Naadam Festival
Naadam Festival
Naadam Festival
14 Days Starting and ending in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
Visiting: Ulaanbaatar, Gorkhi Terelj National Park, Hustai National Park, Elsen Tasarkhai, Kharkhorin, Arvaiheer, Dundgovi Province, Khongor Sand Dunes, Yol Gorge, Tsagaan Suvarga
Tour operator:
Tour code:
8956
Guide Type:
Fully Guided
Special diets catered:
Vegetarians
Tour operated in:
EnglishTrip Styles:
Interests:
Activities:
Tour Overview
- Explore the Gobi Desert including the Singing Sand Dunes
- Spend time with nomad families as they prepare for the festival
- Experience the Naadam Festival
- Walk around remote monasteries and engage with monks
- Search for the rare Takhi horse only found in Hustai National Park
Famed grasslands, nomad life, sweeping deserts and the Naadam Festival form the ultimate Mongolian journey. Join us as we take you into the heart and soul of nomad country and introduce you to some of the worlds most spectacular landscapes and one of the richest cultural festivals on the planet.
The Naadam Festival is truly one of the world’s most exciting and colourful traditional festivals. Taking place across the country, these traditional games are so unique, they are listed on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list.
Crooked Compass offers a more intimate encounter by venturing to a remote town in the country's north, to embrace the Naadam festivities. Uncrowded and authentic, this immersive experience is the perfect event encompassing sport, tradition and history alongside the locals.
Dating back to when Mongolia was ruled by warlords and emperors like Genghis Khan (and prior to that!), the event officially celebrates the Mongolian revolution and independence. Experience one of Mongolia's oldest spectacles focused on skill and strength whilst exploring the remote and dramatic lands.
Highlights
Itinerary
Day 1 - Arrival Ulaanbaatar
Location: Ulaanbaatar
Accommodation: Hotel
Accommodation Name: Bayangol Hotel or similar
Meals Included: Lunch, Dinner
Welcome to Mongolia! Upon arrival in Ulaanbaatar the capital city of Mongolia, you will be met and transferred to your hotel. This afternoon following lunch, you will set out to explore the city. Start with exploring the city square, a short distance from your hotel. You will also visit the National Museum of Mongolia where you can learn about the history of this fascinating country through their collection of artefacts from Mongolia and Central Asia dating from the Stone Age to the present day. This evening, enjoy a traditional art performance and welcome dinner where you can get to know your fellow travellers. (L,D)
Overnight Best Western Premier Tuushin or similar
Day 2 - Mongol Nomadic Cultural Resort
Location: Gorkhi Terelj National Park
Accommodation: Camp
Accommodation Name: Ger Camp
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Following breakfast, depart for Mongol Nomadic Camp. This camp will introduce you to the way of life of “Mongolian nomads” you will witness the traditional way of life for Mongolian nomads. Learn about their animal breeding and how they live with five kinds of livestock and also their continuous movement from one place to another using their ox, yak, camel and horse carts. You will also learn about the process of building a traditional ger as well as understanding that a lot of furniture, pots and clothing are antiques reflecting the Central Khalks from the beginning of 20th century. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 50 km on tarmac road and 12 km om dirt, approx. 1.5-2 hours.
Overnight Ger Camp
Day 3 - Hutsai National Park
Location: Hustai National Park
Accommodation: Camp
Accommodation Name: Ger Camp
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
After breakfast, you drive to the Hustai National Park which is home to the only truly wild horses on earth; the Takhi horse. Several decades ago, wild horses had disappeared from Mongolia, victims of habitat loss and poaching. However, small numbers survived in European zoos and from these numbers, through a program of careful breeding and international cooperation, the wild population was rebuilt. Now, Hustai is home to some 250 wild horses, of which 130 were born in the wild. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 30 km total on dirt road and 40 km on tarmac road. approx. 1.5-2 hours
Overnight in a Ger Camp
Day 4 - Hutsai National Park – Elsen Tasarkhai
Location: Elsen Tasarkhai
Accommodation: Camp
Accommodation Name: Ger Camp
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
After breakfast, you will drive to Mongolia’s sand dunes, an 80km long beautiful stretch that is unlike anything else in this country. This is a unique combination of Mongolian mountains, forests and Gobi-type landscape in one location. Keep your eyes peeled for Maral stag (elk), wolves, deer and fox. The Elsen Tasarhai literally means “an isolated torn-off piece of sand” and it is a small section of real desert in the midst of the green Mongolian steppe. It feels like in the Gobi Desert, hence the name ‘Little Gobi’. For those keen to get active, time permitting, you may get to climb the sand dunes. Others may prefer to go for a camel ride or spend time with a local nomadic family. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 18 km on dirt road and 140km on tarmac road to ger camp, approx. 3.5 hours
Overnight in a Ger Camp
Day 5 - Elsen Tasarkhai – Kharkhorin
Location: Kharkhorin
Accommodation: Hotel
Accommodation Name: Hotel 9 or similar
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Today you head to Kharkhorin town, the ancient capital of Genghis Khan’s Mongolia in the 13th century. You visit Erdene Zuu monastery, which was built from leftovers of Kharkhorin’s ruined city in the 16th century. Sadly, a communist purge destroyed almost everything but a few main monasteries. There are numerous unusual cultural and religious exhibits here as well as a Tibetan-style monastery still active in the Erdene Zuu and important to the area. Explore the monastery and chat to some of the monks. Learn about their fascinating lifestyle in this remote part of the country. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 90 km on tarmac road to our ger camp, approx. 1.5-2 hours.
Overnight in a Ger Camp
Day 6 - Kharkhorin – Arvaiheer Town
Location: Arvaiheer
Accommodation: Hotel
Accommodation Name: Hotel 9 or similar
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
It is an early start this morning as you set off for Arvaiheer town. It is pre-Naadam Day in town and you will visit the local horse trainers camping area. Here, jockeys and trainers will be getting ready for the race tomorrow. It is fascinating to see the build-up of excitement and feel the true atmosphere of the Naadam Festival. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 50 km on tarmac dirt road to a camp, approx.. 3-4 hours
Overnight local hotel
Day 7 - Naadam Festival
Location: Ulaanbaatar
Accommodation: Camp
Accommodation Name: local hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Today is the day of the Naadam Festival’s opening ceremony which starts with a parade. The colour, passion and skill will capture your attention for hours. Enjoy witnessing the country’s traditional sports including archery and ankle bone shooting in the morning – the local’s accuracy is mind-boggling. There are performances of folk music and dance that will pulse through your veins throughout the day, as well as various rounds of Mongolian wrestling, a truly unique form of the sport. You then visit the horse racing field where you may witness racing, equestrian competitions and other horse skill-related activities. Mingle with the locals and learn stories of their Naadam experiences over the years and their beliefs surrounding this historical event. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 135 km on dirt road and 150 km tarmac road to our ger camp, approx. 7.5-8 hours
Overnight local hotel
Day 8 - Ongi Ruined Monastery
Location: Dundgovi Province
Accommodation: Camp
Accommodation Name: Ger Camp
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Today you will drive to Ongi Monastery and to your next ger camp. Ongi Monastery is the collective name for the ruins of two monasteries that face each other across the Ongi River in Saikhan-Ovoo district of Dundgovi Province. The Barlim Monastery is located on the north bank of the river while the Khutagt Monastery sits on the south bank. Both complexes of Ongi Monastery were completely destroyed in 1939 during anti-religious purges. Over 200 monks were killed, and many surviving monks were imprisoned or forced conscripts into the Communist-controlled army. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 180 km on a dirt road to a camp, approx. 4-4.5 hours
Overnight Ger Camp
Day 9 - Khongor Sand Dunes
Location: Khongor Sand Dunes
Accommodation: Camp
Accommodation Name: Ger Camp
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
This morning, drive to Khongor Sand Dunes, some of the largest and most impressive white sand dunes in Mongolia. Khongor Sand Dunes stretch more than 180 km (112 miles) with majestic heights of 15-30 m. The largest dunes are northwest of the range up to 300 metres high. From the top of the dunes, the view of the desert is incredible, and one can also see the Khongoryn River flowing in amongst the desert feeding the nearby oases. Enjoy a camel ride before returning to camp. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 180 km on dirt road and 50km tarmac road to a camp, approx. 5 hours
Overnight Ger Camp
Day 10 - Khongor Sand Dunes
Location: Khongor Sand Dunes
Accommodation: Camp
Accommodation Name: Ger Camp
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
It is a lovely relaxing day spent in the Gobi. Did you know that the name “Khongor” means palomino horse in Mongolian? Enjoy walks near the camp and visit the sand dunes. The dunes make sound like a plane engine on a windy day, so they have also been named the “Singing Dunes”. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 30 min drive to Sand Dunes
Overnight Ger Camp
Day 11 - Yol Gorge
Location: Yol Gorge
Accommodation: Camp
Accommodation Name: Ger Camp
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
This morning, head south to Dalanzadgad, the provincial capital of South Gobi. Continue your drive to the Yol Gorge. The gorge is 2800m above sea level, 40 km long and up to 200m high. The gorge is named after the Lammergeier, which is called Yol in Mongolia or better known as the White Bearded Vulture. The Yol is very rare and lives only in Central Asia at heights between 1500-3000m. The valley is blocked from sunlight and contains thick ice layers throughout the year, but, recently, because of global warming, the ice melts in late summer. Explore the gorge before you return to your ger camp. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 180km on dirt road and 40 km tarmac road to a camp, approx. 4-5 hours
Overnight Ger Camp
Day 12 - Tsagaan Suvarga Cliffs
Location: Tsagaan Suvarga
Accommodation: Hotel
Accommodation Name: Bayangol Hotel or similar
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
After breakfast, drive through the Gobi to Tsagaan Suvarga. Tsagaan Suvarga (or White Stupa) and also known as the mini–Grand Canyon, is a sheer slope that was an ancient seabed. Over millions of years various changes in the environment have produced its famous-coloured layers. The formation is over 50 metres at its highest point, and it is a sheer slope, which from a distance seems to be the ruins of an ancient city. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 35 km on dirt road and 150km tarmac road to a camp, approx. 4-5 hours
Overnight Ger Camp
Day 13 - Ulaanbaatar
Location: Ulaanbaatar
Accommodation Name: Best Western Premier Tuushin or similar
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
This morning, you return to Ulaanbaatar and transfer to your hotel. In the afternoon, there will be an opportunity for last-minute shopping and time at leisure before our farewell dinner. (B,L,D)
Total driving: 400 km tarmac road and 25 km on dirt approx. 6-7 hours
Overnight Best Western Premier Tuushin or similar
Day 14 - Departure
Location: Ulaanbaatar
Meals Included: Breakfast
Today is yours at leisure until it is time to depart for the airport for your flight to your onward destination. (B)
Total driving: 50 km tarmac road to Airport 1.5-2.5 hours depending on the traffic
What's Included
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Return airport transfers
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13 nights accommodation
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13 Breakfasts, 13 Lunches, 13 Dinners
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English speaking local certified Guide
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Bottled water
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Private transportation
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Entrance fees
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Festival fee
What's Not Included
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International & domestic flights
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Visas
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Travel and medical insurance
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All services, meals other than those indicated above
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Personal porters
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Any changes to the proposed and confirmed program
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All items of a personal nature e.g. drinks, laundry, telephone calls, tips etc
Check out our Q&As
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What kind of transportation is provided during the Naadam Festival tour?
The tour provides private transportation throughout, including return airport transfers. You will travel comfortably on both tarmac and dirt roads, allowing you to explore Mongolia's diverse landscapes and cultural sites with ease.
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What type of accommodation can I expect on this tour?
You will experience a blend of comfort and tradition with stays at the Best Western Premier Tuushin, Bayangol Hotel, and local ger camps. This offers a unique opportunity to immerse yourself in Mongolian culture while staying in traditional ger accommodations amidst stunning landscapes.
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What meals are included in the Naadam Festival tour?
The tour includes 13 breakfasts, 13 lunches, and 13 dinners, ensuring you are well-fed throughout your journey.
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Will there be a guide during the tour?
Yes, an English-speaking local certified guide will accompany you throughout the tour to enhance your experience and provide insights into the local culture and history.
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What activities are included during the Naadam Festival itself?
During the Naadam Festival, you will witness traditional sports such as archery, ankle bone shooting, and Mongolian wrestling. There will also be performances of folk music and dance, and you will have the opportunity to visit the horse racing field to see equestrian competitions and other horse skill-related activities.
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What is unique about the Khongor Sand Dunes visit?
The Khongor Sand Dunes are some of the largest and most impressive white sand dunes in Mongolia, stretching over 180 km. They are known as the 'Singing Dunes' because they make a sound like a plane engine on a windy day. You will also have the opportunity to enjoy a camel ride and explore the nearby oases.
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Will the accommodation included meet local health and safety regulations?
Yes. Focusing on providing authentic experiences where ever you are in the world, Crooked Compass has access to a vast array of accommodation styles. From boutique properties in larger cities to local guest houses and home stays within small villages. Crooked Compass ensures that local authenticity flows through your accommodation throughout your tour without compromising standard.
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What sort of transportation is used for your tours?
Transportation utilised on a Crooked Compass escorted small group tour is a combination of a private air conditioned vehicle and local transport where appropriate. This may include a local bus ride, use of the cities metro system, a domestic flight to another city or overnight train ride.
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What Ethical Travel credentials does the tour company have?
Crooked Compass strives to be a leader in sustainable tourism. Crooked Compass is firmly committed to the principles of ethical travel. Our comprehensive Sustainable Tourism Practices policy summarises our commitments and actions. Although the very basis of our ground operations lends itself to the ethos of sustainable tourism, this policy re-iterates our commitment to: Use locally owned hotels Use locally owned ground agents Use local guides and drivers Promote community tourism projects from homestays to craft shops Support charities that work within the destinations that we travel to Carbon offset our travels
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Who runs your tours and are they experts in their fields?
Crooked Compass works with the worlds best operators who are specialists in their country, region and cities providing you with in depth local knowledge. We use local guides who live and breathe the areas they work in, making sure you experience their region, their way. We believe it is far better to have a local guide who knows a lot about a little than a text book trained Western tour guide who knows a little about a lot. Using local guides also ensures that money stays within local communities and supports the regions we visit.
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What can I expect from a Crooked Compass tour that I wouldn't get from travelling with an alternative company?
Crooked Compass provides a sensory way to understand the world – we help you live like a local, eat like a local, do what the locals do and seek the faces behind the places whilst discovering untouched lands and natural beauty. Crooked Compass tours delve deep into the heart and soul of a destination ensuring you get out of your journey all you intended and much, much more. Our intriguing itineraries have been created by travellers for travellers. Steering travellers to follow a different path, Crooked Compass’ itineraries allow you to experience the world’s most fascinating destinations in ways you never dreamed possible. It brings to life those ‘bucket list’ experiences you have yearned to do and separates the travellers from the tourists. Crooked Compass tours are culturally rich, reward travellers with unexpected encounters and uncommon rendezvous, creating truly unique, authentic travel experiences.
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Who do your tours cater for?
Crooked Compass escorted small group tours cater for those who are well travelled seeking the what’s next and what’s new. Our travellers are curious minded soft adventurers who want to uncover something more than the mainstream tourist trail. Crooked Compass tours draw travellers with an interest in sustainable tourism and conservation for the areas they visit. A Crooked Compass traveller is someone who is seeking something fresh and unique, who has a yearning for authenticity and discovery, with an appreciation for cultures, tradition and the natural world. We call them Cultural Purists.
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I am concerned about my impact on travelling through untouched regions. Can I offset?
Yes. All travellers on Crooked Compass tours have the option to offset their part of their tour’s carbon footprint by donating $4AUD (tax-deductible) at time of booking. 100% of these funds are donated to Greenfleet, an environmental non-profit organisation dedicated to protecting our climate by restoring our forests. By partnering with Greenfleet, we are confident that our carbon offset program provides genuine and lasting environmental benefits. Your offset donation funds plant trees and restore permanent native forests in Australia and New Zealand. As they grow, these forests provide many community and environmental benefits by absorbing carbon emissions, protecting our unique biodiversity, restoring habitat for native wildlife, preventing soil salinity and erosion, improving water quality and much more. If you’d like to find out more and offset the rest of your carbon emissions, visit www.greenfleet.org.au
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Low Deposit
Crooked Compass requires a minimum deposit of 20% or the full booking value, whichever is less, with the final balance not due until 60 days before departure.
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Cancellation Policy
We don't charge a cancellation fee, here is a summary of crooked compass charges.
Up to 61 days before tour starts: Forfeit 100% of deposit.
At 60 days before tour starts: Forfeit 100% of booking price.