Taylors Travels continue……………

October 12, 2007

First signs of winter

Filed under: Mongolia — @ 4:17 am

Last Saturday we had our first snowfall, but Sunday was a beautiful sunny day and we headed out into the countryside again.  We stopped for a picnic lunch near this huge Ovoo.

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This is Wikipedia’s explanation of an ovoo……………

An ovoo (Mongolian: овоо, heap) is a type of shamanistic rock cairn found in Mongolia. Ovoos are often found at the top of mountains and high places and at borders and cross-roads. They serve as both navigational aids in a country with few roads and fewer signs, and religious sites, used in worship of the mountains and the sky as well as in Buddhist ceremonies.

Travelers in Mongolia should not pass by an ovoo without stopping. They are expected to stop and circle the ovoo three times in a clockwise direction. They should pick up a rock from the ground and add it to the pile before leaving. Also, travelers may leave offerings in the form of money, milk, or vodka.

Ovoos are also used in mountain- and sky-worshipping ceremonies that typically take place at the end of summer. Worshippers place a tree branch or stick in the ovoo and tie a blue khadag, a ceremonial silk scarf symbolic of the open sky, to the branch.[1] (Khadags should not be removed.)[2] They then light a fire and make food offerings, followed by a ceremonial dance and prayers (worshippers sitting at the northwest side of the ovoo), and a feast with the food left over from the offering.

During Mongolia’s Communist period, ovoo worship was officially prohibited along with other forms of religion, but people still worshipped clandestinely.

 

After lunch we continued on to have a look at another derelict hotel complex from the Russian era - could this be our next project?

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