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jpak

(41,758 posts)
Mon Jul 29, 2019, 05:48 PM Jul 2019

The Deadly Winters That Have Transformed Life For Herders In Mongolia

https://www.npr.org/2019/07/29/737990796/the-deadly-winters-that-have-transformed-life-for-herders-in-mongolia

On a frigid morning in January 2000, Oyutan Gonchig rose at first light to check on his animals. A blanket of snow — over a foot deep — had fallen in the night. He shoveled himself out of his ger, a felt-covered tent traditionally used by semi-nomadic herders. The temperature was minus 10 degrees Fahrenheit, the kind of cold that freezes your eyelashes and stiffens your joints.

Stepping over the threshold and into this blindingly white world, he noticed it was eerily quiet outside.

"Everything was covered by snow. There was no way to distinguish the sheep trails," he remembers. "There were corpses."

A dozen dead animals — his animals, sheep and goats he had raised from birth — had collapsed in the snow. Those still alive were struggling to find grass beneath the snowdrifts, piled high by the biting wind. He felt horrified, and helpless.

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The Deadly Winters That Have Transformed Life For Herders In Mongolia (Original Post) jpak Jul 2019 OP
I heard that on NPR this morning. Climate change has many faces, none positive from what I can see. dem4decades Jul 2019 #1
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