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Showing posts with label Petra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Petra. Show all posts

Monday, July 27, 2015

Petra, Jordan, Part 2: Deep In The Heart Of Petra

We used Day 2 of Petra to explore further into the city. The National Park is huge, and there are tons of routes and trails you can choose to take, all of which will lead you to separate buildings and scenes and stories.  And a lot of Petra still remains un-excavated!   


You know, just taking our time going through the Siiq by taking more ridic jumping photos


Cliffnotes of the Day:
  • Since we wanted to see as much of Petra as possible, we decided to go the mule route and hired mules for the day to cart us around.  I really wish I could remember my mule's complex Arabic name. 
  • I'll say it again - Petra is HUGE.  There is so, so much to see.  Our focus for the day was to see another incredibly well-known building called the Monastery, which was much, much, much (x3) farther than the Treasury.  I'll let the pictures speak for themselves
My mule looks like a total monster next to Drew's.  We are in front of the stadium in Petra - I can't imagine how long that thing took to carve out

A former relief carved into the walls of the Siiq that's since been worn down by erosion. You can see it used to be a man leading a camel and a caravan - all you can really see now are his feet and the camel's hooves.  For something 2,200 years old, however - pretty legit
My favorite part was that you could see so many buildings hidden in the rocks in various shape - some were still pretty intact, while others were so eroded that you had to look hard to see the faintest trace that there used to be something there
Drew's mule was slow (who can blame him!? He was like, half the size of my mule) - so our guide took a bunch of photos of me and my mule in front of a canyon while we waited
Not only that, but Drew's mule had to carry this boy with them too
The ride up to the monastery was so, so gorgeous - like huge valleys and cliffs and rock formations and crazy winding paths with dangerous-looking stairs and such.  I started to feel terrible for my mule for having to haul me up the steep trails. I'm sorry about my ice cream habit, mule-friend

Our little caravan, approaching buildings in the background

After the longest, craziest path through steep winding walkways overlooking breathtaking gorges, we arrived at the Monastery!  It's in such a remote location, and again - IT IS GIGANTOR

To get an idea of scale and how huge this building is - I am the tiny green speck at the bottom. 

The building wasn't a monastery at all despite its nickname; they think it was a temple of some sort

And then we rested in a tiny cafe next to the monastery (it was seriously the hottest day known to man), AND THERE WERE ADORABLE KITTENS

I fully realize I just wasted two photo slots of this post about the most baller city ever on this baby kitten. But seriously, look at its face. Are you dying yet

Drew bought a Jordanian headwrap (men out here actually wear these everywhere) for the trip home. And then of course, we needed an epic jumping photo to go with the headwrap. And on the right, my mule's butt

  • It was crazy because we had so much time to visit Petra before we had to go catch our 5pm bus to Amman.....but before we knew it, time was up and we had to have our mules pick up the pace a little on the way down from the Monastery.  Bouncy.  Very bouncy.

One last view of a cart speeding through the Siiq

Fun Facts of the Day:
  • Apparently the best time to see Petra is super early morning - the sun hits some of the buildings just so, and they light up and look especially rosy.
  • We would not know the fun fact above personally, because we did not successfully get up at 6AM to execute


Petra was also one of the coolest places I've ever been.  I can totally see how people can spend multiple days exploring the place - there are so many amazing buildings to see, and the ones we did get to see were nothing short of TOTALLY INCREDIBLE.  I think I love the Nabateans.  A lot of the hiking is incredibly legit as well - we did a short 15-minute hike from the monastery up to a lookout point, and the view was so gorgeous.  

My favorite part was also that while Petra is Jordan's biggest tourist attraction, it is so large and so remotely located that it's not overrun with tourists.....yet.  There were still many parts where it felt like we had the whole place to ourselves.  



Sweaty, hot, dusty, and having spent the entire day in the sun and on a mule, we got on our 4-hour bus to Amman to catch our flight back to the States.  

I am back in the States currently and it feels so weird. SO. WEIRD.  I can't even figure out how to adjust.  Luckily, it's only a brief hiatus for me, as I head to Southeast Asia next week.  I might throw out some rando blog posts in the meantime, but otherwise - I hope your inboxes enjoy the break for a week =)

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Petra, Jordan, Part 1: The Coolest Ancient Lost City EVER

Petra is a place I've been dying to go for forever - the photos look incredible, and I'm totally fascinated by the idea of this lost city carved out of sandstone rock walls.  Also, a whole bunch of "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" was filmed here, which I loved growing up because I loved Harrison Ford, and I might have written him a fan letter when I was in 2nd grade.

What It's All About:
Petra is an ancient city located in the south of Jordan in the middle of the desert. It was built by the Nabateans, an Arab tribe, between 400 BC (uhh is it me, or are these dates getting crazy older!? 400 BC is like, unfathomable to me) and 100 BC.  The Nabateans were a prosperous trading tribe, and Petra was their capital city, linking China/India to the Mediterranean.  They were worldly and cultural, as they came across so many other tribes and traders through trading.

This is especially evident in Petra - which includes an extensive water irrigation system, and gorgeous buildings carved into the surrounding sandstone cliffs.  When you enter the park itself, there is this crazy gorge you walk through (called the Siiq - this is the part in Indiana Jones) - it feels like walking through the Grand Canyon: it's basically a thin passage winding between huge sandstone cliffs. You can see evidence of carvings and reliefs all over the walls.  The city itself is nothing short of BREATHTAKING - the buildings that are intact are awe-inspiring in their enormity, and you can't believe that people could be capable of something so incredible.


Cliffnotes of the Day:
  • We dropped off our bags at our hotel (right outside the entrance to Petra National Park) after our fun border adventure and a 2 hour cab ride.  Petra is fairly expensive, it's 50 JOD (about $70) for a one-day ticket - but it gets more worthwhile the longer you buy for, so a two-day pass is only 55 JOD.  So we bought a two-day ticket with the intention of wandering solo and taking our time the first day, then doing a more in-depth tour the second day.
First sign I knew I loved Petra - you walk in and your ticket includes A FREE HORSE RIDE from the park entrance down to the entrance of the gorge (Siiq).  All you have to do is tip the horse leader a couple dollars

Riding past one of the structures - most of these structures were tombs. This one has both Greco-Roman and Egyptian architectural influences, which shows the blending of cultures the Nabateans utilized. I kind of love how forward-thinking this tribe was for their time.

  • Then we arrived at the Siiq and started walking through. It's about a 30-minute walk through the gorge, and it is INCREDIBLY gorgeous. You look up the walls and they're ridic high.  This is the route all the caravans took entering/exiting Petra on their way to trade
The Siiq. You can still see shadows of some of the cravings on the left-hand wall

Look how huge the cliffs are!

And again

Annnd given that we had some extra time, we took a series of ridic photos
  • After 30 minutes of walking through the Siiq, you arrive right at Petra's most famous building, the Treasury. The Treasury was originally built as a tomb, but was believed to later have been converted to a temple.

If you look at the people sitting outside the building, you can get an idea of how freakishly huge this building was. It's truly unbelievable

And there are always camels outside; another win in my book

Yet another animal that is excellent at posing for photos

Drew titled this "Connie's future child when they get in trouble"

  • While the Treasury is the most famous building, the entirety of Petra has a zillion (count 'em) more buildings and temples and incredible rock facades - you can seriously take days and days and days to explore and hike and never get to see even a fraction of the park.  We only had time for a quick trip to the Treasury before heading back to grab a quick dinner before a night tour we had signed up for.
  • Our night tour was called "Petra By Night", which basically involves taking the exact same route as we had earlier, except in total darkness.

On our night tour, they line all the roads into Petra with candles. But it was still incredibly dark and some of the roads were a totally treacherous; I have no idea how they avoid lawsuits 

Then you arrive at the Treasury, which has hundreds of candles out front lighting it up.  My iPhone took terrible photos and couldn't catch the soft lighting of the Treasury, but trust me when I say it was beautiful

Drew and I outside the Treasury. For the tour, they had some people come and play traditional instruments and music to add to the ambience

Perfect.

Fun Facts of the Day:
  • In addition to loving NBA, people in Jordan loove smoking. In areas you forgot people ever once smoked in; a.k.a. our taxi driver while driving our taxi, etc. 
  • In Petra, you can hire three kinds of animals to take you around (it's pretty intense hiking in some parts): 1. Camels (these don't go very far; they're not good at paths); 2. Horses (I love horses but in Jordan with its plethora of animals you can ride, YAWN), and 3. Donkeys/Mules.  We had a donkey that lived in a field outside our hotel and would sadly bray occasionally.  
  • Desert. Hot. Bring the sunscreen.


Next up - we spend the next day exploring Petra more in-depth. I seriously cannot believe HOW MUCH there is to see in this place, and how much more you can explore: more than just the Treasury (which is all you ever see in pictures), and more than pictures can ever depict.  This is seriously one of the coolest places ever.