We left China today and crossed the border to Mongolia. The border would probably be quiet without 300 odd P2P competitors and officials all crossing at once.
At the China departure
point, drivers are separated from navigators.
Navigators get to walk through and wait, while the drivers get the cars
and drive through. Well – it takes about
3 hours and the rally organizers waive all time penalties at a restart before
the first test.
The good bit is that in the
Gobi desert you can drive anywhere you want. If you can’t see a track just
drive in the direction of the waypoint. You
can usually go safely go cross country. There are no stumps, no big boulders (for this bit of Mongolia anyway). Usually there are multiple tracks but they are
mostly going to the same endpoint. It’s
great for passing other cars.
We reached the camp site
and thought what a great camping site. Flat smooth – start putting up the
tent. We wondered how dust got into the
boot, then “Holy hell”, the left rear strut is about to pop through the top.
Mark and I despaired. Seemed like a huge problem, but regular P2P competitors
told us the ERA mechanics would help and they did. We emptied everything out of the boot, moved
away from the tent as welding sparks might damage the tent, removed the strut
etc .
The ERA mechanics were
great (above). They worked out how best to repair it and hammered, welded and added
bits to affect a fix. All good but was
2am by the time we got in the sleeping bag.
I didn’t mention the
howling freezing cold wind that seems to come and go out in the desert. A couple of hours after going to bed, the
tent felt like it was going to blow away and I was cold. Note for next camping
night. Wear the thermals and rally jacket to bed.
Problems next morning: Can’t find stuff and there is no petrol at the
camp as many expected.
All Mark’s shirts, socks etc have disappeared, as has a fire extinguisher and the hold-down clamp for the spare wheels. Our current thinking is that the clean up guys (a Mongolian tour company chooses the camp site and provides the facilities including clean up people) may have thought it was rubbish and binned it sometime in the late evening or early morning. We are trying to contact them. The clothes could also have just blown away but not the extinguisher or the hold-down clamp.
All Mark’s shirts, socks etc have disappeared, as has a fire extinguisher and the hold-down clamp for the spare wheels. Our current thinking is that the clean up guys (a Mongolian tour company chooses the camp site and provides the facilities including clean up people) may have thought it was rubbish and binned it sometime in the late evening or early morning. We are trying to contact them. The clothes could also have just blown away but not the extinguisher or the hold-down clamp.
The organizers arranged fuel
for those desperate to get fuel at a village 13km down the road but they only
had limited quantities of 80 octane fuel.
More about that later.
Our times on the “tests”
(stages) were OK.
Results after Day 3:
More photos from Erenhot to Undurshireet:
Erenhot hotel carpark |
Starting Day 3 |
One the road - sort of |
On the road in Mongolia:
Undurshireet campground:
Setting up camp |
Undurshireet campground amenities |
Rally communications outpost |
Spares carried by our Belgian teammates |
Undurshireet campground |
(above and below) Locals checking us out |
Our accommodation for the night (and for several more after the rest day in Ulaan Baatar) |
For anyone interested in seeing the rally cars positions via the tracking device on each car, click here:
or, to check on the complete field, go to: www.rpsrally.com/tracking
Can't believe peeps would nick Marks wardrobe....great spares
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