Saturday, October 20, 2012

Quick Update

Hey blog readers, a quick update here!

Earlier this week I gave a talk at the Natsagdorj public library about my Fulbright research project. Many of my good friends showed up in support which was lovely, plus a few curious students and aid workers as well. It was an abnormally long talk for me (a full 50 minute lecture plus time for questions... I'm used to 10-15 minute conference presentations) but it was a great experience. Practice makes perfect so I will consider this talk excellent practice for future lectures I may give.

This was also my chance to present the results of my research for the first time. Since I did my entire project solo, I am very proud of the work I have done in Mongolia. I think Nomadic Gardens has the potential to be developed into an entire NGO, but right now I've got other plans :)

Final results of my project, in numbers:

Conducted over 100 interviews with nomadic herders

Manufactured over 70 planters out of recyclable materials

Average cost per garden: $5

Implemented a gardening project with 26 nomadic households

Spent 30 days in the field

Grew 14 different types of vegetable, spice, and flower

22 families completed the study

100% of families responded that growing plants was "easier than they thought it would be"

6 families responded that they were going to try gardening next year on their own


That's all for now, more updates on packing and leaving Mongolia next week!

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Mongolian bucket list

Well, we're getting to the end of things here. Just 3 more weeks in Mongolia, yikes! I've made a list of things to do before leaving Mongolia, including:

-getting a haircut
-going horseback riding at Stepperiders for a weekend
-giving a talk about Nomadic Gardens
-having a drink in the Blue Sky Lounge, one of the fanciest bars in Mongolia
-eating a gelato sandwich at Ti-amo (too ridiculous sounding not to try before I leave!)
-sampling a few last restaurants
-selling my extra stuff and packing

So far I've done the first two, and have a plan to give a lecture on Tuesday, October 16th at the American Corner of the Natsagdorj library. I'm excited about it!

So yes, 2 things off the list have been completed. I felt that an Asian hairdressing experience was necessary before I left. First of all, getting your hair cut here is super cheap. I went to a very pricy place and it cost me about $20. That includes hair washing, conditioning, scalp massage, cut, and some sort of wonderful organic hair mayonnaise treatment. The scalp massage was a bit overly vigorous, but otherwise the experience was quite nice, and my hair is as soft as silk after all those treatments.

We also managed to get out to Stepperiders for a weekend. Since the first time I went I've been itching to go back, but I've been way too busy with my research project. This time we got another big group of Fulbrighters and friends together and headed out Saturday morning. When we arrived we had some tea and got our riding gear on and hit the steppe in the early afternoon. The weather was spectacular, the last beautiful days before the winter sets in. It was warm and sunny, about 65 degrees with a warm breeze.

I had an ace up my sleeve for riding this time, an excellent pair of leather boots that I bought at the black market. Usually, "the black market" is just a nickname for Narantuul market and doesn't refer to a sketchy place where stolen goods are traded and sold. In the case of my boots though I'm not so sure. Outside the market proper is a small area that looks like a neighborhood garage sale. Random used clothes, shoes, tools, and phones are offered for sale. I occasionally peruse the items, and this time spotted a fabulous pair of handmade leather boots. And only 10,000 tugrug, wow! That's like $7! So I bought them and happily headed out, and only when I got back home did I have a moment thinking "I might have just bought someone's stolen boots". Hmmm.... I hope not though.

So, equipped with my possibly stolen riding boots, I hopped on a big shaggy beast of a pony whose description was "he likes to run" and we set off. For the first 30 minutes my pony mostly just ambled along and avoided going downhill as much as he could get away with. When we reached the flatter part of the steppe though, he decided that, as advertised, he likes to run. He took flight across the steppe, racing a few of the other fast horses and running for home at breakneck speed. It was a thrilling experience.

The next morning we went for another ride. I opted for a quieter pony who turned out to have a soft mouth and a willing attitude. After another great riding experience we gathered up our things and went back to the city. It was a great weekend dose of countryside therapy.

"Likes-to-run"
My second day pony

Heading out!

Matt and our friend Alban

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Future plans- puppy cameo!

So my research project is all done and finished! Later I'll write a post about the conclusions I've come to. For now, I'm taking a break and letting the data digest. While I do that I've begun working on personal statements and resumes for grad school applications. I've finally found a program that calls to me; the master's in Development Practice program. It's very new and sounds like just my sort of thing :)

In a nutshell, this is from the program website:

"Integrating the core areas of the health, natural, social and management sciences, the Master's in Development Practice program provides students with the substantive knowledge and practical skills required to analyze and diagnose the multi-dimensional challenges of sustainable development such as extreme poverty, climate change and infectious disease."

I like the sound of it because it's interdisciplinary and focuses on practical skills. Also, the programs all include a summer international internship in development practice. So fingers crossed, if I work hard on my applications this fall I'll get into one of the programs and be enrolled next year!

That is my longterm plan for the future. For the nearer future, I will be flying home at the end of October, taking the GREs at the end of November, and then in December I'll be going to England to spend Christmas and New Year's with Matt's lovely family. After that we are going back to China to teach English for about 6 months while I wait to hear back from grad schools. We know how to avoid the many pitfalls that accompany teaching English in China, and we are also able to make a good salary and save most of it because the cost of living is quite low. Hopefully I'll be able to save up a little money for grad school and eat delicious food every day too!

Finally, to keep this blog interesting now that my research is finished I feel it's necessary to include some cute photos of puppies. Here is Mongo, the street puppy, hiding in our shoe rack.



Our friend Johannah took her in off the street and has been taking care of her for the past few weeks. We dog sat while Johannah's apartment was being inspected and got to play with her all day. She's a very nice dog, cuddly and well behaved for a street dog. She has tons of personality too. Even Matt was totally smitten by the end of the day!

Well that's all for now!

Monday, September 24, 2012

Finished!

Here we are about 8 months after my first blog posts. I am excited to say that I have finished my project! Wooo! It's been one heck of a rollercoaster but I'm happy with what I accomplished in my research. Here's a brief recap of my final 3 trips to the countryside :)

My first last trip was to my Darkhan/Selenge site. My brother Bryan was visiting me in Mongolia before going to Japan for a year of study and he decided to come along. We had an... interesting trip... We got lots of good information about the gardens, and saw some excellent onions, turnips and carrots growing in the bottles. However, when I got back to Ulaanbaatar I realized my driver had robbed me while I went into a ger to do an interview. I foolishly left my pouch of money in my bag in the car and the guy had helped himself to $50-70 by my estimate. I expect people to pickpocket me on the street and watch out for it but I wasn't prepared for someone I'd hired to steal from me when I was paying him a good wage for easy work. Alas.

My second last trip was to Ondorkhaan. I hired a different translator because Chingerel found a permanent job. My new translator Yumjirka was quite good, but there turned out to be very little work for her in Ondorkhaan. Many of the families were away from home preparing hay for the winter or hadn't taken care of the gardens. Additionally, the driver I hired to go to both clusters of families demanded more money on our way to the second site. He was my driver for the first trip and one of the families I had given a garden. What had started off as a friendly trip soon turned ugly as he demanded more money than we agreed on. In the end he dropped us off in the city and I paid him half for the half job he had done and I forfeited the data of his family's garden. I ended up doing phone interviews, via Yumjirka, with the 2 families at the second site. One great success from this trip was hearing about a daughter of one of the families who had taken her garden to school in Choibalsan, over 200 miles away! There's a truly nomadic garden that will hopefully inspire teachers and students alike to plant their own gardens :)

For my truly final research trip to Arvaikheer, Chingerel generously offered to give up her weekend to be my translator. Having the same translator for the whole project definitely made a difference, and I had an excellent and productive trip to Arvaikheer. In addition, the driver we hired was friendly and delightful, a pleasant, sort of grandfatherly soul who told me he loved going to the countryside on my research trips to visit the families because he got to taste every family's fermented horse milk! We visited all the families and completed 9 interviews in one afternoon, a record, stayed in a clean and comfortable motel, and were able to take the bus back the very next day. A delightful and successful trip in every way, and a great way to end my project.

Bryan in Selenge aimag

Turnip! wow!

A nice healthy beet plant

This spring onion was harvested and used by the family in soup and dumplings

A really nice picture of me, Jonathan, and my grandmother with Nyamsuren's family

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Exciting news!

Me and Matt are engaged!

The day me and my family got back to UB from the countryside, he told me he wanted to take me out for a nice dinner after work. We went out for a fantastic meal at the Ivy, pretty much the fanciest restaurant in Mongolia. Matt had pre-ordered our entire meal and we enjoyed a thoroughly mutton-free, gourmet dinner. I thought he might propose at dinner (I had guesses about the intent of the night hehe) but we headed back to our apartment after the meal. He opened the door, and I think my jaw literally dropped because our shabby old apartment had been transformed into a pavilion of roses and candles. Our good friends Nina and Hannah had snuck into our apartment while we were at dinner and decorated the place! Matt proposed, we drank champagne to celebrate, and told everyone the next morning. We really couldn't be happier! But before you ask, no we haven't set a date. It will probably be awhile in the future yet, and we need to decide where!

When we met in Peru, 2008

Now, engaged in Mongolia!

Family trip to Mongolia

It has been a long time since I last posted, sorry! Lots of stories to tell though, so enjoy!

Last time I posted we had just had Matt's birthday party at the end of July. I enjoyed about a week's break afterwards during which I was able to prepare for the arrival of my family in Ulaanbaatar on August 7th. I scraped together a pile of maps and tourist info, a local cellphone, and some Mongolian money to meet them with at the airport.

The day arrived and I took the bus to the airport to meet them. It was awesome and weird to see my family actually in Mongolia! My mom and dad, Grandma Isenberg, and Jonathan all managed to make it over. Bryan had to stay back and do visa stuff for his upcoming trip, but he will be arriving in a few days for a two week stopover before beginning his year studying in Japan.

Overall I think they had a great trip! We stayed in Ulaanbaatar for about a week while they got over the jetlag. They got to check out lots of museums, cafes, and restaurants, as well as monuments like the Zaisan memorial which overlooks the city and the Chinggis Khaan statue in front of the government house. For our first meal we went to Khaan Buuz, a Mongolian fast-food joint. My intention was to introduce them to a variety of Mongolian foods including salty milk tea, fried mutton noodles, steamed dumplings, fried meat pancakes, Mongolian goulash, etc. I unintentionally introduced them to the realities of Mongolian restaurants, which is that half the time they only have half the menu they claim to have, and Mongolian food isn't that great. Khaan Buuz was particularly bad, so I unintentionally set the bar for future Mongolian meals very low that morning. The good thing about this is that every Mongolian meal we had afterwards was "not bad".

After hanging out in UB for about a week we headed out for an epic 8 day road trip. We managed to cram all of us, our stuff, Chingerel (who we hired to translate), and our driver Miga (you may remember from my first trip to the countryside back in March) into the van.

The highlights of our trip:

Day 1: Khustai national park, I finally got to see the famous, reintroduced Przwalski's horses! It was super cool and the national park was beautiful. In the morning I saw owls!

Day 2: We rode camels (I hopped on a horse) in the picturesque sand dunes on the way to Arvaikheer.

Day 3:We visited my garden families and they showed my family everything from the gardens they'd been keeping to how they milk their horses, and we exchanged gifts of candy and aaraal and chatted over lunch. It was a really special experience. We tried to make it to the waterfall but the weather caused us to fall short and we ended up staying at a very "local" ger camp. The beds were hard and my family got a kick out of the outhouse, but the people who ran the place were so friendly and kind that we didn't mind!

Day 4: We drove up to Kharkhorin, also known as Karakorum. We looked around the town and my family went for a guided trip of Erdene Zuu monastery. We stayed at a ger camp on the banks Lake Ugii.

Day 5: We had an exciting day trying our hand at fishing and riding horses. We drove to Bulgan city and stayed the night in an old Soviet hotel with grumpy staff that still gives us a laugh.

Day 6:We drove to Amarbayasgalant Monastery and stayed in a lovely ger camp. The weather was starting to get cold.

Day 7: We drove up to the Russian border town of Sukhbaatar. We had fun shopping in a Russian grocery store and stocking up on Russian treats. Before dinner we drove right up to the Russian border at the town of Altanbulag to have a look.

Day 8: We drove back to UB looking forward to a hot shower and a meal without mutton in it.

Favorite quote: Dad: "Is this dirt road the shortcut?" Me: "this is the road"

Jonathan with a hunting eagle

Grandma with a hunting eagle

At Khustai National Park



Wild horses!
 
Riding horses and camels at the sand dunes

Sunset after a storm at Lake Ugii

A random deerstone.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Party time!

Hello again!

Since I last posted I've been out to the countryside for my last mid-term assessment trip, and we've also celebrated Matt's 24th birthday. Coincidentally this was his 2nd birthday in Mongolia; last year we were traveling through Mongolia from China around the same time.

First the birthday coverage: Hannah, Nina, and Taylor, good friends of ours, offered their apartment up for the festivities, which was very much appreciated as our apartment is tiny and shabby. We decorated the place with balloons and a happy birthday banner while Hannah decorated the cake. I managed to bake the beastly chocolate cake in our small rickety oven, and Hannah, the artist, decorated it in a multitude of colors and Mongolian patterns!

Decorating the cake

The birthday boy with the finished work of art

A few days before the birthday celebrations, I completed my 3rd midterm assessment countryside trip. It was back out to Selenge/Darkhan aimags in the north. Now my research project is officially 75% of the way done, yikes! Since the last trip to Selenge was so hairy, I was hoping this one would go smoother. In the end it did go a lot smoother (just because that last trip was so horrible), though I wouldn't call it an easy trip. It started off well, (as these trips usually do). We found a driver in Darkhan city who agreed to take us to the families on our way up north, stay over in a city near Russia, and then come back the next morning. Sorted! So off we went, but as we made our way to the first family we drove beside a lake with lots of baby toads leaping across the sandy dirt roads towards the water. Our driver stopped the car, clearly terrified, and told us he didn't want to keep going because frogs in the road were a bad omen. With a little persuasion we convinced him to drive on the grass next to the dirt road so he wouldn't squish any toads.

When we arrived at the first family's ger, I was disappointed to see that hardly any of their plants had grown. Even the onions hadn't grown! I asked them how often they watered their plants, as I asked at every ger, and like at every ger I received the same answer: "every day!". Since even their onions hadn't grown at all, I was very skeptical. But that is the nature of this research project, determining whether not it will work and why.

As we said goodbye til next time, our driver, who was looking very worried, told us that he was taking us back to Darkhan city because he was getting a bad vibe from us, and the frogs were a bad omen and he couldn't deal with it....

So back to Darkhan we went, and found another driver to take us north to Sukhbaatar city. When we arrived, we hired yet another driver to take us to the families up there. Luckily, a woman from one of the families was in the city at the time. She offered to show us the way to two of the families who had moved. I didn't realize quite how far she meant, but after over an hour and a half of driving through a pretty forest we emerged in a lush valley dotted with gers. To get to one of the gers we had to park the car, carefully walk over log bridges to cross a marsh, and hike a little further uphill. It was worth it, as we were greeted extremely warmly, fed milk tea and fresh fried biscuits and sweet aaraal, and served a delectable nomads' meal. A pile of meat was chopped into bite size pieces and boiled with some onion and salt. A few meaty ribs, the breastbone, and some vertebrae were thrown in and then served in a pan with a few sharp knives with which to serve yourself. Luckily the Mongolians perceived my lack of skill at cutting piping hot meat off the bone, and obliged to slice me up some meat and fat. After that the main course of mutton soup with noodles was served. The fresh meat was so tasty and tender, truly a delightful meal in the countryside.

2 skies

Crossing the marsh

The next day we finished up the interviews. I was surprised to find that this site, which I thought would do the best because of the climate (wetter and milder) was more or less on par with Ondorkhaan for successfulness. I'm beginning to think that successfulness has more to do with how motivated the individual participants are. This also relates to how I selected my participants to begin with. For the Arvaikheer group I drove around to gers, introduced the garden project, then asked for an interview. Those who weren't interested didn't bother giving an interview. For Ondorkhaan and Selenge it was the opposite, I asked if they would be willing to do an interview and then introduced the garden project at the end of the interview. A lot of those people sort of shrugged and said "sure". This is one of the many lessons I've taken away from my research project so far!

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

The bountiful harvests of Uvurkhangai

Just got back from my second trip out to assess the progress of the gardens after a nice long Naadam break. I was excited to go out to Arvaikheer, in Uvurkhangai aimag. The people there are extremely friendly and hospitable, and the countryside is like a painting. We had a nice trip that was neither boring nor stressful. At every ger we were offered freshly made milk products including aaraal (dried yoghurt), eetzgii (dried cheese), and airag (fermented mare's milk). The fresh countryside airag was much tastier than I remembered. It was fizzy and refreshing. The eetzgii and aaraal were also tastier than I remembered. At one ger we were offered shimiin arikh, a clear liquor made by distilling milk. Perhaps the milk of animals in midsummer is milder, because this too was quite pleasant.

People were excited to show us their gardens, which to their and my delight were flourishing. Compared to Ondorkhaan, the gardens here were doing even better! More plants per planter were alive, and those that were growing were more robust than those in Ondorkhaan. It'll take more time poring over the data to draw conclusions about why that is.

There were some nice surprises on this trip too. One family had been so taken with the gardening idea that they had started their own, growing some special grass for their livestock in plastic containers they kept in the bed of their truck. Another family had replaced the plants that hadn't grown with garlic cloves they had bought themselves. Another family whom I gave two sets of gardens consolidated the plants into one planter when some had been eaten by goats. It was great to see people's innovation!

During our trip we had one snag. In the search for one family we got stuck in a boggy mud patch. With the help of a nearby herder and a shovel he lent us, with me driving the car and the driver, Chingerel, and the man pushing the car, we managed to get out without too much trouble. It's not a trip to the countryside if you don't break down at least once or get stuck in mud!

Some photos of the gardens:


Proud gardeners!

Special grass for his livestock

The alyssum bloomed!

Uvurkhangai, a beautiful, empty place

The goats were nibbling the gardens so they put them up higher.

Lots of lettuce!

Look at all that garlic! It's flourishing!


These people rigged up a post to attach their gardens to!

Friday, July 13, 2012

Naadam

It's mid-July and the Naadam festival is upon us here in Mongolia! Naadam literally means 'games' and refers to the three "manly sports" of horse-racing, archery, and wrestling. Despite the name, only wrestling is exclusively a men's sport. Women compete in the archery competitions and boys and girls between the ages of 6 and 13 jockey their families' prized horses over 10-20 mile courses in the races. The traditional festival greeting, saikhan naadaarai!, translates to "happy games!"

Originally me and Matt were planning to leave UB for the Naadam festival. Unfortunately, we realized a little too late that most of the countryside Naadams happen before the UB Naadam. This way the competitors can compete in their hometowns and then go for more glory in UB. To make the most of the UB Naadam, we got up at the crack of dawn and went out to the race course, about 30km west of the city, to watch the stallion race. It was cool, foggy, and chilly. We got ourselves some hot salty milk tea right away to warm up, and some traditional khuushuur (fried meat pancakes). Having already experienced airag (fermented horse milk) we decided to give it a miss.

Soon after we lined up along the bleachers with a crowd of excited Mongolians. We were all crammed in against the ropes holding us back from the track, squinting into the fog for a sign of movement. After about 20 minutes the headlights of the lead car became visible and an excited murmur went through the crowd. Slowly the outline of the horses became visible through the fog. The horses came galloping in to a chorus of "coo! coo! coo!" from the crowd, the traditional encouragement to the horses and their riders to finish the race strongly. As the first five horses neared the finish line, a horse and rider galloped from the sidelines to meet each of them and cross the finish line with them.

Each race has hundreds of horses competing in it, so we stayed for a little while to watch the runners up finish the race. Afterwards we had some more milk tea and made our way back to the city.

The horsemen waiting to meet the first five horses.

The winner!

Runner-ups vying for a higher place.

Side note:

Hannah and her parents brought us back this beautiful tuski (Kazakh wall hanging) from Bayan-Olgii. It was handmade between 1962 and 1964, a true antique! We are totally delighted with it and we've hung it up in our apartment where it takes up an entire wall.



Up close.


Sunday, July 8, 2012

Did they grow?

YES!

This weekend me and Chingerel went back for the first time to see if any of the plants had grown in the planters we gave our nomadic herder families. Since we went to Ondorkhaan, the closest of my sites and a short 2 day trip, Matt was able to come too and see the eastern steppe grasslands for the first time.

We were surprised and delighted by how well they had done with the gardens! I had been partly expecting them all to have been unwatered, abandoned, or possibly broken or eaten by goats, but almost everyone was able to grow something.

Each family had a very different experience with them and it was great to hear all their stories. For various reasons some of the gardens hadn't worked completely, but I'd say about 50% were doing well.

The good news: almost all the families' onions were flourishing in their bottle gardens. Garlic was also growing quite well, as were beets and turnips. The families all mentioned what a novelty the gardens were, and that people passing through often stopped to have a look and ask about them. I noticed that the nicer, friendlier families were the ones who had taken care of them the best. One garden had already been nomadic; they moved the two planters from their winter place to their summer place, and then from their summer place to their relatives' house in the town. To do this, they told me, one of the young men tied a planter onto his back and another onto his front and drove it by motorcycle across the steppe!

The bad news: all the tomato seedlings had died (not the right soil possibly?), plus most of the plants that weren't root vegetables. One family had thrown the garden out completely because it had broken and they couldn't be bothered to fix it. One family had been dutifully watering their garden, but the soil we filled it with was full of weed seeds so they were growing a flourishing garden full of weeds. One family's child had picked all the plants out of the planters, and one family had been sort of busy and not really bothered with it.

Interestingly, some of the families said they would have liked to grow more flowers and decorative plants, and others said exactly the opposite, they would prefer just onions and garlic and useful plants. All the families suggested plants that are easier to grow. Some families suggested a different watering system, and others liked the design. It was great, such a mixed bag of opinions!

We were really excited by our results, especially since I predicted Ondorkhaan would be the least successful growing site (a very dry climate plus less enthusiastic participants in general compared to Selenge and Arvaikheer). I'm looking forward to seeing how the other sites have done!

Now, we are taking a break before going out to the other sites for the summer Naadam festival. During Naadam everyone kicks back, eats khuushuur (fried meat pancakes) and airag (fizzy horse milk yogurt), and watches Mongolian wrestling, archery, and horse racing. It's a great time to be in Mongolia and we're planning a trip to the countryside to enjoy the holiday and revel in the festive mood.

Til next time!

Oh and check out some photos :)

Success! A few of these are weeds though :(

Very happy onions and beets :)

Baby cranes!


This tiny lady makes me look like a giant. I gave her the photo I took of her and her family and she was not impressed because she was wearing her work deel (long coat). I asked her if she wanted another photo and she enthusiastically agreed and then dug through her chest of deels, trying on three before choosing this one for the photo.


A herd of horses romping across the steppe.

Happy plants.


This family is so friendly and sweet. Their parents were out herding and they were hanging out at home. I asked about their bean plants and they sheepishly told me that they had left them outside and the goats had nibbled them up. Luckily the plants in their hanging planters did ok!

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Road trouble

Ok I'm back! I took a few weeks off blogging to welcome Matt to UB and help him get settled in. He's just finished his degree in intercultural communication and Chinese studies and he's here to stay until I finish my Fulbright year! Woohoo! After getting over the jetlag and a welcome-to-Mongolia bout of food poisoning, Matt's been on the hunt for an English teaching job to pay the bills while we're here. So far so good; out of 4 interviews he's been offered 4 jobs. He's just working on scheduling the hours now.

It's probably for the best that I've had a few weeks off before I wrote about my third trip to the countryside, which can only be described as a fiasco.

First off, before I even headed out to the countryside, I was almost thwarted from finishing and picking up the planters from the agriculture school. Apparently they were holding some sort of secretive and confidential standardized tests in the school building that weekend, and no one was allowed in, not even professors. This kind of bureaucratic rule-enforcement is a typical Mongolian frustration that I'd been lucky to avoid for most of my time here. The security guard at the school was having none of my pleading and begging, and only through a combination of tears, and my very pregnant advisor roaring at him, did he let me in to get my stuff. I had been planning to finish the planters at the school, but instead took them home and finished them up in my apartment. I got back and realized I had left an entire bag of bottles at the school. After delivering some choice swear words to the walls of my apartment, I finagled the rest of the planters so I would have enough to give to all my participants, with a few adjustments. I maybe should have taken this as an omen and postponed my trip, but I figured the most stressful thing that could happen for this trip had happened and I'd gotten over it and it would all be fine. Oh, how wrong I was.

The next morning I met Chingerel at the greenhouse as she tried to find us a driver. Unfortunately, there were few drivers in that part of the city early Sunday morning. She found one guy, who took one look at the crazy foreigner with her planters and nervously mumbled that he "didn't know the way" (there are basically 2 paved roads in Mongolia, a roughly north/south one and east/west one) so that's why he didn't want to come. The next guy she found was driving an official taxi, with a green and white checker pattern, a meter, and everything. "Are you sure we can go to the countryside in that?" we asked skeptically. "Oh yea, no problem."

So off we went, put all the gardens in the trunk and the back seat, and set off on what seemed like was going to turn out to be another great trip. Our driver said he was from Darkhan, the main city up north where we were going, so all the better. The taxi car was roomy and comfortable and got great gas mileage (a plus since I pay for gas). However, as we drove over the paved road, zooming towards Darkhan, things began to unravel. A chunk of the bumper fell off, our driver started squabbling about the pay we'd agreed on, and my normally cheerful, smiling, laughing translator Chingerel was cross and stony-faced.

I couldn't understand everything Chingerel and the driver were saying, but I could tell he was annoying her. As we drove on, he began to annoy me too. At first just little things, like ignoring my instructions, or scoffing at my attempts to chat in Mongolian. However, by the time we arrived in Sukhbaatar, near the Russian border, I was actively reminding myself to take deep breaths and not snap at his childish and grating behavior.

I decided to give us all an early night, hoping the rest would put everyone in a better mood the next day. We found a nice hotel and a nice cheap triple room, as we'd done for our previous trips. But oh no, our driver threw a hissy fit and demanded to be housed in his own private room. Most drivers I've worked with need to be persuaded to stay in the hotel and not to sleep in their car, which is what they normally do on jobs in the countryside. So after a bit of a negotiating, we decided he could pay the difference if he wanted to stay in a single, more expensive room. Off he went to another hotel, to our surprise but also great relief.

The next morning we got up early and headed out to find our families. These were definitely the toughest families to find of my three research sites because most of them had moved and not all of them had cell-phone coverage in their new locations. Luckily though, I had photos of most of these families. By driving around and stopping at gers in the area where I suspected they were and showing the photos, we were able to find them. In the case of one family, we spotted a herder on horseback tending his flocks and drove up to him to ask for directions; it turned out he was a member of one of the families!

The weather was crappy that day; cold, rainy, buggy and boggy. Selenge aimag gets very mosquito-y in the summer. Because of all the rain, many of the families were difficult to get to because the ground was soft and marshy. We slogged through, getting soaked and more grimy at every stop, but at each ger we were greeted warmly and offered a much appreciated hot bowl of salty milk tea and a variety of fried biscuits and fresh milk products. The most delicious of which was, hands down, the fresh, even still warm, sheep/goat milk yogurt with sugar. Fatty, rich, creamy, tangy, and sweet, it doesn't get better than that!


The generosity and friendliness of the families we met gave me and Chingerel a boost, since the weather and dealing with our driver was taking a lot of energy. He spent most of the time whining, arguing about the best way to do things, ignoring me when I told him which way to go and where to stop, insulting Chingerel and my herder family participants, and acting like it was his vacation trip. I deduced that he was a spoiled little punk, and the constant head-butting was wearing my patience thin.


Despite that, we were able to give out almost all of the gardens the first day. We decided to drive back to Darkhan for the night and finish the last two in the morning. Mostly, the driver wanted to see his friends in Darkhan, and I wanted to be rid of his company for the evening.


When we arrived in Darkhan, we found a cheap and clean hotel for Chingerel and myself, while the driver was planning to stay at his parents' home. We said goodnight, and to meet us there tomorrow at 8am. "No" said the driver, "we'll meet at 9". I looked from him to Chingerel and back again. "No, we'll meet at 8, we need to finish everything and get back to UB early." At this point, the driver stomped out of the room without another word. I strode out after him. "Come at 8 or don't come at all." I stared him down as Chingerel translated this. "No, I'm coming at 9, 8 is too early" he sneered at us. Then he said something harsh in Mongolian and Chingerel burst into tears, and I lost it and started shouting at him with words I knew he didn't understand, and Chingerel started shouting the translation of my words at him, something about "bad attitude," "never had this kind of attitude from another driver," "not putting up with it," etc etc. As he continued to shout abuses at Chingerel, I told him that's it, he was fired, I'd pay him for the work he did and he could leave. I went to go get my money and came back outside, and he wouldn't unlock his car to get the planters out until I had paid him his wage and for the gas that was in his car before we started. We finally completed the hostage handover, and as me and Chingerel turned away to go back into the hotel, he spat at us. Not the way I wanted to end things of course, but it was a huge relief to be rid of him.

The next morning we found a friendly local guy to drive us to our last 2 families. The weather was sunny and warm, and we seemed to be ending our trip on a good note. But just as we were leaving our last family, a freak hail storm came out of nowhere and pelted us on our way back to the city. It seems that overall, my third trip to the countryside to distribute planters was rather ill-fated.

Here's hoping that my next trip will be a lot smoother!

Check out some of my photos from the trip :)

The taxi car, plus a puppy chewing on a bucket.

Gardens on the ger!

This family was so lovely! They were so enthusiastic about the plants that I gave them all the extra seedlings. We'll see what they do with them!

Showing a bunch of women from one of the families how to transplant seedlings and plant seeds in the planters.

Happy plants! Hopefully they'll be this happy when I go back in July.

A family with their plants.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Just call me Alaska

Here's the second post in the three-part series on the delivery of planters to my participating herder families in the countryside.

The second site I went back to was my eastern Ondorkhaan site in Khentii aimag. You may remember my slightly less enthusiastic post about my first trip out there. The people living around Ondorkhaan tended to be a bit more suspicious of me, and I picked up a sort of unfriendly vibe. So I was a bit nervous in bringing the gardens out to this group and worried about their reactions.

In the morning Chingerel and I hired another driver from the streets of UB, packed up the car, and headed off. Halfway to Ondorkhaan our driver Davaa turns to me with a confused look on his face and says in Mongolian: "Is your name really Alaska?" Haha! It turns out the pronounciation of my name in Mongolian, "Alayks", sounds a lot like a popular ice cream called "Alyaska". We all had a good chuckle once that was sorted out.

When we arrived in Ondorkhaan we called up Ganbaa, the driver I hired for our first trip. Although he lives in a haashaa (fenced in yard) in town, and he had asked if his family could have a garden as well so I said sure. We met up with his family, helped set up his garden, and he showed us the road to where the other families were living.

Again, I didn't need to be nervous! The families had all warmed up considerably since I first met them. I last visited this site in April, so it was a little trickier to find all the families since more of them had moved, but we found them in the end. See some photos!

I let the families decide where and how to put their gardens up. This family had a wagon caravan/trailer they use to move. So we put the gardens up on either side of it, so it drapes over like a saddle bag.

Herder kids are really strong. This little guy scooped up this lamb, nearly the size of himself, in one arm and posed with his bean plant in the other. Probably one of my favorite photos of all of them!

This family had found an orphaned foal a few days before. It was the cutest little thing, wandering around after us, nickering at us, flopping down to sleep next to their yurt, and tolerating lots of petting. When the time came for the garden photo it following it's 'herd' into the frame and the kids held it for the photo.

Gardens hanging from a shed.

An old couple with their nomadic garden. Another family looks after their animals (they're retired) so their gardens could be set lower than other families'. 
I got a few nice pictures of Demoiselle cranes!

Making the gardens together. 
Chingerel was cooing over this little filly even worse than me!