We got up early the next morning to catch the train. We were lucky to have managed to book the deluxe sleeper class (especially since this is the week of Nadaam), so we got a cushy ride. We had our own 2 person sleeper compartment which shared a shower/sink with the adjacent compartment. We spent most of our time lazying around, eating in the dining car, and making friends on the train.
From Beijing to Ulaanbaatar |
The border was a 5 hour affair starting with visits from Chinese health (another temperature reading!), customs and immigration officials. Next, the bogies needed to be changed since the tracks in Mongolia use the Russian gauge. Finally, after pushing on to the Mongolian side of the border we dealt with Mongolian health (no temperature check, just a form), immigration, and customs authorities. We were finally free to sleep without interruptions around 1 am.
From Beijing to Ulaanbaatar |
We woke up the next morning to a view of the Gobi. It looked pretty bleak and we were both glad it wasn't part of our cycle plans. Eventually, as we approached Ulaanbaatar, the scenery became greener.
From Beijing to Ulaanbaatar |
About 34 hours after leaving Beijing, we arrived in Ulaanbaatar. Staff from our guesthouse met us at the train station. After waiting for a few minutes, our bicycles appeared at the luggage claim. However, it turned out that the crux of getting our bikes was going to be clearing them through customs. Luckily, our guesthouse employees transformed into bureaucracy navigation superheroes and for the next couple hours ran around trying to get approval to bring them in without paying duty. Although we declared the value of the bikes as being about 1/3 of their true value, this amount was still astoundingly high for the Mongolian authorities. They simply couldn't just take our word that we would take them with us when we left (and would therefore not be subject to import duty). After our helpers went to talk to what seemed to be the head honcho of Mongolian customs (he had the big corner office on the top floor), we were told we'd have to pay the duty as a deposit and get it back when we leave. At this point it was past office hours so we would return the next day to finish the job. We returned alone the next day and seemed to get an empathetic customs agent who eventually decided we would not need to pay the deposit and summoned our customs broker (whose service we had unknowingly retained the previous day) to navigated us up and down the stairs of the building for another hour or so getting the rest of the paper work done. At each step of the process some insignificant sum of money was paid ($0.10-$2.00) and it all appeared legitimate. Somehow, about $5.00 and 10-20 people hours of wasted time later we had our bikes!
From Beijing to Ulaanbaatar |
All in all we actually kind of got a kick out of the whole process. Therefore, we decided to have a bit more fun and spent part of the afternoon extending our visas. Though after the customs experience this was downright easy.
Maps! We want maps!
ReplyDelete- Tyler
Great stories guys! Can't wait to read more...
ReplyDeleteAnna
Re Maps:
ReplyDeleteYeah, we'll try to get better at mapping on the actual bike ride. We may even try to record a GPS track the whole time and post it as a google maps on the blog and use the track to automatically geocode the photos. You'll note that the photos from our practice ride in the "Mongolia Pretrip" album in picasa are geocoded.
We're not sure if we have the battery power to do it the whole way along here though. We brought a bunch of AA NiMH batteries for the GPS and Krystil's camera. However I failed to check if our charger works on 220V. Luckily we found out it didn't in Beijing and went out and bought one there (at Walmart!).