Wadi Rum,
Jordan
Day 9
Have you
seen Lawrence of Arabia? Good, me neither. It’s on my list of films to see.
As of
yesterday it is the top of my list, because I spent last night in the desert of
Wadi Rum, the home of T.E Lawrence. Only an two hour drive from Petra, this is an amazing patch of desert.
Before setting off for the desert I had to see Petra once more. Matt and I arranged to get to the
ruins early in the morning to beat the tourist rush that hits around 11:00.
It
was well worth it.
We scrambled up to the "High Place of Sacrifice", where the original inhabitants dragged sheep and cows to one of the highest peeks in the area to meet a
grisly end. It gave a great view of the area. The lanscape is so amazing that it makes you giddy.
Following
a quick snack of nuts, sultanas and bananas, eaten while perched on the base of
Roman era columns we decided to head back to town.
You could
spend days scrambling around the rocks of Petra, pretending to be Indiana
Jones, but we both wanted to head south into the desert and pretend to be
Lawrence of Arabia.
As well as
bumping into Matt on the way to Petra, the two of us ran into an American named
Caroline and a Brit named Eirwen. Seeing as the four of us were traveling solo,
we decided to team up and head into the desert.
Wadi Rum
is beautiful. The sense of space is staggering, but perhaps what is most
striking is the silence. If you hold your breath, you can’t hear a single
thing.
After
spending the better part of two days in Petra, the four of us children-of-the-nineties had a huge desire to watch Indiana Jones. Luckily we are all addicted
to technology and had three laptops between us, with the required film loaded
onto one USB memory stick.
After we
had shared a huge desert BBQ and a shisha thanks to our hosts at the camp we
rugged up, set up a laptop on a backpack and watched Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade under the stars in the Jordanian desert.
It was a
far cry from being T.E Lawrence, but it was still amazing.
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Petra. So fantastic. |
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There are so many caves to explore. Many were inhabited until quite recently by local Bedouins, but the were booted out when the are became a world heritage site. |
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Matt on the way up to the "High Place of Sacrifice" |
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There are heaps of well fed, friendly cats all over Petra. |
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Horses and cart ferry tourists down the siq to the treasury at Petra. |
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This old gent has such a great face. He was selling trinkets for tourists. If the antique lamp I bought off him is as old as he says it is, I'll bite my arm off. |
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One small step for tourism... |
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The Wadi Rum |
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This is the camp. We were the only people there. |
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Roughing it. |
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