Quote:
Originally Posted by Ron Youngs
Hi--
A buddy and I are riding from Moscow to Vladivosok next summer. I will be on a VStrom 650; he will be on a bmw 1200 cc bike. We would like to go to Ulaanbaatar but are concerned about roads -- are they paved now, etc.
Do any of you know if, once we get to the Russia/Mongolia border on the west side of Mongolia, the road on into Ulaanbaatar is paved?
If not, is there a different route we can take from Russia into Ulaanbaatar (possibly coming from the north)?
Ron
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Crossing Mongolia is an absolutely amazing experience and very doable. You can enter western Mongolia at Tashanta/Tsagaanuur down to Ulgii, Mongolia, where you'd want to spend a night or two (Blue Wolf Ger is good).
Then from western Mongolia to Ulaan Baatar you have a choice of southern, central and northern routes.
The southern route is said to be easiest (Ulgii, Khovd, Altai, Bayankhongor, Arvaikheer to UB). I rode that with another rider May 2016. The section from Bayankhongor to UB is all paved, and there’s a lot of paving under way between Ulgii and Bayankhongor – offroad sections are slowly disappearing.
For difficulty on the offroad sections, I’d rate the southern route a 2 or 3, 10 being the toughest. It’s just above beginner level IMHO. You have some sections of light-ish sand, but it was never deep. And a few water crossings (which can change after rains). The largest water crossing is at a ger village, and there’s a fair number of cars, trucks and bikes crossing – no worries.
While I was there, I met at least six or eight BMW 1200 riders who crossed Mongolia by southern and central routes… and many other riders on lighter bikes. I was on a DR650 and my buddy, a TransAlp.
Would be a shame to miss one of the premier adv moto destinations on the planet! Mongolia is so unique, gorgeous and unforgettable. In retrospect I wish we’d done the more scenic central route, but c’est la vie… May was early in the season and temps were colder farther north.
BTW, the north-south road between UB and Russia is completely paved. After crossing Mongolia to UB, I took the road north in Russia and on to Vlad.