Bridge over Kherlen Gol
Kherlen Gol
Rest area on the Highway A0501
Restroom far into the inland beside the highway
Don't trust the bars
Entrance in the Gun-Galuut Nature Reserve
Rangers Ger from Gun-Galuut Nature Reserve
Sky in sunset over Gun-Galuut
Gun-Galuut Nature Reserve and the Kherlen Gol
Gun-Galuut Nature Reserve
Gun-Galuut Ger camp
Steppe Nomads Tourist Camp in Gun-Galuut
Steppe Nomads Tourist Camp in Gun-Galuut
Far view into the landscape of Gun-Galuut
Motorway service area stop
Enh Taivany Orgon Choloo
State Department Store
Ulaanbaatar City Place and Tserendorj Choloo
Blue Sky Tower
Sükhbaataryn Gudam (Avenue)
Parliament Building of Mongolia on Sükhbaatar Squa…
Sükhbaatar Square
Chingisiin Orgon Choloo
An herd of horses relax in the river
At Kherlen Gol riverside
Break in a horse
Mongolian livestock
Store for every thing in Darkhan
Row of houses and huts in Darkhan
Darkhan in Khentii province
Darkhan and its benchmark
Overnight camp near Ikhhet
Block of apartments in Ikhhet
Store lane in Ikhhet
School building in Ikhhet
Internet cafe in Ikhhet
Yurts in the back yard
At some ones plot of land
Wind protection around everyones premise
Petrol filling station in Ikhhet
Stoned flat cakes towers
Lunch break on the way to Ikhhet
Kids in the alimentary store of Delgerekh
Delgerekh
Camel lady gets my friendship
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Mongolian Horses - The Majesty of the Asian Steppes


A boy in the age of four years already learns to ride the horses.
Horses are a central part of Mongolian identity: though some city dwellers no longer learn how to ride, some Mongolians really do learn how to before they can walk. Jockeys are traditionally under 12 and sometimes as young as 4!
Horses are a central part of Mongolian identity: though some city dwellers no longer learn how to ride, some Mongolians really do learn how to before they can walk. Jockeys are traditionally under 12 and sometimes as young as 4!
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