Saturday

24 Days Till Christmas!

Can you believe that it is already December? Where did the rest of the year go? I really don't know where the time has gone from coming to Mongolia in August and realizing it is already December. Crazy crazy crazy.

I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving holiday this year. My actual Thanksgiving day meal (on the Thursday) was a cheesy ramen that I ate by myself at my home. But don't loose heart! I more than made up for it on the following Saturday with a great party with my team here in UB. We met at a coffee shop that we rented for the afternoon and shared the traditional Thanksgiving fare with everyone: chicken (no turkeys to be found in this city), mashed potatoes, yams 2 ways, rolls, salad, corn, cranberry sauce, apple salad, deviled eggs - brought by yours truly, and a pumpkin cake with cream cheese frosting for dessert. It really was a great time. We spent time in the Word and time uplifting one another as the afternoon went on. Then after, some of us went to a teammates house and watched the movie Hook and played phase 10. It was a great day.

How was your Thanksgiving? I hope it was filled with friends, family, and great food. I hope your coming holiday season is filled with love, laughter, and great memories! Here are some pictures I hope you all enjoy!


 My Teammate KimO and her coffee

 KimO and Brandie

 
 My coffee - yummmmmmmmmmmmmm


 
Snow outside of my friend's apartment



 A little bit of shopping....
 What ? They didn't have any 'real' sized carts......


Monday

Happy November!

Can you believe it has been 198 days since my last blog post?

I can....and I am sorry! Thank you for those faithful that have been checking my blog site consistently for the last few months and for those who happened to stumble on my blog - here is a new post!

This year in Mongolia, I am a teacher at a Korean/English University called MIU - Mongolia International University. I am teaching three classes for the English department as well as two classes for the General Education department. I am teaching freshmen to seniors from a variety of different backgrounds: Russian, Mongolian, Korean, Chinese, and Inner Mongolian. Teaching conversational English and practicing English are some of my more favorite classes, although next term I am hoping to teach one less class. These 5 classes per week are a bit much for this first time University teacher but not to worry. I have a great partner on my side.

Here are some pictures that I have taken the past few months since coming back to Mongolia from a wonderful and restful summer at  home!

 My University!
 Welcome to the New Term!
 New Roommate (and our neat pink masks)
 Sukhbaatar Square at night
 Before leaving on a weekend in the Countryside
 My SCP students! (Student Care People)
 Freshmen!
 Me and Renne
 Some random people I saw.... ;)
EE Department!


Thursday

Spring in Mongolia!


A Spring Day in Mongolia. About 30 minutes after finishing this video, the sky was clear and clouds were out. In two hours, all evidence of the snow was gone but the ground was a little bit wet. Bring on the precipitation! We need it!!

Friday

New Year! New Post!

Greetings and Salutations! Happy New Year!

I was feeling nostalgic the other day and found this School House Rock video I would like to share:



I hope that everyone had a great holiday season and that you all are well on your way to keeping many of those new year's resolutions you made alive and well. This year I hope will come and go slower than this past year, I mean amazing things have happened! Here is a year in review:

January 2011 - getting ready to head for training in Colorado.
February 2011 - made the journey to Fort Collins Colorado to be trained by wonderful people. Received some fantastic information and great help in planning what to bring with me when traveling to Mongolia.
March 2011 - Mongolia here I come! I left on the 28th of Feb and arrived on the 1st of March. Moved into my apartment and started language school. Traveled around the city and visited many places like Sukhbaatar Square, got lost, rode a bus by myself to a teammates with only 3 or 4 phone calls, and more. Began training for the EXCEL program and helped lead a 7 day English seminar.
April 2011 - finished EXCEL seminar, celebrated Easter with the team and went to Terelj. Watched the sheep be prepared to make Khorkhog and ate/served said dish: pressure cooked mutton, potatoes, carrots, and onions with hot rocks.
May 2011 - continuing with language class, helped get the EXCEL graduation set up and cut/slice/serve cake to the families of those graduating. Baked my first sour cream dutch apple pie (delicious by the way). Visited Gandan - the  biggest temple in UB, houses the largest standing Buddha statue in the world, and watched people feed the pigeons. Observed a lantern festival and traveled to northern Mongolia to see the 'mother tree' - a place where Buddhist and others go to pray. Saying good-bye forever to some teammates while other merely a 'see you later'.
June 2011 - celebrated my first 'Children's Day' by taking a hike with a good friend of mine, teammate's parents came to visit, roommate's birthday, and went to a Mongolian culture show. Climbed the Zisan monument (several times) and got my picture taken with a golden eagle.
July 2011 - Happy 4th of July! Celebrated this with friends, made potato salad and pickles, and watched some kids play baseball from the English Co-Op school. Enjoyed the preparations for the Mongolian celebration of Naadam (the 11-13th each and every year) and enjoyed seeing all that there was to see during this celebration: wrestling, archery, and horse racing as well as eating hosher (fried meat pies), spending time with friends/teammates, and trying airag or fermented mare's milk.....eew.
August 2011 - teammates from the states making their way back to Mongolia, finishing up language class, and teaching a 3 week course for a high school (the Summer Sampler) with my friends Matt and Matthew. Teaching Biology, Chemistry, and English, I was able to 'tap into' what I had learned in college. Went to the Coca-Cola bottling factory for all of Mongolia and got to drink all the coke zero that I wanted! Fantastic!! Fall training at Terelj where I rode a horse who got tired and sat down while I was still on it.....fun times. 
September 2011 - began working with my students (teachers) in EXCEL and began teaching! Hurray!! Grading homework, preparing lessons, and observing teachers.....fun fun fun. Went north again with some friends and saw the Mother Tree again, still a tree and people were still praying to it. First snow falls on the 28th....broke out the warm coat. Finally moved into an apartment of my own (and my roommates) at the beginning of the month. Huzzah!
October 2011 - still teaching. Started making tortillas with my friend Jennifer once every two weeks. Teaching, observing, teaching, observing, grading, grading, grading.....etc.
November 2011 - my friend Bonnie came and took me to the orphanage that she has been supporting for more than 10 years. Made plarn to make a bag (which I finished in Jan 2012) and the bag turned into a garbage can....what can I say? Made ricotta cheese which unfortunately went fuzzy before it was used. Snow snow snow and more snow. Went to the circus (the Wizard of Oz) with Kevin, Pam, and Aleta. Roommate's father came to town, went sight-seeing with them and some good Mongolian friends. Saw the huge stainless steel Chinggis Khaan and a really neat monastery. Celebrated Thanksgiving at our director's house with the entire team. Ate turkey, stuffing, corn bread/pudding, rolls, cranberry sauce (yeah!), pumpkin pie, Mongolian beef salad, apple pie, mashed potatoes and more. 
December 2011 - helped my friend Jess create a nativity set. Got my first cold that lasted for almost 3 weeks. I now think it was two separate colds. Oh well, bought stock in Kleenex. Christmas party with the team, cookie decorating contest, pizza, and food food food. Received a fantastic Christmas box from the parents and another from friends/family at church. Celebrated Christmas day at church with the roommate and Pam/Kevin, had Indian food for lunch (delicious), and walked home past some ice sculptures in front of the Louis Vuitton building. Celebrated the New Year with friends, ate mexican pizza, played games, watched the Wrath of Khan and promptly fell asleep at 12.30.

So far the year has been pretty good and am starting to plan for vacation in Thailand later this month. So, until then, have a great year! 

End of the Year

Greetings and Salutations! I hope everyone had a great Christmas season and celebrated the real reason for the season. Happy New Year from Mongolia! I can't believe that I have been here for almost 11 months. Where does the time go?

Sorry for not posting these past 15 days - sickness and holidays came and encouraged me to not blog....but we shall see what 2012 brings! 

Here are some pictures of the holiday decorations around Ulaanbaatar


Ice Sculptures in front of the Louis Vuitton Building

 Paris

 New York!

Europe

Santa, he came to town along with his Coca-Cola 

 Marco Polo!

Sukhbaatar Square

 Pretty Sweet New Year's Tree

 Translation: Happy New Year!

Thursday

Yarn

Hi, my name is Pam and I’m a yarn-a-holic.

I had a sudden realization this week: I like yarn. I like to make things with yarn. I like to look at yarn. I like to buy yarn. I really like to go to yarn stores. I like to learn new ways to use yarn. Yarn yarn yarn yarn. However, there is a problem here in Mongolia: yarn is not that easy to find. When I do find it, it is either cheap acrylic yarn (not so bad if you are really desperate….which I am) or expensive Mongolian wool yarn.  So, I am sitting with the last skein of cotton yarn that I brought with me this March (I only brought 3 skeins) and am working it and then un-raveling and re-working it. But, I am learning as I go some new stitches and am using the crochet hooks that my parents sent in the last package.

Here are a couple of videos I have been watching and learning how to crochet in the ‘Tunisian’ style of crocheting.   






Sunday

Sites to See in Mongolia

Sightseeing in Mongolia is something that one should experience with people who know what they are doing. This past month my roommate's father came for a visit and we were taken to see some unique sites in the surrounding area by one of our EXCEL students. It was an amazing adventure and is something that I will remember always.

Chingis Khaan - 40 meters tall and covered in 250 tons of stainless steel

Traditional Mongolian Boot

The entrance to the statue

Our two guides! The one in the hat is our student and the other is her husband

The Golden Whip

Chingis Khaan - up close and personal

Holding the golden whip

Roommate's Dad!

Me, roommate, and Dad

Castle from the Movie Mongol (if you haven't seen it, check it out!)

The whole gang! (I'm taking the picture)

A puppy we met along the way 

Camels!

The entrance to the Princess Monastery

Steps leading to the monastary

Horses

Another puppy!

Fearless leader!

The monastery

Prayer wheels

Turtle Rock!