Most of you might have missed it but there is a new, full quality version of the video clip:
http://homepage.mac.com/bjprc/iMovieTheater5.html
Let me know if it runs well or not. It’s a first trial.
Sport
11 August 07: with tennis champion Michael Chang
[updated 18 August, see down below)
Under a bright and blue sky (yep, happens sometimes) I had the pleasure to join the famous star Michael Chang for the opening ceremony of the “2007 Beijing International Tennis Festival”, in Chaoyang Park.
The event is organized by the Beijing Sports Bureau, Beijing Sports Federation, Beijing Tennis Association, Beijing International Sports Exchange Center, Beijing Veteran Tennis Association and also the “Beijing Association for Promoting International Sports Exchanges” (of which I am the honorary director of the board).
The competition is open for all interested players aged 18-50. Registration is at the following website (Chinese only….): www.united-mission.com
Finals will be on 22 and 23 September 07.
I had distributed many tickets during the recent Amcham event (“countdown”), not sure if people turned up, well, too bad if they missed the star. There were some real cool girls dancing – I took some good movie and pictures.
For more and better quality pictures of the event, open this link: http://homepage.mac.com/bjprc/PhotoAlbum3.html
To see a short movie, click the following link (sorry, I am still learning how to do this and have better quality… maybe I need to buy iMovie PRO version…): http://homepage.mac.com/bjprc/iMovieTheater4.html
And yes, this is being added on 18 August: the full quality clip is online:
http://homepage.mac.com/bjprc/iMovieTheater5.html
Let me know how it turns out for you… The clip was made with the basic version of iMovie.
Mongolia: the ultra marathon and more
Back and in one piece, after my adventurous two weeks in Mongolia.
The first week I spent with the group of “Mongolia Sunrise to Sunset” for the ultra marathon (see earlier blog entries with more details). Two groups: one for the 42K and one for the 100K. I left Beijing on 30 June and arrived back in the capital Ulaan Baatar (“UB”) in the late night of 6 July. The I stayed in UB for one week to visit the city and join the “Naadam”, the National Day festivities.
The marathon was held on the shores of Lake Hovsgol, in the northwestern part of Mongolia where we stayed in a “ger” camp “Toilogt Camp”. The ger is the typical circular tent in the country, quite comfortable, with a wood-burning stove in the middle and the chimney that goes through the middle of the roof. I shared mine with a guy from Holland who is working in Sakhalin.
Reaching Toilogt (780 Km from UB) is a genuine back-braking trip by a Russian 4WD or jeep of about 4 to 5 hours from Moron Airport (or “Murun”) – a one hour comfortable flight from UB. The Russian 4WDs look from another century but are surprisingly well adapted to the challenging road conditions – if you can call that a road. No seat belts and speeds of up to 80K/h over gravel, potholes, river beds and dusty grassland.
Lake Hovsgol is situated in a protected natural park. The lake is magnificent and so is the scenery. Situated at an altitude of 1645 m it is one of the largest freshwater lakes: 136 Km long and 36 Km wide with depth up to 262 m – totally 2,620 sq km. It contains over 1% of the world’s fresh water and is connected to Lake Baikal (200 Km further) in neighboring Russia. All around, pine forests, grassland and bare, rocky mountains. In July, day temperatures go up to 30C, nights are fresh with lows of 5C. No problem with the red hot stoves in the gers…
The marathon was tougher than I thought. Rocky trails, through sometimes dense forest with hardly a trail, wetlands, slippery grasslands. Two hills – the first climbing 700 m. Worst was the second one, about 500 m, where I was getting worried to lose my way. The scenery is gorgeous so I frequently stopped for pics and video and took it easy – I did not want to get hurt, sprain an ankle – easy with all the rocks, roots, pebbles. I completed the 42K with last km running, time 8h 33m. Probably next time I could do it in 8h. The race starts in darkness at 4:30 am and we ran with a flashlight through the forest. At 5 am, beautiful sunrise welcomed the runners.
Incredible were the 100K fanatics, they had a further 58K to run. Three foreign ladies finished the grueling race (one in 18 h). Results not available yet on their website.
The week in UB gave a first impression of the capital where a third (under one million) of Mongolia’s population (under 3 million) lives. The country being as large as Western Europe (over 1.5 million sq km), you can imagine how empty it is.
UB is not your friendly city, it is rather dangerous. The locals, much different from their countryside fellows, look at tourists as walking ATM. In the night many Mongolian men get drunk and love to pick a fight for no reason with any foreigner in sight. Prices are officially and unofficially different for locals and foreigners. Admission prices for tourist attractions can be ten times higher for foreigners. Restaurants and other places will take any opportunity to rip foreigners off, the police being corrupt and useless. That’s the many explanations I got from my gang of Mongolian friends who took care of me… I did see many people drunk and picking a fight. The countryside like around Hovsgol Lake is much more welcoming.
It was a very intense week. Clubbing included. In one of the upscale discos (Metropolis, at the Sky Shopping Center) the police came to close it at 2 am. No problem, we went to another well hidden but well known disco (Brilliant) where we walked out after 5 am.
Impressive was watching the arrival of the horse race in the grassland far away from UB’s center. A huge crowd and scenes that reminded me of the movie “Mad Max”. And the Ghinggis Khan Army I run into. Yes, 500 of fiery horsemen. The pics look like taken from a movie.
UB has some interesting museums, a bit old fashioned but a discovery tour in the rich history of Ghinggis Khan who was more than a blood-thirsty invader as we mostly know him. You can also find a small magazine “That’s Ulaanbaatar”, not so flashy as our “That’s Beijing” but it helped me locate some cool spots.
Food is soso, unless you go to one of the several nice foreign restaurants (German, Irish, etc.).
Well, so much to write about. A small book.
Click this link to see some of my 550 pics:
http://homepage.mac.com/bjprc/PhotoAlbum1.html
Enjoy!
Don’t look for me!
Well yes. I am going to disappear for two weeks, starting this Saturday 30 June. heading to somewhere in Mongolia where there is no e-mail and no mobile.
It’s going to be a real adventure. I really need this crazy break and I am curious myself how I am going to go through those two weeks filled with the unknown. Well unknown except for the ultra-marathon at around 2,000 meters. And Mongolia’s National Day celebrations.
The right moment for some extracts of my two favorite Flemish poems from the Middle Ages:
Het daghet inden oosten,
Het lichtet overal.
Hoe luttel weet mijn liefken
Och waer ick henen sal
Egidius, waer bestu bleven?
Mi lanct na di, gheselle mijn!
Du coors die doot, du liets mi tleven.
The Mongolia Marathon – I take the challenge!
Despite all good advice from family and others, I decided to join the very challenging “Mongolia Marathon”, that will take place in Mongolia on 4 July 2007. Well, at least I “only” run the Marathon. The other choice is the 100 Km. The circuit is very hard:
The event course follows a lakeside single track north of Camp Toilogt through woods and over windblown lowlands for the first 12 Km. You run in the dark, in a forest – the start is at 4:30 am. Runners (grand total maybe 60 or 70?) need their own flashlight to try to find the track. Temperature in 2005 was 2C at the start. In the next 5 Km, the course departs the lake (altitude 1650 meters) and heads up over 700 meters into the mountains to spectacular views and 2,300 meter Chichee Pass.
That’s not the only mountain in the circuit… Later in the day, temperature can go up to 30C. Or it can rain…
One also needs to carry a substantial survival kit:
Band-aid & disinfectant (open wounds, blisters) – Elastic band (sprained ankle/knee) – Antiseptic wound cream for sores – Muscle relaxant, chili plaster or poultice in case of stiff neck, pinched nerves or injured muscles – vitamin C and other cold medicine – stomach medicine (diarrhea) – your preferred pain killer/aspirin – Rain proof gear for top and bottom – One emergency blanket – One whistle, one note pad and 2 small plastic bags – Emergency food: one bar of Swiss military chocolate – The course map and profile – Compass – One scarf of your own (100 x 30 cm approximately) or equivalent cloth (useful also as a bandage or splint) – Your own liquid containers with a minimum capacity of 1.5 liters – Water disinfecting tablets.
Some of those are provided by the organizers.
The organizers have a nice website, see: Mongolia Sunrise to Sunset (www.ultramongolia.com)
Wish me luck… Two months of hard training ahead.