1 DRAFT TAX REFORM PACKAGE UP FOR PARLIAMENT SUBMISSION WWW.UBPOST.MN PUBLISHED:2025/12/26      2 MONGOLIA LAUNCHES WORLD'S FIRST 24/5 BLOCKCHAIN-BASED SECURITIES TRADING WWW.KIPOST.NET  PUBLISHED:2025/12/26      3 CONSTRUCTION OF OIL REFINERY AT 50 PERCENT COMPLETE WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2025/12/26      4 FLS DRIVING INNOVATION AND SUSTAINABILITY IN MONGOLIA'S MINING INDUSTRY WWW.MONGOLIANMININGJOURNAL.COM  PUBLISHED:2025/12/26      5 MORE THAN 3,000 LAND PARCELS CLEARED IN ULAANBAATAR IN 2025 WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2025/12/26      6 LAND ALLOCATION REQUESTS TO BE PROCESSED STARTING DECEMBER WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2025/12/26      7 SCHOOL NO.49 BECOMES 100% SOLAR-POWERED WWW.GOGO.MN PUBLISHED:2025/12/26      8 CONSTRUCTION OF WASTE-TO-ENERGY PLANT TO BEGIN IN 2026 WWW.GOGO.MN PUBLISHED:2025/12/25      9 SECURITIES TRADING REACHES MNT 879.5 BILLION WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2025/12/25      10 PROPOSAL, CONCLUSION ON DETERMINING THE STATE OWNERSHIP STAKES IN 'ACHIT IKHT', 'ERDENET MINING', AND 'ZES ERDENIIN KHUVI' LLCS TO BE DISCUSSED WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2025/12/25      Ж.ЧИНБҮРЭН: ХДХВ/ДОХ-ЫН ХАЛДВАРТАЙ 12 ИРГЭН ХЯНАЛТАД ОРОХГҮЙ АЛДАГДСАН НЬ ҮНЭН WWW.GOGO.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2025/12/26     БАТ-ӨЛЗИЙ, ХУЖИРТ СУМЫГ ХОЛБОСОН АВТО ЗАМЫГ УЛСЫН КОМИСС ХҮЛЭЭН АВЛАА WWW.MONTSAME.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2025/12/26     "ОЮУТОЛГОЙ"-Н ТОГТООЛЫН ТӨСӨЛ БАТЛАГДАЖ, ТҮР ХОРОО ТАТАН БУУГДЛАА WWW.EGUUR.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2025/12/26     ГОВЬ-АЛТАЙ АЙМГИЙН АЛТАЙ СУМ ЦАХИЛГААНД БҮРЭН ХОЛБОГДЛОО WWW.EGUUR.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2025/12/26     ЭНЭ ОНД НИЙСЛЭЛД 16.3 КМ БОРООНЫ УС ЗАЙЛУУЛАХ ШУГАМ УГСАРЧЭЭ WWW.ITOIM.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2025/12/26     ТӨРИЙН ӨМЧИТ КОМПАНИУД ДНБ-ИЙ 74 ХУВЬТАЙ ТЭНЦЭХ ХӨРӨНГӨТЭЙ БАЙНА WWW.ITOIM.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2025/12/26     УЛААНБААТАР ХОТОД БЕНЗИН, ДИЗЕЛИЙН ТҮЛШНИЙ НИЙЛҮҮЛЭЛТ ТОГТВОРЖСОН WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2025/12/26     ГАЗАР ЭЗЭМШИХ ГЭРЧИЛГЭЭГ ОЛГОЖ ЭХЭЛНЭ WWW.NEWS.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2025/12/25     ИРЭХ ОНЫ ЭХНИЙ УЛИРАЛД “АЧИТ ИХТ”, “ЭРДМИН”, “ЗЭС ЭРДЭНИЙН ХУВЬ” ХХК-Д ТӨРИЙН ЭЗЭМШЛИЙН ХУВЬ ХЭМЖЭЭГ ТОГТООХЫГ ҮҮРЭГДЖЭЭ WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2025/12/25     2026 ОНД ЮУНД ХӨРӨНГӨ ОРУУЛБАЛ АШИГТАЙ БАЙХ ВЭ WWW.ITOIM.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2025/12/25    

'The girls go crazy over him': Meet Jenisbek Tserik, Mongolia's most eligible eagle hunter www.cnn.com

(CNN) — "Look over there. See that man coming this way?" asks Timur. "He's so good looking."
Galloping towards us on a stout Mongolian steed is the nomad's version of Brad Pitt returning home in "Legends of the Fall." Bundled inside a pinto jacket above richly embroidered trousers, he certainly catches the eye. A fox fur hat warms his head, and perched calmly on his right forearm is a golden eagle that's not merely a prop for a cheesy cologne advertisement.
"Look at his eyebrows and his cheekbones," continues our local guide. "And look at how big and strong he is. The girls go crazy over him."
"It's true," says Timur's wife, Bata, blushing slightly. "If I was to compare him with Timur just on looks, of course I would choose him."
Upon closer inspection, the intruder's weathered face betrays a life lived outdoors. But his jaw is certainly chiseled and his natural squint reminds me of a youthful Clint Eastwood as he gazes off into the distance.
Arguably more impressive though is his stature, which I only begin to appreciate once he stands beside four other berkutchi, or eagle hunters, who have assembled in front of us for a scheduled photo shoot and interview session. He's close to a head taller, with broad, square shoulders and muscular limbs that are further exaggerated by his bulky attire.
His name is Jenisbek Tserik, an appellation that means "steel warrior" -- an apt description given his achievements. A master horseman, he's also a serial winner of tug-of-war competitions pitting two combatants wrestling a goat carcass.
So adept is Jenisbek that he has been flown to Dubai to compete in exhibition events. For a semi-nomadic Kazakh living in Mongolia's remote, westernmost province of Bayan-Ölgii, any trip abroad would be like visiting another planet. Glitzy Dubai would be a whole different universe.
Aged 26, Jenisbek tells us he's not married, then jokes that he has five girlfriends, including one in Dubai and another in Kazakhstan, from where 90% of Bayan-Ölgii's resident population originates. I'm unsure if he's serious, but from what Timur and Bata have told me about him, it's not beyond the realms of possibility.
As well as the tug-of-war, Jenisbek is a champion archer, and he's won numerous awards for eagle hunting in Bayan-Ölgii, where the centuries-old pastime is more widespread than anywhere else on the planet.
Eagle hunting can be traced back to a forgotten kingdom in Central Asia, where direct descendants of Genghis Khan settled by the Aral Sea until encroaching Russian Empire forces compelled them to flee to the lawless region of the Altai Mountains in Mongolia.
Then, when the Soviet Union and China established borders either side of them early in the 20th century, the Kazakhs became cut off from their homeland and were unable to return.
They continued to live as semi-nomadic herders in Western Mongolia, where traditional pastimes such as hunting with golden eagles continued, passing from one generation to the next. Since such practices were suppressed in Kazakhstan during Soviet rule, Bayan-Ölgii became the sport's nucleus.
"For a Mongol, it's pride thing to train racehorses. For Kazakhs, their pride is in training eagles to hunt," explains Bata.
You can see it in the way they walk and how they behave. The five berkutchi know they're being watched and they play up to it, puffing their chests out and stiffening their backs whenever a camera lens points their way. Brows furrow and lips purse like they've modeling all their lives.
It's a far cry from how life must have been in this part of the world before tourism impinged following the first Golden Eagle Festival, which was staged outside the provincial capital of Ölgii in 1999. But even now, foreigners are hardly stampeding to get here. When I quiz our local facilitator about numbers visiting the region this season, he replies that there are "many."
"How many?" I ask.
"About 800."
Numbers peak around the timing of the festival in early October, and during the smaller scale Altai Kazakh Eagle Festival, held here in Sagsai two weeks earlier. In each, as many as 100 berkutchi test their skills in events where eagles are expected to catch fox skins being dragged behind horses or in races to scoop up a coin off the ground on horseback.
One flirtatious contest involves a whip-cracking woman chasing after a man who doesn't always try overly hard to escape. I could imagine Jenisbek receiving a disproportionate share of lashings these past few years.
But it's only once the tourists have gone that the eagle hunting season begins. From October to March, hunters head off into the mountains in pairs -- one to flush out their prey, the other to release the eagle from high along a ridgeline. Prize catches includes foxes and hares, whose luxuriant coats make the warmest hats, just like those crowning Jenisbek and his companions.
Hunts can last for days at a time, and training requires patience as the eagles become accustomed to their handlers and develop the required skills. There's no doubt it's a time-consuming passion -- one that would almost certainly cause rifts in Western households.
Has it caused couples to divorce, I ask Timur, when husbands spend more time with their birds than they do with their wife? He shrugs his shoulders.
When every unmarried woman in the valley is lining up for you, like they are for Jenisbek, who needs a wife?


Published Date:2020-09-23