Sorry it has been a while since we last posted stuff in The Camel Diaries but between exams, losing our phone line for a while and general business, it has been hard to find a moment to put some words down.
Anyway, enough excuses…
There are lots of things to write about since the last post from Malta. About a week after that trip, the Desert Rat and I headed down to the Fezzan region in southern Libya with some friends on a tour of the desert. If I had to describe the experience in one word, all I would need to say is AWESOME!
We flew from Tripoli to Sabha on the Thursday night after work. In the morning we got up and drove off in a line of 4 wheel drives. There were 4 cars all together – three carrying us and one kitchen car. There were eight of us, 4 drivers, a cook, a guide and a tourist policeman (you are not allowed to travel outside of the Tripoli area without an escort due to a few years ago some idiot tourists tried to leave the country carrying some rock art they had chiselled off the side of a cliff wall – cheers guys!).
The first stop was in Germa, to see an ancient town that has been there since at least the first century. All that is left are some mud brick walls that are eroding away but you can get a good feel for what it must have been like.
After Germa we continued our drive south-west and began our trip off-road into the desert. We camped each night – getting to the site before dark in time to pitch our tent. We were very spoilt in that each night the cook made us a hearty dinner and all we had to do was wait around to be served!! Our after dinner activities each night usually involved a scramble up a sand dune to watch the stars.
Each day after breakfast, we headed off – the drivers know the area like the back of their hand. How they knew which sand dune to turn at or which tyre tracks in the sand to follow, I will never know!!
One of the reasons that tourists are drawn to this are is the rock art. This can be paintings or carvings and archaeologists have determined that some are as old as 10,000 years. The pictures illustrate a time when the Fezzan area was a fertile savannah where wild animals roamed and people kept domesticated cattle. The Romans used to trade with the locals, buying the lions and tigers etc for the Gladiator fights. The art is found on the rock faces of the hills with the best ones sheltered from the elements. It is just amazing – most you can go right up to, though they seem to be now fencing some of the more important sites off to protect them from people touching them. Some examples of rock art:
Did I mention the scenery was spectacular?
Now, The Camel Diaries would be incomplete without some camels. We came across a few on this trip, both wild and tamed. For the adventurous folk out there, you can go on guided tours, leaving the cars behind and going on a camel instead.
We spent some time in the Murzuq Sand Sea. You know how in primary school you learn about what a desert is, and pictures of massive sand dunes in the Sahara are shown. Well, this was it! I had to pinch myself a few times to remind myself that I really was in the Sahara Desert!!
On the second to last day we went into Wadi Methkandoush where the main rock carvings are. They show how animals such as elephants and rhinos, giraffes, monkeys and even crocodiles lived here once.
We then drove up to Ubari Sand Sea which is special as there is a series of lakes. One is fresh but the rest are extremely salty. They are all beautiful and there is a little community living there.
I hope these photos have given you some idea about how beautiful southern Libya is. The Desert Rat and I feel extremely privileged to have the opportunity to see such amazing sights.
Until next time....
Sahara Gal
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