Showing posts with label desert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label desert. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Palmyra II [updated with pics and more; first posted 12/03/09]

I was up at 4AM on the 10th to get ready to head out to watch the sun rise over the ruins in Palmyra. Ali was waiting outside the hotel with his camel. We headed up to what he called Zenobia Palace (the travel guide book says it is Diocletian's camp). Before the sun rose, we checked out a cave tomb behind the structures.Then we climbed up to the top of the ruins.The sunrise was good but not great. Not colorful or anything like that. After the sun rose, we went for a camel ride around the ruins.[tower tomb]After a bit, we stopped for a little break at the Baths: "It is known as Zenobia's baths, consist of three main parts; Frigidarium (cold), Tepidarium (warm) ,and Caldarium (hot). It has a nice facade with granite columns. (2ed - 3ed Cent AD)." The travel guide book says it is Diocletian's Baths, but the original structure was there before he arrived in Palmyra. I read that he just made the entry a bit fancier (he was obsessed with building). The columns at the entry are Egyptian red granite).That was when I took the videos of the camel munching away. :) Ali then left me to wander a bit on my own while he went to get his motor bike. [the Fakhr-al-Din al-Maani Castle is in the distance on the hill/mountain to the right.]Every ledge on the sides of the pillars at one time held a statue. Any remaining statues are now in the Palmyra museum and others. It would be amazing to see what the Grand Colonnade would have looked like with all of the statues as it used to be. Above every statue was one of these drain like lion heads (of which this is the only one remaining intact), or something similar:The explanation I got for the drains is that it didn't rain very often in Palmyra, but when it does, the water would run down over the statues from a roof (I think he was saying that the Colonnade was, at one time, covered), and clean them in the process.[The Tetrapylon marked the center of the city and was used as some sort of roundabout or traffic circle. It is 4 sets of 4 pillars, which were originally Egyptian red granite. It was reconstructed in 1939][view up the Grand Colonnade from the Tetrapylon][above is a wall on the side of the Agora, a large rectangular area used as a market place and place for public gaterhings][The Theater]The theater was buried in sand up until the 1950s and has had a lot of restoration work done.[Part of the aqueduct system?][another view of the valley of the tombs]We drove out into the desert, in the opposite direction from the previous day's trip to the Bedouin camp. The desert here is very rocky, not sandy and smooth like around Dubai or around Siwa in Egypt. After driving a while, we stopped for a breakfast picnic. He had packed tea, cheese (the little triangles like the Laughing Cow cheese) and bread (flat bread). Perfect for a breakfast out in the desert.[camels at a Bedouin camp in the distance, at 50x digital zoom, with camera just balanced on my knee]
Then we drove some more.[powerlines in the desert; photo taken from back of moving motorbike - a fairly rough ride, actually] Ali wanted to show me the new(ish) camel race track which is about 30 km out of the town. Before heading there, we checked out some ruins that are sort of near the track. Ali said he has passed them so many times on the way back and forth from the tracks, but had never stopped to see them before.It is one bigger structure and a few smaller ones.We climbed to the top of the wall.Quite the view, and very high (scary!! - I'm afraid of heights). It was amazing to sit atop the ruins with the desert all the way around, and no people.There's a gecko in this picture... can you find it? It's on one of the rocks in the corner of the structure. Guess it's a tad hard to see. :PHere is the gecko at 50x zoom.After taking in the view (and taking a few pictures), we headed for the track. The old one, closer to (in) the city, is only a 5 km track but the new one is 10km track.We drove along the road the follows the oval race track. Ali had raced on the new track about 6 months ago. He came in second. His brother, Adel (the one with the tattoos), came in first. For about 2 months before the race, they stayed at the track and trained the camels. They trained them to run longer races so that the 10 km would seem easy. There are enclosed areas nearby where the racers can set up camp.
After the tracks, we went back to the town.[a small dust devil on the road ahead of us]An odd building on the edge of the oasis: some sort of beehive house. There are a couple of villages of beehive adobe houses in Syria, but I didn't have time to go see them. Check out beehive houses on Google and you'll get all sorts of cool pictures. We went into the oasis and sat for a while in one of his uncles' garden.Ali and I made plans to meet later to have dinner at his friend's home, and he dropped me off in front of the Temple Of Bel, which is said to have been one of the most important religious structures in the 1st Century.I checked out the temple in a short time. It was only open for another 15 more minutes. Even though there was only a short time left, I still had to pay. That's okay. There isn't really that much within the walls. Only one main structure. I think some of the wall surrounding the structure were not quite put together the way they originally were. It seems they used some fallen pillars in the walls as there are sections of circular stone.Looks strange and out of place. There were 4 young Syrian police (or army?) men looking around the temple as well. When I went out (when everyone was kicked out), they approached me to say hi and they wanted a picture with me. Each one wanted a picture with me. LOL.They took turns and then said bye. I was walking away towards the main ruins and they ran after me again and said they wanted one more picture, with the ruins. Funny. I suppose I'm used to having people ask to take pictures with me from living in Korea and from traveling. It doesn't seem unusual to me. Only a tad funny.[Walking towards the entrance to the Grand Colonnade from Temple of Bel]
While I waited for Ali, I went back to the hotel for a while and then went out to walk a little. I didn't walk far as I decided to check out a little shop. As soon as you walk into a shop there (or in many places around Syria, really), you are invited for tea. The guy was very interesting to talk to and had some suggestions for places to travel and how to get places (though a bit too expensive for me on this trip). As soon as I finished my small glass of tea, he refilled it. A couple of times. That is how it works here. I wonder if by the time I return home I'll be sick of tea?? And they put a lot of sugar in it.
When it was time to meet Ali, he picked me up on his motorcycle and we headed out into the maze of the oasis to his friend's little home. His friend came with a huge platter. On it was a smaller, but still huge platter with a mountain of seasoned rice, topped with chicken and carrots and tomatoes. On the side there were dishes of salad and bowls of yogurt (unsweetened) for each of us - Me, Ali, his friend, his friend's brothers, one of whom was only 5 (?). It was soo good! That, of course, was followed by tea.
After eating and having tea, I went back to the hotel to head to bed. It was a long day and we had a plan to meet at 5 AM for another sunrise.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Dune Bashing

While in Dubai I went on a day trip out into the desert for a 'desert safari' which was pretty much just dune bashing in a 4x4. Great fun, except for the guy in the back seat throwing up half the time. :S I'm so glad the driver put me in the front, as I'm pretty sure I'd have been throwing up if I were put in the back.
This is the 1st of the series of videos I took. It is also the shortest. If you have time, watch them all. :) If not, maybe just the 5th one? (or maybe the 2nd one?? or 3rd?)... Well, actually, I love them all. They are all slightly different.

This one is the 2nd one. I love the combination of music and atmosphere, and it really shows the movement of the 4x4. While driving, I kept the camera horizontal, so if everything else isn't, that's the angle that the truck is at. Quite scary at times!!!

This one is the 3rd video. I love the music, Desert Rose, and at around 1:10 in the video you can see the sand going over the top of the truck. Love it.

Video #4, dune bashing to some Eminem. :)

Video #5, still to EMINEM. Actually, this one might show the most in terms of ups and downs and sideways.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Safari etc.

Before my safari trip, I had time to wander around the area a bit. I found the gold souq.Interesting.I had lunch (fattoush and fresh mango juice) at my hotel restaurant and then wandered a bit more.The safari trip was great fun. I was picked up at my hotel at around 3:30. There were 6 other people plus the driver. Since I was traveling alone, the driver, Ahmed, had me sit in the front seat. I'm glad for that, knowing now how the day went.Basically all the safari is is going through the desert 'dune bashing'. Going up and down the dunes feels pretty much like a roller coaster (though, thankfully without the loops). We went along the tops, down the sides (sideways!), up and down and around and over. One guy in the very back seat got sick. Because of the shocks, the back bounces a bit more than the front. I am pretty sure if I had been sitting in the back I would have been sick as well. :SI was a bit disappointed, though, as we didn't get a chance to do the sandboarding. Maybe because of the sand storm? It was very windy and blowing the whole day. When we did get out to take pics or take a break, it was hard not to get sand in the eyes. I will have to wait until I return the end of April to go sandboarding, I suppose. The camel riding isn't really camel riding. More like just getting on the camels for a 2 minute walk, only long enough to take pictures. I didn't do that.
Ahmed, my driver, seemed to feel the need to protect me as when we stopped, he stuck near me when ever we stopped. At the first stop before dune bashing, he shared his snack with me and gave me a drink (vitamin C drink). While on the dunes, I had his phone in my bag under my knees (incase things in the truck started flying?). He has been doing the safaris for 6 years so knows what he's doing. He said he's never rolled but most of the other drivers have at least once. Apparently the day I chose to go was very dangerous because of the sand storm. The dunes were changing, and the tops were softer, plus the tracks they normally follow had disappeared. Luckily, since he's been doing it for so long, he knows very well the ways to go. Ahmed said it's most dangerous when it rains (which is very rare). Sometimes up to 80% of the trucks roll then because they slide. I took a couple of videos of the dune bashing, which I will upload as soon as I get a chance.
After going around the dunes for a while, we went to the safari camp. It is enclosed by walls and around the inside, there are several tents. I sat with Ahmed and some of his Egyptian friends for a while and had a sheesha and tea/coffee mix - coffee mix, sugar, condensed milk and tea all together. Actually not a bad combination! :) The others went to get pics with the camels or disappeared elsewhere. I didn't get pics with the camels, but did get one with the falcon.Then we went to the tent with all the tables (which was closed to keep the wind out). It was getting quite cool by that point. The rest of the group then showed up. We sat for a while and then our buffet/bbq dinner was ready so we all went out to line up. There was one table/line for the women, and one for the men. So much food. Yum! Tahini, babaghanoush, flat bread, vegetables, rice, pasta, and then from the bbq lamb kebabs, chicken kebabs, beef kebabs, and ribs. When dinner was finished, the show started on the large stage outside. A belly dancer was up for a long time. Then a whirling dervish.
I got back to the hotel at almost 10PM. An hour later than expected, and very tired.
Argh. Uploading pictures on here is taking SO LONG!!
Oh. Just an added note. While I sit here at the computer in a little Internet cafe, there are cockroaches running up and down the walls behind the computer, and on the desk as well. YUCK!