Thursday, 20 October 2011

21 October. Australia

Gold Coast airport (7am!)

We have arrived in Australia - and the bags arrived with us - always a pleasant surprise. Through the immigration auto entry machine, no humans! I have a chipped Australian passport. The machine spat out a label saying "Welcome home John Oliver Collins". Big brother is watching ....... Fastracked through customs and quarantine, always a problem in Australia, but not this time. Gold Coast is a tiny airport, and all our visas etc. are in our UK passports, so they didn't see the Mongolia stamps etc. otherwise we might still be in the queue!

Our plane from Japan at the tropical Gold Coast airport

So now we have to wait in the Gold Coast airport 4 hours for our connecting flight to Sydney. Lots of Japanese off our flight and off a flight from Tokyo, plus Oz youth in shorts singlets and plastic thongs (flip flops), being very loud and full of life, high fiving and full of beer at 6.30 in the morning! Ahh being young ..... Beer and bonhomie.

We have yet to get to Sydney, take the subway to town, pick up the car, hope it starts ..... and 4 hour drive to the bush. Oh, forgot the obligatory Malaysian chilli noodle soup (called laksa ) for Merryn at her favourite Thai near the flat! It has red chilli oil floating on the surface!!

Update late in the day .....
Flight to Sydney unremarkable.
Train to the city - expensive but convenient. In fact the most expensive subway we have been on.
Reconnected the battery, the car started first time (what a lovely old Toyota). Had the soup - don't know how she does it !!
Pleasant trip out to the bush (Molong).

20 October. Leaving Japan.

Tonight (wednesday 19th) we pack for the plane. Bit of a shock really after trains and boats which don't impose a weight limit. We've eaten all the dried food we started out with and still no room and seems to weigh a ton!

Had a really lovely meal tonight, typical Kyoto, fish and lots of other stuff in small lacquer bowls, quite superb. In fact second best we have had, after Peking Duck.
Third best was perhaps the food in the Yunnan restaurant in the alley, also in Beijing.

Eating this was only part of the enjoyment

Visited great bonsai nursery yesterday, bought a couple of pots, which I suppose adds a little weight, oh such beautiful trees, but no way!! Then to a Shingon Buddhist temple, near the nursery, beautiful buildings and gardens.
I think the best tree in the nursery

Part of the nursery selection

Today we went to one of the most famous Zen Buddhist temples in the world. The RyoanJi Temple which houses the world heritage zen dry stone garden. I have wanted to visit this for many years, one of the reasons for being in Kyoto. The stone garden was superb, designed hundreds of years ago, within a courtyard it is 15 rocks within 5 "islands" within a sea of raked white gravel. No-one is sure about the designers intention, but it was always a very spiritual place, and is still considered to be so.

Two young girls in contemplation beside the zen garden

The gardens of the temple were again superb, moss gardens and maples etc. all set on the edge of the hills around the city.

RyoanJi Temple gardens

Kyoto was not firebombed in ww2 like Tokyo and rest, so escaped relatively intact and all the temples etc. have come through recent history intact. Arguments about the rights and wrongs of the war aside, this is not the forum, we can just be grateful that some beauty survived the insanity.

Finish packing tonight and at the airport tomorrow night for flight to Oz. Last train trip tomorrow, on a fast train from here to the airport in Osaka. I will miss the trains.

Our last train. Kyoto to Osaka airport.

So the rail trip is basically over, now it's the fast way to Sydney.

Had another pleasant day in the city, bus out to the Ginkakuji Temple on the outskirts. Again lovely gardens. Bit more commercial than yesterday, so very pleased we went to RyoanJi.

The Ginkakuji Temple gardens

We tis leaving day today, and I am filing this from the airport waiting for plane to Oz. The airline we are on is very strict with baggage weight, and we were half a kilo under ...... Having quiet beer in bar with baseball on tv. Baseball very big in this country. Last train trip to the airport very efficient, as expected.

One last thought about Kyoto, All through the city, many of the houses had small red fire buckets by the front door. maybe this is a local regulation, we never found out. But fascinating, although not sure how effective the buckets would be?


I hope you have enjoyed reading these little scribblings, I have enjoyed putting my thoughts in order, and reliving some of the pleasures - and pains - of the last little while.

Highlights? Come to mind immediately- Moscow metro driver who opened his cabin door and waved with a great big smile, Chinese carriage attendant on Trans Siberian who wanted to sell us beer, and gave us hot water from his private stash when the fire went out, lovely old Japanese man on the ferry from China who helped us with the Osaka subway, and bowed to me as the train left. There are many more, bit it's the people who come to mind first, they make the trip, the kindnesses and
the fun. On that note I will have another beer and remember the fun.

Thanks for coming along with us. Cheers from us both.

Monday, 17 October 2011

17 October. Arrive Kyoto

We arrived in Osaka on time.

Our ferry was a bit smarter than this

After a health check were allowed to disembark. For the health check we had to stand in line, according to numbered cards we received when boarding in China, and we then had our temperature taken. If we had a temp higher than 35 we would not be allowed to leave the boat, so presumably we would have to go back to China? Seemed too difficult to ask.

The ferry terminal

After the usual formalities took a bus to the subway station.

On the boat we had met a charming elderly Japanese man, who spoke some english, and was keen to help about the menu. Anyway he joined us on the bus to the subway, and helped with tickets etc. Then also took the same train to where we had to change, so stodd and indicated the station when we arrived. We got out with a Canadian guy who was going our way, and the man bowed and waved from the train, which I returned.

Got the next subway to the mainline station and bought tickets for the bullet train to Kyoto, the train was an express to Tokyo, first stop Kyoto. We arrived in 15 minutes!

Out of the station and to the hotel, a traditional ryokan.


The Ryokan courtyard garden



The traditional rooms - tatami mats and bedrolls 

Although traditional, the rooms are equipped with "washlets". A heated loo seat and electric built in bidet which squirts warm water in various combinations at various orifices with the push of a button! Quite exciting!!

The controller - what combinations!

Being a traditional ryokan, the internet is a bit primitive, all wired windows (in Japanese), oh where is our helpful old man now???

So being Apple wifi users we must go in search of a wifi coffee shop. If we don't find one no-one will read this so you will be non the wiser.

17 October - Ferry ride to Japan

A life on the ocean wave! Eventually ......... First we had to navigate the Huang Po River, then the Yangtzi Delta. River traffic through Shanghai is relentless, day and night.

Traffic on the Huang Po River heading upstream through the smog. 

Moving out from the dock into the river traffic

Making our way down the Huang Po River 

Entering the Yangtzi River

Just dropped the last pilot boat. Big place Shanghai. Took us about 2 hours to get into the Yangtzi River, then another 2 hours to get to the mouth of the river.

Finally - a life on the ocean wave

Dinner tonight, a bowl of rice and a small dish of green beans plus dish of bean sprouts fried with tofu. Merryn had some chicken as well. Plus we had light beer, so pleasant and light. A few other choices, but they seemed the most appropriate for us.

Interesting that in all the places we have eaten (except the hotel in Shanghai) there was no concession to western eating, you used chopsticks or your fingers. Luckily we are both skilled to grain of rice standard. Found a triffic little shop in Shanghai, only sold chopsticks, including some very beautiful and expensive ebony or ivory topped with gold or silver. I chose very simple polished steel with a green inlay, to match my simple yet hedonistic lifestyle(!)

That little shop was one of the very few "local" shops around. We have never seen so many Gucci - Rolex - Tiffany etc. stores anywhere. They were in every shopping mall, and there was a mall on every corner it seemed in Shanghai. Lotsa money town, at least for some people. Mao must be spinning away at great speed somewhere!

Last night after our meal in the old town we walked down the Bund again. The lights just magnificent on the old buildings and on the skyscrapers across the river in Pudong, the financial centre. Most of Shanghai seemed to be strolling along with us. Very pleasant. Even the brides being photographed on the bridge at the mouth of the Suzhou Creek seemed more relaxed than we have seen.

Seems it's a tradition, and good luck, to have your wedding photographs taken on the old iron bridge at the end of the Bund (just outside our hotel). The bridge is a symbol of the city . There can be 3 or 4 at a time, and even in the rain.

At the moment the ferry is rolling about a bit, and we have a karaoke bar 2 floors down, but because this a smallish ship, the sound carries all the way up to the "special cabins". We have a "special" twin bed cabin with our own bathroom and door to the deck. There are only 8 such cabins on board - very posh! First class are 4 berth cabins with bunks and share the bathroom with the rest of the cabins. Don't ask about second class!

But back to the karaoke, a Japanese invention I recall. But why is it that only the tone deaf take part?

Been out on deck. It's great to see so many stars again. We also seem to be surrounded by ships all lit up and heading towards Shanghai.

Sunset as we enter the East China Sea

Now to bed to the strains of some tortured Sinatra classic!

This morning, Sunday, woke to blue sea and sky. Not a ship in sight. We had the last of our coffee for breakfast, and threw away the tin. Tin been with us for many years, Since London in fact, coffee from Monaco last month. Yes been on the road for nearly a month..... Tin had to go cos we need the space, and twas getting a bit bent. We keep the stockings though in case we need to make coffee on the road in Oz.

Why the stockings?  Travellers Tip Put coffee in stocking, put in hot water, wait, remove stocking and voila - fresh proper coffee.

Just had lunch (rice, tofu, steamed greens, fried stuffed tofu, light fishy soup and beer - very nice.

It's now 24 hours since leaving the dock in Shanghai, and we have just sighted the outer islands of Japan. Another 18 hours to reach Osaka, but from now on we will be insight of the coast as we enter the Inland Sea. Very smooth crossing - so far.

Outer islands of Japan

Dinner is over, another meal of rice, meat with oyster sauce and tofu in a rich sauce. Plus beer.

Food aside, I really can see the allure of the sea, maybe not cruising, but travelling by sea. There is nothing to do except read or watch the sea and sky and think or dream. In 2 days I have finished a collection of Ernest Hemingway which I started a while ago. Not having read him for some 40 odd years, I still found his style deceptively simple, but it flew along with the wind and the sea. Almost became poetical then, must be what the sea does for you?

When not immersed in Mr. H. watched flying fishes, and flocks of birds diving into shoals of fish boiling up the surface of the water, presumably being chased by something bigger below them - life can be a bit of a shit at times!

Tonight watched the lights of towns passing surprisingly closely as we make our way up the inland sea.
Realised that one of the "towns" is Hiroshima! Must go there one day. I had a distant uncle (Australian) who was one of the first to fly into the city after the bomb. Perhaps not surprisingly he had battles with cancer - which he eventually lost.

Was this Hiroshima?

Under a bridge close to Osaka

Tomorrow morning we dock in Osaka, then we make our way across the city to catch a train to Kyoto.

Maybe travelling by container ship or freighter is really the go. Equates well with train travel. Nice way to end the trip.

Friday, 14 October 2011

15 October Shanghai

At the moment of writing this we are crossing China at 310 kph heading to Shanghai. When we left the station in Beijing, we timed the speed buildup - in 10 minutes we had reached 320kph through the suburbs. It hardly feels like we are moving.

Our train to Shanghai being washed before departure

Read an interesting article this morning in the English language Beijing daily analysing the reasons for the recent train crashes here. One of these trains hit another a few months ago, and the same happened on the Shanghai metro.

Bearing in mind that anything published here must accord with the official line, the article blamed the rapid adoption of western high speed technology, and its adaptation by Chinese industry without a complete understanding of the implications of those changes. Basically a company buys one and then builds a hundred without fully developing the necessary skills, and fully investing in training. The high
speed train program will be slowed to allow this to happen.

We're still doing 310, with 2 hours to run. Not exactly packed!

Thoroughly enjoyed Beijing. So different to Moscow. In Beijing they still seem to believe in their system. Of course there is poverty, and we have seen some dreadful beggars on the streets, with physical deformities that "beggar" belief, but there is a vivacity and energy whether they are collecting rubbish or running a shop. People are aspiring to a better life.

Whereas in Moscow apart from the super rich in their black 4wd and mercs, the average Muscovite seems dour and at odds with the system.

The Chinese believe (with some exceptions of course) it's their country and they seem proud of it. In Russia they are not sure whose country it is, but they don't think it's theirs anymore. There you are, that is my potted analysis!

Mind you haven't seen Shanghai yet.

We are just arriving in Nanking, and it's pouring down! First real rain we have seen on this trip.

Well we arrived in Shanghai. On time to the minute, after nearly 2000 kms!

Took the metro from the main line station to the station nearest to our hotel (walking distance), when we left the modern metro, dragging suitcase and with large backpack, we walked straight into a full-on Chinese market to be assailed by very aggressive hawkers "what you want - you want watch-
what you want" to which I replied "you out of my face" followed I have to admit by "expletive off!" It seemed to work.

The market was full of narrow alleyways, and even when we found the way out, the exit was blocked by bikes and stalls.

After a couple of wrong turns we made it to the hotel, to be told that the room we thought we had booked wasn't available, "we very busy". A little posturing did the trick (usually does), and we got a lovely large room with the biggest bed you have ever seen, and a view to die for over the city and river, right above the Bund.

Lit up it is quite stunning.

Our hotel is a former Art Deco apartment building, next to the Suzhou Creek, which runs into the Huangpu River by the white "Monument to the Peoples Heroes" in the above picture. 70 years ago it was one of the biggest buildings in the city.



Nowadays the business district (Pudong), across the river from us with it's buildings into the sky, leaves no doubt about this country's ambitions!

Pudong in a damp smog

Tomorrow is our first full day here, so we will walk the city if we can, but rain forecast.

Thursday, essentially a washout. However learnt a little about the town. We didn't walk the city, we bussed it. I usually avoid, to the frustration of my wife, the open top bus tours, but in this case, it worked well. It was pouring down and so what better way to see a city than on the top of an open bus (under cover)!

Last night instead of going out for dinner we ate again in the hotel, this time Italian - sort of..... The fettucini was in fact spaghetti cut into short bits and the parsley was coriander. But the torrential rain left no choice.

Although we had booked a cabin on the ferry to Japan, we had to pay when boarding the ferry, and in cash, in Chinese yuan - no cheques/credit cards etc. Managed to get most of the cash for the tickets to Japan.

Even in Shanghai - with all its wealth and glitz - someone has to clean the street.

Friday 14th, a bit more interesting, and challenging. With all this glitz in Shanghai, trying to get a good wifi connection seems almost impossible, coupled with the interference from the authorities (we assume). Our hotel is impossible, however there is a Costa Coffee on the Bund with free wifi, slow and some sites not available, but better than nothing, then your battery runs out! Ah well.

Obtained the balance of our Japan ferry fare, saw more of the city from the bus, did the obligatory shopping, had afternoon green tea at the Peace Hotel. A superb Art Deco hotel, fully restored, and magnificent. On the Bund, when it was built, and known as the Cathay Hotel, it was the finest in Asia.

Peace Hotel

Went to the old town for dinner. A small cafe up some stairs down small street, couple of beers and gingko nuts and noodles. The menu said "all meals vegetarian". Vegetarian beef, chicken, pork etc. Not the best meal we have had in China, but interesting, as was the old town.

If I get offered one more watch, I just might take it!

The night lights are spectacular, but they all get switched out at around 10pm! As does the tv in our hotel room?

Your intrepid correspondent on the Bund

Tomorrow morning we board the ferry to Japan at the terminal just down the road. Saw the ship today, quite small really when you consider it has to cross the East China Sea.

Shanghai Saturday Oct 15. Waiting in the terminal to board the ferry to Japan.

Queued with all the other passengers to buy the tickets. All in cash!

Shanghai Ferry Terminal

Enjoyed China, but have to say that for all the glitz and glamour of Shanghai, I prefer Beijing. A little more dirty and "downtown".

This post will be filed in Japan, Kyoto probably. In less than a week our rail trip will be over, we'll be in Sydney. Pity really.

We pray for calm seas!

Tuesday, 11 October 2011

11 October. Beijing Impressions

How to describe Beijing! Enormous, polluted, crowded, all that you would expect.

Our hotel is a great find. It is in a hutong, an old traditional alley. The rooms are around a small courtyard with a gingko tree in the middle.

The courtyard with "our" table

Our room

At night the courtyard is lit with red paper lanterns, and despite being in the middle of the city, and with a lively alley outside it is so quiet you can sit and listen to the wind in the tree. We have taken to having a cool drink in the evening at the table outside our door before heading out for dinner..


We are in the centre of the city, not far from the main sites, which is good for us because we like to walk a city. You get to see much more this way, off the tourist trail. But back to the hutongs, this is where the people live and work. Our alley is a great example. Our neighbours include a small police station, a tailor, seamstress, hairdresser, bike repair man, tv repair man, laundry, couple of hardware type shops selling bowls and assorted everything, several restaurants/cafes, a man who sits in the alley with plastic bowls of fish, and young rabbits in cages etc. A mahjong game at night. All these are holes in the wall shops, with much of the work done outside.

Dongsi 4th Alley

There is a continuous stream of bicycles and bicycle carts delivering stuff, food, water bottled gas, fuel, and collecting rubbish, rags, etc. There are pedicabs and rickshaw type vehicles.




What is fascinating is that more than half of these bikes are electric. I am very impressed with these electric bikes. They come in various combinations, usually with a rear seat to accommodate the "wife" or children. They are silent, nippy, and I want one! There are also electric scooters, look just like the
real thing but with electric motors. Prices start at around 3000 yuan which is about 350€.


Once you leave the alleys, the electric bikes are still filling the cycle lanes on the boulevards, and the buses are mostly electric trolley buses. Modern apartment buildings are topped with rows of solar water heaters. All of this I assume is an attempt to reduce the shocking air pollution which reminds me of the UK in the fifties.



We have had some interesting and delicious food. Our first night we ate in the hotels bar, quite pleasant. Next night, Saturday, went to restaurant just outside the alley, looked good, cooking at the table etc. Handy as well because the menu had pictures and brief English descriptions, and that was when we saw it - dog (roast or boiled)! We made our apologies and left. Had noodles down the road instead, 89 yuan for roast chicken, steamed greens, rice, taiwan noodles and 2 beers (11€) for
two people. Rather good.

Next night, Sunday, we went to Beijing's top restaurant for Peking Duck. The Dadong Restaurant. It was in the same district as our hotel, Dongcheng. Impossible to book on short notice, so we went and sat at the bar till a table came up. I think about an hour wait. Fascinating, because the duck ovens are behind a clear screen in the lobby, so you can sit and watch the process. There are 4 branches of Dadong, and they are regularly rated as the "best" in Beijing. The decor was very Asian contemporary, minimalist, with black marble tables. No faux traditional decor here! To begin we had gingko nut salad with lily bulbs, and sautéed bamboo shoots with light mustard. Then the duck arrived and was carved at the table, with condiments including crushed garlic and a rich sauce and sugar (to dip the skin in). Plus a steamer
full of light pancakes to wrap the shredded duck with the condiments. The best duck either of have ever had. The Dadong prepares the duck differently from many others, allowing the fat to drain. The ducks are also less fatty to begin with. Worth every penny.

Monday and tonight we had dinner at a Yunnan restaurant in "our" alley.

Dongsi 4th Alley. Yunnan Restaurant on the right.

Superb light cooking, lots of chilli, also lots of garlic. Had sautéed chanterelles with slices of garlic, shredded chicken, shallots, chives, with cream and chicken stock, and rice wine sauce. Tiny restarant, can seat only 10 people. Chef greets you when you go in, brings up a couple of things they bought at the market etc.

Food is excellent value (as is everything, especially when you convert to Euros.)

The Peking Duck converted to about 90€ including a nice Cote de Rhone, tonights meal at the Yunnan restaurant in the alley was 144 yuan which is 16€.

We have walked for miles it seems, good thing really considering the excellent food! Metro is also great value at 2 yuan a trip (23 euro cents).

We have done the usual sights, the Forbidden City(absolute hell with the crowds, but you gotta do it).

One of the corner towers of the Forbidden City outer wall.

Also visited the Drum Tower, Bell Tower, Tianenmin Square, discovered a beautiful Taoist Fire Temple, that doesn't appear on the tourist maps. Walked the city and the alleys and enjoyed it.


Taoist Fire Temple

Today, Tuesday, walked some of the Great Wall. We took the train (in keeping with our travel agenda), although all the tourist brochures etc. only tell you about using buses or private hire. Took about an hour to get there from central Beijing, for the princely sum of 18 yuan return.


The train was easy and fast, and although it only goes to the "most touristed" section of the wall, we were able to walk an almost empty section.


Even an hour from the city, notice the smog (white cloud) around the wall.

Visited the Pearl Market, where Merryn bought some large pearls to work with.

Beijing is a fascinating place, at once very modern and also retaining the old. Surprising how much survived the cultural revolution. Vibrant self assured place. Also very commercial, on the metro the commercials showing on the screens in the train are synchronised with the commercials showing on the big screens on the stations. There are video screens in tunnels showing commercials as the train passes. Very clever.

Tomorrow its Shanghai on the Chinese version of the bullet train. Readers may recall how much I love the TGV, we shall see how it stacks up?!

Saturday, 8 October 2011

8 October - Beijing

We have been in Beijing since yesterday.

Exploration today and buying rail tickets to Shanghai. We had to go the beijing Central, which is where we   arrived yesterday. Crowds same as yesterday. Eventually we found the crowded ticket hall, and then found the line to a window that was signed, "Foreigners". Show passport etc. and they took Visa!

Beijing Central station

We have to leave from the more modern (and smaller) Beijing South. Interestingly you can't buy tickets there? Beijing South was built for the Olympic Games.

Beijing South

Market this afternoon, Merryn spending fortune on pearls at the pearl market (410 Yuan - about 40 euros!).


Although the city is a big place, there's always room for a neighbourhood game.

I am writing this sitting in the courtyard of our traditional hotel in an alley (hutong), having a cold drink to revive from the smog. I read that figures just released show lung cancer rates in Beijing have increased 60% in just 10 years. Although smoking is blamed, the dreadful smog can't be helping.

I don't appear to be able to access my weblog while in China (!?) so cannot check these posts, trust they are ok.

6th October. Leaving Mongolia - filed from Beijing

Thursday dawned Very early for us - 5am. We checked out at 6, and were at the station to catch the 7.15 to Beijing.

We thought we had a cab booked through the desk, but as so often in this supposed 4 star hotel, nobody booked it, despite assuring us the night before. Anyhow another was called, and the driver knew all the major potholes, at one point driving on the wrong side to avoid a particularly nasty one. I should point out that this is not unusual in UB traffic.

As we sit in the station, all packed into our compartments all you can hear is a recital of coughs and sneezes.

Most of us probably arrived fit and well, (though not us - see later) but a mix of freezing mornings, hot middays, and pollution has taken its toll. There was still snow on the ground in shady corners, (its not winter yet!) and when the wind blew it cut through you, but with blue skies and intense sun you felt overdressed very quickly, until the next shady corner.

A city of sharp contrasts, and that sums up Ulaanbaatar very neatly for me. The growing middle class and the very poor.

Because we both had nasty colds, Merryn caught hers on the train from Moscow, from someone we believe in a Scandinavian party (they all seemed to be sneezing), then I caught mine from her, consequently we had an easy day on the Monday. We also had a chance to sample Mongolian medecine. We needed something to ease the symptoms of the flu/colds and visited a pharmacy (with a little  note in Mongolian from the hotel desk). We left the pharmacy with a packet of pills, the only recognizable thing about the packet was a drawing of someone sneezing, and instructions (in sign language) from the pharmacist to take two at a time.

The pharmacy (and the bank) were in this row of shops just up from our hotel 

Whatever was in those pills worked like a charm. We went back the next day and bought several packets!

(from France December:  We brought some back to France, and used the last few to remove the symptoms of a nasty cough and cold I caught when we got home. Fantastic stuff!

Tuesday and Wednesday were the big days.

First to the Buddhist temple museum. It is one of the two Buddhist temple complexes to have survived the destruction of 1937, the other was the monastery we visited on Wednesday, but more of that later.

Main gate of the Buddhist museum 

Not a history lesson, but by way of explanation, Mongolia has suffered quite a lot over the past 300 years. First the Chinese invaded and it became a province, then at beginning of the 20th century Russia took an interest, and "freed" Mongolia from Chinese rule, of course replacing it with Russian influence. Then came the revolution, and the country became a soviet republic, with support from a large proletariat who embraced communism as a means to free themselves from the ruling elite. The monks still had a great deal of influence. but in 1937, the great purge began. The party was cleansed and the monasteries destroyed. Hundreds of thousands of monks were killed or made to renounce Buddhism. The civilian population were re-educated, or killed, land was confiscated.

The city of Ulaanbaatar was razed (to be rebuilt in the correct way), and two of the few buildings to remain relatively intact were what is now the museum, and the monastery. Reasons? Well the then country's leader had a soothsayer who warned that because of its power, there would be dire consequences if the temple complex, which is now the museum, was destroyed. It was never re-opened as a temple complex, but became a repository for what was saved from the rest of the country.

What is now the only practising monastery in Ulaanbaatar survived because Russian troops needed somewhere to stable their horses. It was reopened (in a very limited capacity) in the late 1940s after a visiting US dignitary asked to see where the people were able to practice their traditional faith! The artefacts had been destroyed and some temples razed, but it reopened. This monastery we visited on Wednesday.

So that is the very potted recent history, which I am somewhat ashamed to admit I didn't know, however it is significant in understanding what we have seen. History lesson over - apologies if you knew some of this already. We had our lesson in the history of 1937, simply by asking how the museum complex survived the religious purge.

Ulaanbaatar is a city of great contrasts, the temple museum we went to is isolated from the rest of the city by building sites, constructing new high rises.

One of the temples in the  museum complex.

The museum itself was fascinating, and housed some beautiful artefacts. There were 5 Temples in the complex, all in varying states of decay.

Inside the main building. I found the inside of this and the other temples quite stifling.

Then we went to the museum of Political Oppression (it's real name escapes me as I write this). The museum is in a very rundown building almost next to the temple museum. The building was the home of the president at the time of the purge by the right in 1937. He was arrested and killed, the museum was by opened by his daughter after the collapse of the communist state.



Like the similar museum we went to in Moscow, it left you a little in despair at humanity. We were the only visitors, and the cleaner, an old man with a straw broom came into the room we were in and made the sign for insanity. I was reminded of the old woman in Moscow.

The museum is the country in microcosm, the building is very rundown, but the front courtyard is filled with used Humvies being sold by the neighbouring dealer. Humvies are BIG american military style 4WD. It seems the majority of vehicles in UB are big 4WD. You need them to navigate the city's roads, but it makes crossing the road a little exciting, red lights don't seem to mean a great deal, and the traffic cops with their whistles and red batons just seem to be looking the other way at the time.

Museum carpark. The state of the pavement was not unique - rubble and rubbish seems dumped everywhere.

Next day, Wednesday, to the Gandan Buddhist monastery, where there are some 600 monks.
It's at the end of what looks on the map to be a wide, almost ceremonial tree lined boulevard with central walkway.




It may have started that way, but now it's a broken potholed path with the usual open sewers bordered by dead trees and lined with broken lights. At some point in time someone (the city authorities?) had dug up a couple of spots and just left the soil piled up on the path. The whole mess ran through one of the cities rougher areas with shacks on either side and piles of rubbish.

Everyone has to live somewhere, and being poor is no crime, but this total lack of respect by either the city or the population (or both) for such a sacred site, is inexcusable.

Main gate to the Gandan Monastery

The monastery itself was impressive, a little the worse for wear, but being repaired. It also houses a Buddhist university. And is home to the cities pigeon population! The main temple in the complex houses a statue of Buddha 4 stories high, a replacement for the original destroyed in 1937. The statue surrounded by prayer wheels being turned by the constant stream of devotees.
The monks all looked well fed, although a little out of tune.

I think I have gone on a little long, but it's a country that fascinates, such is the massive transition. However, it is a country in thrall to western entrepreneurs and those Mongolians who took advantage of the collapse of the state and social structures when communism collapsed, as in Russia. The country also lost economic support from Russia after the USSR collapsed.

Consequently there seems to be no control of development, or its effects on the infrastructure. The city is a mess, public utilities don't seem to work, public transport is chaotic and rundown. The parks and gardens are a mess, everything seems dead, there is rubble and garbage in many.



The pavements are either broken up, or simply rubble, many of the sewers are open (dry thankfully), and used by the city's homeless - warm in winter..

We just crossed the Mongolian desert, and the same is apparent in the way mining is going on. Small scale open cut using diggers. When the ore has been scraped out, the spoil is left in heaps and the holes left open. The workers live in Ger camps. Yurt is the Russian word for the tents.

All that said, I wouldn't have missed it.

We are now in China (at the border) having our wheels changed to Chinese guage. With the authorities and the wheel change, it's going to be a long night.
Beijing tomorrow afternoon. I will file this from there.