Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 2016)
20 Wednesday, September 21, 2016 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon Commentary... The hour of dogs a-barkin’ By lynn Woodward Correspondent “It’s the hour of dogs a-barkin’,” as Tom Russell sings about Mexico. Seems to be true in the countryside of Mongolia as well. This night though, Stinky, Guetuerma and a nameless pup that belongs to someone else but is here most of the time, were barking well past dark out- side my ger (Mongolian for “yurt.”). It had been an unharmoni- ous day for them: this after- noon, a large aggressive male dog hung around camp. Most dogs here are “Mongolian Dog” — black with brown points; few are neutered. The dogs strutted, snarling and posturing; the intruder chose a bone from a myriad of cow, horse and sheep legs the other dogs had brought in, and simply lay down to gnaw for hours. Around dusk, a bellowing had ensued down the hill by the Terelj River. The black- and-white Holstein-looking bull lumbered up to where my hosts were milking. Yadmaa and Davasuren encouraged the bull to stop harassing their cows. So the bull stomped through the ger camp, sling- ing slobber. The dogs glared back. Very skunky, he was. Definitely looking for some- one particular. Finally, far up the hill an answer to his bellows drew him in that direction. Every morning and night, Davasuren drags each of the dozen-or-so calves by an ear into the small post-and-rail round pen, then deftly weaves a loop of one-inch webbing from a corral post around the horns of each cow to keep them anchored for milk- ing. On horseback, Yadmaa pushes each udderly empty cow on up the hill. Each day, a young man on horseback pushed sev- eral hundred goats and sheep through the “front yard,” up- valley in the morning and down-valley in the evening. One day, I watched a palo- mino stallion wander through and chase Yadmaa’s horse. Fences? Very few. Open range everywhere, even in the cities. Fences are not of the nomad mentality. Every evening, Yadmaa unsaddled his horse and lit fires in the ger’s wood- stoves (no matches, just a minute with a butane torch). Davasuren would then appear in my ger with dinner, simi- lar to breakfast or lunch, of mutton, potatoes, cabbage and carrots. I thanked her, “Bayarlalaa” (pronounced something like “bye errtth la”); it was the first of four words I learned, although my pronunciation always made the Mongolians laugh. My hosts knew about 40 words of English — nouns. While gestures and smiles led to some understanding; soon I yearned for more communi- cation, so I got out my copy of Mongolian phrases. But I didn’t want to tell them to “turn left” or ask “where to buy cashmere.” I wanted to know what it was like to grow up here. How the fall of the Soviet Union changed their lives. If they’d ever been lost in a blizzard. If they’d ever been healed by a shaman… And I couldn’t; so I watched and listened. One afternoon, Davasuren appeared with walking-fin- gers and come-hither ges- tures. We walked to a casually fenced area of maybe four acres; this fence keeps ani- mals out, not in. Davasuren started raking a section of cut dry grass with a pitchfork that Yadmaa repaired earlier that day with a spare ger pole for a new handle. Soon, I took over the raking and she pulled out her smart phone and made a call. Yadmaa drove into the field with two more pitch- forks, both with handles made of straight branches, bark smoothed from use. The tractor was left running, as it requires a roll-start. We all raked and forked the grass into the cart. Yadmaa gestured that I should get up on the cart and stomp down the hay. I did, as they forked more hay on. And more. I stomped and teetered about a foot above the cart walls and a good five feet off the ground. Finally, they decided no more hay would cling to the angle of repose, so I carefully leaped off the cart. They tied the load, then Yadmaa drove the tractor half a kilometer to their winter camp and unloaded the hay. Take two, and that section was done. Mongolians set up their gers wherever they want; little of the land outside of the cities is privately owned. Yadmaa and Davasuren don’t move far summer to winter. Some families move every season, as their ancestors did, quite a distance. They dismantle and move the gers in open-bed utility trucks. In Yadmaa and Davasuren’s tidy ger there isn’t much: a wood- stove for heat and cooking, kitchen shelf and utensils, a small bed each, a dresser with photos displayed, a small wardrobe, a place for shoes, an extra car battery, his bow and arrows, her purse, a blan- ket with a stitched image of Chinggis Khaan on the wall, a waist-high blue plastic barrel photo by gana Davasuren and Yadmaa and lynn Woodward. of fermenting cow’s milk. One bare light bulb hangs from the ceiling; no running water, but only a short walk to an outhouse and drip-bucket for hand-washing. Along the ger’s outside wall are a satel- lite dish, solar panel, water barrels. Later I walked up to their winter camp. The large hay pen was about a sixth full and Yadmaa indicated that it would be completely full before winter. Several pens form the compound, where their horse, goats, cattle and sheep will stay. The pens have walled and covered sections, with rails of tree trunks and dirt and plants on the roof. Cow dung has been pressed into the cracks between the bark-on logs to keep the wind from blowing through. The skull of a large canine was on one of the pen roofs. Later, through an interpreter, I learned that it’s a wolf skull and is believed to help pro- tect the livestock. Last winter was an especially cold one; a cow’s tail broke off. The coming winter is predicted to be another hard one. The dogs finally quit bark- ing; I slept deeply through only a hard frost of a summer night and woke to be further intrigued by a people merg- ing the slick new stuff into an ancient way of life. photo by lynn woodward guertuerma and the pup soaking up sun. Most dogs here are “Mongolian Dog,” black with brown points. Hope for a child. Change for a nation. DON’T MISS OUT! Take a look at this week’s inserts in The Nugget: • BI-MART: Football season is here! Great savings now on LED TVs , some HD, screen sizes from 24" to 50" with starting prices as low as $129.99! • RAY’S FOOD PLACE: The other white meat! Pork Shoulder Roast , (Smithfi eld Prime, bone-in), on special now for just $1.99 per pound! There are a million perfectly understandable reasons not to help. Thankfully, love trumps them all. $37 a month. All the difference in the world. Sponsor a child with a local organization at HopeAfricaKids.com This ad sponsored by The Nugget Newspaper.