Aravt Tour Mongolia

Aravt Tour Mongolia Life is short World is wide 🌍🏕🏖🚣‍♂️⛷🚵‍♂️🧗‍♀️
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20/01/2024

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🎄Hello December 🎄
01/12/2023

🎄Hello December 🎄

19/11/2023

Dog sled trip in Mongolia

19/11/2023


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19/11/2023


#这是蒙古 #여기는 몽골이야 #ここはモンゴルです
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13/11/2023

Ice Cave, Ar Bosgot canyon. Mongolia, Khuvsgul province.

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Khankh SoumKhankh Soum has a total area of 5,500 km².The center of Soum, Turt, is located on the banks of Khuvsgul Lake,...
11/11/2023

Khankh Soum
Khankh Soum has a total area of 5,500 km².
The center of Soum, Turt, is located on the banks of Khuvsgul Lake, 22 km from the Khankh-Mondi border crossing with Russia.
The highest point of Khuvsgul province is Munkh Saridag in the area of Soum, near the Russian border.
- Has 26,000 head of livestock
There are three teams, Turag, Khooro and Turt.
It is surrounded by Tsagaan-Ur, Chandman-Andur, Renchinlkhumbe three sums, Khuvsgul lake water and Tunchen province of BNRBU of the Russian Federation.
Founded in 1931.
In 1955, the sum was disbanded and part of it was merged into Chandman-Undur sum, while the remaining part was re-established as Turt Committee in 1959, but it was dissolved again in 1978, this time merged with Renchinlkhumbe sum.
In 1994, the sum was re-established.
From 1956 to 1990, the "Khuvsgul Dolgio" collective worked in this area.
In 2000, Soum was connected to the Russian power grid.

11/11/2023

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08/11/2023

Jargant River/Жаргантын гол
Province

Dukha people-Mongolian Reindeer /Tsaatan/The Dukha, Dukhans or Duhalar (Mongolian: Цаатан, Tsaatan) are a small Turkic c...
03/11/2023

Dukha people-Mongolian Reindeer /Tsaatan/

The Dukha, Dukhans or Duhalar (Mongolian: Цаатан, Tsaatan) are a small Turkic community of semi-nomadic reindeer herders living in Khövsgöl, the northernmost province of Mongolia.
The name Tsaatan, which means ‘those who have reindeer’ in the Mongolian language, were originally Tuvinian reindeer herders
The Dukhan language is an endangered Turkic variety spoken by approximately five hundred people in the Tsagaan-Nuur county of the Khövsgöl region of northern Mongolia. Dukhan belongs to the Taiga subgroup of Sayan Turkic (Tuvan, Tofa)
Originally from across the border in what is now Tuva Republic of Russia, the Dukha settled in northern Mongolia. Tuva became independent in 1921, when Mongolia gained its independence from China. At that time, the reindeer herders were able to cross the border freely between Tuva and Mongolia. However, when Tuva was annexed to the Soviet Union in 1944, the border was closed. In 1944, Russia was involved in World War II. So the Dukha people fled from Tuva to settle in Mongolia mainly for the following reasons:

Since the border zone was their original territory, they had good trade relationships with the Mongolian herders in the Mongolian steppes.
There were food shortages in the Soviet Union due to World War II.
Domestic animals were requisitioned by the Soviet government during the war.
Many schoolchildren died from the spread of diseases they had little resistance to.
People were afraid of losing their domestic animals due to collectivization.
At first, the Mongolian government repeatedly deported them back to Tuva. In 1956 the government finally gave them Mongolian citizenship and resettled them at Tsagaan Nuur Lake on the Shishigt River.

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Mongolian Snow Leopard  The snow leopard (Panthera uncia), commonly known as the ounce, is a species of large cat in the...
03/11/2023

Mongolian Snow Leopard
The snow leopard (Panthera uncia), commonly known as the ounce, is a species of large cat in the genus Panthera of the family Felidae. The species is native to the mountain ranges of Central and South Asia. It is listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List because the global population is estimated to number fewer than 10,000 mature individuals and is expected to decline about 10% by 2040. It is mainly threatened by poaching and habitat destruction following infrastructural developments. It inhabits alpine and subalpine zones at elevations of 3,000–4,500 m (9,800–14,800 ft), ranging from eastern Afghanistan, the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau to southern Siberia, Mongolia and western China. In the northern part of its range, it also lives at lower elevations.
A large-scale survey to determine the distribution area of the snow leopard in Mongolia and estimate its population was initiated by the program office of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) in Mongolia in collaboration with partner organizations such as the Mongolian Leopard Conservation Fund, the International Leopard Conservation Fund, the Academy of Sciences General and Soril Institute of Biology jointly organized it in 2017. The research work was carried out by more than 40 field surveys by about 500 people joined by the above-mentioned partner organizations and the University of Mongolia, academicians, specialists of Specially Protected Areas, conservationists, and local people. This very important work was supported by the policy of the Ministry of Environment and Tourism.
Field research on leopards is not an easy task. A leopard is not a steppe animal. They live in the steepest mountains with obstacles, rocks, and difficult to travel places. Argal and ibex are visible and can be counted. However, because leopards live in hiding, they cannot be counted with the naked eye. Therefore, unique research methods were used. In this, information was collected using many methods and methods, such as case studies to track snow leopards, automatic camera studies, habitat modeling, migration maps of collared snow leopards to determine their territory, and asking local people about leopards. As a result of the research, it became clear that the leopard population is between 806 and 1127, or an average of 953 adult snow leopards, living in an area of approximately 328,000 square kilometers across the Mongolian Altai, Gobi Altai, Khangai, and Soyon mountains. This makes Mongolia the country with the second largest population of snow leopards in the world.

🐕Dog sledding tour - in Mongolia 🇲🇳🇲🇳                                             🇫🇷       🇰🇷 #몽골에오신것을환영합니다 🇯🇵 #モンゴルへようこ...
02/11/2023

🐕Dog sledding tour - in Mongolia 🇲🇳

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❄️Jargant River  /-40 non-freezing rivers 🥶🥶/   Province🇲🇳                                     🇫🇷       🇰🇷 #몽골에오신것을환영합니다...
02/11/2023

❄️Jargant River /-40 non-freezing rivers 🥶🥶/
Province

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📸 photo by: Munkhbaatar

THINGS TO NOTE WHEN TRAVELING TO GOBI:The best season to visit Gobi is autumn. It is at this time that the exhibition of...
01/11/2023

THINGS TO NOTE WHEN TRAVELING TO GOBI:
The best season to visit Gobi is autumn. It is at this time that the exhibition of Gobi will be more vivid and create the most delicate feeling. So what should be considered when traveling to Gobi?
What should be considered in personal training?
When traveling in the Gobi region, wear as thin, cool, light-colored clothing as possible, and choose shoes that do not get sand or dirt. Also, don't forget a sun hat and sunscreen to prevent sunburn. However, even in such a hot temperature of +30-+35, it can drop to +8-+10 degrees at night, and sometimes there is sudden cold rain and hail. That's why you need warm clothes, not thick like winter, but light, not too thin. Also, take hiking boots for hiking. If your mountain shoes are light and long, they are good for traveling by horse or camel. As mentioned above, July and August are the hottest months, and there are few trees and plants to block the sunlight, so it is recommended to stock up on liquids.
Don't forget your map and compass as the risk of getting lost is high
In Gobi, it is difficult to navigate around the mountains and hills and find your destination. Therefore, it is necessary to go with direction-finding tools such as compass and GPS. Avoid night trips as the risk of getting lost is high.
Driving in the Gobi sands requires a lot of driving skills and experience. So have a good driver. It is also a good idea to carry tools such as ropes and shovels in your vehicle.
Be careful not to get hurt
If you are going to visit places like Hermen Tsav, white stupa, river mouth, etc., we recommend you to wear mountain shoes. Unexpected accidents such as falls, broken bones, and inflammation caused by open wounds are common among travelers traveling through rocky terrain. Therefore, it is better to have a first aid kit and a first aid kit in your travel bag.
Animals of Gobi
You can see the world's rarest and rarest animals such as flat, mazaalai, hulan, horseshoe crab, Mongolian rufous, and black-tailed gazelle. Not only that, you can see a variety of birds, poisonous and non-poisonous insects. Also, Mongolian gobi spiders and shield snakes are considered dangerous. The Gobi spider is common in the southern Gobi region of Mongolia and can run and jump as well as jump. Angry, ferocious, self-confident, can even harm other types of spiders, and has a voracious appetite. It does not emit poison, but when it bites, the food residue on the beak can pe*****te the human skin and cause contamination. Disease spreaders are classified as carnivores, parasites, and herbivores. Bambai honshoort snake is a poisonous snake that is widely distributed in Khovd, Arkhangai, Umnogov, and Dornogov regions of Mongolia. Usually live in rocky areas. The color of the bamboo is yellow and dark brown, and in the Gobi desert region, it is often found with a light and brown color, and the body color is very variable.
Govi tour is ideal for adventure seekers.

✨MILKY WAY✨Galaxies in the universe come in many different shapes and sizes.Our own Milky Way galaxy, which resides with...
30/10/2023

✨MILKY WAY✨
Galaxies in the universe come in many different shapes and sizes.
Our own Milky Way galaxy, which resides within us, is generally average in size but spiral in shape with over 100 billion stars.
Our closest neighbor, the Andromeda galaxy, which is on its way to collide in 5 billion years, is also spiral in shape and is very close to ours in astronomical terms, but only slightly larger.
However, in the universe there are really giant ball-shaped galaxies that are 1000 times more massive than ours, and there are also dwarf galaxies that are much smaller than ours.
The irregularly shaped dwarf galaxy, called IC 2574, is located 12 million light-years away from our galaxy.
Its diameter is almost twice that of our Milky Way, about 50,000 light years. Nearby is a cluster of several galaxies, collectively known as the M81 cluster.
This cluster is close to the well-known "seven gods" or "seven buckets" in the sky.
The blue light comes directly from the young, hot stars in this galaxy, while the pink light is caused by numerous newborn massive stars ionizing nearby hydrogen clouds (clouds of hydrogen atoms that have lost electrons). Observing European astronomers published their study of the star-forming ionized nebula in this galaxy last year in the following paper:
The galaxy was first observed by American astronomer Edwin Coddington in 1898. Of course, with the telescope of that time, the human eye could see just a small gray nebula, which was not as distinct as the image above, so this object was called Coddington's Nebula until it was discovered to be a galaxy.

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Aglag MonesteryThe brainchild of G Purevbat, a lama and world-renowned master of Buddhist sculpture and painting, Aglag ...
30/10/2023

Aglag Monestery
The brainchild of G Purevbat, a lama and world-renowned master of Buddhist sculpture and painting, Aglag Khiid was built in 2014 as a meditation and education centre. Yet following the trails of this mountain monastery, overlooking pine forest and dotted with boulders carved with Buddhist reliefs, you'd be forgiven for mistaking it for a 300-year-old temple. Located 100km from Ulaanbaatar, it's become an increasingly popular day trip for locals and tourists alike seeking fresh air with a dose of spirituality.

After a steep 10-minute hike from the car park, your first stop is the monastery complex, which houses several museums. Collectively they contain interesting local artefacts and Buddhist relics that have been shifted here from the original museum in nearby Bornuur. Some exhibits are a bit gruesome, including a stack of human skulls pulled out of a mass grave. They are the skulls of local lamas who were executed by communist forces in 1937. There's also a rather frightening collection of stuffed animals, both real and fabricated – from five-headed fish to a unicorn!

After viewing the monastery museum, follow the signed path that loops up above the monastery to view G Purevbat's series of exquisite Buddhist rock carvings. This walk is the highlight of a visit here, and you'll encounter atmospheric stupas and sacred rock formations (including fertility rock sculpture) as well as fantastic panoramas to the surrounding forest. There's no English signage (so bringing along a guide is recommended), but otherwise there's an informative, glossy book for purchase (T20,000) from the museum.

For food there's a very basic guanz (canteen) on-site that sells cold drinks and beef khuushuur (T1000), but a better choice are the lovely ger restaurants nearby with great steppe views and local food and airag (fermented mare’s milk; available late June to August).

The site is around 100km northwest of Ulaanbaatar, along the Ulaanbaatar–Darkhan road, about 5km south of Bornuur (Борнуур). There's no public transport here, so you'll need to arrange your own vehicle or join a tour.

30/10/2023
Demchog Monastery (“Demchog” is translated as “supreme tranquility”) There are 33 kinds of different sizes of Gobi deser...
30/10/2023

Demchog Monastery
(“Demchog” is translated as “supreme tranquility”) There are 33 kinds of different sizes of Gobi desert in Mongolia. One of the biggest and famous is Galba Gobi desert where three monasteries standing 5 - 6 km far from each other and surrounded by the Galba Mountain Range were built between 1830 and 1836. Those three monasteries are known as Galbyn Three Monasteries - Ereet Monastery, Tsagaantolgoit Monastery and Demchog Monastery. Demchog Monastery is located in the southern part of Mongolia, Khanbogd Soum in Umnogobi province, over 600 km from Ulaanbaatar city. The builder was a famous one for his name as the Saint Lord of Gobi. His name was D.Danzanravjaa.
D.Danzanravjaa (1803 – 1856) was born in a poor family in 1803 in the East Gobi, present Khuvsgul Soum in Dorno-Gobi province. Soon he was recognized as a prodigy, writing and performing his own music at age four. In 1808 local Red Hat Buddhists proclaimed him as the reincarnated Fifth Ferocious Saint Lord of Gobi, their spiritual leader when he was 5-year-old. After completing his basic training in Buddhist literature, art, religion and philosophy by the early 1820s, he founded the Khamar Monastery in the East Gobi that would be his headquarters for the rest of his life. Danzanravjaa gave considerable importance to the development of Khamar Monastery in particular, where he established a professional theatre and touring company, public library, museum, and primary school-all of which reflected his serious commitment to the cause of public education. Danzanravjaa's known literary output included more than 300 poetic works, over 100 songs, a philosophical treatise, the ten-volume Saran Khukhuu operetta, and numerous religious tracts written in both Mongolian and Tibetan. Several of Danzanravjaa's songs and poems remain popular until this day such as “Ulemjiin Chanar” commonly sung at holidays and celebrations. In addition Danzanravjaa created several dozen paintings on religious themes. Danzanravjaa's poems, songs and teachings are remarkable for their outspoken criticism of 18th century Mongolian society.

Once Lord Danzanravjaa looked for the suitable place for the monasteries, he did travel by horseback riding with looking at surrounding area, near the Mountain Khanbogd for 30 days and did meditation for a single week there. He felt its natural energy with miracle hidden resources. Just after then the Lord made his decision to build the monastery in this place. There is a large deposit of alkaline granite very close to the monastery, which is believed to be the world’s largest deposit of alkaline granite. So it makes the area special the World Energy Center with due to huge natural energy.

Demchog Monastery was destroyed during the Stalinist purges in 1930. Mongolian people worship the area and the monastery is currently undergoing renovations.

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Lonely Planet list: "Best in Travel 2024" #1 Welcome to Mongolia
26/10/2023

Lonely Planet list: "Best in Travel 2024"
#1 Welcome to Mongolia

Lonely Planet reveals its top picks of places to travel in 2024.

25/10/2023


#这是蒙古 #여기는 몽골이야 #ここはモンゴルです

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🇰🇷 #몽골에오신것을환영합니다
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📸 photo by: Erdenebulgan

Sunset at Khyargas lake.Khyargas Lake (Mongolian: Хяргас нуур) is a salt lake in Khyargas district, Uvs Province, Wester...
21/10/2023

Sunset at Khyargas lake.

Khyargas Lake (Mongolian: Хяргас нуур) is a salt lake in Khyargas district, Uvs Province, Western Mongolia.
Some sources are using different Khyargas Lake statistics values:
Water level: 1,035.29 m
Surface area: 1,481.1 km2
Average depth: 50.7 m
Volume: 75.2 km³.
📸 photo bye: Erdenebulgan

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Mars is like the
19/10/2023

Mars is like the

NASA's Mars Curiosity Rover Sol 4: Martian Landscapes in Enhanced Colors

🥽 360VR video 8K: https://deovr.com/dy0eb0

Scientists of NASA enhanced the color to show the Martian scene under the lighting conditions we have on Earth, which helps in analyzing the terrain:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/multimedia/pia16105.html

The images for panorama obtained by the rover's 34-millimeter Mast Camera. The mosaic, which stretches about 30,000 pixels width, includes 140 images taken on Sol 3 (August 8, 2012). Curiosity rover added from of the earlier B&W photos.

NASA's Mars Exploration Program
Source images credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / MSSS
Stitching and retouching: Andrew Bodrov / 360pano.eu (https://bit.ly/sol0004)

Music in this video
Song: Earthbound
Artist: Dreamstate Logic (http://www.dreamstatelogic.com)

Yolyn AmYolyn Am (Mongolian: Ёлын Ам, Lammergeier Valley) is a deep and narrow gorge in the Gurvan Saikhan Mountains of ...
14/10/2023

Yolyn Am

Yolyn Am (Mongolian: Ёлын Ам, Lammergeier Valley) is a deep and narrow gorge in the Gurvan Saikhan Mountains of southern Mongolia. The valley is named after the Lammergeier, which is called Yol in Mongolian. The Lammergeier is an Old World vulture, hence the name is often translated to Valley of the Vultures or Valley of the Eagles.
The valley is located within Gobi Gurvansaikhan National Park.

Yolyn Am is found in the Zuun Saikhanii Nuruu (the Eastern Beauty) subrange of the Gurvan Saikhan Mountains. The area, as part of the Gobi Desert, sees little precipitation. However, Yolyn Am is notable for a deep ice field. The ice field reaches several meters thick by the end of winter, and is several kilometers long. In past years it remained year round, but the modern ice field tends to disappear by September.

White Stupa/Tsagaan SuvargaLocation: 420 km from Ulaanbaatar, 85 km from Ulziit town in Dundgobi province, and 30 km eas...
14/10/2023

White Stupa/Tsagaan Suvarga
Location: 420 km from Ulaanbaatar, 85 km from Ulziit town in Dundgobi province, and 30 km east of the Ulaanbaatar-Umnugobi main road.
Tsagaan Suvarga is a beautiful photo shooting spot both day and night. There are some trails to hike down and up through the cliffs. Except for the cliffs, 50m-long Khevtee Bosoo Cave is worth a visit. People have abundant time may spend a day exploring ancient rock drawing gallery in mountains located 32 km from Tsagaan Suvarga.

Khamar Monastery Khamar Monastery (Mongolian: Хамарын хийд, Khamar Khiid), founded in 1820, was an important Red Hat sec...
14/10/2023

Khamar Monastery

Khamar Monastery (Mongolian: Хамарын хийд, Khamar Khiid), founded in 1820, was an important Red Hat sect Buddhist monastic, cultural, and education center in Mongolia’s Gobi Desert region until its destruction in 1937.It was rebuilt in 1990. Today it is located in Khatanbulag district, Dornogovi Province, approximately 47 km south of the provincial capital Sainshand. At its height, the monastery reportedly accommodated over 80 temples and some 500 monks.
Khamar Monastery was founded in 1820 by Dulduityn Danzanravjaa, a charismatic 17-year-old lamaist monk of the Nyingma red hat school of Buddhism. Danzanravjaa chose the site of the monastery believing the surrounding area radiated with a spiritual energy fostered by the Gobi desert. To the north of the monastery lie a series of caves where monks would retreat and practice high levels of meditation for 108 continuous days (108 being a sacred number in Buddhism).
Often referred to as “the Terrible Noble Saint of the Gobi”, Danzanravjaa was an educator, poet, and harsh critic of Mongolian society. He supported the idea of public education and respect for women and he founded the monastery in the desert to serve as a model of a more enlightened society. The monastery was deeply engaged with the surrounding community and contained a public library, a museum, and a poetry recital hall. It was also home to Mongolia’s first ever professional public theater, the Namtar Duulakh Datsan (“story singing college”) which sponsored a touring company of some 300 artistes that performed throughout the Gobi region. By the 1830s the Khamar Khiid included a school for children, the Khuukhdiin Datsan that provided a non-religious education in Mongolian and Tibetan literature, mathematics, natural science, and history.

In 1937 the monastery’s lamas were driven from the grounds and the complex completely burned to the ground as part of Khorloogiin Choibalsan’s Stalinist purges. Many of the lamas were executed while others were forcibly laicized.

The current monastery was built after the 1990 Democratic Revolution in Mongolia and restoration efforts continue.

14/10/2023

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14/10/2023

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