In the footsteps of Moses

 

Friday 6 October

This morning we depart Amman and head south.  We pass lots of street stalls selling brightly coloured pomegranates, eggplants and tomatoes.  We have no photos of these because it seems like an intrusion, but the colours and displays are wonderful.  Enhanced by the many olive and date trees bearing fruit.

F4E41BD9-4DF9-4051-8943-B28ABD5C29A0

We travel down the 5000 year old Kings Highway, which is covered in what appears to be 5000 years of litter.   Our guide blames the wind.  We keep uncharacteristicaly quiet but it is evident to us that this litter is no breeze.

96F2CCB5-2315-47B9-B2B3-112871C75F9CAmongst this barren landscape we are delighted to see the odd farm

74DECEDD-E86B-4185-8C9D-D78AE5EEC12B

We visit the Greek Orthodox St George’s Church which houses the oldest map of Palestine in existence – all in mosaic and done in 560AD.  I also learned that St George was a Greek – who knew?

E5A1BD0B-BB34-44C7-97FD-00312E845BA2

The Dead Sea is depicted top right with a turtle in it (actually, Cherrie tells me it is people in a boat) and Jerusalem lower right in what appears to be a walled city.

From there we proceed to Mt Nebo.  Now, the Bible has never been a page turner for me and I only remember what was drummed into me in scripture lessons at school, but so much of what we are about to see almost moves me because it is so familiar.  Mt Nebo is where it is said Moses saw the Promised Land.  Where is it?

AF7FF2C9-D9A6-4013-B553-C989C5B9D9E7

Oh, cripes there it is

0C67FEEC-BD91-42E3-85DD-25C577561730

I am grateful that this land was not promised to me.   If you look carefully you can see the River Jordan, in which it is said Christ was baptised.  From here, as the Christian crow flies, Jericho is 27kms, Jerusalem 46kms and Bethlehem 50kms.  We’re right amongst it folks.  Having seen the promised land, it is said Moses died. Frankly I’m not surprised. It is said he was 120 years old!  No one knows where he is buried but there is a wonderful Church on Mt Nebo which was built in 350AD in honour of Moses.  Over the years most of the church was destroyed but the wonderful mosaics have been preserved and it is now a modern chapel and a Franciscan community.  Pope John Paul II visited in 2000 so it got a good makeover for that.  It has been beautifully done.

7CBE01D7-8C0B-4FED-B088-997CDC933E2D

67B805EF-6A51-49C1-87E9-918F5CAB0714

We see what it called a rolling stone (with apologies to Mick) which is used to seal up tombs.  And, it is said, was moved from Christ’s tomb

C2123212-4263-46C2-A759-B23BEA85B4AC

We have an hour for lunch each day, which is hardly enough time to finish the feast before us.  Always with a delicious lemon mint drink, always with what are referred to as salads which consist of hommus, baba ganouche (unlike the one we enjoy in Australia – this with tomato, cucumber, cardamom etc as well as the eggplant), other dips, fatouche (lettuce, tomato, cucumber, toasted pita bread croutons), falafel and lots more.  Then there’s the main course, which may be lamb, rice and yoghurt or chicken and rice etc.  Far too much food goes to waste.  And waist.

We were to visit a crusader castle after lunch today but our guide informed us yesterday that there is simply not enough hours in the day to fit it in.  Having led a few crusades in our time, we are not concerned. We do however drive past Shobak Castle en route to Petra

D3D46EC7-BE71-4E64-AD00-37FAB031AB1F

We are now headed to Petra, which is probably our primary reason for being in Jordan.  We pass through countryside which is much the same everywhere

 

And the greening of Jordan program did not impress Cherrie

C9680FBD-1D9B-4B01-97DF-D07D79919EF8

We arrive in Petra at 5pm and we commence a cooking class at Petra Kitchen an hour later.  We join five others (Harvey and Laurie from California, Yuan and Beau from Beijing and Corinne from Amsterdam) and learn to cook lentil soup, baba ganuj (Jordan way), a spicy tomato dish called galayat Bandaranaike, tahini salad, cucumber and tomato salad, rice with chicken and my personal favourite Bedouin pizza.  Something to do with all that beef mince left over from Tony.  It is a fun experience but I am so exhuausted from this holiday lark that I barely stay awake.  It’s a late night for us, nearly 10pm when we get to bed!!

Tomorrow, the lost city of Petra

Amman (and two women)

Wednesday 4 October
After a 3 hour flight from Dubai to Amman with Emirates we are singing the praises of Qantas.  Honestly, the service on both is chalk and cheese.  And we prefer cheese.

We were met at Amman airport and transferred to our luxurious hotel.  We are staying at the Four Seasons and it’s probably a good idea to stay in luxury in a city such as this.  The airport is quite a long way out of town, 30kms, and the drive made me feel like a foreign correspondent.  Except for the journalistic skills.  We are clearly in a different culture and very different landscape.  There is nothing western about that drive at all.  It looks like the television images we see of the Gaza Strip.  Desolate, sandy, barren hills, some with olive groves, some with camels (farmed for their milk) but most with nothing.  Then there are the ones with houses, all the same.  Square, just off white, with square windows cut in.  The scene reminded me of a design presentation at day one of rehearsal, with a white cardboard set model.  Little boxes on the hillside.

As we neared the city the density of the buildings obviously increased and from our hotel window we see just buildings.

40913485-CEBA-475E-98AF-83C50A0945E7.jpeg

 

Entry to the hotel included a full security check.  Mirrors under the car, open the boot to check for unsavoury things or people and then a friendly wave through.  All luggage and people scanned and xrayed on entry to the foyer.  But then we were met by a surfeit of friendly, welcoming and ever so slightly intrusive (but very well intentioned) staff wishing us a happy stay and ensuring us of their undying attention.  We may test that yet…..

We are exhausted but its only 6pm and so we go down to the 151 bar on the ground floor for a drink and snack (at eye watering prices!).  Lots of the patrons were smoking hookahs, the vessels with hose pipes, lots of smoke and flavoured tobacco.

Cherrie complained of passive hooking and so we retired to the room.

Thursday 5 October
This morning we meet our tour guide (Murad) and driver (Raed) for the next five days.  It takes us all of today to learn the pronunciation of their names.  How handy it would be for the travel agency to advise us the day prior as to the phonetic pronunciation of those we will spend much time with.  It would save embarrassment  for both parties.

We set off for a full day tour of Jordan’s capital, Amman.  It is a modern, bustling city full of cars with apparently non functioning indicators.  Or drivers who have not yet discovered what that little stick to the side of the steering wheel is for.  We visit the Citadel which sits on the highest of the 7 hills in Amman (actually it used to be 7 hills but the city has expanded to such an extent that there are now more than 20!).  The Citadel is a historic site dating back to the Bronze Age.  There we see the Temple of Hercules (built by the Romans)

F346A16B-259C-45F5-B234-84BFBBB40EC0

The palace, built in 720AD stands against the modern skyline

ABA8DBEB-AF98-46B9-924B-D7485EA8C4BD

The Archeological Museum is a simple affair but its here that we saw the oldest figure made by man in 8000BC

8310DFD7-1FE8-4B83-880E-07571602933B

And even Tony Abbott is represented (no doubt because of his ancient views on most things)

0A1D64ED-22E2-44DE-B9EA-4854FEB54706

From there we moved to the Amphitheatre, built by the Romans in the 2nd Century and which has perfect acoustics.  A small house though, resembling many of those of Christine Dunstan Productions in the past82370BC9-00A0-49F9-AC1D-3B0E9B680EAD

We also visit a private art gallery of Khalid Shoman, whose family founded the Arab Bank.  It’s set in a wonderful house and is an eclectic and interesting collection

After lunch, during which our tour guide indulges in a hookah

FB844E1B-C8FD-40B3-999B-7FE3A0A90C91

we head north, within 20 kms of the Syrian border (yikes) to the ancient city of Jarash.  We take the road to Damascus, but you will no doubt be disappointed to learn that I remain the same troublesome woman I always was.  No conversion for me.

Jarash is a walled Greco-Roman settlement, again dating back to the Bronze Age.  It’s a large site with lots of archeological works still happening.  It has, like so many sites in Jordan, been severely affected by earthquakes over past centuries and so lots of columns etc are no longer standing.  However Hadrian’s Arch is there still, dating back to 200AD and the huge colonnade around the oval shaped forum.

Back to the hotel at the end of a long day, we eat early and simply and retire to prepare for tomorrow when we head to Petra.

Hallo and Dubai

Wednesday 4 October 2017

So, the adventure has begun. We are travelling with a mini iPad this time (now that I’m retired), so a blog is even more challenging, for those of you who read it as well as those of us who aspire to write it. This is our travel diary, primarily as our holiday record, so if you don’t enjoy it please log off now! Or anytime the boredom sets in. So, here we go…..On Tuesday afternoon we depart from Sydney domestic terminal, where we bump into my old (and I mean that in every sense of the word) friend Michael Lynch, providing an amusing diversion for us. It’s a convoluted itinerary from Sydney to Dubai, courtesy of Qantas frequent flyer points. Serves us right for being cheapskates I guess. Sydney-Adelaide-Melbourne-Dubai, with a convenient 3 hour stop over in both Adelaide and Melbourne. By the time we reach Tullamarine we are somewhat over flying and consider a five week holiday in the bleak city instead. But, hey, the bright lights of the Middle East are calling. When we take off at midnight we have already been on the move for 18 hours, having woken for an early airport run. We have been looking after Bartie Arnott-Smith for the past 6 weeks while his mother Susie was in the UK. It was wonderful to have a dog around Quamby again and we loved every minute of it. Coincidentally Susie arrived back in Sydney the day we depart so we did a sunrise handover of the Bart.

FDA89165-31D6-4830-91DE-6C736C061069

We wil miss him but we expect that there will be plenty of distractions coming up.

An unevetful flight to Dubai except for some unexpected and significant turbulence 40 minutes before we touch down. So dramatic was it that there were some screams from alarmed passengers. Not us, of course. But it didn’t last long fortunately and was explained by a Boeing 777 a few miles ahead of us. We apparently got caught in the wake and a slight alteration to our flight path corrected everything. A smooth touchdown. We have 7 hours here before boarding our flight to Amman and so we had the good sense to book a hotel room in the airport. A cuppa, shower, snooze fixes everything. So, soon on to Amman and the beginning of our long planned holiday in Jordan and Morocco

Hallo and Dubai

So, the adventure has begun.  We are travelling with a mini iPad this time (now that I’m retired), so a blog is even more challenging, for those of you who read it as well as those of us who aspire to write it. This is our travel diary, primarily as our  holiday record, so if you don’t enjoy it please log off now!  Or anytime the boredom sets in.  So, here we go…..On Tuesday afternoon we depart from Sydney domestic terminal, where we bump into my old (and I mean that in every sense of the word) friend Michael Lynch, providing an amusing diversion for us.  It’s a convoluted itinerary from Sydney to Dubai, courtesy of Qantas frequent flyer points.  Serves us right for being cheapskates I guess.  Sydney-Adelaide-Melbourne-Dubai, with a convenient 3 hour stop over in both Adelaide and Melbourne.  By the time we reach Tullamarine we are somewhat over flying and consider a five week holiday in the bleak city instead.  But, hey, the bright lights of the Middle East are calling.  When we take off at midnight we have already been on the move for 18 hours, having woken for an early airport run.  We have been looking after Bartie Arnott-Smith for the past 6 weeks while his mother Susie was in the UK. It was wonderful to have a dog around Quamby again and we loved every minute of it.  Coincidentally Susie arrived back in Sydney the day we depart so we did a sunrise handover of the Bart.

FDA89165-31D6-4830-91DE-6C736C061069

We will miss him but we expect that there will be plenty of distractions coming up.

An uneventful flight to Dubai except for some unexpected and significant turbulence 40 minutes before we touch down.  So dramatic was it that there were some screams from alarmed passengers.  Not us, of course.  But it didn’t last long fortunately and was explained by a Boeing 777 a few miles ahead of us.  We apparently got caught in the wake and a slight alteration to our flight path corrected everything.  A smooth touchdown.  We have 7 hours here before boarding our flight to Amman and so we had the good sense to book a hotel room in the airport.  A cuppa, shower, snooze fixes everything.   So, soon on to Amman and the beginning of our long planned holiday in Jordan and Morocco.

Ooh La La; Au Revoir

Monday 30 May

We had plans to go to the Jardin des Plantes today, and then to Place des Vosges. No musee open today, Monday is day off!  What a relief.

We headed out in our rain gear but by the time we got to the metro, we realised that this was a futile exercise.  It’s just too wet, windy and cold to go anywhere.  So we headed home again.  Early afternoon we braved the elements again and had a bowl of onion soup (surely I don’t need to insert French there) and again we got wet.  The television in the very classy luncheon place indicated to we non-French speaking ignorami that the metro is on strike so we probably wouldn’t have got anywhere anyway, except on foot and that was far too slushy.   On the way back to our apartment Cherrie popped into a hairdresser and had a trim. Sign language works wonders; it was a good trim too.

Dinner back in our local tonight, Chez France.  It’s a lovely small bistrot with great friendly service and a nice selection of food and wine, all reasonably priced. That’s a find in Paris, it really is a very expensive city.  Parisian food, in fact French food, is not what it used to be.  We remember when it was nearly impossible to find a bad meal in France.  Now it’s done a complete turnaround.

Tuesday 31 May

It rained heavily all night and still very wet this morning. But, we were not going to lose another day in Paris so once again we donned the wet weather gear and headed out on foot.  Cherrie’s umbrella may have got a little too much use recently and will be relegated to a Parisian rubbish bin when we leave!

IMG_1619

 First to the Musee du Quai Branly.  This is the building which boasts the vertical garden wall which we saw on our first day in Paris

The museum opened in 2006 and is dedicated to the civilisations and arts of Africa, Asia, Oceania and the Americas.  We are particularly interested in seeing the Australian Aboriginal works.  We got there early to be sure to have our tickets for the 9.30am opening.  It doesn’t open until 11am!  So, we wandered the beautiful gardens in the rain.

 

It’s a large area and beautifully landscaped, mostly with trees and grasses.  But hang on, what’s that?

IMG_1573

 Why, it’s a living fossil.  From Wollemi, right here in Paris.  This is a remarkably peaceful garden and the clear double glazed wall separating us from the busy Quay d’Orsay outside provides a complete sound barrier.  Finally it got too wet for us so we retreated to the coffee shop, which fortunately opens before the museum. The collection is very beautifully displayed with some nice Australian works by Rover Thomas, Mick Tjapaltarri and Kathleen Petyarre, amongst others

 There are terrific woven carpets from the Middle East, ornate robes from South East Asia and lots of carvings from Africa, the Polynesian and Melanesian islands, and all those in between

 I wanted to take a photo of the voo-doo dolls but Cherrie counselled me against it.  However I did spy this actress in ornate costume.  Garry and Genevieve, I believe that you have worked with her?

 IMG_1599

Leaving the Branly we crossed river on foot, well over a bridge on foot, heading to the metro.  The Seine is up and has breached its banks

This is the wettest May since 1873!

The metro is back working today, although we take Line 1 which is the one metro line in Paris least likely to be affected by the strikes, as these are driverless trains.  They pull up precisely to doorways on the platform, which only open to give access to the train once the computer says yes. IMG_1617

We walk around the oldest planned square in Paris, the lovely Place des Vosges

IMG_1620

And through the narrow streets of the Marais

IMG_1624

The rain isn’t putting off all the tourists.  These ones are planning to pray for a miracle break in the weather in the Notre Dame.  The photo doesn’t show the length of the queue, this is just one line of four around the square

IMG_1627

Finally, it gets too much for us and we get the train to Invalides and walk home.  The tower is not so visible today

IMG_1630

Wednesday 1 June

It’s not raining!  We take the train (as opposed to the metro) to the Jardin des Plantes, the main botanic garden in France. Set on 28ha it was originally signed off on by Louis XIII as a medicinal garden.  Whilst it’s not spectacularly maintained, Cherrie really liked it.  She loved the fact that there are demonstration gardens, with great displays of decorative plants.  Everything is really well labelled, making this a great educational garden, possibly because the school of horticulture is based here.

The rose garden is particularly spectacular

 But the recent rain has taken its toll

IMG_1636

We spent quite a long time in these gardens, memorising names of plants that we recognised but couldn’t put actually articulate, but thanks to the excellent labelling we were fully qualified.  For a few minutes.

 We came across this magnificent Cedar of Lebanon, planted in 1734 and still growing strong

IMG_1653

 Look at that canopy

IMG_1652

 While we’ve been in France we have observed the very different light than that which we have in Australia.  The European light is so much more subtle, and we can see the influence the Australian light had on the Heidelberg school.

We’ve seen them before, but here is another home for insects.  Their security detail seem distracted

IMG_1635

 Look at the size of that artichoke

IMG_1631

Within the gardens is also a zoo, with an amazing array of animals.  I can’t bear to see animals in cages so we didn’t go in, but the kids can have a fun time on the carousel riding animals they have seen  in the zoo

IMG_1681

 The weather closed in mid-afternoon and so we headed home.

We were so looking forward to meeting up with our friends from Woodhill, Bryan and Mary, for lunch tomorrow in Paris. They are just starting their 3 month holiday as we end ours.  We have been planning this lunch since Christmas.  But those bloody strikes have got in the way and Bryan rang from Singapore to say their flight has been delayed by 51/2 hours and they now arrive in Paris an hour before we leave.  If they arrive.  If we leave.

So our plans for tomorrow must change and we are so disappointed.  We have a cab booked for 3pm to take us to the airport. We shall decide in the morning what we do.  The weather will be influential in our decision.  Tonight we pack.

Thursday 2 June

We are at a complete loss as to what to do this morning!  We have so long planned this day, meeting up with Mary and Bryan in the Place des Vosges at 11am followed by lunch at Ma Bourgogne, and then back to the flat for a 2.45pm check out.  Now everything is grey, the skies and our day.  Mary and Bryan are on a plane right now, en route to Paris and we hope they land as planned at 5pm.  Our checking of the BA website promises that our flight will depart as scheduled at 6.05pm. We fly first to London where we have the pleasure of 3 hours at Heathrow before departing at 10.30pm for Sydney, via Singapore.

We’re all packed up, with nowhere to go.  It’s not a walking sort of day, drizzly and grey again.  So we’ve decided to walk to the metro and go to La Defence, the business district, where there is the square arch through which we can see all the way through the Arch de Triomphe, down the Champs Elysees, to the Louvre.  But we know there will be a ferris wheel in the way.

 We take the driverless train, line 1, to La Defence.  What a different, new side of Paris this is.

IMG_1701

The Grande Arch is under renovation, of course, and we can’t go up it.

Maybe we’ll come back in 2020.

So much for our view of the ferris wheel, but if you look carefully, you can see the Arc

IMG_1698

 Brr.  It’s cold out here and sprinkling with rain.  We went down into the foyer of the building which was like a ghost town.  This must be the quietest side of Paris as well as the newest IMG_1688

 Back at Invalides, the wind is blowing a gale and it is cold.

IMG_1703

So for lunch we have that famous Parisian speciality pizza and head to the apartment for the last time.  We missed you Bryan and Mary.

 As I write this it is 5pm local time and we are at Charles de Gaulle Aeroport and all checked in.  So far, we are supposed to take off on time.  We put our faith in the French unions to get us to London, oh and in BA of course!

And so it is that we head home after 3½ months of travel.   We have had some wonderful adventures (particularly in the Arctic Circle), seen some wonderful sights (particularly the ice breaking on the St Lawrence River), strolled some beautiful gardens (particularly those in the Loire Valley), caught up with friends (particularly in New York), laughed a lot (particularly with Garry and Di on the boat), eaten some fabulous food (particularly with Gus in the Languedoc), faced some challenges (particularly the theft of Cherrie’s handbag and therefore her identity),  had some frustrations (particularly with the insurance company, who still have not accepted Cherrie’s claim because she cannot provide proof of purchase of her late mother’s jewellery case or the jewellery inside it), increased our waistlines considerably and survived the French transport system.

It has been an adventure and a wonderful way for me to transition from work to not so work.  We have loved our holiday and now we are both ready for home a new and different life.  Maybe.

Thanks to all of you who have followed this blog.  It’s been written for us, as our personal record, and if it has provided any of you with any little enjoyment, then we are delighted.

We hope to catch up with you all soon.

Au Revoir

The 2Cs

The holiday gets the thumbs up from us

IMG_1694