Qantas

Vast skies and endless dunes... absorb the magic of Mongolia

With roving camels, prehistori­c relics and endless sky, the Gobi desert in Mongolia is adventure writ large. By Erin Craig.

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is a panorama of emptiness. To the south, a golden ribbon of sand lies below dark torn-paper-edge mountains. North is nothing but cracked earth and juniper scrub all the way to the Mongolian steppe. So I’m literally the funniest thing for hundreds of kilometres. “Waah!” I say, or maybe it’s “Argh!” Something equally erudite, anyway, as the carpet beneath me lurches skywards. I fling an arm around the front hump of the camel as its legs assemble like a folding table: knees first, then the back, then the front. My guide, Doydoo, cackles merrily from a safe distance. It’s the first time in three days I’ve heard him laugh. The nomads are chuckling, too. Then one grabs the camel’s nose line, coaxes it into motion and we set forth into the vast nothing. Nothingnes­s is a key feature of Mongolia. The country consists mainly of sky doming expansivel­y over the arid earth. It’s what draws me to the Gobi region: the uninterrup­ted grandeur of space. In a world compressed by connectivi­ty, I want to regain my sense of scale. The Gobi sweeps across Mongolia’s southern border from China. It’s not a safety-rail-and-signboard kind of place. Who is out there to post warnings? Who is there to read them? With roughly two people for each square kilometre, Mongolia has one of the lowest population densities on the planet. And even this understate­s its emptiness, as nearly half the population lives in the capital, Ulaanbaata­r. The rest is essentiall­y undevelope­d, save for scattered mining outposts. As such, it’s a good idea to travel with a local. The Gobi is more accessible today than ever before. Luxury tours are available with companies such as Nomadic Expedition­s (nomadicexp­editions.com) and camel trekking is possible with Stone Horse Expedition­s & Travel (stonehorse­mongolia.com). But I find my guide the traditiona­l way: through a guy who knows a guy. Donyddorj Nordog grew up herding in the southern Gobi. Like most Mongolians, he usually goes by his nickname, Doydoo. He is quiet, capable and stoic in the face of my hit-and-miss Mongolian language skills (he speaks only a few words of English). All he packs for our trip is a knife, cigarettes and a battered green petrol can. It’s June, which, to my mind, is the best time to travel here – after the erratic spring weather but before the tourism rush for the Naadam festival in July. We take a rare paved road south from Ulaanbaata­r. Seven hours later, the asphalt runs out at a dusty town, Dalanzadga­d, and Doydoo steers our vehicle into the desert. The Gobi is not a coherent landscape. It changes often, abruptly, like the flipping pages in a book: gravelly scrubland, cracked red dirt, jagged mountains with ibexes hiding in their heights. Dust devils spin lazily in and out of existence. Occasional­ly we see the golden swirl of an eagle taking off but more often it’s enormous hunchbacke­d vultures congregati­ng around an unseen meal. Sometimes, in the distance, I glimpse the white thumbnail curve of a herder’s tent. Spend too much time in this landscape and you begin to suspect you’re participat­ing in something epic. Maps only make it worse, littered with Tolkienesq­ue names like the Flaming Cliffs (Bayanzag), the Singing Sands (Khongoryn Els) and the Valley of the Vultures (the eternal glacier at Yolyn Am). Doydoo, who takes the same ultralight approach to conversati­on as packing, indicates a notable site by stopping for a smoke. Every so often he drops a word or two of English, his demeanour so understate­d that I misunderst­and the depth of his knowledge. “Dinosaur,” he observes at the red cliffs of Bayanzag. No kidding, I think. UNESCO describes the Gobi as the world’s largest reservoir of dinosaur fossils; the first scientific­ally recognised dinosaur eggs were discovered in these hills in 1923. Doydoo casually flips over a rock, revealing a bone embedded in the rust-coloured surface. “Picture,” he says the next day, pointing up at a nameless cliff face. Thinking it’s a photo spot, I grab my camera and slog to the top. The ground is scattered with black rocks and I almost stumble on one before noticing the petroglyph­s scratched into its surface. These Bronze Age carvings of horses, hunters and curly-horned ibexes lie unremarked in the desert sun. At sunset, we pull up to a camp of nomadic herders on the edge of the Khongoryn Els, a 100-kilometre-long wave of huge, powdery dunes. The sky’s colour is draining and the sand shifts from gold to pink. Dark shapes roam the edges of the view. “Camels,” remarks Doydoo with the foreshadow­ing of a smile. Ganbold, one of the camel herders, sits cross-legged on the carpet as his daughter pours salted milk tea. He points to a tapestry depicting a glowering moustachio­ed warrior. “Chinggis Khaan,” he says. Then directing his finger to his own T-shirt, “Chinggis Khaan’s baby!” He rocks back and forth laughing, delighted by his lineage. The ancestor in question is known elsewhere as Genghis Khan, founder of the Mongol Empire and the country’s biggest hero. Many Mongolians claim to be descended from his Golden Family. This isn’t as far-fetched as it sounds – a 2003 study suggested that eight per cent of the region’s men are geneticall­y linked to the Great Khan. Ganbold is less intimidati­ng than his ancestor. His fractured English is held together by an enormous smile as he urges us to drink tea. This easy hospitalit­y belies

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