Mongolia Mission Week 37
Our hope with this blog is to share highlights with our family and friends about our exciting opportunities and awesome responsibilities in Mongolia. It's an impossible task, though, because it's hard to condense everything into a few words and pictures. So ask us individually if you'd like to know more about anything! You can contact us by email (jrose219@gmail.com or krose213@gmail.com), Facebook messenger, or you can text Kathy's phone (515-537-3273).
Temps have been hovering in the 90s these days. People carry umbrellas (not in the rain, but when it's sunny), and we've seen some creative ways of keeping motorcycle seats cool in the sun.
Flannel bling covering with cartoon characters |
One motorcycle we saw was even covered in crocheted granny squares! Then there's this one with brightly colored fringes:
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A ride like this just has fringe for fun. |
We mentioned enough about the cold last winter to convince you all that we live in a frozen wasteland. But it's time to share some things we are learning about the Gobi (it's not called "Gobi Desert" because the word Gobi already incorporates desert into its name). You probably already know that it is the one of the largest deserts in the world - 500,000 square miles or about twice the size of Texas - but did you know it's green? During the summer?
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The Gobi seems to go on forever. And we only see a small portion of it. |
The Gobi where we are is not really a sand dune type desert. It's more just gritty dirt. (Fun to keep off the church floors!) When we arrived in late November it was barren and brown with very little precipitation, but in the hottest months of the year we actually get some rain, maybe once a week. And the desert weeds and grasses respond.
When it does rain, you can see it does a decent job of filling the low spots. |
Around the apartments, we are beginning to see what emerged from the seeds people planted a few weeks ago. We have rows of grass. We also have tire planters with hardy plants like hollyhocks, cosmos, and marigolds. It's inspiring how much people work to beautify the area, even for only a few months.
This week on our preparation day (p-day), the six of us assigned to Sainshand went for a picnic. We heard there was a lake near "the 13th windmill." Our group wants to have a cookout there (more on that in a couple of weeks!) We wanted to check out the location. But finding a way to the windmill was an off-roading adventure all on its own. First we tried one road/trail. It was pretty sketchy. We almost got stuck in the sand. And it was across the fence (there was a fence!! we don't see those often) and the railroad tracks from the windmills. We tried again. Found a road that goes past a huge solar farm along with windmills and government warning signs not to use it. But there were several other dirt car trails, so we chose one of those and went searching for windmill #13.
We found goats and sheep along the way. They were complaining about the heat and using any shade they could find for relief.
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We saw a nomadic family with their horses. Maybe it was their goats and sheep we saw. |
So we set up our picnic, got baked in the sun, played Frisbee until we roasted, then packed up and drove back to the air-conditioned church to play a Chinese dominoes game until nearly 6 pm. That's when p-day ends and we get back to work. It was a great day of exploration and fun.
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The two of us won the dominos game, which surprised the young people. |
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Even more fun is seeing the traditional nomad family gers in the view just beyond solar panels - truly the old and the new. |
Goodbye dinner |
Hello dinner |