Mongolian Nature and Culture

{Mongolian Yurt}
Where shall I put my next erection?

When I am erecting a new mongolian yurt ?
http://pics.livejournal.com/yarrowkat/pic/00001b74/s640×480

Good stuff mate you are funny keep them coming your a star ha ha ha

{camels}
Do NO Hump camels produce lots of sweat?Is it the camels NO Hump because they have little or nothing to eat?

According to one of the question ask in my test paper Question ask:
Some camels do not have humps because they_________________
a) do not have to work b) produce a lot of sweat c) have little to eat
d) produce urine with high water content

They only sweat above a certain temperature, and their sweat evaporates from the skin, not the fur. This gives camels the power to control their body temperature and preserve 5 liters of water a day.

a camel does not store water in its hump. It is in fact a mound of fatty tissue from which the animal draws energy when food is hard to find.

{mongolian horses}
black footed ferrrets,nearly extinct.?

Cantors giant turtle and the mongolian wild horse. Do you think we will ever have a world where human caused habitat destruction will no longer put animals in a continual struggle for survival.

Some what for they are on the federal protection list, and they are also chicken killers and Farmers use to kill them by Poisoning and trapping them for their fur by the ton… I also have ferrets as pets and I love them dearly…………..

{mongolian landscape}
Language needed to visit Mongolia?

I looked at some pictures recently that showed how beautiful Mongolia’s landscape is. Do many people speak English as well as Mongolian in Mongolia? How hard is the language to learn? Is it relatively safe to travel there? What are the people like?

Thanks. :D

Mongolian is spoken by 90% of the population. And is extremely similar to Russian, and you may get by knowing a little Russian. The other 10 percent are nomadic, tribal languages that are close to impossible to learn. But some Russian would take you a far way.

{mongolian steppes}
Mongolian horses in winter…what would they eat?

When Mongolian horses were in Russia during the 13th-15th centuries, they obviously lived through winters. These horses would ideally eat fresh grass in grasslands or steppes, but in winter, what kinds of foods would they eat? Grains? How much water does a very active horse need to drink in a northern winter?

The Mongol horses are very small, what we’d consider ponies actually. Probably like the Icelandic horses, they have a very efficient digestive system that makes the most out of the sparce pickings of their homeland. They know to paw through the snow to find food in the winter, and emerge in the spring looking like emaciated wraiths. Survival of the fittest would definately prevail.

{Gobi Desert}
Help, we are trapped in the Gobi Desert!?

My name is John Brown, and me and my friends, Tylor, George, and Mike, are trapped in the Gobi Desert. We have no idea where we are. We were able to type this message using my old Cell Phone. We need urgant help, or else we will die. We do not know what to do. The Gobi Desert is a massive, hot place. We are surrounded by sand dunes. Are we doomed?

Riddle me this.

If you have cell phone coverage my guess is that you are within walking distance of civilization. I would suggest you either look for the tower that picks up your signal and walk to it, or walk until you have no more signal then turn and go back the other way.