Tuesday, April 05, 2005

 

Jordan

Bill has realized a long-held dream and visited Petra in Jordan, center of the Nabateans for hundreds of years, until the Romans took over in the 1st century AD. We landed in Amman to be met by our guide who spoke excellent English and was much appreciated for dropping us off at the various sites to explore at leisure and then answering any questions we had on what we had seen and about life and culture in Jordan while we drove to the next spot.

We stopped at Mt. Nebo, site of Moses' death and had lunch next to the Crusader Castle at Kerak, a visit to which was an unexpected bonus. Lunch was buffet-style but one of the dishes was Mansef, which is lamb cooked with yoghurt and very special as it is served at weddings and other high occasions.



Siq

Our hotel in Petra overlooked the rocks out of which Petra was carved so the view was unbelievable. Next morning we met a local guide who had spent a year in San Antonio and whose English was perfect. After a horse ride to the Siq (passage), we walked 1200 meters through the towering rocks while our guide pointed out the most minute details of the rock carvings and engineering marvels along the way. We then came out of the Siq and were met with the sight of the Treasury - the most famous of all the tombs in Petra. Bill stood at the exact spot we think David Roberts must have sat in the 19th Century when he painted the scene of the Eastern End of the Valley, which Bill has on the wall of his study in Nashville. Our guide was most entertainig and had a dry sense of humor that kept us on our toes. According to the guide, the idols and statues of gods who are missing their heads were damaged by the Byzantine "Taliban". The tombs at the top of the ampitheatre are really "sky boxes" and the tombs below the Nobles' Tombs are "two-camel garages".



Treasury



Tombs

About eight Bedouin families still live in the Valley and their main source of income appears to be providing transport for the tourists who cannot manage the full 12 kilometer hike around. We had a choice of donkey, camel or horse-drawn surrey, with or without the fringe on top but turned it down in favor of absorbing the incredible colors in the rocks and the finest details of the carved structures on foot.



Bedouin Tent

Next morning, we had a two-hour jeep ride into Wadi Rum, a favorite spot of Lawrence of Arabia. The Bedouin still live in goat-hair tents in the desert there. The movie with Peter O'Toole was shot in the Wadi as well as Val Kilmer's Red Planet. The jeep was an experience as it was very old and sounded as if it would die in the sand at any moment. I sat in the back as a good wife should and as the windows were painted black, it was impossible to see without them being open and it was unexpectedly cold in Jordan this week. There was no danger of dying of heatstroke in the desert. The rocky scenery was impressive and we saw T.E. Lawrence's spring where he was alleged to have bathed on occasion.

LS



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