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Sunday, February 3, 2013

Southern Tunisia

Last week, Thursday was a local holiday so Kaylee used one of her personal days on Friday so that we could take a 4 night trip to Southern Tunisia.  We flew out of Tunis Wednesday night after school and arrived in Djerba in time for dinner.  Djerba is known for its resorts and beaches, but we arrived late and after picking up our car we left the island early the next morning. Our mission was sand, just not sand beaches, real sand...Saharan sand! We drove south of the island and then headed north west through Medinine towards Toujane, a small hill town.  Turning around, we headed back south Towards Tatouine (Starwars fans will recognize the name of the town for which Luke Skywalker's home planet is named.  Much of his home planet was filmed in Southern Tunisia.) Out side of Tatouine we explored Ksar Oueld Sultane, Chenini, and Douiret.  I can not do them justice other than to say that each was a independent hilltop civilization built on and in some of the tallest "mountains" in the area.  We we spent our second night in a Troglodyte hotel in Douiret.  The room consisted of an anti chamber that lead to a "bedroom" literally carved back into the rock.  It was a really cool place to stay and impressively dark when the electricity providing power for the one cave light did not work in the morning.

The second morning we headed north through fairly small towns before turning west to cross what would be some of the loneliest roads of our trip. There was a 20 kilometer stretch of gravel road, with intermittent patches of loose sand that threatened to strand us, during which we saw only two other cars and a lone sheep herder.  Regaining pavement, we headed south into the real desert towards Ksar Ghilane, a remote desert oasis about 150 kilometers from anything.  Along the unendingly straight road there were a number of free roaming camels.  We see a fair number of camels around Tunis, but they don't get any less strange the more you see.  When we reached Ksar Ghilane there was no one to be found, not one person.  It took a good 15 minutes to pick our way through the sandy roads before we found one of the Tourist campgrounds that we had planned to stay at.  Fortunately, the door of the campground office was open and happy to have us as their only customers in a facility set up for at least one hundred.  With in half an hour we were settled in to our 250 square foot permanent structure tent, changed, and headed out on ATV's with a guide to explore the dunes.  Real dunes.  Saharan Dunes!  I wish we could have taken pictures while we were out on the quads but the wind was howling and blowing the powder fine sand everywhere.  It was an awesome experience none the less.  Some of the dunes were as big as a small two story house.  It was also really cool to be outside of the oasis and be able to look back and see it surrounded by nothing but sand as far as we could see.  We spent the rest of the evening exploring the oasis on foot and headed to bed early in an attempt (that didn't work) to escape the cold desert night.  Cold by Tunisian standards anyway.

We got up early the next morning and with the wind much less active than the day before we ventured out on foot with our cameras in tow.  Most of the dune pictures below are from this morning outing.  After breakfast we headed north leaving the desert proper behind.  Our path took us through Douz, which is well know as the northern entrance to the Sahara.  Many multi day desert excursions begin and end in Douz.  From there we headed north and west across the salt lake, Chott El Jerid. Completely flat and dry the trip across the lake is 60 straight kilometers.  We stopped half way across to get out and walk on the moonscape.  The ground was completely covered in a hard layer of salt, in most areas at least 2 inches thick.  I haven't really seen anything else like it in person before.  Continuing on we landed in Tozeur where we would fly back to Tunis from the following morning.  We made it to Tozeur much earlier than expected and we still had a few hours on our car rental so we headed north to check out the mountain oases of Chebika and Tamerza.  We pushed our exploration to the limit and made it back to Tozeur with six minutes to spare before the car rental closed for the night.  The final morning we explored the area near our hotel on foot before heading to the airport to fly home.  It was an amazing trip which we hope to repeat before we leave this beautiful country for good. The pictures do not sufficiently convey the experience, but come much closer than anything I write ever could.

Aside-

On our way out of Tozeur we came across an interesting piece of geopolitical history.  On the tarmac at the Tozeur airport there are two 1970's Boeing 747's (those are the big ones, with two passenger decks) that did not appear to have been flown in many years (at least we hoped not, because they had barely any paint and all of the wheels were flat).  I also remembered that I saw two very similar planes in the same location on the satellite view of the Tozeur airport when I was planning for the trip.  Back at our place in Tunis, I checked Google earth again and using its historic view I could see that the planes hadn't moved since at least 2003.  This piqued my curiosity because each of those planes are were worth close to $50 million originally, a significant chunk of change in this country.  Doing some research I learned that Saddam Hussein had sent them here to protect them during the first Gulf War.  The plans haven't moved in over 20 years!  There is an ongoing controversy as to who has a legal right to the planes, the new Iraqi Airways or Kuwaiti Airlines.  I believe the debate was recently resolved, but Tunisia is now preventing their release until someone pays for the 20 years of back storage fees.  This is an interesting country we live in.

Near Toujane

Roman Causeway connecting Djerba to the mainland

Ruins in the town of Toujane

Ksar Oueld Sultane

Ksar Oueld Sultane

Ksar Oueld Sultane - This exact scene is replicated on the Tunisian 20 dinar note.

The mosque of the seven sleepers near Chenini

Chenini
Chenini

Troglodyte hotel

Troglodyte bedroom

Troglodyte hotel

Sunrise in Douiret

Sunrise in Douiret

Douiret

Douiret

Strange Animal

Douiret

The Sahara - outside of the Ksar Ghilane oasis
Ksar Ghilane

Ksar Ghilane

Ksar Ghilane

Ksar Ghilane

Simon wandering in the Sahara

Ksar Ghilane

Chott El Jerid salt lake

Chott El Jerid

Chott El Jerid

Chott El Jerid

These salt crystals are nearly perfectly pure and are about the size of a quarter.

Chott El Jerid

Chebika - Mountain oasis

Chebika

Chebika

Chebika

Chebika

Ruins and palm forest at Chebika

Tamerza oasis 2 kilometers from the Algerian boarder

Tamerza canyon - formed in the 1960's during a 22 day stretch of continuous rain

Tamerza

Tamerza

Tozeur Palmerie, the second largest in the country with over 200,000 palm trees, view from our hotel window

Tozeur

Monday, January 28, 2013

The Adventures in Tunisia Continue...

So we have been hearing some complaints that it has been so long since our last post.  I guess life got in the way...or we got lazy.  In any case we spent the last four days in the southern parts of Tunisia.  It was a fabulous trip.  We even went through all one thousand of our pictures last night in preperation for today's blog post.  Then as it does, life got in the way.  Today we had a different, new experiance.  Today we became aquanted with the La Marsa Clinique Amen Emergency room.

The ACST's boys JV basketball team unfortunately does not have any schools with which it is able to compete. So as an end of the season "tournament" we have arranged a three game series played on three consecutive Mondays between the JV team and a select team of staff.  Today was our second game.  Last Monday the staff team played to a decisive victory and I have to say I scored a personal best... 4 points.  Today's game, I scored 0, shot 3 air-balls, and took a head to the face...  In the last 30 seconds of the game, I set a pick and as the defender pivoted he drove his head into the left side of my mouth.  By the time I was able to wash off enough of the blood it was obvious that we were going to have the great honor of testing out the Tunisian medical facilities.  I nearly bit a piece of my lip off. It didn't hurt so much, but it didn't look so go either.

The intake/triage process at the clinic left something to be desired and didn't quite instill the confidence that we were hoping for, but they quickly called in a maxilo-facial specialist to stitch me up. His standard of care was nearly on par with what would be expected in a hospital at home, inspired much more confidence, and efficiently put me back together (Although the one or two stitches he spoke of quickly turned into 7).  It didn't hurt either that he spoke English. 

Off to drink my soup dinner, yum!




Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Bizerte for Kaylee's Birthday


We spent last weekend in Bizerte to celebrate Kaylee's birthday and explore somewhere new.  Bizerte is only about an hour north west of Tunis, but we had done little more than drive through it in the past. We found a cheap hotel on the beach and spent the weekend exploring the beaches, viewpoints, old port, and markets.  The town seems to have been well set up to welcome tourists ... a few years ago, now everything is empty and not well kept.  If things progress well here in Tunisia for the next few years I think Bizerte will begin to attract many more European tourists.



 Coastline north of the city.

 The Harrisons joined us.

 Our hotel, note the nice green pool.  It doesn't get any clearer when you get closer.

 Old Bizerte port.

 Old Bizerte Port

 Narrow "street" in the Kasba

 Tourist restaurant that we ate at in the old port.  The food was good when we ate it, but not great for me a few hours later.

 Coastline north of the city.  This small peninsula is actually the second most northern point of all of Africa.  The farthest north point is actually a few kilometers north west (it may be visible in the distance in the next picture), it is supposedly 30 meters farther north.

 Looking northwest from the top of the rocky peninsula.

 On top of the rock.

 Birthday girl

Looking towards Bizerte from south east of town.

 One of the many trails that we followed trying to find the ship wrecks.

 Ship wreck 1.  Haven't been able to find any solid history on it yet.  If you are interested the wrecks are located in Rimel beach just south east of Bizerte.

Ship wreck 2, appears to be in the process of reclamation.  Many of its former parts are strewn about on the beach and the parts that remain seem to have been cut rather than rusted through.  Once source claimed that this ship ran aground here sometime in the 70's after experiencing an engine fire.  Another source said that it was an Italian vessel that has been there since the 40's.  No idea for sure, but it does appear to be a commercial vessel rather than a military vessel.