Monday, January 4, 2021

Kelzie’s School News. 32nd edition 2020

=> Kelzie’s School News © <=

*** 32nd Edition --- Adventures in Life Series –2020 –– Yearly Log ***

Instead of a Christmas note -- we write a Log of the last year after Christmas and mail it in the new year 

¯\_(ツ)_/¯


Hoping You had a Merry Christmas and are having a Great New Year  KSN came into being when we lived on  our boat named “Kelzie’s School” in ‘87-‘91. This was originally published and sent to Kelzie’s friends to keep her in touch with those she left behind in WV. 

   And we’ve kept this tradition.


KELZIE'S FANTASTIC YEAR

What even is there to say? What questions can even be asked about a person’s 2020? We’re certainly going to have to come up with some, for that big cocktail party everyone’s going to schedule for the first day after quarantine ends. (Remember cocktail parties? Remember party lines? 2020 has guaranteed that we will come to remember them the same: distantly and involving of such an unnecessary number of other people.)

Q: “I will now conduct the Standard 2020 Interview #2 Version Tango with the subject. Please speak into the microphone.” <feedback squeal> “Please state your name for the record.”

“My name is Kelzie Beebe.”

Q: “Please state your covid status for the record.”

“My most recent covid test was negative.”

Q: “Ok, you can take off your mask.”

<whisper of home-stitched fabric from Etsy brushing against skin>

Q: “What do you remember of The Before Times?”

“I don’t remember that much. My parents and I drove from Indiana to Denton over two days just after New Years. I started classes the next week, and I honestly can’t summon nearly another distinct memory until Wednesday, March 12. I’m sure there were clients, classes, track meets, and pizza deliveries. They just don’t stand out.”

Q: “Not surprising. Where were you on Friday, March 13, the day the world locked down?”

“I’ll do you one better and tell you where I was on Thursday, March 12, the day between the day the NBA shut down and the day the world locked down. I was at a track meet a few hours away from Denton with the UNT track team. We drove there in one big bus, a couple vans, and one private car. I found a lot of reasons to be under bleachers or walking between warm up areas and events, to stay away from people. The NCAA and UNT’s conference suspended spring sports between the morning and afternoon events, and we were ordered home. We loaded up without finishing, and went back to Denton. I still do mental health and sport psychology work with the team, but I haven’t seen a single one of them in person since. In my program we spend three years with our team, and since I am in the middle of my third year with mine, I may end my time with them in May without ever seeing any of them in person again.”

Q: “What type of quarantine have you had?”

“The lonely, isolating, but no-covid-yet kind. I went into my apartment alone on Friday, March 13…which sounds like the beginning of a horror movie and it was because I’ve been in there alone ever since and will continue to be. Everything UNT-related quickly, and I do mean quickly, switched to Zoom. Every class I have taught, every class I have taken, and every client I have seen since has been through a computer screen. I can count on less than 2 hands the times I have been on the UNT campus in the presence of another person since the second week of August. Which, as the saying goes, is both “a blessing and a curse”.

Out of an abundance of caution I stopped delivering pizza in early April, but out of an abundance of no money started again in mid-July. 7 days alone in an apartment, taking all precautions, and 2 night shifts going into and out of the presence of hundreds of people. That’s what they call the big reveal in the horror movie, and the one where the dumb blond surely gets it.

Other than one last chiropractic appointment in March and a somewhat-emergency dental surgery in May, I didn’t touch a single person from sometime before March 12 until I got home to Madison on November 26. I’ve been in Madison for Thanksgiving and Christmas, and will return to Denton soon. Spring 2021, at least, and beyond I imagine, will be more of the same.”

Q: “How many different seating options do you rotate between in your apartment?”

“3. 4 if you count one useable only for social zooms. 5 if you include laying in the middle of my living room in the light coming in through my sliding glass door. It was a lovely, if ant-burning-through-a-magnifying-glass-esque, way to spend a summer indoors in an old apartment with lousy insulation in Texas.”

Q: “What do you predict for The After Times?”

“Apple allowed us to cut the cord, but Covid allowed us to negate geography. Where am I if I am always in a Zoom room? Wherever I want to be. That and maybe one day, if we’re lucky, health care workers will forgive us.” 

MARNIE and RICK

After a long and quiet Christmas holiday together on Schacht Rd we drove Kelzie back to her home in Denton to explore her environs. Back in Bloomington the winter was spent caring for the farm, working out at the YMCA each morning, feeding the local feral cats (and catching many of the neighborhood possums and raccoons), watching IU basketball, and lamenting the awful news developments - the political scene and the onset of the Covid-19 Crisis. 

We put both of our properties on the market - the Indiana farm in the summer of ‘19 and the Middleton “shotgun house” March ‘20 - with the plan of moving our WI residence to a permanent condo when the farm sold. As we were driving back to IN from Madison on the Sunday morning in March after contracting to purchase a nice Hawks Landing condo, we were notified within a 1/2 hour that each of our properties sold with accepted offers; now we had a plan for 3 closings and our move on 4.30. The first week in April the condo sellers stated they would not move out of their condo/close the sale because their “old folks' place” (they are younger than us) was not finished and they were afraid of the onset of the pandemic...and then neither of our buyers could “rent back” to us.  

Wednesday afternoon we REALIZED we were “HOMELESS”. Thursday noon we headed back to Madison, Friday we looked at 5 houses with our realtors, and Saturday morning we settled on purchasing the first house we looked at - an unfinished, new house in Verona, near Madison.

Rick masterfully rearranged our complex multi-step move, we finished packing both houses, the closings went forward on 4.30, and later that day we shoe-horned our belongings from 2 homes into our brand new 2000 sq ft place (with a beautiful garage almost as large). During all of this we were on pins and needles in the face of the threat of Indiana and Wisconsin stay-at-home orders and our concern about contracting Covid-19. 

 The summer was committed to adjusting to the house, acquiring a few favorite perennials, receiving free plantings (100s) from neighbors, and nurturing a new lawn, scrubs and trees. That was fine with our schedule since there would be no traveling this year. Marnie joined Rick and his brother Paul in twice-weekly small group sessions with their fitness trainer, and we cobbled together 2 exercise spaces in our basement for additional workouts. Marnie’s power walking gave her a chance to get to know our new community. 

Rick had one consuming activity. He got a new BMW moto last fall after the riding season so finally he could break it in. Every summer afternoon he rode the countryside, watching the farm ground being prepared, crops planted and maturing, and the harvest completed, covering 8500 miles. 

We both became involved in volunteer work, Rick at the local Second Harvest 2 afternoons a week until distancing became an issue and now both of us gleaning for CAC 2-3 mornings a week. We transport donated food from grocery stores and bakeries to a food pantry (70#s of food is distributed to drive-up cars every 100 seconds in 4-4hr drive sessions per week) and to a shelter for homeless men. Hundreds of pounds of food every week...all our SUV will carry. This contribution of time feels helpful toward meeting the needs of our area and both activities are outside with little physical interaction, to maintain our distancing. We have been very pleased with the conscientious masking and distancing at these sites. Through all these activities we have been fortunate to stay healthy and safe from Covid, as we stay home as much as possible and when in public practice distancing and wear masks. 

Kelzie was able to drive to Madison in time for Thanksgiving because all her therapy sessions at the counseling centers and classes (teaching and taking) were virtual; she has been working daily from her study cube here. We have enjoyed having her in the fold, at the dinner table, in our workout sessions, and help with gleaning. We’ll miss her when she returns to Denton and school early January.

2020 was a year of transition, frustration and sadness worldwide, and Americans have been faced with the additional fright of the political scene and election cycle. Over a million people have died due to Covid and many many  more, including some among us, have been seriously affected by its consequences. Our lives have a new normal and our emotional health is challenged. We experience a sense of loneliness and depression due to isolation, frustration with noncompliant folks, and fear from the political strife and damage to our democracy. Too many Americans prefer the risk of Covid to a long and happy life (theirs and ours), and with the rising infection numbers, 2021 looks to be a lot like 2020. However, as Covid vaccines have gotten approved and distributed and the election results became clear, we do have reason for hopefulness and elation in the new year. 


952 Pollow Road

Verona, Wisconsin 53593

608/497-0015 hm

rmbeebe@gmail.com 

Happy New Year

Kelzie, Marnie & Rick

We HOPE you had a great Christmas in spite of the circumstances and are having a great New Year.... and we pray that 2021 will be a year of health and happiness for all of you... 



Friday, January 4, 2019

Kelzie’s School News.. 30th edition..2018

=> Kelzie’s School News © <=
*** 30th Edition --- Adventures in Life Series – 2018 –– Yearly Log ***
Instead of a Christmas note -- we write a Log of the last year after Christmas and mail it in the new year


Hoping You had a Merry Christmas and are having a Great New Year 

KELZIE'S FANTASTIC YEAR  
Sometimes after a period of time passes you think “yep, nothing’s gonna ever be the same again.” Sometimes that period of time feels four years long. Seriously, it may be 2019 in a week, but 2017 was half a decade ago; you cannot convince me otherwise.
After last year’s PhD application cycle beat down, this year’s cycle was exquisitely worse, even if the outcome was #spoileralert better. I knew the stakes for my future were pretty much do or die and there were really only 2 schools (out of 11) that I would be truly excited to attend so the chronic anxiety was brutal: 4 months of injecting stress hormones straight into my veins and waiting for the axe to fall. But in mid-April, when the tea leaves were read and the rubble cleared, I got an offer from my first choice, the University of North Texas (UNT) in Denton, TX.  Writing about it now the process seems a distant, but nevertheless denting, memory.
I slowly drew my time at IU to some sort of closure by early June. However, the tone and urgency of that changed when the same day that I signed a lease in Denton, my parents bought a house in Bloomington. I switched from saying “bye, see you never” to “bye, see you in December.”
Again - and now with some urgency because UNT has different expectations for its students’ summers than IU - it was a summer of travel. It started with a venture to Chicago to see friends who won’t be so easy to reach from down near the OK border, and a last-minute trip back to Salem, WV, for the funeral of 6-year-old-Kelzie’s best friend. I walked out of the past and into the funeral home to much reminiscing; I was 6? 8? the last time the Schumacher’s saw me and well, I have less hair now. Mom helped me pack up my apartment and put my life into boxes before adjourning first to Madison for 5 days and then Central Asia for 6.5 weeks. I started in Tbilisi because Georgia gets along with the countries not named Russia in the region, and did a bunch of out-and-backs: a few days in Georgia, 10 days in Azerbaijan, a few days in Georgia, a week in Armenia and the Artsakh, 10 days in Georgia, and then 2.5 weeks in Turkey.
It’s here that time really starts to dilate and shrink, duck and dodge. On my third day in Istanbul I was attacked by a pack of street dogs (cue ambulance, hospital, bandages, rabies shots…). Which frequently overshadows the memory that a month earlier, a week into my time in Azerbaijan, I was thrown off a horse – a white horse even! – while fording a river high up in the Caucus Mountains (cue the fastest/cheapest x-rays I have ever received and using the miracles of modern technology to text them around the world). Which tends to make me forget that 36 hours before flying home I caught…something…and spent an overnight bus trip vomiting into plastic bags.
Azerbaijan is a study in modern nation-state building. In a state created out of thin air by the Soviets in 1918, modern Azeris are either dirt poor or oil barons, with almost no in-between. I really enjoyed the dichotomy of Baku, the capital city awash in disgusting wealth and fantastic architecture (be sure to Google a video of the Flame Towers), and the Caucasian villages that pretty much each date back several thousand years and live (mostly) that way still and just happen to fall on a different side of a border now. Up in Xinaliq, the oldest and highest village in the Caucus mountains, I watched Russian news on a flat screen TV with this old Caucasian solider while his wife was outside hand-making bricks from dung – to burn to power the flat screen TV during the winter.
In contrast, their neighbors in Armenia and the Artsakh, as well as the Kurds two borders over, are an object lesson in fierce loyalty and pride, emphasis on fierce. Wooboy. Since the mountainous Artsakh was wrested from Azerbaijan in a civil war that started when the Soviet Union fell in 1991, every adult there guards it literally with their life; Azerbaijan sits mere kilometers away and the first tank used to retake the historical capital, Shushi, still sits next to the road into town. It’s a self-declared independent state recognized by no one, but you have to get an entry visa and stamp from the Artsakh Foreign Ministry – because 4% of the population died to secure those borders. However, once you get that stamp in your passport, Azerbaijan won’t let you in, so Artsakh will kindly put it on a loose sheet of paper if you ask. I received so many free shots of oghi (basically Armenia moonshine, gag) because I chose to get it in my passport; I had declared my loyalty and done my bit to fight the Azeris (until my current passport expires anyway).
Georgia is just as dichotomous as Azerbaijan: Tbilisi is one of the hottest tourist destinations and men in the Caucasian mountain towns in the Svaneti region are only a few decades removed from wearing chainmail. And I thoroughly enjoyed both parts! I didn’t have enough time to do any of the common multi-day hikes along the range, so I would pick a trail and climb as high as I could, before having a picnic, taking a nap or seeing a precariously perched church, and climbing down. The pictures weren’t doing the views justice so I just started taking 360-degree videos. In Mestia, I was wandering around on the edge of town and spent a couple hours working on carpentry in a Svan tower (just Google that term) that was oh, nearly 1,000 years old. And then mind-bogglingly, one (long) minivan ride later I was in the resort city of Batumi and swimming in the Black Sea.
From there I went overland to Turkey and well, I managed to not get dismembered – and that’s not even a joke about journalists and embassies. Truly, Istanbul is a world city not to be missed – except for this one park next to the Topkapi Palace, I just really recommend not going there. I’m not sure what frenzied the dogs that morning, but my scars are healing far better than I ever could have expected when ripping apart my pants for tourniquets and looking down at my legs during the ambulance ride. Plus I will never forget the Turkish word for rabies: in Turkey street animals are so prevalent that the government covers all medical expenses related to their bites, and there is a specific room in major hospitals that is tasked only with giving rabies shots, with a sign on the door that says simply “Kuduz” (pronounced with the “eu” sound of the French “bleu” for each “u”). As I told my doctoral program director this Fall, compared to my adventures while traveling, graduate school is relatively equanimous.
I returned to the US via Warsaw and a night lay-over with long-time family friends Justyna and Tomasz (who is a fantastic Polish historian and has video of my teenage years that is best left on that side of the Atlantic). I stayed in Madison for 2 days and 1 rabies shot and then drove 2 days to Denton, where I arrived to a rented apartment contaminated with mold. After 8 days sleeping on benevolent couches and air mattresses, I finally moved into a different, mold-free apartment 3 days before classes started. 
This semester was probably the closest I have come to figuratively drowning. I’m not sure why professional schools are all so proud of nearly killing their students because unless you’re becoming an ER doctor or trauma surgeon, what’s the point of training while overwhelmed and rushed? Anyway, my clinical experiences have vindicated my decision to wait a year and apply again in hopes of going to UNT; it’s reputation for being the best place in the country for sport psych is not exaggerated. And besides, I am starting to enjoy the place and people, in the few spare moments I have, and I already knew I would enjoy the food. My life in Denton probably won’t resemble my life in Bloomington (hockey, bells, bunnies, trivia, etc.) for a while, if ever, but you are welcome to come find and join me for some BBQ and tacos.
You know it’s been a weird – and LONG – year when you spend just as long writing about riding in foreign ambulances as you do writing about your brand spanking new PhD program. Then again, after 30 years you readers kind of know what to expect with me.
Kelzie: 617/461-8354
3300 Fallmeadow street apt # 2218A
Denton,Texas 76207
MARNIE and RICK
The fall of 2017 was consumed by preparing for our winter volunteering in Cambodia and traveling in Vietnam and Mongolia. After our Christmas and New Years celebrations we embarked on the 30 hour trip to Phnom Penh, Cambodia, where we would be involved in a Global Service Corps (GSC) service-learning program with several other volunteers of various ages and specialties. This organization, developed and run by Rick’s high school/college friend Rick Lathrop and his wife Maxine, assists in-country partners with program development for Cambodia’s most vulnerable populations. 
For the next 3 weeks we lived at the “Volunteer for Children and Development Organization” facility while we spent our mornings volunteering in a feeding center for street children called Les Restaurants Des Enfants and the afternoons volunteering at the Sacrifice Families and Orphans Development Association (52 kids ages 2-18). At these 2 sites we  provided/organized needed 1st aid supplies and  personal hygiene items, and donated sports equipment, games, tshirts, backpacks, waist packs, etc. We trained staff and children in basic first aid and personal hygiene skills, supported teachers and assisted students in English/Math classrooms and cooks in the kitchen, played and socialized with children, practiced English with children and adults and immersed ourselves in the Cambodian culture and history. Our 3 daily lengthy commutes through the intense bustling traffic were by driver and his tuk tuk, a motorbike with an attached covered passenger cart. Motorbikes are the predominant means of transportation for most people and can be overburdened with furniture, a large family, a driver with a phone in his helmet, huge stacked bags of supplies, and even animals. As part of the program we were able to tour significant sites in Phnom Penh including the Palace, the National Museum, the Killing Fields, and local markets, as well as hear a stirring presentation on the oppressive history of the country. We hope that we made some small difference in the lives of the children and monks we worked with. We appreciated the experiences we had at these sites and the relationships we developed with many of the people and have remained in contact via Facebook/email.
One weekend we traveled north with other GSC volunteers to the city of Siem Reap to tour its temples including the Angkor Wat temple complex. These are very popular and famous UNESCO sites of ancient Buddhist cities and worship areas developed before the 12th century. On the trip there we were able to see Cambodian agriculture including already harvested rice fields, hay being put up, farming equipment, privately owned cattle and water buffalo in small numbers, and homes built on stilts. At a lunch stop market we saw popular prepared and sauced foods such as scorpions, crickets, silk worms, quail eggs, and tarantulas, as well as local fruits, for eating. Fortunately, the restaurant menu included more tourist-friendly Cambodian dishes.
During our last week in Cambodia we lived and were immersed in the Buddhist culture at Wat Kultoterna, a Buddhist monastery and temple. During the days we held sessions in conversational English and shared life stories of resident monks, and we observed/participated in the Wat and Buddhist routines. Each evening we taught conversational English in a private nite school for students who attended regular school during the day - first hour with children thru middle school age and second hour with their teachers (who also had little practice). Mid-week we were fortunate to be able to participate in a Buddhist festival at the Wat which celebrated Buddha’s sermon on the 3 things Buddhists must do/be. This 24-hour-long celebration was attended by 1000’s of followers and included many speakers, traditional candle lightings day and night, donation tents for the faithful, and a massive parade observed by throngs of people. Someday we hope to be able to share an experience in America with some of these monks as they shared their Wat with us while we were there.
After the first week in February we finished the GSC program and bused to Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon), where we immediately noticed several notable differences from Cambodia: the SMOG and dirty streets, the absence of tuk tuk’s, fewer multiple motorbike riders, and the frenetic night life. We would be touring the country for 3 weeks with Footprint Tours, with a different personal guide and driver in each area. 
In and around HCMC we toured the fanciful main Cao Dai temple, explored the war tunnel network at Cu Chi, learned about peanut fields, visited Chinatown and its markets, and toured the Thien Tau temple. We walked the 3 floors of the War Remnants Museum which depicts Vietnam wars since the 40’s, visited a popular eggshell art factory which employs maimed adults, and drove by the now-unrecognizable American Consulate. We traveled south to the Mekong Delta for an overnight to take boat trips on the Mekong River and observe canal and river life/business. The Delta’s floating wholesale markets sell local fruits, vegetables, flowers, and fish from up river, all of which are sold retail regionally.
From HCMC we flew to Nah Trang (the drive on poor roads takes 12 miserable hours), the winter vacation-beach area for Russians, Chinese, Eastern Europeans. Here we visited popular sites then headed to the countryside to observe green rice crops, unlike elsewhere where the seasons, lack of moisture, and cool temps preclude year-round growth of rice.
  A 45 minute flight delivered us to Da Nang, from where we drove past the dragon bridge and on to HoiAn for a 4-day stay in a boutique resort during the major celebration of Tet. HoiAn is a resort community famous for US R&R during the war. We traveled by boat down the Thu Bon river, visited a fisherman’s family who gave Rick a net casting lesson, went for a basket boat excursion, rode bikes through rice, vegetable and flower fields, and toured and shopped the old part of the city (many buildings are from the 17th C). Here we purchased a very large oil painting of a local scene, which we carried rolled up in a tube for the rest of the trip, and Marnie bought a North Face outer jacket for $18 to replace the one she left in Seoul when we were running to catch a flight.
Next, in Hue, we visited the Thien Mu pagoda, an icon of Vietnam built on a steep hill overlooking the Perfume River, the serene tomb of Minh Manh, the popular 2nd emperor, and then that of the unpopular 12th emperor Khai Dinh. A cruise of the river, a cyclo bike ride (bike is behind the passenger seat), and a tour of the Citadel completed our tour of Hue.
As you might have noticed, travel was a significant part of our itinerary in Vietnam. At this point we had a 4:45 PM departure on an overnight sleeper train north to Hanoi, with a 5:30 AM arrival. During a busy day here we sampled authentic Vietnamese salads (chopsticks were expected) at a restaurant with child sized furniture (apparently normal), toured the Museum of Ethnology (demonstration of the 54 ethnic minority groups of Vietnam), took an early evening cyclo ride around Hoian Kim lake and through the old city then attended a traditional Lotus Water Puppet Show at the Vietnam Contemporary Art Theater. 
An overnight train delivered us to Lao Cai, then we shuttled by car to SaPa in the mountain region just south of China (which we could see). In this popular trekking area we hiked, drove and Rick rode behind the driver on a motorbike (on a 18” wide concrete strip over hill and creek) to a very interesting overnight Home/farm stay with a Red Doa Hmong family (4921’ elevation and Marnie was taller than each of the family members). The next morning we trekked down the mountain to an amazing annual festival of several minority ethnic groups from surrounding communities, each dressed in the colorful traditional clothing specific to their group - Red, Flower, & Black Hmong. Entertainment included traditional singing and dancing, a pig race, a contest of pole walking across a rice paddy, displays of food and clothing, and booths selling products including handmade Hmong clothing. As foreigners, we were interviewed for a TV news program about the event! A tour of SaPa, a family visit in a remote Black Hmong village and a walk on the Chinese border bridge were fit in before the return overnight train trip to Hanoi. 
From HaLong Bay a 2-day junk boat cruise gave us an education about life on the Bay of Tonkin among the limestone, steep-sided islands and floating cities. In Hanoi during our last day in Vietnam we bicycled/motorbiked thru a major flower and vegetable growing area where all work was done by hand, visited a horticulturist who grafts orchids, observed tofu making in a small private business, learned to make our spring rolls for our lunch in a typical home, and stopped at the Footprint tour headquarters. Footprint tours was great and we recommend them for Vietnam tours.
On the 1st of March we flew to Bangkok, where it was 100+ degrees, and then on to UlaanBaatar, the capital of Mongolia, where it was minus 28 degrees. In this Winter off-season we were here on a specially-designed tour with Mongolian Secret History tours. Odka, our guide, and Odbayr, our driver, oriented us about the 2 weeks to come then checked us into our friendly, tidy guesthouse of 10 rooms. From here we would tour the city and make several short trips to the countryside. We proceeded to lunch with a family in their ger, which gave us the first of several first hand opportunities to learn about Mongolian family structure, culture, housing, life style, traditional foods, work opportunities, etc. The next order of business was to buy a traditional Mongolian coat for less than $10 with a free braided Ger wrap as a belt for Rick, which required exploring 2 large markets, 1 inside, 1 outside. 
75% of the UlaanBaatar (UB) area is made up of small fenced plots containing a ger and perhaps a small brick house, if the family has prospered. A Ger is a round felt building with an interior wooden spine structure, with a coal/wood heating/cooking stove in the middle, vented out the peak. Half of the Mongolian population of 3 million lives in UB and half of the UB dwellers live in Ger village areas. UB is surrounded by mountains and has 4 coal (largest Mongolian industry) fired power plants, making it one of the worst atmospheric inversion, polluted locations in the world (for a while worse than Beijing). 
In UB we toured one of 4 city schools for special needs students and were greatly impressed by the quality of the services provided. At the Univ of UB we visited with an Economics professor to learn about regional economics and agriculture, the information of which was very helpful to us later when we toured in the countryside. We also climbed the Zaisan Memorial to the observation area, learned about cashmere and camel wool clothing production in a factory, and visited the rural Lotus Children’s Center Orphanage. We spent 2 nights in a hotel ger to attend the Winter Eagle Hunter festival/competition. The participants were from the western area near Kazakhstan, and they put on an impressive show with their well-trained eagles. See the movie “The Eagle Huntress,” the story of the only female hunter, whom we met, and how the hunting is done. 
Additional touring in UB during our stay included the Gandan Monastery during a chanting session, the Choijim Lama Temple Museum, the State Department Store, a summer “cabin area”, and a huge coal mine collapsed by illegal over-digging. We were given special permission (civilians cannot attend) to observe a court proceeding (“smart clothes” required), had a pre-arranged lengthy discussion with an attorney regarding the Mongolian legal system, and toured the Parliament building museum (an opportunity granted few tourists). 
Travel in the country-side requires patience and an “iron butt”, as communities are few and far apart and the major roads are 2-lane affairs of rough quality. Beyond the roads were communities connected by dirt paths with no signage; more than one dirt path can be seen going in a direction. We had to pick the one least muddy, snowy or bumpy path. Thus, we traveled sometimes over 100 KM to get to a location and 100 kms back, often seeing unfenced and unattended herds of horses, sheep/goats, a few cattle and camels forging on the steppes for the little available grass. These trips included staying at a Travel Complex to visit a nearby herder family on their farm, touring a Japanese solar project for food production in greenhouses, and staying in a very to-us-remote town/district of about 5600 people to leap-frog to the long-ago abandoned but renovated Baldon Bereeven Monastery. We also visited the massive Chinggis Khaan Equestrian statue and the Aryapala Initiation/Meditation Temple (each requiring a overnite ger camp stay).
In the desert area west of UB a prosperous herder family hosted us (camels, sheep, goats, cattle with a corral and 3 gers), including an afternoon in the Ger drinking vodka. At 40 degrees below we rode their Bahrain camels (double humps), fed sheep/goats which were born too early (catching the mother, bringing her into the Ger and holding both of them for a feeding time), and gasped for breath when we went outside at nite to relieve ourselves. We were not able to find the Przewalski wild horses in the Khustal Nauru Nat’l Park because of too much snow, in which we got stuck 5 times. Home on 3.17.
While we kept updated on US news via the internet, in our transition to home we devoured the daily political developments. While we hate the trajectory, the political developments/disasters are the most dramatic/tragic of our lifetimes.
From this point in this year we are not sure what happened and what to report about the quality of our lives. We immediately resumed our daily workout and life activities and acclimated to Madison culture. R realized his second knee went bad from all the walking overseas and started working on a final replacement. We volunteered for the Primary election then in April after visiting Kelzie R took a bike trip to visit Geoff Hubbard (one of our live-ins as a teen) and family in Alabama before heading for CA. Half way across Tx he burned out and headed NE thru Denton (where Kelzie goes to school now) to scope out the scene there and then on home after 3800 miles. Meanwhile, Marnie kept up with her book club, gardening, and animal trapping then helped Kelzie pack to move. Rick spent the first half of May biking 3500 miles across IA, WY, CO, NM, UT, CO and back to reride the Colorado River area on the Utah-New Mexico border.
  Boredom of life in Madison and finding a house with 7 acres for restarting with animals interacted so we bought a place in Bloomington, IN and sold Royal Oaks by July. To be ready for this change Rick had his second knee replaced June 26. However, shortly after settling the exchange of homes our hope of farmetting fell apart and we were sorry we had made the move. But in Bloomington we immediately joined the YMCA and signed up with trainers (2 sessions each week) to have a health focus each AM after reading the overnite news developments. In the afternoons we’ve been working outside on our property, even into the cold days of winter. We revamped the landscaping and ground around the house, removed trees and ground roots to allow more air and sun into the intermediate space, removed fencing and overhauled the kitchen garden, and pruned 50 large bushes in the front 3 acres. Using our zero turn mower as a bushog we cleared the back 4 acres of invasive species/growth and mowed the large front field. Alas, the winter project has been to remove the large brush piles (some very old) adjacent to our property including cutting invasive vines and bushes. We have been surprised and amazed that we 70+ year olds could work this well and make these accomplishments - we are proud!
Feeling cut off from and missing Madison, we purchased a small place there (technically Middleton) to which we can go for short periods to visit friends, attend church, and maintain our primary residence in WI. 
We remember those who we’ve lost in the near past: Kyle S, Dallas B, Nell B, Al S, Ross J, Dick H, Jean H, Caroline K, and Mary S’s brother-in-law. 
We are anxious for new daily news developments in hopes for the demise of 45* and those antics. We endeavored to end the year on a positive note, ringing in the New Year with friends and family and each going our separate way for new and exciting experiences in 2019. Love to all
2570 E. Schacht Road
Bloomington, Indiana 47401
812/824-8248 hm
Happy New Year

Kelzie, Marnie & Rick

Saturday, March 17, 2018

Asia - Mongolia - Tenth Week

Asia - Mongolia - Tenth Week

Day 69/11 3.11 Sunday  Ghangis Khan Statue 
Up very early but the lodge was not open so back to the Ger and prepared for a shower while Marnie prepares for the day and proofs week 9 log. To the lodge at 8:30 to publish  and read mail before we find out there is no coffee, jelly for bread, or any remnants of western food, as the place caters to Koreans. After a couple attempts to get something we’d eat, the chef made us eggs, bacon and cheese. We left the camp and arrived  at Chinggis Khaan (Mongolia’s Statue of Liberty) huge statute. He founded the largest land mass under one government in 1206. We toured the place from bottom to top and took lots of pictures. If you can see in the picture the many car paths (not roads) across the  prairie/wilderness expanses that provide grazing for the animals to live on year around without any other supplements for their diet. We have been reduced to driving, eating and trying to figure out  what to write about. 45deg F at noon..what a change. We entered the national park and found the Tengeriin Elch Ger camp (Heavenly Envoy Camp). We are in the Tereij National Park, drove past Turtle Rock and went on to  Aryapala Initiation and Meditation Center high on the hillside. Marnie and Odka climbed all the way to the top while the driver and I watched from the bottom. Thereafter we rested til dinner of mutton and noodles with a spicy carrot salad. Bed by 9 in our Ger.

Day 70/12 3.12 Monday  to the mine & UB
Sleep good in our overheated ger with the door as the thermostat to cool  the temp down. Outside temp is very moderate, I’d say around 25F. The National Park’s, mountains are much more rugged, rocky and craggy than the land further east which we crossed over the last two days to go to the monastery. Next, we drove to the collapsed underground coal mine which is now being mined by scavengers who go down in dangerous places to dig some coal to sell. The community there is using the old site for dumping their garbage to discourage the mining. Back to the Zaya guest house by 10:30. We rested and slept til 1 when we went for a walk on the Main Street. At 3:30 we went for dinner at the Mongolian BBQ place with Odka’s friend who is a lawyer (defense) in private practice. It was very  difficult communicating about these technical issues as everything needed to be translated as he does not speak English. What we understood is just the justice system is based on the Russia model. There were recent revisions in the system but they are not clear. There are no juries, depending on the type and severity of the case there are 1-3 judges who hear and make decisions about a case. There is a citizen observer who monitors the trial but does not have much power. We talked for 3 hours as we ate. We then headed for our guest house but were tied up in traffic for more than an hour and we felt bad for our driver. To bed early after catching up on two days of news.

Day 71/13 3.13 Tuesday  off to the west and herders 
We feel we took a chance on touring Mongolia at this time  of year and it’s not panning out as hoped. We don’t understand courts, we can’t observe parliament and we spend a boring amount of time driving - rather disappointing since last Thursday. Guide and driver are good and understand. We see little else to become involved in within the city but will take one more long journey to more herders for a last ger overnite. Guest house is out of napkins and coffee. We left at 9:30 but did not get on the highway til 10:30 due to marketing and  gas. Arrived at desert  and herders’ ger about 3. We had to laugh- herders living in a ger powered by solar cell and storage batteries with wife glued to her cell phone and he is glued to a small  tv watching afternoon comedy soap while on a cell. Family has a month old baby and day old sheep and lambs. The small animals are in the ger between feedings to prevent against the strong cold wind and zero temps. The mother and Odka are cooking dinner with homemade noodles and mutton plus a few  other items. We went for a Bactrian camel ride, being led into the desert area and we saw a dead baby camel, a new lamb and 300 sheep and the rest of 20 camels. Eating at 5:30. As momma breast feeds dad trims  the rest of the meat off the remaining sheep bones and then breaks the bones for the marrow which he shared with his wife. Baby is bundled. The three babies, 1 fat tail lamb and 2 goats needed feeding so they brought the mothers in the ger and worked on the first time mothers to stand and allow the little  ones to suck. Including Marnie. The wind  is howling outside and it is been cold in the ger and it is heated with junk wood and dried manure. The lamb has settled beside the stove (cooking and heat source) in the center of the ger. Dinner was noodles and mutton made from scratch..not bad. To bed in piles of bed clothes on a board bed at 8 in a semi warm ger bed. Awake several times but drastically at 3 when I felt hypothermic as I could not catch up on heat and felt colder and colder until driver (who shared our ger w/5 beds) and Marnie built up the fire. Outside to the bathroom was excruciating. We helped the newborn lamb and goats  suck their first delivery  mothers for the second time as we waited on special pancakes for breakfast.  They tied the sheep to a bench to keep her in one place while the lamb fumbled around. The temp was well below 0C but the wind has died. We paid 8$ for our camel rides. Morning cowboy movies were on. We learned the family has a car and his motorcycle is broken (being fired this am). They have 3 older kids who go to school 30K away and who board in town on weekdays. I am ready...

Day 72/14 3.14 Wednesday back to Ulaan Baatar  
Breakfast at 8 of fried bread made of the same dough as noodles with butter added and coffee. Ger is two uprights to  a round piece which accepts the spokes of the roof. The walls are diagonal lattice that supports the walls and receives the Spokes of the roof. The entire structure is covered by felt blankets. The interior walls have hangings all the way around to create a dead air space for wall  insulation. There is a hole in the point to vent the stove pipe and for a vent to open and exhaust interior air- too hot or too cold. Edge of the sand dunes and the area of wolves, so they work hard to protect their animals. Now that it’s only cold and nothing but blowing/sifting snow, the herders can use Chinese motos (costing less than $1k) to get to town and check herds. We drove east for a couple hours and the guide and driver had lunch. We then attempted to see the wild horses in Hustai National Park, but the horses were in the high mountains and snow drifts blocked the road. We quickly decided to not even try because we had already been stuck once in nowheresville. We came on to Ulaan Baatar and toured the indoor Black Market where I bought my coat  and belt. Finally, we ate at Casaopnria and came on the the guest house where our valuables were awaiting our organization. We went for a walk and tripped thru a very upscale department store which exceeded our expectations. Back to our room to read and write after cleaning up from herder life. The trip to the herders was tedious as  we spent so much time driving, satisfying to be close the animals and the land, and exceedingly uncomfortable.

Day 73/15 3.15 Thursday  to Parliament Museum 
Up at 7 for exercise and for breakfast. Looks like we can stay here til about 4 tomorrow which will let us go to dinner and the airport. They won’t let us observe Parliament, but we will purvey the State history museum. The museum requires an interpreter as it is not designed to help the non- Mongolian speaker/reader.  After coffee at Tom n Toms we took a prolonged drive thru a ger district. We passed thru the ger area and on to the summer cottages of the wealthy city people. We visited the sister-in-law of Odka and her baby in the ger in the village. 60+% of the inhabitants of Ulaan Baatar live in the ger district because they can’t afford city prices. A ger runs between 1500 for the building  to between 5000$s and 15000$s if land is included. We ate at 4 at Mongolian BBQ and went back to our house. Mongolia is the least densely populated country in the world. Pasture or desert comprise 90 percent of its land; the remainder is forested or cultivated. Most Mongolians live in rural areas, and about a third are nomadic or semi-nomadic, engaged in livestock herding. About 11 to 7 % unemployment but the number really represents “underemployment”. Friends think it might be much higher and up to 40%. For your info...middle age is 45 to 65.

Day 74/16 3.16 Friday to the airport for 11:50 flight
The construction of big buildings and small ger village buildings ceases during the winter-the high rises are empty everywhere..no workers or machinery. Will restart in the end of March until the end of October. Up at 7 for exercises and 8 breakfast. We walked to the State market to buy Mongolian country symbol stickers. We were picked up 1 after talking to house owner (great guy with dual citizenship) and tried to go to a museum. It was closed so we went to a market to look and eventually bought new backpacks. Went to Odka’s apartment to meet her mother and have coffee (and great  dumplings). Then to Mongolian BBQ again for leisurely eating and talk. Off to the airport in Bad, bad traffic so it took over an hour. As we sat we found the suggestions to Chris re our tour and rated the outcomes..sent to Odka. Hoping to check-in. Checked in and loaded for a midnite takeoff and 4 am landing in Seoul. Waited 6+ hr and reloaded for Chicago at 10:30 AM Saturday. Landed in Chicago at 10:30 AM Saturday, as we lost a day flying east. Van Galder to Madison arriving 1:35 at Dutch Mill.

Day 66 3.17 Saturday  HOME
It’s 37 hours from ULAANBAATAR — HOME
Time to publish


THE END OF THE ADVENTURE.... we were impressed that we as 70+ year olds could get it done....

Saturday, March 10, 2018

Central Asia - Mongolia - Ninth Week

Central Asia - Mongolia - Ninth Week

Day 62/4 3.4 Sunday  to the Eagle Hunters Spring festival 
-25c/-14F.  Up at 8 to exercise and pack all our clothes for being outside  all day and for an overnight outside the city near the  festival. 10 am pickup for the festival, arrived at 11. We shopped at the merchants who had their wares lying on the ground at the festival as we waited for the start of the program. The program started when all the Kazak with eagles rode over the hillside in a line on small horses. We bought a stitching table pad.  Then we met Chris (Scottish- Christopher David McTaggart) and Oko (Mongolian) Smith, our tour designer and the boss of Mongolian Secret History (MSH), and Purevdorj Odka (our guide) with whom we eventually went to lunch after the bare-handed  bone breaking contest...nice lunch together of dumplings  with meat therein. The hillside above the ger guest village was covered by rental sledders. All this action and motion confused the eagles during the competition and some went off course to the sledders rather than the Kazak on the horse down the hill. We looked around for opportunities for pictures of the MSH banner in unique situations..with Bactrian camels, Kazak horses, Golden eagles, the Kazak lady from the west from whom we bought goods. Mx. Purevdorj Odka is our guide .... We bought 1 item from our favorite lady (who rode the bus 2 days from the far west with goods) and when we paid  double what she asked, she loaded us down with 3 more items and helped with a picture. We were freezing so came back to our cold ger and got the fire guy to lite us up for heat (wood burning stove in the middle of our ger). When our ger cools off cuz the wood fire burns out we call the fire guy to restoke us...pre set for 10pm and 6am. We leave the door unlocked for him. Dinner was at 6pm with set course dinner of bbq beef with Odka in the “largest” ger in the world. Our hands got very cold trying to take pictures in the below 0 weather and our feet eventually froze up from the drop in ambient temp of our boots and clothes. Finally the ger started to warm but our feet didn’t follow quickly. By the way the toilet is 1/2 block away from our front door across the frozen tundra like conditions. 8pm -21F. Sleeping in long underwear and socks incase the fire stops heating before our firemen times. We shall pee outside. 

Day 63/5 3.5 Monday festival to a trial (if)...
Oh what a nite. Yellow snow! The 10:00 fire builder restarted our stove as the ger   was freezing... then the heat built to sweltering. I woke up to the weather and Marnie was stripped bare reading news of the destruction of America-madison.com and the WP. We actually opened our ger door wide open and let the cold in (-20) and the heat out for 30 minutes. Thereafter, we adjusted the  opening of the door with our favorite piece of wood to moderate or build the heat- the door was our thermostat. Another nite of 100 for the cpap. Added  a little wood for Heat at 6. Walked up to take a pic of the Ghangis (Chinggis) Khan statue. -13F...Breakfast at 9 then a short nap til the eagle program started. First up was hawk flying where a hawk was released and the owner spun a live bird on a 4’ string, enticing  the hawk to dive and catch the bird after serial misses and finally taking it down range to eat. Next was a presentation by Didi (the orphanage mom) to the Eagle Huntress who could not go to Hollywood for the  award for her film by the same name. Then there was bow shooting and horse riding competition for which we did not stay as we were rushing to court. As we were leaving we were asked to allow an interview for TV on the Eagle News. We had a muddled interview in 2 languages. We came to our hostel and redressed and were off to a court house and sat in on a civil case related to a death and insurance payments. It was a 3 judge panel and one citizen juror. The plaintiff lost so the guy did not pay for the companies debt. Marnie has a bad cold and just hung in. We went to dinner at a Mongolian BBQ and came home early. I’m having elevation sickness problems. Mx. Purevdorj Odka (like Vodka without the V) is our guide. 

Day 64/6 3.6 Tuesday Around Ulaan Baatar 
We ride around in a right side drive Toyota Land Cruiser. Up at 8 to sew my new jacket, eat breakfast, and prepare for tomorrow’s  countryside trip. Our guest house owner said he had seen us on TV the eve before. 10:30 we left with Odka for city tour, starting with the Gandan Monastery in the center of the city where the chanting Service was taking place.  I stood in a place where I could get eye contact with a 20+ something years old monk-we smiled and winked as he chanted. I moved to his side and noticed he was huffing tobacco on his thumb joint from a vial/jar out of a special sewn pouch like we did at our first meal at the ger. I subtly signal him and as the chanting ended he gave me a huff (my goal was to  see if I could nonverbally communicate and get tobacco) - no bowing or genuflecting. As we shook hands as he was leaving he gave me a huge dusting on my thumb and when I huffed it I sneezed and eyes watered - all had a laugh. BUT SUCCESS!  This monastery was closed 1938 to 1990 during the  socialist period- destroyed the temple to stop worship of religion/Buddhism in communism.Then we went to another temple building to a huge standing Buddha about 30 meters high. Odka snuck a not allowed pic. She showed her families prayer wheel with a dedication to her father who died when she was 17. Then off to the National Museum in a restored monastery where we encountered many groups of elementary school children as Tuesday there is no charge for nationals- there were a lot of high fives and punches with the kids and teachers. We then went for coffee to warm up and get a snack, before going to the top floor of the department stare to buy crafts, slippers, flanges, gifts, a huge writing book for 4$, and food/face cream. To finish the day early so Marnie could rest we ate chicken and big salads and got home in a huge traffic jam by 5. **** I discovered something amazing— the traffic drives like America on the RIGHT side of the road...but most of the cars (particularly Prius) are imported used from japan with RIGHT hand drive controls..so most cars are wrong sided for the traffic laws. Car purchased in Mongolia as new are LEFT hand drive cars like the US. ***

Day 65/7 3.7 Wednesday to Mongolian Secret History & Herders
Up early to organize for our move to another facility and pack for our trip,   exercise, and eat. A floor mop pic- a wooden frame that the loose scrubber cloth goes over during use. 9am pickup and northwest out of UB. 25k for Monnaran Farms where they have solar electric for 6500 houses and  heated/solar greenhouses for raising strawberries financed  and owned by Japan. Half tires planted to designate people’s property already allocated but not built on or fenced. When a place is built upon it is fenced, like fencing out animals rather than in.  Cattle and horses free to roam in seeking of grazing grass, as there are few  fences. 2 miles off the main road we arrived at Mongolian Secret History Tourist Camp in a beautiful austere valley at noon and had lunch. The building is lite wood  with heavy log beams and rugged planking. There was a mentally ill traveling Portuguese lady being escorted by a different tour co -  boy was she wacked. After lunch we went to the herder’s ger and proceeded to get stuck twice in the snow. The driver and herder on his horse shoved the LC out. I rode the mogul horse to the ger and we visited with beautiful couple in their 60s. After dumplings with horse meat we began on vodka and fruit alcohol getting stoned shot after shot. They had a cat which reminded us of Lloyd and he was on Marnie’s or my lap nearly the whole time. We went to feed the yearling calves and the new calves with mixed grains. Thereafter and beyond reason  we drank more and were dressed  as traditional mongols for pictures. The woman of the House was a vet and he had worked in construction before becoming herders. During our conversation we had her sing a song and what a voice. They generally moved 4 times a year for pasture. Then I was given a traditional shirt made by the mistress of the ger. We left in alcoholic trouble as Marnie laid down and I wrote. Dinner at 6 of chicken and RICE. Just withdrawing from an afternoon of shots as dinner finished. Off to bed as a party is starting in the dining room. 60% of Mongolians smoke.

Day 66/8 3.8 Thursday back to Ulaan Baatar 
UP at 7 for exercises and reading/breakfast at 9 and leaving at 10 to take vodka  to herder couple and get a ger and valley pic. The thaw line in the valleys is 2 meters. Then we drove back to Ulaan  Baatar, stopping at a pass to take a picture at prayer flags. The austere mountains with little vegetation makes us doubt the frequent herds of cattle, horses, and sheep/goats get any nourishment as they work around the snow for morsels. Once in the city we went to the State   Store for more life supplies and ideas. Then to lunch at the dirty flag restaurant before checking into our new room for an afternoon rest. Our observation is that Buddhism is much more relaxed in Mongolia compared particularly to Cambodia. When we passed thru the booth on the tollway our wheels were sprayed to reduce the spread of mad cow (the problem for which our tour to the camel races and subsequent activities has been modified) outside the quarantine area. As we came into UB we saw soviet-era apartment housing built in the 70-80s, the first we have seen and visited since our first eastern bloc visits after the Wall came down. They are extremely shabby now and have little redeeming quality beside warm/dry/solitude (in Slovakia they are called “sleeping room” because they are so small and uncomfortable). These apartments are owned, not rented, in UB and they are not remediable by remodeling - They need to be replaced.

Day 67/9 3.9 Friday Out east toward the temple
Up at 7 for exercise and breakfast..leaving at 9:30 and into a traffic jam. The  streets of UB are very clean as workers are constantly on the street using brooms and rolling garbage cans (even cigarette butts  are swept up). We went east on A0501 for 235K stopping for lunch in Baganuur. We ordered a big Caesar  salad, however it was like nothing we’ve seen before by that name. The dressing wasn’t Caesar, there  was very little lettuce, some spongy croutons, and cucumbers, tomatoes, and chicken (we think). We stopped at  a pass for a prayer flag photo and stopped for a herd of sheep/goats. There had to be 500 animals in the herd and I slowly worked toward them until I was among a straggling group. We then turned North at Tsenternandam for 65K on frozen dirt but little snow prairie-crossing streams and thru  some snow always trying to find the best track among the many  tracks going our way. There were no homesteads but many large herds of cattle, horses, and sheep - actually, horses out numbered cattle. The terrain reminded us of the Alto Plano in Bolivia. We finally got to the town of Omnodelger with 5820 people with  many fences and all dirt roads- there seemed to be little layout of the place  other than roads and town center where people did not claim land and build. Most homes were buildings with few gers. We went for a walk to the town center in 25 degrees temps (finally warming up) and met 3 girls who were seniors in high school and were all going on for advanced degrees. We are staying in a local-local hotel tonite. You would not believe the outside toilet- boards over a dug hole with the middle board in each stall missing - that’s all. The snow on the prairie and the frozen water have dissipated (from  solid to vapor without passing thru a liquid state) as very little of the ground was wet, except at low spots in creeks. 28 million sheep, 20 million goats, 500 Bactrian camels, and 4 million horses. 92 million people ..... feeling bad - lethargic all day and exhausted at 8pm so to sleep.

Day 68/10 3.10 Saturday on to the monastery 
Up at 7 but no one is up so we walked to the town  center. The village is not alive at 7:30 and only steam is rising from the chimneys. The town is laid out by possessed lots and fences there around, so streets end up wide dirt uneven paths. 8 breakfast. There is an open area between the hotel and  school/center which apparently was to be a park, but it is in disarray. Many big furry from winter dogs run free but our dog here is on a 4 foot chain with no house or ground cover. Apparently he sleeps like the rest of the animals with no protection. School starts at 8:30.
AM morning...4 hrs drive on the continuing prairie to Baldan Bereeven Monastery built in 1777 by Tseveendorj and housed 6-8 thousand monks of the  yellow hat sect. Biggest monastery in east...destroyed by communists in 1937 and 5-600 monks were killed. Mongolians were forbidden to worship until 1990. 11 inches of average snow here but the cold is much worse than home. Chinggis Khaan is the Mongolian spelling for Genghis Khan. 
Up at 7 and since breakfast wasn’t open marnie and I walked to the town center is clear but cold —-conditions. Breakfast with out WiFi and of to the monastery by 9. We drove over prairie lands with some snow and small frozen creek crossings. We got to the monastery and toured for two hours. Then back in the car for 100 miles of prairie and melting  snow trying to figure which of the worn paths were the best and did not end up off course. There were few markers or signs to help us select among the many vehicle trails ahead and  crossings. There were amazing long vistas of tan-brown of stubble, winter-dominant grass with backdrops of mountains, some with most, partial and others with no snow (south facing are clear). In the 200 miles of prairie and hard road we were never out of site of some herd of animals- mostly sheep and goat, followed in number by horses, and last was cattle. We did come across one 20 head herd of Bactrian camels. After 100 miles on hard road we got to our ger camp near the home and statue of Genghis Khan. Now waiting for dinner high on a  mountainside  overlooking the park area. This is our 4th major adventure overland in a Land Cruiser.. 1. this adventure for over 100 miles in eastern Mongolia to see the monastery; 2. Two trips thru the Alto Plano in Bolivia above 12000 feet where the back of the vehicle dropped down and a wheel, then the brake drum, sped past the car (we found enough nuts to put the brake/wheel back on (‘97 & ‘03); 3. Our own from Madison to Panama City Panama and back one winter; 4. From Kathmandu, Nepal to Lhasa, Tibet overload near Everest thru China in ‘03 with Kelzie.


 Odka’s facts and fictions about Mongolia

  • Currently, Mongolia is one of 35 countries whose citizens have travelled into  earth’s orbit
  • Mongolians often say that those who constructed the Great Wall must be great, but those who forced them to construct it must be greater.
  • Two humped Bactrian camel - In the world 30% of the camels are one humped, only 10% of camels are two-humped camels. Mongolia takes first place by numbers of two-humped camels in the  world.
  • In Mongolia before the Communist purge of 1929-1937 there were more than 700 monasteries, more than 100,000 monks. After the  Communist purge no monks were left and only 6 undestroyed temples remained. Monasteries were destroyed, monks were killed, imprisoned, exiled or forced to join the army or the Party.
  • UB has 9 districts and one is 100K away.
  • Military service is compulsory but can be pay to avoid.
  • The fourth Dali Lama Yondon JAMES (1589-1616) was a Mongolian. He was born as a grandson of the Mongolian king Altan Khaan and was given perfect knowledge and very special care until he died in Monastery Braivan, Central Tibet.
  • Chinggis Khan built the largest land under his governance the world has ever had about 1260.

Did you know?
  • That territory of Mongolia is three times the size of France but its population is 30 times less that that of France
  • That the number of livestock in Mongolia is 20 times more than the country’s population
  • 20 million sheep and nearly as many goats, both used for meat and cashmere.
  • That Ulaanbaatar is True Nomad? The city changed its location 29 times before   settling in the present-day location.
  • that the first dinosaur egg was discovered in Mongolia in 1922.
  • that the first National Park in the world was established in Mongolia in 1778. The Bogd Khan mountain range was declared as a National Park.
  • That Mongolia is the number one country with the biggest numbers of houses per capita.
  • Mongolia was the first to introduce paper money to the world

Gandantegchilen Monastery

  • Buddhist University of Mongolia was established in 1920. the University contains  modern education with  traditional teaching methods.
  • There are two departments:
  • The department of Internal Sciences which include major in Buddhist Philosophy and Chanting.
  • the department of common knowledge which includes Tibetan, Sanskrit and English language majors as well as a Traditional Medicine and Astrology major.