Mongolia Travel Guide - All About Mongolia

Beyond the Great Wall of China, spreading out across the Gobi Desert and the vast steppes of Inner Asia stands legendary Mongolia.

Its mere name conjures visions of camel-borne nomads, stampeding columns of wild horses and orange sunsets plunging into the grasslands.

As the least densely populated country on earth, it's also a place of magnificent silence and Arctic-like emptiness.

But Mongolia is changing. Nomads flock to the city to seek out new opportunities. Businesses are springing up and foreign investment pouring in. And while tourists were a novelty a decade ago, they have become a regular spectacle each summer.

Mongolia is a great place for adventurers, lovers of the outdoors and camping enthusiasts. There is no privately-held land, the entire country is in effect one enormous camp ground and you can pitch your tent wherever you please.

Without super-highways or even fences, it's entirely possible to ride a horse clear across the country, which is what some travelers attempt to do. (A few years ago one eccentric American tried golfing his way across Mongolia with a 3-iron - and he succeeded).

Travel here requires a little imagination as you won't find information booths and gargantuan tourist sites every step of the way. The main attractions are the mountain and steppe scenery, wildlife, evenings in a ger (yurt), and the Mongolians themselves, a welcoming people whose generosity is beyond compare.

Survival guide to Mongolia