Small Group Adventure Tours - G.A.P Adventures

Mongolia Travel and Destination Guide

PLACES TO SEE

Four Holy Peaks

Considered holy, the four peaks surrounding Ulaan Bataar are the Tsetseegum, Chingeltei, Songino Khairkhan and Bayansurkh mountains and they correspond roughly to the 4 points on the compass. These peaks are popular for their hiking, forests, grasslands and stunning bird and animal life.


Ulaanbaatar

UB, as it is affectionately known by foreigners and locals alike, is a cauldron of concrete and dirt. It wasn't always so: a century ago camels plodded down unpaved main streets and Tibetan long horns bellowed from monasteries. Now, new buildings, humvees and European fashion shops are commonplace.


Tavanbogd National Park

This stunningly beautiful park includes the three lakes of Khoton Nuur, Khurgan Nuur and Dayan Nuur. It's a remote place, divided from China by the high wall of snow-capped peaks, and is known to local Kazakhs as the Syrgali region. It's possible to make rafting trips downriver from Dayan Nuur, and there are many archaeological sites in the area.


Shiliin Bogd

At 1778m (5830ft), Shiliin Bogd is the highest peak in Sükhbaatar aimag region in Mongolia's east. The extinct volcano is sacred to many Mongolians and is set in a stunning and isolated area. A jeep can get you about halfway up the mountain, and then it's a short but blustery walk to the top for awesome views of craters across the nearby border to China.


Amarbayasgalant Khiid

Amarbayasgalant Khiid is considered one of the most important monasteries in Mongolia. It's also one of the most beautiful. It was originally built in 1737 by the Manchurian emperor Kansu, who dedicated it to the great Mongolian Buddhist and sculptor, Zanabazar. The communists found their way here in the 1930s and destroyed 10 of the 37 temples and statues.


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