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I've found some mentions that don't make it quite clear if that's really the name of the river, or if they simply talk about "the river next to Khogorog". But with such thin data, I see no point in listing it at the moment. Note that『Хогорог гол』(with quotes) gives zero google hits. Of course, if you (or anyone) come across better information, feel free...
The rivulet at your coordinates probably can't be the right one, as the travel reports I've read talk about several hours of riding from Gurvansaikhan to Khogorog. --Latebird (talk) 18:49, 1 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe it depends on the rider and horse. Or hogorog can refer to the river and some distinct place nearby - like halhgol can refer to either the river or a settlement. I agree hogorog river probably does not deserve its own article, as i have only seen it in enumerations so far. I think the best solution would be to delete the redirects. Yaan (talk) 19:07, 1 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Or maybe they just think those lakes/rivers listed are suitable for swimming. Once I see the name on a map, I'll reconsider the options. --Latebird (talk) 19:27, 1 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I know my Mongolian is far from good, but I think the translation of Гол мөрөн нь цагаан загастай, дээд цагаан нуур, Боом, Хоногцол, Хогорог, Хар нуурын сайн чанарын рашаан байдаг. should a pretty straightforward The rivers [of Renchinlhumbe] have white fish [might be the name of a species], and there are mineral springs at Deed Tsagaan nuur, Boom, Honogtsol, Hogorog and Har nuur.
And [...] Хөг, Ивэд, Шишгэд, Ходон, Шарга, Арсай, Хогорог, Тэнгис зэрэг түргэн урсгалт 50 гаруй гол энэ нутгийн сүр хүч, дагшин ариуныг илтгэдэг. looks like something along the lines of [mountain ranges and lakes and] the Hög, Ived, Shishged, Hodon, Sharga, Arsai, Hogorog, Tengis and more than 40 other rapid streams [i.e. about 50 in total] show the might and icy purity of this area.
Do you want me to upload an image from the map I use (It is called Hovsgol Aimag Map, author is G.Tseepil)? It has most of the springs mentioned above - Har nuur is missing, probably because the correct name is Har us, and Hogorog is spelled Hogorgo (Contrary to what i wrote above, the marking for Hogorgo is for a spring, not for a settlement).
Thanks, got it. Confirms that there is no river to worry about. I'm just trying to fix the worst mess of incorrect cookie cutter articles created by certain editors, not to find every possibly body of water, after all... --Latebird (talk) 20:28, 1 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi. Those seem to be errors in the IOC online database. Most other sources disagree with it, including the Mongolian OC. We have decided to trust the Mongolians here, since we expect them to known their own athletes better. The 4 articles have references and links to document this. That's probably the best that ruwiki can do as well. --Latebird (talk) 08:01, 27 August 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Reading through the mongolian cuisine page there is mention of roadside restaurants, but I can't seem to find any metion of them elsewhere. Having created the article do you have any more information on them? 125.168.62.242 (talk) 12:52, 5 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
What kind of information are you looking for? It's just the local term for a small roadside eatery. On commons you'll find a few examples titled/described that way. Mongolian language lists it as a loan word from chinese. --Latebird (talk) 13:13, 5 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]