Wild Mongolia
with Tugi
Wild Mongolia
with Tugi

Slow Gobi · 11 days · golden hour
The iconic southern Gobi loop, extended. Same places as June's fast run — with three extra days to actually be in them. Late August: warmer light, cooler nights, fewer flies.

Khongoryn Els
The Singing Dunes
Dates
Aug 18 – 28, 2026
Days
11
Group
5 – 7
Region
South + Central
Pace
Medium · breathing room
Price
$1,200
A letter from Tugi
Southern Gobi is the slower, better-paced version of the June Gobi Glimpse tour. The route covers the same essentials — Dalanzadgad, Yoliin Am, a night with a camel family in the open Gobi, Khongoriin Els, Flaming Cliffs, then north through central — but we take eleven days, which changes everything.
Extra time means extra hikes. Extra time at the dunes. A proper second night in the desert. A real day hiking into the Orkhon waterfall gorge. A longer soak at Tsenkher. A hot-spring morning instead of rushing out.
Late August is also when the Gobi cools off and the central steppe turns golden — different colour palette than the June version, quieter light, fewer flies. If you can only pick one Gobi trip, this one is my favourite.
Itinerary
Gobi
📍Ulaanbaatar·Dalanzadgad
🚐🏙️
Down to the gateway of the Gobi — ~560 km south, or a 1-hour flight if you'd rather save the day. Hotel night in Dalanzadgad.
Most groups choose to fly down — saves a day, costs a bit more. If we drive, we split it with stops at Baga Gazriin Chuluu rock formations and a lunch break in Mandalgovi. Either way, we sleep in Dalanzadgad — last hot shower for a few days. Walk the bazaar in the evening if you want.
📍Dalanzadgad·Gurvansaikhan park·Yoliin Am ice canyon·Family ger
🚐🥾🛖
Two-hour drive into Gurvansaikhan National Park. Afternoon walk up the ice canyon — narrow gorge with ice that holds till August.
Yoliin Am is the most famous of the Gobi canyons for good reason — it's narrow enough that the sun barely touches the floor, which keeps ice on the riverbed deep into summer. We walk in about 3 km on the first afternoon, get a feel for the place, then back to the family ger for dinner.
📍Yoliin Am gorge·Vulture cliffs·Family ger
🥾🏔️
Full day in the canyon. Hike where the ice sits deepest, watch for lammergeier vultures. Slow evening at camp.
Today belongs to the canyon. Bring water and a layer — even in August, the cliff shadows are cold. Vultures nest on the upper rocks; you'll usually see at least one circling. We picnic where the gorge opens and walk back down by mid-afternoon.
📍Gobi steppe·Camel herder family·Open-space camp
🐪🏕️🍴✨
Morning with a camel-herder family — learn the harness, ride for a few hours into the open Gobi. No ger, no walls — we sleep in the open with the family, dinner around the fire.
This is the kind of night you remember years later. The family has around 200 camels; they move twice a year and we catch them at their summer ground. We help set up the evening camp (mostly they let us help), share dinner — boiled mutton, milk tea, maybe some airag if they offer — and sleep on thick felt mats out under the sky. Stars unfiltered. Camels close by.
📍Open Gobi·Khongoriin Els · Singing Dunes
🚐🥾🏔️
Short drive to the Singing Dunes. Climb the main dune at sunset, walk the ridge, photography all evening. Camp at the foot.
Khongoriin Els is 100 km long and tops out at 800 m of sand. The 'singing' is the sound the dune face makes when sand slides — like a low drone, eerie the first time. We aim to be on top for sunset; coming down is much easier (and faster) than going up.
📍Khongoriin·Bayanzag · Flaming Cliffs·Red-rock canyon
🚐🥾🛕
~250 km east to Bayanzag — the Flaming Cliffs. Dinosaur eggs were first discovered here in 1923. Red-rock hike at golden hour. Ger camp.
Roy Chapman Andrews' 1923 expedition found the first dinosaur eggs ever identified, right at these cliffs. The rock turns to a deep red at golden hour — about as Mars-on-Earth as it gets. We hike the rim trail then drop into a small canyon for the last light.
Central
📍Bayanzag·Mandalgovi·Orkhon Valley family camp
🚐
The long transition day — ~8 hours on the road. Desert greens into steppe by afternoon. Orkhon Valley family camp for the night.
This is the leg that earns you the second half. Mostly paved, occasionally washboard. We stop at a few overlooks, pick up groceries somewhere along the way. By dusk the landscape has changed completely — grass, herds, the first proper rivers.
📍Orkhon Valley·Ulaan Tsutgalan waterfall·River gorge
🥾🌊🍴
Drive and hike to Ulaan Tsutgalan waterfall. Walk down into the gorge. Slow afternoon. Khorkhog for dinner.
The waterfall is small but the gorge is genuinely beautiful — basalt walls, swallows nesting in the cracks. We pack a lunch, walk in for swims and photos, hang around till mid-afternoon. Family camp again that night with khorkhog (lamb cooked on hot stones in a sealed pot).
📍Orkhon·Tsenkher springs·Wooden pool camp
🚐♨️✨
South to the springs — 86°C at the source, piped into wooden tubs. Long soak under the stars. First real bath in a week.
By day nine your body knows it's been to the desert and back. Tsenkher answers the question with hot mineral water. Tubs at varying temperatures — soak, read, soak again. Dinner at the camp, then a final hot soak after dark.
📍Tsenkher·Family camp · lunch·Karakorum·Erdene Zuu Monastery
🚐🛕🛖
Short drive to Karakorum via a family camp for lunch. Erdene Zuu Monastery in the afternoon. Ger night near the ruins.
Erdene Zuu is the oldest surviving Buddhist monastery in Mongolia — 16th century, built from the stones of the old Mongol capital. Slow afternoon walk through the courtyards, then a final ger night nearby.
📍Karakorum·Ulaanbaatar
🚐🏙️
~6 hours back east on paved road. Drop-off in UB by late afternoon. Group dinner that night if you're up for it.
Last drive. Most groups want a real shower and a real bed first; we can do an optional group dinner around 7pm at a place I like in central UB. Flights home the next day.
Act I · The Gobi

“In August the Gobi loses its glare. The light goes warm, the wind drops, the country finally lets you sit with it.”



The central leg
The country's heart. Orkhon Valley waterfalls, Erdene Zuu and the ruins of Karakorum, the dormant Khorgo volcano, the pale water of Terkhiin Tsagaan Nuur, Tsenkher hot springs, and long evenings at a family ger camp with khorkhog on the fire.






Family stays
On this trip you get seven nights with nomadic families and two in the desert itself. The food is buuz, khuushuur, khorkhog, endless milk tea, and whatever the camp is harvesting (late August means wild onions, roots, and berries).
Kids, dogs, goats, wind, sunset. This is the part of the trip you remember most clearly a year later.
Your first ger visit
Practicals
If June fits better, Gobi Glimpse + Central (June 10 – 18) covers similar ground earlier in the season.
Before you apply
Same places. Three more days. Gobi Glimpse (June) is tight — long driving days back-to-back. Southern Gobi (August) has breathing room — full days at the dunes, the canyon, the family camp. Same price-per-day, different experience.
Days 18–26 °C, nights 4–12 °C. Much gentler than June. Bring a real sleeping bag and you'll love the desert nights.
No. Tsenkher gets busier in July for Naadam, but by late August it's mostly locals and our group. You'll have a pool to yourselves most evenings.
Camel at Khongoriin Els (~2 hours, gentle). Optional horse day at the Orkhon family camp. No technical riding required.
Most areas yes, but always check with me first — Bayanzag and the monastery have rules. I know where flying is fine and where it'll get you yelled at.
4 – 6. Smaller than Naadam or the festival — the drive days work better with fewer people.
Come with me
The Gobi with time to breathe. Small group of 4 – 6. Bring a friend and save 15% each.