| General Clothing and Gear
List
Dress is very informal, basic knockabout and
camping clothes are your best bet. Chinese and
Mongolian sensibilities and common sense as a
traveler and guest, dictate a degree of modesty in
the cut and color of the clothing you wear. Hotel
laundry services are available (and expensive)in
Beijing and Ulaan Bataar but you will need to bring
two or three changes of clothing for the horseback
portion of the trip. This basic list will be
entirely adequate for the demands of our horseback
treks. There are a few specialized items required
for kayaking and rafting trips which are included in
the trip packets. Weather in Mongolia and the riding
areas of Tibet and Xinjiang will be in the 60's and
70's during the day, but nights will be cold.
Beijing will be hot and humid.
- Sleeping
bag (four-season, synthetic fill, mummy style) -
Ensolite pad or Thermorest inflatable pad (for
ground insulation) - 1 pair walking shorts - 2
pair jeans or riding pants - 4 shirts or t-shirts
(one long-sleeved) - 4 sets underwear - 1
pair warm, water repellant gloves - 1 warm cap or
hat, wool or pile - 5 pair socks (2 pair should
be wool and knee-high for riding) - 2 bandanas or
scarves - Women: Jogbra or other suitable sporty
support - Comfortable footwear for city and
village walking (sturdy walking shoes or tennis
shoes or lightweight hiking boots well broken in)
- Riding boots, well broken in (western or english)
OR half chaps to wear with walking/hiking shoes -
GOOD RAINGEAR: parka and rainpants or chaps (NO
PONCHOS!) This is a critical item for your comfort
and safety. Do NOT skimp: bring quality, durable
raingear. - Long underwear for cold nights (polypropelene
or capilene) - Wool sweater, wool shirt or pile/polypropelen
sweater - Pile jacket or down vest (something for
warmth) - one piece bathing suit - sun hat or
visor - sturdy daypack or fannypack (preferred
for comfort while riding) - minimum 1 liter water
bottle (leather bota bags work great for riding)
- camera with plenty of film - flashlight with
EXTRA batteries - sunglasses - extra glasses
or contacts for those who wear them - sunscreen
- personal hygiene items including basic cold
medicine, aspirin, etc. - camp mug (insulated,
tough plastic is best) - 25 feet of nylon
parachute cord( you can never have too much) -
insect repellent (concentrated) - pocket knife
- biodegradable soap or Campsuds - lightweight
snacks like granola bars, fruit bark, trail mix,
nuts, tea bags that you can't start the day without.
- vitamins - toliet paper - small luggage
padlocks (required on some airlines) - small hand
towel and washcloth USEFUL ITEMS: Small
binoculars, travel alarm clock, journal and pen,
extra baggage tags.
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