Ancient rock formations, Buddhist temples on cliff faces, and brown bears in the forest — and it's less than an hour's drive from Ulaanbaatar.
Ariyabal Buddhist Meditation Temple surrounded by autumn colours in Terelj National Park.
Imagine leaving the bustle of Ulaanbaatar behind and, within an hour, finding yourself in a vast, pine-scented valley where the only traffic is a herd of horses crossing the Tuul River. That's the magic of Gorkhi-Terelj National Park — Mongolia's third-largest national park and one of its most beloved escapes, sprawling across nearly 3,000 square kilometres of dramatic landscape right on the capital's doorstep.
Terelj's most photographed resident isn't an animal — it's a rock. Turtle Rock (Melkhii Khad) rises from the steppe like something a giant sculptor left behind, its silhouette uncannily resembling a turtle mid-stride. But beyond the photo opportunity lies a deeper story: locals link it to Galdan Boshugtu (1644–1697), the formidable Dzungar-Oirat Khan who united the western Mongol tribes. Standing beside the rock, that history feels surprisingly close. Thousands of visitors make the pilgrimage each year — it's easy to see why.
Turtle Rock
Not far away, look for the Old Man Reading a Book (also called Praying Lama Rock) — another uncanny formation with its own thread of ancient legend woven into the local landscape.
The Tuul River winds through the park's heart — sacred in Mongolian culture, and perfect for a morning walk along its banks before the day heats up.
Four kilometres west of Turtle Rock, the Ariyabal Buddhist Meditation Temple clings to a steep mountain slope like something from a Tibetan painting. Built in the shape of an elephant's head, it draws you upward via 108 stone steps — each one representing the 108 defilements in Buddhist teaching, and together forming the elephant's elongated trunk. The climb is meditative in itself. At the top, the valley opens below you, and the temple's teachings — timeless, unhurried — offer a genuine counterpoint to city life.
Whether you're after a quiet afternoon on horseback or a full day of white-water, Terelj delivers. Here's what's on offer:
However long you have — a day trip or a full weekend in a ger camp — Terelj has a way of slowing things down in the best possible sense. It's the kind of place that reminds you why Mongolia's landscapes are legendary.
UB – Chinggis Khaan Statue Complex - Terelj NP attractions: Turtle Rock and Ariyabal Buddhist Meditation Temple - UB