Not Falling in Dubai, but Floating in Umm al-Quwain

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Nescafé Classic

I set the alarm for 4:45am and I’m up with the energy of a child, packing up and drinking coffee – that somehow took 30 minutes. I parked under the awning and walked to Skydive Dubai to check in at 5:30, and they don’t bother to weigh me because they’re in a holding pattern due to high winds. I don’t know how I missed the storm brewing through the enthusiasm pumping through my veins as I walked in on the crew eating breakfast, but through the tinted windows the flags are blowing about.

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regular roundabout

At 6:30, the crew gets in their swim gear to go to the dock and practice water landings – we, the worldly tourists, didn’t know this at the moment, but I could tell they weren’t flying today. I got my money refunded at 7am. I wasn’t choosing to wait around till 8:30 for their final no and wasn’t going to reschedule for Sept. 29. I can see why they delay the bad news – who wants to tell a room of 30 people – not today, as has been the update for the last two weeks.

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Coffee Museum

I drove out to Atlantis at 6:30 and managed to take a wrong turn. I parked down the street from the hotel so I could enjoy the walk, but what I wouldn’t enjoy was being hassled for trying to see the garden as the guards thought I posed a threat to the comfort level of their guests – the ones still sleeping. I stop at the Heritage House area (between Bastakiya and Al Fahidi Fort) and don’t worry about parking because I don’t think I’ll be there long. There are empty alleys, closed doors, and courtyards with trees – like the Christ Thorn planted in 1890.

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Blue Souq, Sharjah

Of all the places that would have an open door – the Coffee Museum and shop – with a sign that says: Come in, We’re Awesome. I pass the majlis room to look at the antique sections on the ground floor and learn that, like anything else on this planet, coffee beans come in a hundred varieties. Upstairs there are books about coffee – The Pleasure of Coffee, and Coffee Floats, Tea Sinks; and different grinders like the ceramic wall mill from Germany. I walk past a thatched wall and more tan corridors back to the car.

construction in Dubai

construction in Dubai

Though I’ve been in this area before, and probably for that reason, I think that the Heart of Sharjah (its heritage village) is next door to Dubai’s (which is actually less than 2 km away from the Coffee Museum), but this doesn’t stop me from doing all the extra driving – and making me debate how much caffeine I need. I get to park closer and visit their Islah al-Umm School Museum, established for all education levels in 1935. There are plenty of pens (wooden sticks and ink pots) and Qur’an holders on display.

Al Muntazah St., Sharjah

Al Muntazah St., Sharjah

I wipe the sweat from my forehead for the hundredth time and watch the bus of tourists pull up. I found more closed museums and empty stalls. I get some things are ‘open’ but their timings vary in this heat and though a place may look closed you need to check the door and possibly call someone to open it for you, I don’t feel like waiting while I’m hungry. I go back into the Souq al-Arsa where the shopkeepers are begging for my attention, especially the restaurant, but when I ask for hot food I’m told it’s another hour. I’ll take date milk, basil seed drink, and large water for the road.

Ajman Museum

Ajman Museum

I drive back down south to return to Dubai’s Heritage Village. It was great last time at 8am on a weekend, but the view seems jaded, and hot, and not relaxing at 11am on a weekday. The village and its doors are open, but the only thing I see in this heat is the postcard stand. I realize I can’t judge one visit based on another and will remember those happy morning moments instead of this afternoon drudgery – and I now have more time to enjoy the rest of the country.

Ajman Museum

Ajman Museum

I stop at a mall in Sharjah for a coffee and a veg sandwich, that will be a two-parter for me because I filled up on three packs of biscuits for breakfast. My first site in Ajman will be their museum – the one that used to be a working fort. There’s the ticket window in the sun or the door in the shade where I’ll walk to pay my entrance fee. Guns, beds, Qur’an’s, pottery, jewelry, and fishing equipment – usual display items. Tear gas bombs (made in the U.S. in the description) and firecrackers, rockets, bombs, plastic bullets, and a truncheon used to disperse demonstrators – not usual.

Sheikh Zayed Ajman Mosque

Sheikh Zayed Ajman Mosque

In another display, I find myself grateful that they no longer require a wife to travel as her husband’s property like they did in the 60s. This also answers the “how to see under the burqa” question – they didn’t need to as long as the husband vouched as to which one was his, along with a number of children. Sometimes I debate going to yet another museum, but it’s ones like this that keep me coming back for the art, history, and culture that they portray in a unique way.

lunch from

lunch from Rambo

I park by Musalla Souk, less than a kilometer from the museum, and it’s closed. I mean the front door is open, but it looks like the prayer hour has been extended for months. I walk across the street to Rambo at 4pm and order a four-fruit juice and an egg paratha vs. the birthday cake faloodah and hotdog burger on the menu. Joining me for lunch is a table of six Asian women eating fried chicken with hamburger buns and dipping their fries in hummus – and they do get the faloodah for dessert. I wish more restaurants offered this variety of culture.

fishing boats of Umm Al Quwain

fishing boats of Umm Al Quwain

I leave Ajman, the tiny emirate with hard-to-find tourist attractions, to find my way to  Umm Al Quwain Museum 31 km away. It’s in a fort that doesn’t look twenty years old, minus the patchwork that is a restoration of this building put together around 1768 for the local ruler which once was the Al Mualla family. It became a museum in 2000 and averages 120 visitors a day who come to see swords from Yemen and Aleppo, a necklace from Bahrain, and currency from Nicaragua and Indonesia — all gold. Inside these walls are stamps, dishes, and fashion of the Emirates and the regions they traded with from Al-Dour, Iraq to Rome, Italy.

Umm Al Quwain Museum

Umm Al Quwain Museum

The sun is threatening to set when I leave the museum and the timing couldn’t be better. I drive to the beach surrounding me and get the feeling of Beauty and the Beast – from the mansion on my right and the scared crab to remind me of Cogsworth, not from the pile of plastic on my left. As the sky goes from shades of bright orange to bluish-grey I meander the beach looking at the shells, skulls, and seaweed. I linger as the sun disappears to enjoy this peaceful place – and book a night at Hotel Royal Residence Branch down the street.

UAQ Beach sunset

UAQ Beach sunset

It’s two km away and I arrive after 7pm. I check in, find the pool, and return to room 7C to change and grab an embroidered towel. I thought about sheesha because I’ve been craving a smoke all day – and my luck the sheesha guy is also a Marlboro man. After that, I float in one of the two pools on one of their orange rings and watch a bat do touch and goes. I do a lap and climb out. I take a photo of the restaurant menu and though the prices are good I’m not in the mood for a whole chicken and rice.

rocky waters, UAQ

rocky waters, UAQ

I get back to my room at 8:15 and tried checking email but the service is blocked on my mailbox for security. I call the front office at 8:30 for the Palma Cafe timings. I’ll go there in the morning – at least it’s on the tourist list. I check locations for tomorrow in Ras al-Khaimah and message Caleb till he goes to sleep at 10pm. My computer says it’s 11:40 and I’ve been up since before 5am. I close my eyes, having been hungry the whole time, and watch as the room lights up in red, but not overwhelmingly so, and I climb under the fluffy blanket.

evening by the pool

evening by the pool

more pictures from today:

 

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Unique Alone Excursion into the UAE

flydubai - in Bahrain

flydubai – in Bahrain

This trip will be unlike any other I’ve ever taken. My plan is to jump out of a working airplane in the Palm Drop Zone of Skydive Dubai – one of the top five spots (according to some websites). I had to plan this part a month and a half in advance, as people travel the world for these adrenaline rush-type activities. I booked my flight for the night before and a stay in the Pearl Marina nearby, having had a look at Airbnb and not being impressed with the monopoly on certain buildings.

I figured while I was in the country I would drive around and see the other Emirates, having already spent eight days among three (mostly in their capitals), the other four deserve some time. I had a spare set of keys made, as our locks had just been changed as maintenance works their way through the list of things that need fixing, and handed them to a friend. Caleb would be home sometimes, busy from 5am to 8pm making Chief, and I would need someone else around for the times in-between.

Can you find the road? Tip: there's a car on it

Can you find the road? Tip: there’s a car on it

Caleb is able to get a couple of hours off work to drop me to the airport with the plans that I’ll be gone from the 24th to the 29th – back in time to spend my birthday with him – if I want to visit him at work. I wake at 8am and write a letter to the dog-sitters, quite a lengthy one, for the four men who have offered to watch Sparky and Piggy in my absence. I zip up my bag as Caleb walks in the door at 11:10am. I pick-and-choose my outfits to make sure they are modest as I’ve been getting comfortable in Bahrain, but not as much as I was in Amwaj wearing only a short sundress to walk the dogs.

We hang out on the couch for an hour while I have a shake consisting of bee pollen, flax and chia seed, coconut powder, cinnamon, green superfood, cashew and protein powder, coconut water, and rice milk – among varying ingredients – inspired by ‘overnight oats in a jar’ on Pinterest. Sometimes I will add oats, peanut butter, and frozen fruit. Caleb eats from his stash of shawarma (what he plans to eat while I’m away) and then we drive slowly to the airport at 12:30pm.

flydubai - over Dubai

flydubai – over Dubai

He takes the driver seat at 1pm after telling me how jealous he is that I get everything handed to me and really live the Life O’Reilly and wonders how I get upset or need a vacation from the constant one I live in – because I want a different view and other experiences – I need things to blog about (and the dedication to do so). Inside, the Bahrain customs agent notices the foot of extra hair in my passport photo and says I cut it because it’s hot here – yes. I sit near gate 12 for an hour reading while my phone charges, then by gate 11 where I’ll be departing from for 20 or so minutes.

I get up to pee, as I always have to do, but the doors are locked, so I sit behind the guy blocking my window seat. There are so many empty ones that he could easily move and I could sit closer to the front, but don’t. I take a picture for him when we’re descending after trying to show him the house in the desert with the tiny car in the dunes on my phone. We land and the passport line is long, but I’m able to pick the fast lane – retinas scanned, book stamped – done. I’m also lucky to be an adult in a line where a toddler is free to roam and slap other children.

sunset over Dubai

sunset over Dubai

Customs is even faster with nothing to declare, and the agent notices I’m leaving before my birthday, but I’m here to celebrate it. I’m happy that the rental car office is in the same terminal this time – so no pricey cab ride – just the $5 McDs coffee I had before leaving Bahrain and the $7 falafel-cheese wrap from Costa that I will chomp on during the paperwork process. It takes only a few minutes to scan my passport, drivers license, and credit card before they hand me the keys to a 2015 Nissan Micra.  They asked if I wanted the Oman insurance (the reason I chose them) – for only $81 for 7 days (about what I’m paying now), which is better than I thought, but I’ll concentrate my time in the UAE and maybe make it back to Formula Rossa!

fountain and reflection in front of Burj Khalifa

fountain and reflection in front of Burj Khalifa

I turn on Waze – an amazing application in Dubai with 50 users online – and got on the road. I’m hesitant at first as the sun has set, but I’m an adaptable driver, and soon texting, photographing, mapping, switching lanes, and eating – they can’t get me for whatever stains are in the back seat, but the breadcrumbs are all mine. I miss the turn to Dubai Mall, but the app is one step ahead, and I get there easily after a U-turn. I find a spot in cinema parking, on P2 in the C-D area, go downstairs to the fountain level via lift, and walk a partial length of the mall past the Power Rangers Super Megaforce, and by the coffee shop Caleb and I had breakfast at on my way outside.

The area is packed with tourists and regardless of what else people can judge you by – they do more so when you take a selfie. This is the largest dancing fountain set to songs in Swahili, Arabic, and Italian to name a few. The water shoots a measly 500 feet in the air compared to the set of WET Superlights, over 6,000 in total, that can be seen from 20 miles away. The show runs every 30 minutes and I’ve been here for ten. The facts and technology are impressive, but I think it speaks to the child in us as well – it’s lights, water, and music – like a giant snow globe that’s been released – loud, beautiful, and powerful (which might be Dubai’s new slogan).

half the fountain in action

half the fountain in action

I take a video and pictures, and then cast my eyes over the sea of screens to see it for myself. I go inside the Souk Al Bahar. I know what I’m looking for, but somehow can’t seem to pass the yummy nuts shop, Munch & Crunch, without buying something new – and it wasn’t the stuffed dates I was eyeing – though it’s my birthday week, which is enough of an excuse for me. After that expensive charge I keep walking and pass ladies enjoying gelato from the same place Caleb and I got coffees – I’ll be back to order a scoop of forest berries as it feels more like summer than the strawberry cheesecake.

I go upstairs and the kopi luwak café (not its real name) is open. The woman wants $49 for a tiny cup to drink in-house from a three-chamber pot. I knew I’d regret walking away, but I also knew that skydiving was taking precedence over the beginning of this trip. No point in drinking expensive coffee and staying up all night when the excitement alone will do that for me. I tell myself I’ll be back, but it might be another year. I go to the car park near P2 towards C-D where I left the car… didn’t I? I walk around clicking the key and three car wash men start to help. I panic and they tell me to check other levels – different colors and letters. I check P1 and P4, not finding P3 and start to freak out – it’s been 30 minutes.

PBJ meets Fruit by the Foot meets Middle East

PBJ meets Fruit by the Foot meets Middle East

I go back downstairs and am directed to the police station, i.e., security/customer service. I wait in there for 10-15 minutes for a guy on a cart who drives me from P1 to P5 while making small talk to calm me down. He asks about where I was coming from – then he’ll know the direction I took. I can’t believe I forgot that badly – level P5, but I’m so grateful to see the little car after 9:30p – and that I have a passport and athletic shoes to jump with tomorrow. It’s not until I’m stuck in traffic, at a standstill, 3.5 km from my bed for the night that I get out of the car for water. 

I’m by the marina for the night, at the end of the street, and the man at the desk has a sense of humor – giving me a special rate as he charges the rest of the room to my card – and I thought it was pay upon arrival. It’s already 10:30pm and I thought I might have time to walk the marina or go to the beach, but I put my tiny car in the garage and take the lift to the wrong floor. I’m glad to find my room with a large bed and a message from Caleb at the end of his long day.

the sign says it all

the sign says it all

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Drooling to Doha

to the airport in Jordan

to the airport in Jordan

I woke in the middle of the night, which woke Julie, but didn’t keep her from falling back asleep — and back to snoring. I picked up the blanket and moved from the twin beds to the couch with my alarm set for 8 and 8:30 am. I paid attention to the first one and thought maybe Julie would be up, but she’d been on her phone and went to sleep after me. I got up to the second alarm and started packing. We were ready to go by 9 am, said bye to Dana, left some change on her counter and the leftovers in her fridge.

We got to the beautiful field before the airport twenty minutes later. I went up to B-20 something to check in with Qatar Airways and the agent told me they didn’t have a reservation for me on this flight. She said I could call her boss, “but I don’t have signal in the airport…”, or wait on her colleague to do so. If I had called I would have bought a new ticket. The agent noticed that I’d bought my return for May 8th and was able to transfer me to the same flight, same seat, for today for 17 JD. I was more than thrilled.

departures in Amman

departures in Amman

I paid at the airport office, returned the receipt to the agent, and he handed me a ticket at 10:15. I thanked him and got in the queue for passport control. A couple tried to cut four of us in line claiming there were two lines. I corrected them and others were grateful for my actions just as the girl behind me was when an employee tapped on her shoulder to let her wave at family one more time. I smiled into the retina reader and the officer told me to open my eyes wide, 25 minutes later, and I’m on the other side.

With some time to waste I went looking through the Duty Free shop and paid for my purchase in dollars, but still received piastres (Jordanian coins) back. I spent most of the next hour sitting by gate 110 listening to Sri Lankan women speak Arabic. They were kind enough while they sat there, but they got pushy in line. I played a word game, while they finished boarding the flight, in an attempt to stay awake.

arrivals in Doha

arrivals in Doha

I was in the aisle seat in the middle section and an attendant raised my seat back. I lowered it again, put the pillow under my face, and slept. He tried to tell me something about my safety, but having people come by and bump me won’t bother me after we crash and burn if that’s what he expects to happen after take-off.

Once I started drooling I was left alone for the flight. I was sat next to two women, and the one didn’t seem to mind my leaning. I’m grateful. Food was brought and taken away, but I managed to wake enough to grab the bread for later. I woke up as we were descending and put my seat upright. I’d had a good nap to make up for the sleep deprivation in Jordan and was feeling better.

leaving Qatar

leaving Qatar

Doha has a T-Rex in their airport among many other odd statues and displays. I was worried that we would be delayed on this flight. I’d been told to go through security early, skipping the machines, and sat waiting, but as soon as the announcement went through the line was quick. A lady was seated in the middle seat behind her husband and child. When a man took the window she asked me to switch with her. I did, knowing their culture… and it wasn’t like I was giving up a view. I was getting closer to it, which did make it easy to reach my arm over the guy to get a picture of Hawar Island.

I don’t have Snapchat, but I’ve seen people use it. I now star in two videos posted on the app. The lady that I moved seats with recorded me playing peekaboo and ‘punch my hand’ with her son. The screen came down and he pushed it back up until the crew gave up lowering it again. He was great. We took off, juice was served, and the plane was ready to land. As much as I enjoyed Jordan I was happy to be back in Bahrain.

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Salty Lamb in Jordan

riding into Petra

riding into Petra

I wake up after getting less than six hours of sleep and Julie has already eaten and plans to ride a carriage to the Treasury. I went to the toilet and thought about my options and food was first on the list. I sat at a table and ate my red and yellow selection (eggs, tomato, bread with jam, yogurt, and cereal with apple) and then walked to Petra to try the day after last night. I bought a 50 JD ticket, a discount for staying overnight, with three hours to enjoy it. Included, is a horse ride to the entrance of the Siq, and a free guide.

I’m hesitant at first for any distraction, but I figure it’s only part of the way, so… I took the ride and my guide, Ahmed, with the belief that I’d travel down past some dirt and rocks and then leave him to take a thousand photos of whatever beauty lay behind my eyesight last night. Like everywhere else in the world, pictures and people’s descriptions don’t do it justice. I’m in awe of the city that has been carved into the rocks – what did I think the luminaries were on last night – and I get to see part of it while on a horse.

skull-rock waypoint

skull-rock waypoint

Ahmed, convinced I wasn’t a regular tourist, wanted me to see Petra from another angle – and I thought that’s what he was doing. He said I was hard to convince (a man taking a woman alone off the trail), but he got me into the mountains – and I’m so grateful for his persistence and seeing the adventurer in me. I could’ve trudged through the crowd, like most places when that’s the only option, but for those seeking something more – leave your horse and step into the trees. The path will appear and the excitement grows.

He ensured me that I would see the Treasury and more. While the others marched between the sandstone, I’d be climbing on top of it allowing me a vantage point down into the canyon and up to Jabal Haroun (Aaron’s Mountain) in the distance. I took pictures of plants, living and dead, along with rocks and their shadows, as if I was a scientist and would use these in a lab later – and I suppose in a way I am, as they help me recall the cool of the air on a hot day and the weird sense of being in the middle of a powerful trading junction some 2,000 years ago that’s now concerned with the removal of historic artifacts, the education of its children, and the welfare of its animals.

Batman visiting the ruins

Batman visiting the ruins

Some turns I would’ve been lost, but others are marked with cairns, steps, or worn trails if not over the flat rock, but I feel as if Ahmed could walk this in the dark. Jordan has left the park ‘open’ (if you can find the local entrance) and only charges its residents, over age 15, 1 JD per day to enter because 1) they’re making enough money off tourists, and 2) it is part of their heritage and they feel they have a right to it. I’d say we should do the same in the States, but maybe we don’t know the value of our history and natural beauty.

I’ve told Ahmed that I’ve got three hours, so he is constantly checking the time, and when I’m winded we have time for him to point out details and take my picture, but when I start to slow we must move to make time – and he’s sad that I don’t have the day to hike other trails and come back tomorrow and see more of the park – me and him both. We get to the top, the opening, the field; and there are carvings and etched script, a brown dog, red and purple poppies, and other people. I’m happy to know I’m not the only one who wants to see things differently, but I’m also grateful when we leave them behind with their arms and legs showing, and loud shoes.

this is Rose City

this is Red Rose City

Ahmed picks up a rock and scratches it and then rubs it on me – local makeup. I should’ve kept it, but acquiring water from a man on a donkey would cause me to change priorities. I didn’t realize how thirsty I was until he stopped him, then I was grateful and offered to share, but he said I needed it more. I got to see the Roman Theatre, that may blend in with the surrounding Red Rose City from this perspective, but the people, along with the roads and modern buildings show how large the structure really is – with 4,000 to 8,000 seats.

Next, is looking at the top of tourist’s heads in the canyon, as I’m on the rock that makes up Al Khazneh (The Treasury). I can look across at the Bedouin tents with solar panels and the hikers on the other side so they can see the carving ahead of them, but I don’t have time for all the steps, and hours, needed. We stop in a tent for a bottle of water – this one I pay for. Ahmed asks the guy to take some pictures of us together, especially after he puts his keffiyeh on me, which I still have. Then the water man tries to sell me an old Roman coin for 50 JD – which might be fake, stolen, overpriced – and I’m not a collector.

man playing a fiddle-like instrument

man playing a fiddle-like instrument

The steps that most people don’t want to bother with are the ones I‘m able to come down easily. I pass donkeys and the man sweeping their poop into the canyon; the women selling jewelry and magnets; and the tourists with their cameras, wide-brimmed hats, and water. I don’t blame a donkey for taking a nap between the rock and shrubbery. He is trained to carry people up the stairs and then returns alone for his next trip where he provides shade for dogs and their people while he waits. I would be hiding too. 

I get to look at the grandeur of the place while trying to spot the details among the shade while a girl, with her family, whom he’d given a tour to yesterday was there and greeted him with candy for his daughters – the ones he doesn’t have, so we shared. He told me he was getting married, but that might also be a ruse. I don’t blame him for milking us tourists for what we’re worth, because it isn’t his imaginary family that helped me enjoy my time, but his kindness and knowledge.

the tourist photo

the tourist photo

There are camels to ride, musicians to listen to, and gardens to spot in high crevices among the already rich gathering of colored stone – something that could inspire the great artists from 1860 to 1970, like Monet and Richter – which led me to this music video.  I think all the hiking and sightseeing before the Treasury came into view lessened the excitement (just as seeing Half Dome is diminished after witnessing the awe-inspiring place that is Yosemite), but it’s these postcard images that make a place important enough to preserve, so that others may come and appreciate the rest.

I get my picture taken in front of the Treasury, along with the costumed guards, children, and camels. Ahmed is good about taking photos of me throughout our hike and offered his hand on slippery sections to keep me from falling. He joked that he would give me 1,000 camels to marry him, but in all seriousness that’s a $700k to 15 million dollar offer that would leave Caleb as my new brother as we traveled the world – riding, eating, racing, and selling camels.

Siq perspective

Siq perspective

The walk back through the Siq is very different in the daytime. The candles and stars have been replaced by loud horse carriages in a hurry and an old lady living in the moment with a better grasp of how little time we have. We’re both enjoying the details of what surrounds us – breaking the view into pieces that our minds can digest, as trying to take in the blend of nature’s art and man’s work can be overwhelming.

Coming out the other side, I got a photo with the guards and then rode another horse back to the entrance. I told Julie I would meet her at the room at 11:30 am, though I didn’t need to be there till noon, so I stopped by to see Abdallah. He was laying on the floor, hung over from last night. I went to the father/son shop to get a discount on water and since they’d gone home I got a small one for free.

Montreal Castle

Montreal Castle

Ahmed followed me to the hotel because he wanted to take me to Wadi Musa Spring and said he’d wait outside while we checked out. Julie offered me a falafel she’d gotten from Abdallah that I ate while she finished packing. She came outside and was ready to leave. I bid Ahmed goodbye. He gave me his number and I gave him the 30 JD we agreed on. There are guides you can book online, companies you can go through, or haggling to be done – though I know I still overpaid, I got a good deal today.

As we got to the city limits, Julie changed her mind about seeing that spring, so we looked for it with no luck and no help from the police who don’t speak English. We drove out of the city for the second time that day and made our way to Montreal Castle, built by Baldwin I of Jerusalem in 1115 and renovated in the 14th century by the Mamelukes – slaves of the king, considered to be true warriors that would go on to carry positions of power – and who were responsible for ending the Crusades in 1291.

tower with stone inscription

tower with a stone inscription

We looked inside the museum and then Julie chose to sit in the coffee shop while I walked up the road past one of the stone towers with Arabic inscription and the guard selling old coins – one of a soldier with thick hair and a prominent nose. I sign into the guestbook and am greeted by my tour guide, Thallal, who will use sticks and plant stems that were laying around to turn his torchlight (aka flashlight) on and off as we go from bright outside to peering into dark corners inside. He took me up to the edge of the castle so that I could yell into the canyon, “ECHO!”

He showed me the wine-press made into a sugar press when the Muslims took over, the safe in the floor where they stored gold, and the 365 slippery and crumbling steps to the well (we only did twenty). He pointed out where they could hang up to three people at a time, where the Arabic school was, and the market that sold jewelry and spices. There was a room with cannonballs and reliefs and we sat down, with me in the queen’s throne, and enjoyed the sun through the skylight. The castle might not look that spacious from a distance, but the builders took advantage of the mountain.

a lot of stone work inside the castle

a lot of stonework inside the castle

I tipped Thallal 2 JD for his efforts of translation and kindness. On my way down the hill, I yelled into the canyon again. Julie had bought some spices that she looks forward to sharing over a meal in Bahrain. Inside they have currency from Mexico, Australia, South Africa, Malaysia, India, Venezuela, and Cuba. They also have one qirsh – the smallest denomination of Jordanian currency.

I drove us through the mountains in search of the Dead Sea. We stopped somewhere for the view at 2:50 pm and these two guys, parked there, kept saying something about the Dana Reserve. I took a photo with one of them and he got a different reaction from Julie when he tried putting his arm around her. We stopped 30 minutes later at Alhala Restaurant in Tafila. Julie felt we were in the middle of nowhere, as most places are in the desert, and wondered where their business comes from – over 80,000 residents and 50,000 travelers – thanks to Dana Reserve and the hot springs in the governorate.

lotsa rocks

lotsa rocks

We paid 1 JD for a long shawarma with fries, tomatoes, and cucumbers, eaten off a Sports Authority tray. The staff showed us the large in-ground pots outside where they cook 100 chickens at once and told us that a shawarma stick can hold 200 chickens. We thanked them and got back on the road – and watched the hills go from green to brown to lake – as if the grass had melted into a pool.

We first saw water on the horizon at 5:13pm and passed a sign for sea level at 5:20pm and thought we were getting closer to the Dead Sea – around the next bend, past the herd of goats, and the goodbye sign from the Municipality of Al Aghwar Al Janubiyya – and there’s just more road going along. I stopped on the shoulder for pictures of the sun on the water in front of us and the rocks behind us.

Dead Sea coastline

Dead Sea coastline

We stopped by Wadi Mujib’s dam (the exit of Jordan’s Grand Canyon – and the lowest nature reserve) for a picture or ten. We get approached by another friendly Jordanian and Julie says (paraphrasing), “thanks, but I gotta pee!” We follow Mohamed, over the cliff of no returns, to his chalet that he stays in while building the rest of the resort, so Julie can experience release. I was going to wait in the car, but the hanging wet clothes with the promise of water has me and the camera out on the prowl.

I ask our host if we can go for a swim and he suggests (also paraphrasing), “fewer clothes means more sea on you”. I told him I planned on changing into a swimsuit, and he waited, and then helped us down the rocky embankment. I’d seen what I thought was a wooden staircase to the beach – it’s not. Julie panics and I lighten the situation by telling her to cry it out so I don’t have to cry about my mom – she gets in the water. Luckily, she’s brought a waterproof camera. I leave mine with Mohamed.

Dead Sea cliffs

Dead Sea cliffs

I walk into the water and am questioning my ability to float. Julie tells me to lift my legs and there is instant buoyancy. I think how great this is – not standing on inches of sharp salt that has accumulated on the rocks and I start to roll over until I get salt in my face holes – don’t do that! In the mess of things I somehow manage to get a salt jab to the derriere and this causes me to lay back and float – and take selfies with Julie as we’ve accomplished another bucket list item.

Meanwhile, Mohamed has scraped up mud along the coast to cover us with. I go up first and he tries the same trick, “less swimsuit means more mud on you”. I tell him I’m fine leaving my bits covered. He already has more access to my body than any other man has had in years (I think couples massage 2009). He starts with my arms and I’m quickly transformed as Julie documents the process so Caleb can see as Mohamed makes me go from peach to black minus hands and feet.

incomplete boardwalk to Dead Sea

incomplete boardwalk to the Dead Sea

He starts on Julie and then we’re told to stand there and let it dry for maximum effect. I wait ten minutes and then wash off so I can capture the living colors around me as the sun sets at 7 pm and Mohamed is eager to get us out of the water before dark – a Middle East thing about borders, bodies, drugs, etc.  I followed him on the rocks to a spot that would be easier for Julie to climb back up as she bobbed along in the water. I’m surprised more people haven’t turned their pools or spare tubs into mini dead seas as I now plan to do.

Ten minutes later we were having ‘tea by the sea’ (hashtag) with a chunk of salt on the table that I picked up and Mohamed’s quiet friend. It was a wonderful moment, but over quickly as it would be slow going in the mountains with our brights on and lack of lane lines to follow. I was able to pick up the pace once we hit the city street lights. We went back to Dana’s so Julie could shower and I took selfies of my salty-muddy self at 8:40 pm before letting her have the bathroom. I washed my face, hands, and feet. I could see the salt in my hair and feel it on my jeans.

floating in the Dead Sea

floating in the Dead Sea

It’s 9:15 pm before we leave the house. We go to the sheesha place so Julie can use their wi-fi to do homework while I play Tarneeb with Sara and Waleed – who will teach me the suits: cupa and dīnārī; and how to say, ‘How’re you?’ in Arabic: kayfa ḥālik? I want to try mansaf for dinner and they know just the place, but while Julie finishes her chat she gets two orders of cheese sticks and some garlic bread, so I order a bowl of booza (mastic Arabic ice cream with salep to slow the melting process) which is sticky with pistachios and chocolate syrup. I’m given four scoops, enough for the table, but they let me relish in this cold sweet at a dinar per scoop plus 0.5 JD for toppings. 

We leave the sheesha place at 11pm and Waleed drives our rental car. Julie has been looking forward to this so that he can call the company and complain about the crap condition of their vehicle. He tries to ask the guy if he would let his wife or daughter drive this and the guy argues that he’d be driving, but we’re assured that we will be getting a different car or a refund – which is up to Julie. 

this is mansaf

this is mansaf

Sara orders two servings of mansaf – which is a bowl of bread and rice (nuts extra) and another bowl with lamb and yogurt as one portion. Julie is busying herself getting a slice of chocolate mousse cake and strawberry cheesecake. Sara pays for dinner at 11:45 pm. Waleed is right; this is filling. I finish the meat and half the rice and get the rest for take away to save room for dessert.

Waleed brings two kinds of kanafeh – an Arabic sweet with cheese, to the table – one with crunchy vermicelli and one that’s spongy, both with pistachios. I start getting sleepy. We drop Sara off at her place at 12:50 am, then Waleed drives us back to the sheesha place so he can walk home. Julie moves from the passenger seat, so I stay in the back and sleep while she drives us back to Dana’s. I don’t know how lost she got, but we didn’t get there till 2 am and I still needed to shower. I went to bed with wet hair to wake up with.

Posted in Animals, Art, Education, Food, Friends, Hiking, History, Music, People, Photography, Travel, Water | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Rum, Wine, Beer, and Whiskey

Oh, give me a home where the camel graze... and I'll play in the sun all day

Oh, give me a home where the camel graze… and I’ll play in the sun all day

I wake up at 1:00 am, and even with Julie snoring, am able to go back to sleep until 8:30 when she wakes me at My Hotel. We go upstairs to enjoy a meal from the buffet by the window, but not before taking in the view of the city surrounded by mountains and ocean from the pool area. I feel lucky to have pita with yogurt and honey, along with pound cake and French bread, to carb-start my day before making our way to Wadi Rum (aka Valley of the Moon).

Jordan’s ‘American Alley’ consists of KFC, Pizza Hut, Popeyes, and Burger King. There are a few metal art installations and lots of planted trees along the road and in the roundabouts, and then… the giant wooden fish that seems to be eating one of his scales. I want to stop and hike in the mountains, pet the goats that are eating rocks, and ride the camels grazing in the field; but that’s the traveler in me that prefers to explore without time restraints, boundary laws, and property rights – at least when it comes to animals.

Journey Through 1916 at the Wadi Rum Station

Journey Through 1916 at the Wadi Rum Station

I pause at the railroad crossing to take in the view (or look cautiously for the train that could come speeding around the blind corner) and admire the sign of the little engine with its big puff of smoke (which seems entirely possible that the train would overheat in this region). Ten minutes down the road appears what could be a radio station or an active train depot – if it wasn’t for the rusted boxcars and the 1916 sign making it more like a museum or an interactive site to travel through time. But again, no time to stray from the semi-planned itinerary.

It’s only another 15 minutes, past the mountains that go from looking like stacked papers to shelved books, to the visitor center main entrance. There’s a large sign with the option of a vehicle or camel tour with distance, time, and price listed beside each choice. Our guide, the man who called dibs on us, is ready to waive the entrance fees if we will hire him. Julie tells him to back off before she gets bitchy, and we go into the pricey coldstore to buy a large water each and a Connection for me – a Snickers/Musketeers combo, while we discuss our plans; she doesn’t want to be late for Petra by Night.

me on a dromedary in the desert

me on a dromedary in the desert

We agree to meet our guide in Rum Village at 11:00 am where the restaurant and camel rides are, and the tours begin. This park reminds me of Canada’s parks in the sense that they are unpaved with little proof or signage of their existence, so the guide is here to wait for us to return from short trips within the vast expanse of desert path that we have chosen – looking out for the safety of the park and its visitors to Middle Eastern standards.

I see a camel and an opportunity to experience the ‘stand and sit’ before we start. The guide calls the owner over and I’m on the hump taking selfies. There’s a lot of padding and even a handle on the seat and I imagine what it would be like to ride a camel through the desert, especially if he got in the mood to run, which is why they have guides walking them with harnesses. I’ve been on a running horse on a small farm, but I’m sure a camel doing the same thing here would alter my dream to the extreme; of course, this will remain an item on my bucket list.

camel option through Wadi Rum vs. 4WD that we took

camel option through Wadi Rum vs. 4WD that we took

Julie regrets not riding an elephant in Angkor Wat and doesn’t want to feel the same way about Jordan, so over she goes. It’s funny to watch her throw her short leg over and then scream when the camel goes to sit as she thinks she will fall – hence why the men stand nearby as it’s a common occurrence. The men tried to hide their chuckles, but I laughed out loud and continued to do so on the way to the tour truck.

With a good laugh out of the way, we’re ready to start the tour at an agreed price of 40 JD. It was 35 when we left the visitor center, but we can appreciate the even number with the agreement that we get at least two hours and some cash towards the camel guy. The guide puts two cushions in the back and we’re grateful as we hit the bumps of the road and the rocks and sand of the desert. I thought Jordan would be flat with Petra hidden in the middle, but this country is full of mountains, sand dunes, deserts, farmland, trees, cliff sides, and water – it’s beautiful.

view from springs

view from natural springs trail – not the top

Our first stop is a natural spring. Our guide has the option to sit in his truck, sit in the shade of the tent selling things to tourists, or to join us. He goes with the first and I begin to wander and then to climb, not as high as the man who made it to the small spring surrounded by plenty of lizards out enjoying the cool weather, but high enough to get a better view of the valley below, and to see a lizard rock hopping. We make our way back to the truck with Julie’s new 10 JD keffiyeh on her head to help shade her from the sun. I put my hoodie up to protect my neck since the hat that I brought, for this reason, is smashed inside my bag that’s packed in the trunk of the rental.

Our next stop is a single dune on top of a rocky hill. Our driver has to back up and try again (more gas pedal) to get us parked by the others that are on their way as we pull up. I enjoy feeling the soft sand on my toes until it starts to burn. I put my sandals back on until I make it to the crest where I can dig my feet into the cool below while I take a panorama before we head to a canyon. Julie starts to explore as I go the way another woman has just come – the toilet direction. I think I find a good spot until I look up and can see the camp. I go down further between rocks and find other patches of wet sand where others haven’t ever seen a cat pee.

lone dune

the lone dune

We go up the stairs, stones and clay, on the rock and into the canyon. We tiptoe the edge; along with the other people covered in hats, cameras, bags; past the water to get in further. This is where the angles are: the smooth lines and deep crevices; the sharp edges and soft water; and the bright sun contrasting the petroglyphs on their canvas. The next pool is an unknown depth and we’re not ready to swim, so we take some more pictures – of the canyon and ourselves before going back to camp where I hear one guide describing the local attire and watch another apply a burqa to a woman to aid in his explanation. We sit along the wall and have tea, mine with no sugar.

The boy sitting next to me, definitely a teenager, has beautiful eyes, as most Jordanians do. I ask for a picture and he asks for money. Our guide tells me to kiss him on the cheek and he shies away – not that I would’ve done it unless I was guaranteed the picture for proof. He went un-kissed and un-photographed and we were on our way to the temple, or what’s left of it. The guide had told us we have time for one of the bridges, but wouldn’t tell us how long that would take and wanted an extra 5 dinars each, so we headed back to town.

the tea maker

the tea maker in camp

I wouldn’t walk on a historical wall in the States, but here there are rocks positioned just for that, at least that’s what it looks like to me with the footprints for added proof. I go in to inspect the rocks and crevices and Julie goes the other way to see what she can find. We meet back at the truck and our driver sits up – what a job he has. Perhaps if we were sitting in front we would get more info about the area, but that’s not happening. He drops us back to the car and we give him 20 JD each.

Our guide offered to take us to lunch. We said no thanks at the same time. We are very capable of finding food and don’t need to pay for assistance. There is a restaurant across the street, but we will be making our way north to get to Petra before dark. I’m excited and my foot heavy. We’re making great time flying down this smooth section of road sans speed bumps which Jordan is famous for – at least for surprising us since most are unmarked and Julie was unaware of what the sign meant.

temple ruins

temple ruins

I see the sign for the railroad tracks – the ones with a stop sign because there is a sharp turn for the train and no bars or horns to warn you otherwise of its approach. We stopped on the way down and took a picture from the window. This time the picture will be of the flat tire I get us at 1:30 pm after we crash down on the other side. I’d like to blame this on the shit condition of the car – bumper falling off, two bald tires in front, and the headlights pointing down because they’re loose, but the damage is from the scratched rim poking a hole – way to go Jess.

Even though I know how to change a tire I’m quick to throw my hand in the air at the truck following behind us. The passenger is kicked out to help us while his friend drives on. He’s quick to put the donut on only to realize that it has as many cracks in it as the road does and we’ll soon have another flat. He rides into town with us and directs us to a garage. We are charged 50 dinars ($70) for tire and services, which might be considered a great deal in the States, but it’s an overcharge here. All Julie and I can think of as we drive away is that we should’ve gotten a receipt for reimbursement from the rental company.

I'll eat while he works

I’ll eat while he works and Julie photographs

Julie will take over driving for a while. We need the other tire to last. At 2:45 pm we stop at a Petra gift shop where the owner tells me everything is handmade and some of their costs are paid for by US AID, so since we’re Americans we can get things 25% off. As grateful as I am I have no need for tacky magnets, rusty locks, shiny lamps, large bags, and plenty of other displayable items that I have no shelf for. Julie does find something nice though in the blue color she loves and after enjoying a glass of tea we’re back on the road.

I thought Petra was just the Treasury hidden in a butte in the middle of the desert, but I was wrong. There is a shopping village and beautiful mountain range in the town of Wadi Musa (the water from the opposing mountain in the distance – 14 km hike). It’s a long way down to the valley, past the entrance to Petra, and up the hill behind Movenpick (that was booked, regardless of our coupon) to the La Maison behind.

road to Petra

road to Petra

We check-in to room G-08, and buy our 17 dinar tickets for Petra by Night. I’m eager to see it, but it’s 4:30 pm now and the site closes at 7 pm so they can set up the candles for the reopening at 8:30 pm. That would be a lot of walking (but as anyone who has been knows, it’s definitely worth it) or running (and I don’t want to rush). I will check out the town after I put my bag in the room and head out with a phone, camera, and cash. We can leave the key with the front desk and I leave the car keys with Julie.

I walk down the hill, past the purple and yellow flowers, to the shops. I’m stopped by a curious guy who offers me a free lemon popsicle and some conversation with him and his son. They want to take me to dinner and I tell them it has to be before 7:30, pre-Petra, or at 10:30, post-Petra, but he says that’s too late. I head to the visitor center to see what the museum has – lots of pottery, busts, and information about the Nabataeans – and their women being equal to men in society. I inquire at the desk and the site opens at 6am – enough time to explore before we have to leave tomorrow.

this camel smoked too much sheesha

this camel smoked too much sheesha

Outside, I’m stopped by Abdallah who wants to talk and offers to buy me a drink at Guest House Hotel. I ask for a local white wine and am brought a glass while he drinks his whiskey from a paper cup. I’m eager to get outside and see things, not sit inside, but I tell him the story of the boy with the beautiful eyes, so we go into his shop and I let him put kohl on my eyes – to help bring out the color. He put it on lightly and then another guy applied a second coat.

We were on our way in search of Petra Beer, at 8 and 10% ABV (with no need for the 13%), at 6 pm. It’s also something new for me to try, and something I don’t usually do – drink on vacation. We happened upon his friend Mohamed who was traveling with an Israeli singer who he just met outside the entrance of Petra as well, and walked with her to the Treasury. They were glad to join us as we stopped at one place and then took to the village hills to find the beer at Valentine Inn where they have a 15 dinar Turkish bath for hotel guests; along with Wadi Rum tours, dinner buffets, movie nights, and a midnight curfew – popular in the Middle East for hotels and women under 25.

me with kohl on my eyes in Petra

me with kohl on my eyes in Petra

In keeping with my mood to stay outside we decided on a hill overlooking the city to watch the sunset. It was absolutely amazing to be sharing this moment with these people. The girls had a beer, me what was left of mine after I foamed it up, and the guys whiskey with apple juice – a yummy combo. The sun went behind dark clouds and soon the mountains. After 7 pm, the Maghrib (place where the sun sets) prayer filled the canyon with amazing sound. Then it was time to pee. The singer went behind the large rock and Abdallah showed me some sage growing on the rocks (perhaps something to wipe with) before I found another rock. I went to take a picture of the piece he picked and he said why not get the whole plant… sage advice.

I told the group that I would meet Julie at 7:30 and that they were welcome at our hotel’s happy hour from 7:30 to 8:30. On the way to the hotel, and popular in Jordan, I noticed that taxi drivers have their inner lights on when there’s a passenger. I don’t know if this is to make the customer feel safer or to let people hailing cabs know that this one is taken, as there are legal debates all over the States as to the amount of distraction with lights inside the car and to their legality of use at night.

sunset over the valley

sunset over the valley

At La Maison, Julie had tried to see the top floor and been denied, something about renovations. Abdallah talked with a guy and they opened up the balcony for us – and the bar. I drank a beer with them; then Julie and I walked down the hill and said we’d see them at 10:30 pm. We started walking along the luminaries at 8:30 and I could hear crunching rocks and foreign languages. I could tell we were heading into a canyon as the lights started to grow on the shadows around us – placed in holes and on steps, but I couldn’t see anything else but the dirt around the bags and lights in the distance that soon faded as we made our way into the park and away from the city.

I appreciate a park being open after dark, with the advantage of a different perspective, even if it is a separate entrance fee. I know we’ve reached the Treasury by the 200 candles lit up on the stairs – and I’m gauging how long this will take me to see in the morning when I can take more photos if it takes 30 minutes before the light of the moon has had time to join us down here – how deep are we?

Petra by Night luminaries

Petra by Night luminaries

The 300 people are led in to sit on the stairs behind the candles, on the ground amongst them, and filling in the space between the steps in front of me and the wall behind me – like we’re in a topless cave. I stand in the back and listen as the flute player fills the canyon with sound before a man uses his voice with a rababa – a bowed instrument aka a spike fiddle – to do the same. I’m glad people are willing to watch with their eyes and not their phones. I watch the cats weave around the candles that cast light enough to cause curiosity, but not to fulfill it.

There are men carrying trays of tea glasses and as soon as Julie gets hers at 9:30 I squat beside her. This is great for the peaceful ambiance, but I want to experience the canyon without all the people, and now is the time. We walk back and are slowly joined by others passing us. The moon and stars are beautiful, the shadows playful, and the area more magical, mysterious, and spacious. It sedates my feet and quickens my heart. I have to come back.

old man with his oud

old man with his oud

I get to the lift of our hotel at 10:30 as the group is coming down. They were done waiting on us, and Julie had gone down the street to get a soda. I said I’d be back for her in our car or theirs. We called out to her and she ignored us at first, as usual catcallers that know her by name, and then we were able to convince her to cross the street and get in. At 11:15 pm we were back at Valentine Inn getting beers and ice, and an old man was kind enough to sing for me while playing his oud – a paired-string instrument popular in East Africa and the Middle East aka an Arabic lute.

Julie was ready to go after dinner plans went from trying mansaf – a traditional Jordanian dish – to getting firewood for a BBQ. The guys loaded the wood into the back of the car, we dropped Julie back to the room, and made our way to Little Petra to cook in a cave – or a grotto-esque recess – about big enough for six to sleep with a fire, which we had going by 11:30 pm. We were joined by two other guys, one I recognized from earlier as we’d given him a ride, but they left before the food was ready.

city lights while fireside

city lights while fireside

We passed the time talking by the fire, dancing under the moonlight on the rocks, and the others singing their cultural songs. I feel bad now that I didn’t participate but I debated singing Twinkle, Twinkle or Old MacDonald or the Star Spangled Banner. There were half chickens with bread and I had two of them. I didn’t know I was that hungry. We put our trash on the fire before kicking the extra wood out to save for the next people, and then put the coals out. There’s a great view of the city lights from here and I appreciate the local perspective given to me by Abdallah and Mohamed who got me back to the room by 2 am. I woke Julie for a second just by coming into the room but was quick to change out of my smoky clothes and climb into bed for tomorrow.

Posted in Animals, Art, Education, Food, Friends, Hiking, History, Music, People, Photography, Travel, Water | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments