat two days earlier not too far from where we were. So now I was in the middle of snow leopard territory, also home to ibex and argali!

The herder's dogs. They were very aggressive. I took this photo from the car.
The herder’s dogs. They were very aggressive. I took this photo from the car.

We drove back down the valley and set up camp at this spot, right next to a stunning, fast-flowing stream. Idyllic doesn’t begin to describe it.

Our campsite
Our campsite

The next afternoon my guide took me on a hike up the valley into a part that was separated from the main one. We clambered over rocks, moving steadily higher in elevation until the trail narrowed and continued as a track that led deep into the mountain.

At the end point of our hike with snow leopard habitat behind me
At the end point of our hike with snow leopard habitat behind me

We hiked back down to camp, where I spent the rest of the day drawing the rocks and flowing water of the stream.

Rocks and stream- Derwent drawing pencil on paper
Rocks and stream- Derwent drawing pencil on paper

The next day I worked until lunch, doing a double study of two of the aspen trees.

Aspen trees, Jargalant Hairkhan Uul, Khar Us Nuur National Park
Aspen trees, Jargalant Hairkhan Uul, Khar Us Nuur National Park- pencil and watercolor on paper

While I was drawing, two camels showed up! They crossed the stream not far from where I was sitting. For a minute or two I wasn’t sure how close they’d get, but it turned out all they wanted was to get past our camp so they could move on down the valley.

Bactrian camels
Bactrian camels

There weren’t a lot of insects and even the mosquitos weren’t too bad, especially compared to the lake. I did manage to get a good photo of this flashy dragonfly.

Dragonfly
Dragonfly

My guide took some pics of me working.

On location
On location

Finally, it was time to leave. This was the last stop on this year’s WildArt Mongolia Expedition and it was one of the best. I thought the trip was over when we got back to Hovd, but my guide and driver weren’t done yet. The next day was my flight back to Ulaanbaatar, but it wasn’t until late afternoon. So they picked me up in the morning and took me on a tour that included the local cultural center, which has gers, artifacts, objects and clothing from all the ethnic Mongol groups who live in Hovd, plus the Kazakhs.

The cultural center
The cultural center

It really is a must see.

Imperial ger
The kind of ger and wheeled platform that a wealthy aristocratic Mongol might have had.

The final stop in town was a monastery that had just started to be re-built five years earlier. The original was one of the hundreds destroyed by the communist government in the late 1930s. I was told that the whole community came together to raise the money.

Temple in new monastery complex in Hovd
Temple in new monastery complex in Hovd

They took me back to the hotel to rest for a couple of hours and then it was off to the airport. The flight was delayed, so we looked at some of the photos and video I’d shot. Finally, it was time to do in to the boarding area, onto the plane and back to Ulaanbaatar. I was in town for a couple of days, then went “on vacation” to Delger Camp for four relaxing days, just hanging out, doing watercolors and hiking down to the dunes and back. A few more days in UB and I was homeward bound, my tenth journey to Mongolia at an end.

 

 

 

The 2015 WildArt Mongolia Expedition, Part 2: Maikhan Nature Reserve & Jargalant Hairkhan Uul

Khar Us Nuur reedbeds with Jargalant Hairkhan Uul in the background
Khar Us Nuur reedbeds with Jargalant Hairkhan Uul in the background

The first leg of the Expedition ended in Hovd at midnight. But a hotel room was waiting for us and the hot shower was great. The next day Turuu, the Mongol student/artist who was participating in the first two weeks of the Expedition, and I, met with the guide and driver/cook who would take us on the next leg to Maikhan Nature Reserve and Jargalant Hairkhan Uul, a freestanding mountain which is part of the eastern tail end of the Altai Mountains. I had seen the mountain from a distance in 2006 and had done a painting of it at sunrise. I’d been curious about it and wanting to explore it ever since. Now I would get my wish, in ways I could never have envisioned. But first up was the nature reserve, about which I knew nothing except its location on a map.

We left Hovd the next morning heading south along the shore of Khar Us Nuur, stopping for photos along the way. The lake’s edge has the largest expanses of reedbeds left in Asia which are home to many species of birds and endangered wild boar.

Khar Us Nuur reedbeds
Khar Us Nuur reedbeds

There are very few access points to the lake. The one mentioned in the guidebooks is off the main road and has an observation tower, which is where we had lunch. What a view.

2a. KUN lunch stop
Lunch in the observation tower with a view of Jargalant Hairkhan Uul

We continued on until the turn from tarmac to earth road, going southwest toward the reserve. Good thing we had a driver who knew the area because there were no signs to indicate which road to take.

The road into the reserve
The road into the reserve

Our guide had told us there was a cave we could visit. That was something I’d never encountered before in Mongolia so definitely wanted to see it.

5. cave
The cave entrance is the black area to the right of the “v” shaped shadow
6. view from cave
The view from the cave entrance, looking up the valley in the direction we would be going
7. cave interior
The cave interior. Even with my wide-angle lens I couldn’t get more than a section. This shows the left side where the cave drops off to some unknown depth. I was told that there were petroglyphs and/or paintings on the wall down below, but without any equipment, not even a flashlight, and no way of really finding out what was down there, there was no way I was going to risk it
8. view from entrance
Here’s the cave entrance, looking out

After driving up a beautiful valley with a stream running through it and many aspen trees, we came to this place at the end of the road, our campsite for the night. Wow.

9. MNR stream
The driver asked if this place would be ok to camp at. What would anyone say but “Yes!”?
10. MNR tents
I pitched my tent so that I would have a view of the stream when I crawled out of it in the morning.

Turuu and I painted and sketched in the evening and the next morning and then it was time to move on. Back down the valley we traveled with our next destination in view….Jargalant Hairkhan Uul.

11. road to JHU
Back out the earth road through the reserve

I had only seen the mountain, as I mentioned above, from a fair distance. I really had no idea of its scale until we started to get close. But I did know that we were heading into snow leopard habitat, where the World Wildlife Fund Mongolia has been doing research for some years. In a later post, I’ll be sharing what I learned about snow leopards in this part of Mongolia.

12. JHU approach
The central section of the mountain, with what looked to me to be the highest point on the right
13. valley entrance
The entrance to the valley where we would spend the next two nights.
14. KUN reedbeds from valley
We drove awhile on the upland slope before we got to the mountain proper. Before we went into the valley we stopped and I got some photos looking back the way we’d come. This shows Khar Us Nuur’s open water on the right and the reedbeds we saw on the way to the nature reserve in the middle and left
15. JHU aspens
Once we got to the valley proper we found ourselves working our way up a very rocky dry riverbed dotted with aspen trees, some of them clearly very old
16. JHU end of the road
At the end of the road was one ger. We visited with the family for bit, learning that a snow leopard had killed another herder’s goat two days earler not far away from where we were, and then headed back down the valley to find a campsite for the next two nights
16.a JHU campsite
It was hot so we looked for a place that had shade in the afternoon. As it happened the best spot was here, right at the base of a sacred spring
17. JHU white poppies
On the valley floor and slopes wild flowers were blooming, including these delicate white poppies
18, JHU moonrise
All the early clouds had gone away and it was a beautiful wam summer evening. First the moon came up
19, JHU sunset with khadag tree
The the sun started to set and the mountain peaks and slopes of the valley glowed in the intense orange light
20. JHU sunset down valley
Looking west and somewhat south out the valley entrance the colors were more subtle

It was great having the whole next day to be in this place and have time to amble about and take pictures.

21. JHU valley road
The angle of the light let me get a photo of the “road” that goes into and up the valley
22. JHU painted inscription
Inscription painted on one of the rocks
23. JHU Turuu
It was a hot day. I managed to get in some painting time in the morning by finding a place in the shade. Turuu read and dozed. How he managed to stay on this tree limb for some hours was impressive.
24. ovoo
This ovoo was directly across from the spring

The second afternoon and evening it clouded up, so no evening light. I noted in my journal that at about 9:24pm bladder pressure reached the point where I had to go out and deal with it. It had already gotten quite windy and there had been a little rain on and off. I was back in my tent at (I checked) 9:27pm when a heavy downpour hit like someone had flipped a switch. Good timing.

25. JHU sacred spring
Turuu and our guide filling water bottles from the spring.
26. JHU khadag
Trees next to the spring festooned with khadag, the offering scarves
27. JHU with Flag
Since my WildArt Mongolia Expedition was also an Explorers Club Flag Expedition duriing which I was required to display the Flag, I had Turuu’s and my picture taken with it in front of the ovoo

As we headed back down the mountain after lunch, our guide said that the driver knew of another road that accessed the lakeshore, so of course we had to see that.

28. KUN reed enclosure
Khar Us Nuur in the background with something on the shore I’d not seen before…an animal enclosure made from dried reeds
29. KUN winter enclosure
This is a very nicely built winter shelter for livestock. The presence of these shelters tells one where a herder will spend the winter.
30. KUN unloading ger
We passed a family unloading their belongings, including their ger, from this truck. Imagine being able to drive to a lake-front location like this and set up anywhere you want to
31. KUN at the beach
The driver had mentioned something about a “beach” and near the end of the road, there it was…a real sandy beach

The beach was the last stop and then it was time to head back to Hovd.

32. Enroute sand road to Hovd road
Sandy earth road on the way back to the tarmac
33. truck with horses
We saw a number of trucks with horses over the previous days, a sure sign that there was a naadam happening in the area and there was going to be one the next day in Chandmani. Unfortunately, our schedule didn’t allow time to go to it
34. Ovoo
Comiing up over a last pass before dropping down to Hovd there was this quite elaborate ovoo
35. Hovd
Hovd in the distance

Back in town, Turuu had to catch a flight back to Ulaanbaatar to register for university. I was sorry he couldn’t stay for the rest of the trip, but very glad he was along for most of it.

The next destination for the Expedition was also a place that I had been to for a very short time in 2006, Khomyn Tal, one of the three places where takhi/Przewalski’s horses have been reintroduced. The journey there and the three days I spent with the horses will be the subject of my next post.