yeeeeee-how!

forbidden city, beijing, china
beijing at night

the next leg of the trip was a train through the gobi desert from ulaanbaatar to the chinese border. we prepped ourselves because we had heard horror stories about mongolian trains – people being robbed as they slept and how the sheets would reek of mutton. but it was quite nice – probably the nicest train ride all summer in fact! we arrived in the chinese border city of erlian and spent the day wandering the streets until late afternoon when the sleeper buses starting their trips to beijing. these chinese sleeper buses were one of a kind – i’d recommend trying one if you ever get the chance! very early the next morning we arrived in beijing!… at an unknown location. we allied ourselves with a group of austrian bros and sweatily set out down a dark beijing street. a number of hours later, we made it to our destination – tiananmen square! just in time for the morning flag raising! there were tens of thousands of people there at 6 am, and most of them wanted a picture with us, the pasty whites! i knew i was going to love china!

our beijing bros
beijing

beijing is an amazing city! a few highlights:

-ate scorpions which were six inches long!

chinese food

-bubble tea!

-great wall of china! (my sister got groped on the bus, had a very uncharacteristic yet retrospectively funny hypoglycemic breakdown because we didn’t get a chance to eat for 13 hours, and i had some very serious and very unfunny issues of my own that resulted from chugging three liters of water immediately before a long bus ride, but overall still a pretty good day!)

great wall!
great wall!
great wall!
great wall!

-some gritty punk rock live in some underground venue in some suburb that took me four hours to get to, but it was worth it!

-temple of heaven

-finally tracking down the elusive peking duck!

-oriental plaza shopping mall: kind of – i know i overuse this word especially regarding malls but its because i mean it – amazing!!!

-food, food, and food!

-hanging out with some of my sister’s friends who are in china to teach english – it was a lot of fun!

americans in beijing

-forbidden city!

forbidden city, beijing

basically beijing was super enjoyable and compared to the locales we had spent the rest of the summer in, quite luxurious and very easy to get around! i mean, subway stops labeled in english? beijing 1, moscow 0! it was wonderful and 30 days would have been better than four, but life must go on!

beijing hutongs
beijing rooftops
beijing
new terminal 3 at beijing international airport – one of the largest buildings in the world

mongolia: where the sky is closer!

ulaanbaatar, mongolia

continued from russia: start here.

the next leg on our trans-siberian journey was an extremely warm and slow bus ride to mongolia! the bus was much cheaper than the train. i sat beside a girl who spoke perfect english who was from yakutsk, a republic in the far north of eastern siberia – she told me all about her homeland! traveling up there would be an epic trip – the road is called the “road of bones” because so many people die en route. anyway, a few of mongolia’s superlatives: coldest capital city in the world (but it gets pretty darn hot in the summer); lowest population density of any country in the world; fastest growing economy in the world last year (mining, mining, mining). a fascinating place! the real mongolia is out in the steppes, where nomads herd yaks and drink their fermented milk in their yurts. but because we didn’t really plan things out as well as we could have and didn’t have tons of time, we spent most of our time in the capital city, ulaanbaatar.

the night we arrived, there was a huge party in the street around a massive television screen because a mongolian was about to win a very rare olympic gold in judo!! but then he lost to a russian. the crowd dissipated rather fast. mongolians don’t really like the russians, partly because they used to have an ancient tibetan-like vertically written script of their language, but the soviets forced them to start using cyrillic. unlike russia, where we went for two weeks without meeting another western tourist, ulaanbaatar was hosting a very large quantity of tourists, mostly of the dreadlocked, spiritual pilgrimage type. indeed, literally most of them were israeli. we spent an enjoyable entire day looking for a place to do laundry (the sink in our hostel wasn’t an option as there was one sink for the 80 people staying there = craziness). we also went to a mongolian “cultural” show, which was actually one of the most entertaining things imaginable! they did a bunch of dancing, some contortionism, and what everyone comes to mongolia to hear – throat singing! we found a huge buddhist temple with lots of pigeons and prayer wheels and a three-story high buddha. we also went to the movie theater for some mindless indulgence that i craved all year as i was studying microbiology – it was the new batman and everyone cheered whenever batman saved the day and it was amazing! ate lots of meat soup and thick noodles.

central square, ulaanbaatar, mongolia
ulaanbaatar from the tallest building in town
ulaanbaatar

waiting for meat soup
olympics on television in the public square, ulaanbaatar

we ended up staying an extra day in mongolia because the trains to china were sold out, so we decided to make our way to a national park outside the city called terelj. we were too cheap to go any way other than public bus, but were getting all kinds of conflicting information in mongolian about which bus was the right one, so we chose one at random and hoped it would get us close. it kinda got us sorta in the right direction! because we didn’t have any idea we’d be going there we had no idea what to expect, but it was very beautiful, with jagged rocks jutting up out of the steppe! we eventually found a huge rock that resembles a turtle and hiked for a few hours to a buddhist monastery on top of a mountain, and i had a terrible fever and barely made it, but thanks to maria we survived! we found the correct bus for the two hour ride back to ulaanbaatar, and it ended up being quite a memorable time. all seats were taken so we had to stand – no problem. but every minute or two the bus would stop to pick up another four passengers, or 12. it became unbelievably crowded, with three or four people in each seat and literally about 100 people squeezed into the isle. i was standing at the front, right between the driver and the gear shifter that he had to grab every 15 seconds. memorable!

terelj national park, mongolia
terelj national park, mongolia
turtle rock, terelj national park, mongolia
terelj national park, mongolia

next stop: china!