Hong Kong photographer Palani Mohan braves sub-zero temperatures to photograph the striking beauty of Lake Khuvsgul. Close to the border with Russia, at the foot of the eastern Sayan Mountains, the “blue pearl” – as it is known in this part of northwestern Mongolia – is classified as one of the 17 ancient lakes of the world, having held water consistently for more than 2 million years.
With mirror-like azure waters stretching to distant horizons under immense skies, it is also, with the exception of Russia’s Lake Vostok, considered the world’s most pristine lake.
Khuvsgul is 135km (84 miles) long and 262 metres (860 feet) deep, making it the second most voluminous body of fresh water in Asia. It is described as the “younger sister” of Russia’s Lake Baikal – the world’s largest freshwater lake by volume (and also its most ancient, at between 25 to 30 million years old) – into which Khuvsgul eventually drains, through waterways that wind 1,000km as they drop 1,169 metres over the 200km that separates them, crossing the border along the way.
In an arid land where most lakes are salty, Khuvsgul contains almost 70 per cent of Mongolia’s fresh water and it is held sacred. The Lake Khövsgöl National Park, bigger than the United States’ Yellowstone, plays host to a wide variety of wildlife, including ibex, argali, elk, wolverines, musk deer, wolves, brown bears, Siberian moose and sable.
In winter, though, the lake is transformed, as night time temperatures plummet to minus 35 degrees Celsius and its waters freeze to a depth of more than a metre, creating a dramatic crystalline winter landscape. The Lake Khuvsgul Ice Festival is held each year, in March, and features skating, ice sumo wrestling, horse sleigh races, ice sculptures and shaman ceremonies, as well as visits by reindeer herders who make their way south to the festival from their northern taiga. (South China Morning Post)