Of all the places in the world, Mongolia is probably one of the most varied destinations, offering a wider range of fascinating landscapes: rivers and streams that flow into Lake Hovsgol - the cleanest freshwater lake on the planet -, unspoilt taiga forests, steppes, majestic mountain ranges and, of course, the desert.
As expected, the highlights of each one of the region are unique and varied: from the Kazakh nomads and their golden eagles, hunting up and down the mountains of western Mongolia, to the sand dunes in the Gobi Desert, that seem to whistle an evocative melody to the explorers from 180 meters high.
And, of course, the intense orange colour of the Flaming Cliffs at sunset, named in the early 1920s by paleontologist Roy Chapman Andrews, director of the American Museum of Natural History during an expedition through Central Asia.