On Saturday (the 20th) I
tried to arrange several meetings with students, but Bayasaa was the
only one who ended up being able to make it. We met at the public
library around 10:00 in the morning and ended our meeting close to 12:30. We talked about a rather wide
variety of things, ranging from his profession and studies (he's a
radiologist/medical imaging specialist in Ulan Bator Central
Hospital), his wife's profession (she a radiotherapist), the fact
that he lives alone and must do his own cooking (and what he cooks),
hunting (both here and in Mongolia), as well as other interesting
facts about the US and Mongolia.
Mongolia has a population of around
2,800,000 people and 40 some million livestock, of which 20 some
million are cashmere goats. It also has large numbers of sheep,
cattle, horses and Bactrian camels. If I understand correctly
Bayasaa's father owns some kind of farm or ranch, and Bayasaa has
some animals of his own there. When he retires he plans on having a
farm and keeping some cattle. I talked some about my family's dairy
farm and showed various pictures that I had on my computer, including
pictures from when we had our cheese operation. He seemed to find
those quite interesting, and when I came to some pictures of French
mold ripened cheeses he thought that the cheese was rotten until I
explained that mold is normal on some cheese and is actually
Penicillin mold.
Mongolia has a very cold climate.
Bayasaa said that the winter daytime high temperature where he lives
might only reach -30F. I asked him how they heat their houses in the
winter and the best I could tell (his vocabulary, like most language
learners, has very pronounced strong/weak areas) they use coal fired
steam heating systems. Coal is one of the main mineral resources (as
are gold and copper), and if I understand correctly many areas do not
have very many trees, so I suppose coal is the natural choice for
heating. From what I understand the capital city (Ulan Bator) has
very serious pollution problems.
Bayasaa (sort of joking) said
something about maybe after he is done with his studies in Japan that
he will see me teaching English in Mongolia. He said there is a very
high demand for English teachers, and it seems they can make a decent
wage there.
Quite a few times in our
conversation we would come to a word that Bayasaa didn't understand,
so I would write it down on his notepad and then he would look it up
in his translator dictionary on his phone. The next time I see him I
am going to suggest that he should keep a list of new words that he
encounters in conversations and try to learn them, since it is likely
that if he encountered them once he will meet them again.
I think it is great you and your partner were able to talk for so long. I also think keeping a list of new words is a great suggestion to help him with new vocab.
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