Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Day 9 – The Road toTineghir




We left the desert after two nights of glorious camp life where we had carpeted tents, a bed with plenty of blankets, a small light, a toilet, and a hot water bottle to keep us warm at night. Nice touch! We also had Hussain and his team of five to cook for us, provide tea/coffee and appetizers, and bring a bowl of hot water in the morning to wash with. The dining tent was heated and lit and a welcome refuge from the cold in the night or the early morning. We also had 4x4 drive us around to different places we visited or to meet and pick us up at a destination.

I love camping,” I said at breakfast today. “Honey, this isn't camping,” a couple people responded.

But it's Sahara Desert camping through OAT,” I replied, “and it's good enough for me.”

Yemni later told the group that the camp has made refinements. The toilets used to be outhouses and the carpets were of the plastic kind rather than wool.

My tent reminded me of a picture I cherish of the famous anthropologists, Margaret Mead and Geoffrey Bateson typing their notes after a day's work in the field. I pretended to be like them last night when I spent a couple hours writing for this blog. After all, we are “in the wild” gathering data about new and exotic things. I am writing about them. This kind of adventure travel is different from most tours where visitors don't usually have the opportunity to meet local people or obtain a broad view of the political, economic, social, and cultural contexts of a place as we are—as OAT provides for us. Leave me alone to my fantasies!!

I got up for the sunrise at 6:30 again and this time only a couple others were there. Arthur, a Kosher Jew, watched the sunrise a dune or two away from me. I thought how lucky I was to share the moment with a man and his God. Later at breakfast he shared that seeing the glorious sunrise reminded him of a Jewish prayer: “Holy, holy, holy Lord God of Hosts. Heaven and earth are filled with your glory. Hosanna in the highest.” This prayer was adopted as part of the Catholic Eucharistic prayer that is said before the bread and wine are consecrated to be the body and blood of Christ. So it has particular meaning for me especially now that I have been in the desert near the region where my religion was born. What a wonderful gift!

On the Road Again
After a nice breakfast we left camp for our next location, the oasis town of Tineghir. We crossed the J'bel Sahro Range (at about 5,000 feet) and passed through the High Atlas Mountains on our right and the AntiAtlas Mountains on our left. We were on an old caravan road and that added to the mysticism of our journey except that we were in a comfortable bus clipping along at 50-60 miles per hour rather than on a dusty trail sitting atop camels. Along the way we saw several “sand traps” made of cross-hatched palm leaves about 2 feet high. They catch the sand and keep it away from the agricultural plots in the region.

When we reached the region where the Khattara tribe lived, we stopped at an old irrigation project that is now being developed into a tourist attraction by our guide, Karim, and his family. There were a series of wells (hatar) dug every 20 to 30 yards that sat atop the ground; they looked like beehives. It was what there was below that was so astounding: a tunnel dug to connect all the wells. The tunnel represented a “pipeline” that at one time collected water (about knee deep) from the mountains that flowed downhill to the kasbah at the other end. Each well was 50-60 meters deep and the mud had to be continually scooped out to maintain the wells and the tunnel below.

Families that owned land had access to the water, but they also had to dig out and maintain the wells. They worked for as long as they used the water. For example, if they needed two hours of water every day, they worked on the well for two hours every day. A wooden bowl with a small hole in its center was the timekeeper. It measured out an hour when it was full. We went down a series of uneven steps into the seven-foot high tunnel. Karim's assistant had lighted the way for us with candles. The only light coming into the tunnel was from each well. 
 
This irrigation project had been operating for several centuries until the 1960s when the government built the dam lake in Errachidia, which we had seen a couple days earlier on our trip. This modern irrigation system collects water in the lake or reservoir until it is needed. Then water is moved down a channel and aqueduct to water the fields.

Without irrigation, nothing in this region would grow,” said Yemni.

A couple times on this road we saw a well with some nomads and their camels and donkeys surrounding them. The nomads were drawing water from the well for drinking and washing clothes. In the small towns we passed through we'd see students walking or on bicycles going home from school for lunch from 12 to 2 p.m. They carried backpacks or school bags with a strap on one shoulder. We will meet some students tomorrow when we visit a school. They are in school for four hours a day either in the morning or the afternoon. They have Sundays off.

We, too, had lunch about 1 p.m. and stopped at a small roadside restaurant for a picnic lunch of cold chicken, olives, bread, and cheese. It was a little too cold to be outdoors, so the proprietor moved everything indoors. An abused dog hung around the restaurant, which was sad to see. Dogs are not well liked here. A cat, however, made his presence known throughout our lunch with a constant meowing. He was begging for food from our table.

We head out again and a couple hours later finally reached the busy market town of Tineghir. We will spend two nights here and have our first hammam experience (public bathhouse) after we check into our hotel. Tineghir is built around the mountains and it is a beautiful city. We took a couple picture stops to photograph both the old town, whose mud houses and buildings are “melting down” after a 100 years of use. A new town made of concrete blocks and steel rods is being built. These buildings will, of course, last a lot longer. Like in the desert, people abandon the old mud buildings because they are too expensive to restore. The empty buildings reminded me of Detroit. However, this is part of an expected “melt down” process here, while the City of Detroit is decaying because of neglect and terrible corruption. Nevertheless, cities change all the time.

We passed through the town to get to the Todra Gorge, one of the few places where we saw water gushing along a river. Here the rock goes straight up 500 feet and except for its small spaces, it reminded me of Machu Picchu when I first witnessed the power of God in the strength of the mountains. Even though these are limestone mountains (sedimentary rock layed down by ancient oceans) and not igneous rock formed from the hot lava from volcanoes, there was no doubt of their enduring quality, which was what I experienced in the desert as well. We walked along the river and I found a spot where I could touch it. It was not cold as I had expected. Of course, there were people selling souvenirs—and a man and woman climbing up and down the rock. Then appeared what looked like a colorful, little doll house of a hotel. Perhaps the gigantic size of the rock made it look so small. We stopped there for refreshment, and I had a cafe au lait, which has become my favorite treat on this trip. We were served by a young man in a black turban and a leather jacket and jeans, part of the cross-cultural quality of the upcoming generation and Morocco itself. Our buses picked us up to take us to our hotel.

The Hammam
 

The Hammam goes back to the Romans who loved water and bathing. The Arabs—or in this region, the Berbers—adopted the sweat baths as part of their own culture. These public baths provide people with a chance not only to bathe but to make a ritual out of cleaning their bodies from the desert dust and sand. Six of us women and three of the men from our group participated. We were guided through the process by assistants who not only showed us what to do, but they did it for us, and that made the experience all the better.


We undressed down to our underpants, in compliance with Islamic laws of hygiene and purification. We walked into the steaming baths where we saw several other women, some of whom had small children. The stripping down was a bit embarrassing, but we all got over it after we got into the bath.

We sat on the floor on a plastic sheet that had been layed there, maybe for us, and maybe for others who received the treatment rather than do it themselves as most of the women there did. First, our aides poured hot water on us from plastic buckets they would constantly fill with water from the taps nearby. Then they gave us olive paste that we were to rub all over our bodies. This was rinsed and they scrubbed us down with another soap with a scratchy cloth that removed dead skin. This was rinsed and they used another soap. We lay on our backs and then our stomachs. They massaged our backs and one of our group who had a knee problem, had her knee done, too. On this last soap down, we had our hair washed and our heads massaged with a plastic brush. It all felt so good, and the steam of the place helped to clear our froggy throats and sinuses that many of us have been suffering with on this trip, including me.

This experience was unforgettable and one of the women later said that she felt a new closeness to those of us who participated. I guess when you strip down to nothing and bathe with each other, that happens. We dressed slowly, as we were still light-headed from the hot steam. But we felt good and revived, especially after our desert experience. What great timing!! (Yemni regularly makes the hammam part of his revival, too.) We marveled at how soft our skin was and so free of dead skin that it felt very different. Even my dry legs were clear of scaling and unusually soft to the touch. It wasn't perfumed with natural scents like lavender, as I expected, however, but the “makeover” our assistants performed was well worth the $12.50 we paid for such a wonderful treatment. Too bad we don't have the hammam in the States! 


Day 8 – Sahara Desert Visits



Sunrise on the Sahara

I found that the desert pulled something out of me, and the sunrise would make its message clearer.  A biblical quote came forth: “Be still and know that I am God” now made sense. Actually, the stillness was deafening. I even felt a little dizzy. Maybe my ears were still plugged up from the change in altitude we experienced yesterday as we climbed the mountains. But I felt I was on a different plane from usual. I couldn't hear or smell anything, and all I could see and feel was sand. It was like a void and then I realized that to fill this void, humanity has created the arts. People sing and play music, they dance, they paint, they draw, the sculpture to break the silence. And isn't this what God did? The universe was a void and God filled it with Creation. 

A couple of the women from our group joined me on the dune.  As the sun rose, a rooster in the nomad camp crowed and a donkey brayed. They, too, gave homage to the new day. It is a time to celebrate!! 

In the distance we could see a small figure crossing the dunes and coming toward us. We had all been quiet until it approached. It was a small girl in traditional clothing. As she neared us, she knelt down without a word. Then, she gingerly pulled something out of her bag. It was a colorful, homemade camel—for sale. She continued her silence and then waited. Soon a younger girl joined her in the same manner.

The desert brings out many things. Most of them are unexpected. Most of them are glorious. Some of them are unbelievable.

Nomad Camp
Hadijah cards camel hair in her nomad tent

After breakfast we walked east for 20-30 minutes to the nomad camp and met Hadijah, 46. She has become an “OAT Nomad” because she stays near our camp and doesn't move as nomads do. Actually, OAT pays her to serve as one of our visits, and she's glad to do it. She doesn't like moving and she doesn't miss it a bit. A big part of the problem is that she doesn't have the money to rent a truck to move.  That means she would have to walk and that is extremely tiring and difficult in the sand. When nomads raise sheep and goats, they need to move about because the animals need grazing land. Farming nomads, however, don't need to move.
Hadijah served us hot mint tea
Another reason she stays here is that her husband died from something, she doesn't know what. He was healthy one day and then suddenly got sick. He was somewhere between 40 and 50 years old.  She has eight children, and like the woman from the poor family, she wants the best for them and hopes they have a better life than she does. Two live with her and work in the Sahara; two are nomads and tend sheep; the others are married and living far away.

Her parents and grandparents were nomads and that's the only life she's known. It is difficult to trace her heritage any further back than that. She was very matter of fact in her approach to life and didn't see the need to be philosophical or romantic about the nomadic life.

water and olive oil supplies outside Hadijah's tent
bags of camel dung for fuel
Her daily life is fairly simple. She gets up between 5 and 6 a.m. and prepares tea and breakfast for her children. Then she goes to the river nearby to collect wood for the fire and water from the well. (There are plenty of “nomad wells” because the government provides them. The are on two the six meters deep, so they are quite accessible. Tomorrow we would see some nomads taking some water from one of these wells. They pull up a bucket of water with a rope and then use the water for drinking and washing clothes.) She bakes the day's bread and prepares lunch. When she has free time she cards camel hair or embroiders. In the afternoon she doesn't work. Go goes to bed early. (The sun sets about 7 p.m. at this time of year.)

She was carding some camel hair as she talked with us and pulling it out to make thread. She rents a loom to weave it. It takes one year to make one strip, which is about 12 feet long. Camels are sheared every two years and sheep and goats every year.

Once a month she goes to the market to buy goods like tea and sugar. (Mercedes trucks come to pick up the nomads for these shopping trips. Before they used donkeys, camels, and mules. Nomads typically take sheep and goats—or their butter—to market to make money.) Hadijah has three camels and six goats.

She has a copper ring on her finger not for any particular reason or symbol but because she likes it. She wears henna on the tips of her fingers for the same reason. She wears kohl under her eyes to protect them from the sun.  (According to Wikipedia, kohl is an ancient eye cosmetic, traditionally made by grinding galena (lead sulfide) and other ingredients. It is widely used in South Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, the Horn of Africa, and parts of West Africa to darken the eyelids and as mascara for the eyelashes. It is worn mostly by women, but also by some men and children.)

Her tent is made out of camel and goat hair.  We sat on rugs under the camel hair tent and it was warm and comfortable. It runs north and south and has flaps on the east and west sides of the tent so that either can be opened or closed depending on the weather. She opens the flaps to let the sun in and closes them when the wind is bad. This morning the eastern flap was open.



inside Hadijah's tent
In her answer to the question about what makes her happy, she said there was nothing to be happy about. Yemni explained that the nomads spend most of their time coping with life and living for their children. They don't think about their own lives, but rather they have hope that their children will have better lives than they do. Hadijah had a bright and smiling face. Perhaps this is because she assumes a paradoxical outlook on life that involves acceptance and resignation. She doesn't seem to take life too seriously. Although she doesn't know anything about entertainment as we city people understand, says Yemni, she does like to watch the dancing that goes on at a wedding in the village.

Hadijah's neighbors
She has some interaction with other tent families that are nearby. They all know each other and they help each other out when they need it, like borrowing sugar for cooking. She is a Muslim and like most old people, she prays five times a day at home because she doesn't have access to a mosque.

I asked her what she thought of the OAT visitors and she answered that she wondered why they come to the Sahara. In fact, she thinks we're crazy to come to a place that is hard to live in, especially one that only offers heat and sand storms. I guess a lot of the locals can't see the beauty of the place as we do. They take it for granted—just as so many of us take our homes for granted. When we live in them, they just aren't that special or unique as when we visit other places.

After our visit with Hadijah, there were some vendors anxious to sell us some goods.  Hadijah showed Kari how to wear a head piece.  Then she posed with her for this precious photo below.




 We were hard pressed to find much life among the sand dunes, but we did find a bug at the nomad camp. Later in the day we saw sparrows flitting and swooping among the dunes. I'm sure that if we had stayed longer, we would have found more signs of life.

 








Desert Farm
young date palms planted near irrigation ditch
You wouldn't think there would be any farming going on in the Sahara Desert, but there is. About twenty or thirty years ago, one successful hotel owner decided to build a farm to help grow crops for his hotel restaurant. He started with date palms and used drip irrigation, a technique developed by Israelis. He also uses flood irrigation, as evidenced by the foot-high mud walls that section off his various crops. These sections are about 20 to 30 feet squares and they include such things as eggplants, carrots, parsnips, garlic, cabbage, fava beans, apricots, red chili peppers, cumin, almonds, lemons, pommagranites, henna (for hair dye and make-up), alfalfa and barley for the sheep. He also grows bamboo and sells it to people for their roofs and fences.

The henna, alfalfa, and date palms make money but the vegetables are for the hotel. The soil is good here and crops are raised organically and fertilized with dung. The farm is now 7 acres but it is expanding. He has experimented with cotton, but that was a failure.

irrigation trenches
One of the first things we saw as we approached the farm was a solar-powered water pump, the tool that is so essential for growing crops in the desert. The pump also works on diesel and electricity. The farmer has two pumps: one inside his place and the other outside it so that other people may use it. It seemed an anomaly that there would be water here in this dry desert land, but when grass and trees grow in an area, that means there is water.

The Moroccan Ministry of Agriculture encourages drip irrigation by reimbursing farmers' expenses for the equipment. They buy what they need and provide receipts and 100% is repaid. This is part of the government's
a solar-powered well made available to nomads
overall program to support agriculture. Already it has irrigated 1.4 million hectares, but it plans to irrigate 8 million hectares of good land. The government recognizes the dangers of global warming, especially in a country that only gets three or four months of rain. However, it focuses on capturing as much water as it can through various methods. The southern part of the country, divided by the High Atlas Mountains, is especially problematic since it is arid, while the north side of the mountains is green. 
a pretty lush, pretty diverse desert farm that provides local food at its best














Berber Cemetery
After 100 years or so, the mud houses of the Sahara begin to “melt” beyond any restoration. Then people abandon them and move on to build other houses and neighborhoods. Near one abandoned settlement, we visited a Berber Cemetery. As non-Muslims, we were not allowed to walk among the stones because that is considered a desecration. Yemani explained Muslim burial customs at this cemetery because we could get close to it.

The body, which has been washed, perfumed then wrapped in white cloth, is buried in the ground without a coffin. There is a stone marker at the head and the feet of the body. Men's stones are parallel to each other lengthwise, while women's stones are placed with the foot on the width end with the length of the stone at the head. So that the body may face Mecca, the Muslim holy city, the body is placed on its side and not on its back.

Bodies are buried within 24 hours after the death. Before it is buried, the body is taken to the mosque for good-bye prayers. Women are not allowed to visit the grave site until three days after burial, and only men are allowed to bury bodies.

Until the 1970s, people placed two bowls at the grave site where they put water in one bowl and grain in the other for the birds. Now they put flowers on the graves, which is a French influence. People typically visit the dead on Fridays, the Muslim holy day. None of the markers has a name on it. This is a typical countryside practice while people in cities DO put names and sometimes birth and death dates on the grave stones. There they must also pay for a plot. Some urban graves also are in marble.

Evening Meal and Sky Phenomenon
Before our evening meal, Yemni led us in a discussion about the Islamic religion. He told the story about how the Prophet Mohammed founded the new religion and how it spread. Then, just as we did last night, we had some appetizers of almonds, peanuts, and biscuits with tea or wine before we settled down to soup, bread, and a tagine of lamb, potatoes, carrots, and onions.

In the middle of the evening activity, someone noticed a special sky manifestation. The almost full moon had a halo around it. Jupiter and another bright star were near the ring, while Venus shone brightly in the west. No one had ever seen such a phenomenon, nor did they know what it was. I am sure that it was a sign of some kind, only I've not come up with a story about it. 

I did not get a photo of the moon halo, but found one like it photographed at Pearl River, LA just after the passage of a cold front. The halo is attributed to refraction in high altitude ice crystal.  Source:  Georgia State Univ Department of of Physics and Astronomy 

 About 8:30 we all went to bed in the pitch-black night with our hot water bottles in hand (to help keep us warm under the covers).  Although we have a light in our tent, we are without electricity and Internet power. This is our version of “roughing it” out in the desert. 

 

Monday, December 16, 2013

Day 7 -- Sahara Desert Camp Experience



Can there be anything more beautiful, more natural, more unspoiled, more quiet, more mystical, more pensive, more fun than the Sahara Desert? I have come to the ends of the earth and it is in the form of sand, sun, dromedaries, and aridity. I have come, despite all my vast experience around the world, to the ultimate experience of my life in a place that utterly defies life and yet, which I find, envigorates my soul from the grouchy snorts and protestations of the camels whose footsteps silently move across the sand to the blue sky with streaks of script across its face, to the flutter of our tent in the slight breeze. I think I could stay here forever for this place is eternity itself.

I wrote this after our camel ride (really, they are dromedaries since they have only one hump while camels have two), our lunch in a desert tent, and our drive in 4x4 cars that went through the sand like we Michiganders fishtail through snow and ice. Even my handwriting is more graceful in the desert, which explains to me the way Arabic is written, if the desert truly is an influence that is transferred from what you see here, what goes through the brain, and what the hand produces.


Camel Ride
We got out of our cars and immediately saw the camels, seated and waiting for us, all in a row. They were silent and resting, just taking in the warm air and very slight breeze—and oblivious and nonchalant about whether we were there or not. As the camel drivers put blankets on each camel and had each of us get on, some of the camels expressed mild displeasure at the prospect of having to stop their daydreaming and get up to serve us. They don't live a bad life. They don't do hard labor as some of their brothers nor will they become next week's dinner. Nevertheless, our guides warned us about trying to entreat the camels, as I wanted desperately to do. They are very grouchy creatures, and you just don't mess with them!

So this guy walks into a bar and says:  Anyone want to ride a camel?

I was so pumped for this experience that I thrust myself to the head of the line to claim my camel for the next hour.  Getting on it was another thing.  I raised one leg over the saddle of my camel (none of the animals have names except “camel”) but wasn't sure I would fit the wide girth of the beast; but I did. There were no stirrups for my feet.  The guides advised that we hang on for dear life to the steel handle before us, which I heeded, especially when Camel got up. The trick in this move is to lean backward and wait for the camel rise. I was concerned I would be so high up I'd be afraid to ride, but my fears were soon allayed. Once everyone was saddled up, we proceeded toward the pink-colored sand dunes. 

On our left were several hotels. This is emblematic of the tourism effort going on in Morocco, and they spoiled the exotic nature of the adventure. So I looked to the right instead and imagined myself in a caravan soon to see Lawrence of Arabia swoop down from behind a giant dune and stop and say hi to us.

The ride was only 45 minutes and the saddle was not comfortable, but I loved it. I truly loved it. I tried to relax on Camel's back and move with him. Of course I snapped photos with one hand and held on to the steel bar with the other. I tried to be a cool Arabic camelgirl. I touched Camel's neck just a bit. Occasionally he would look back to me, and I accepted that gesture. His eyelashes were long, just like the llamas at the farm where I work, and his eyes were dark and dreamy. At one point my overall response to Camel was: “what was God thinking when he designed you?”  The camel was probably thinking the same thing when he got a look at me!

Below are some of the treasured sights during this brief but full ride.
Our pretty cool-looking caravan
We passed a desert camp snuggled in among the dunes







The camel drivers exercised full control over the animals.  And, if anyone needed to get off the camel for whatever reason, Yemni and a 4x4 were close at hand to assist.









Hark!! Some vegetation ahead

Riding the camels seemed to mystify everyone because we all seemed to stop talking as we struggled a bit to be comfortable and admired the distinctive scenery that is as beautiful as National Geographic depicts it. Only we were inside the pictures and interacting with it. The desert, I find, is a very engaging place, and my mind and meditations would wander in surprising ways in response.

an enchanting scene
one other enchanting scene
The camels didn't make a sound as they walked. When one of the guides was nearby, I could only hear his flipflops as he shuffled through the sand. I found such silence almost deafening.  However, after spending time in the noisy and frenetic medina in Fes, and after our long cross-country bus ride, such quiet was inviting and soothing. And, then I discovered the beautiful sight amidst all the intriguing swaths and swirls of the dunes. As we walked north, the sun cast a wondrous shadow on our caravan, and I became     fascinated with the silhouetted view in the sand.


 

 









The descent from Camel was a bit more perilous because I forgot to lean back. The guide looked concerned at my clumsiness, but I hung on with both hands and Camel made it down OK and I was down OK. The ride was only 45 minutes but I had the thrill of my life.  There's something very sacred about riding a camel in the Sahara.  I think it's about the quietness of its feet over the expanse of the sand.

I said good-bye to Camel with a silent mind-meld and snapped a photo.  As I am prone to anthropomorphize the animals I'm with, I felt sure Camel responded to me with a charming smile, as this photo shows. At least I'm sure he was thinking:  "Thank God, this broad is off my back.  Now I can go back to MY business."

The destination of our ride led us to a little lunch "oasis" in a desert restaurant.  Balancing on top of a one-hump camel can work up an appetite.  We had a delicious tagine of couscous and vegetables.  Best camp food I ever ate! 




 The coordination of all our travels on this trip has been (and would be) excellent--always.  Our 4x4s awaited us after lunch.  Ali drove the car I was in.  He spoke Arabic and French.  Fortunately, Rae, who is French-Canadian, could speak to him and translate for us.  Suddenly, I was speaking to him, too, in French.  The desert was starting to work on me.  I was remembering words and phrases as though I had studied them yesterday.

On our way to our camp in the 4x4 we had one of the bumpiest, and most thrilling rides I've ever had since I rode the dune buggy of Lake Michigan near Saugatuck.  Actually, I thought the driver was goofing off for us, but he was serious.  Even a 4x4 struggles in the sand.  I suddenly acquired a new respect for these vehicles.


We arrived at the camp and were greeted by Hussain. The saying here goes that "the camp is Hussain and Hussain is the camp."  We would find out what that meant.

Hussain is a "Blue Man," a descendant from one of the Berber tribes that lived a traditionally nomadic pastoralist lifestyle and are typically found in the Saharan interior of North Africa.

As we piled out of our cars, the drivers pulled our small luggage bags out and put them on the blue plastic rug placed on the "main street" of the camp so that we could take them to our tents. This gesture was as organized and dignified as any fancy hotel, only we were in the middle of the desert far away from anyone else—except some nomads who lived a 20-30 minute walk away across the dunes.

  sink in foreground, our white dining tent in background

The camp is on private land rented by OAT and managed by Hussain from September to April. The tents are up during that whole time as the dunes are quite stable here in this clearing. The white canvas tents are covered with an additional black covering, and they are about 7x7 yards in size. I joked with Yemni by asking if this was a religious camp.  He looked puzzled.  I said that the tents looked like the Kaaba in Mecca.  He laughed.


The inside of my tent is decorated with red, orange, yellow and brown wall hangings and the floor is in red rugs with a blue plastic mat under the bed (typically used by nomads as walkways). The bed has a red with gold flowered spread on it—and the sheets are pink! There is a table with a water cup, a purple plastic wastebasket, and a table for luggage. I instantly loved it. Our tents have numbers and mine is #9. 

On the next day while the others went on a fossil hunt, I would sit in my tent to work on my blog.  The sun was too hot and too bright.  The experience of writing in a tent in Africa led me to a wonderful fantasy of being an anthropologist compiling my notes for the day.  The image came from a picture of Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson working at their typewriters in a tent.
 





 












OAT requested that each tent have an indoor toilet, which we all much appreciated especially for those night time calls of Nature. After we use the toilet, we just pour water (pail on the right) down it quickly to “flush” it.  It took me a while to get used to the backward lean of the toilet, especially during the night in the dark.  After all, this is a camp.  We can't expect all the comforts of home!




Anti-Atlas Mountains with Algeria behind them
crest of a dune
We had a few hours before dinner so most of us took advantage of the free time to walk around, get acclimated to our new digs, and to take a farm jacket and a red Canadian flannel jacket and was warm enough in the cool of the afternoon. It would get a lot colder at night but I don't think it reached the predicted 30s temperatures we were all prepared for. 
shower stalls

Here are some sights:








 

desert sink (frontal view)

Julie and Lester on their "front porch"



One of many "stoney" roadways that crisscross the desert in between the sandy dunes.  This one happens to be our "main street" just south of our camp.

The dunes in this area are among the highest in Morocco.






  Sunset in the Sahara
Hussain proposes a Sahara toast

 At 630 p.m. we all gathered for the sunset. I have seen many a sunset on Lake Michigan and have enjoyed them for their beauty and majesty. However, this one, my first in the Sahara, began with an OAT toast of French champagne--in plastic cups.  After all, we are roughing it. 



and we capitulate


Then we waited. 

The dune where we watched the sunset is just west of our campsite. I sat down in the sand to be closer to the ground and looked all around me.  As the sun made its descent, the sand surrounding it turned a bright pink.  





I was so moved by the beauty of all this expanse, that I stood up and bowed to the sun to honor it and to give praise and gratitude to God for my being here in Morocco, especially here in the mighty Sahara. 


By 7:10 the sun was down. The whole experience was dramatic, magical, and deeply spiritual.  I can see how the three great religions grew up in the desert.  You cannot be here and not be inspired.
 

Dinner Time

Before dinner we had a cooking demonstration by our camp cook.  He is a young man who has been cooking for almost 10 years.  He skillfully showed us how to make a chicken and vegetable tagine, which we had for dinner tonight.  He was like a chef on those cooking shows where he demonstrated how to make it and then next comes the cooked meal.  Delicious.

   








Our group watches the cooking demonstration.  Notice the heater on the right.  The other heater is behind me.  These heaters came in mighty handy and provided us with a toasty tent during dinner and breakfast when temperatures were in the low 40s. 




 

And here is the fully cooked result that we are about to eat.  It made Mary, Kari, and Jan very happy indeed.












The Sahara Desert is not just a landform. It is a region that stretches across the northern part of Africa. My father was stationed in Algeria during World War II, but it had no meaning for me until I came here this day and had a taste of what he lived in. As a matter of fact, the AntiAtlas Mountains (20 million years old compared to the High Atlas that are 15 million years old) are visible east of our camp and over them is Algeria. They are important to the geography of Morocco because they protect the eastern Sahara from spreading into the country—and thus reduce the amount of arable farmland that is possible to maintain today. Also, they keep the smuggling trade down as well. Moroccans and Algerians conduct an illegal trade of gas, drugs, medicines, etc.) Tomorrow, we would get up at 6:30 to watch the sunrise over these same mountains.

After the sunset we met outside the dining tent for appetizers, some wine that people had purchased in Rabat. Hussain passed around peanuts, almonds and crackers. Then we went inside the warm dining tent for a cooking lesson on how a tagine is prepared with chicken. Then we had some. Hussain had two heaters going and it made the evening very comfortable. At 8:30 we went to bed. 

It was cold outside, but not freezing. The stars were out and so was Venus and another planet, maybe Jupiter. Someone thought they say a satellite. The moon was almost full, so it blocked some of the stars we might have seen. Clouds in the north, a patchwork like swiss cheese, blocked the other stars. 

As I exited the dining tent and looked up the scene of the camp in the night surrounded by the high dunes of the Sahara, I was once again moved and touched by the spirit of the place. The night would produce dreams I cannot remember, but I felt peace and contentment I have not experienced in a long time. 

About 8:30 we all went to bed in the pitch-black night with our hot water bottles in hand (to help keep us warm under the covers).  Although we have a light in our tent, we are without electricity and Internet power. This is our version of “roughing it” out in the desert.

Sunrise Meditation


I found that the desert pulled something out of me, and the sunrise would make its message clearer.  A biblical quote came forth: “Be still and know that I am God” now made sense. Actually, the stillness was deafening. I even felt a little dizzy. Maybe my ears were still plugged up from the change in altitude we experienced yesterday as we climbed the mountains. But I felt I was on a different plane from usual. I couldn't hear or smell anything, and all I could see and feel was sand. It was like a void and then I realized that to fill this void, humanity has created the arts. People sing and play music, they dance, they paint, they draw, the sculpture to break the silence. And isn't this what God did? The universe was a void and God filled it with Creation. 

A couple of the women from our group joined me on the dune.  As the sun rose, a rooster in the nomad camp crowed and a donkey brayed. They, too, gave homage to the new day. It is a time to celebrate!! 

In the distance we could see a small figure crossing the dunes and coming toward us. We had all been quiet until it approached. It was a small girl in traditional clothing. As she neared us, she knelt down without a word. Then, she gingerly pulled something out of her bag. It was a colorful, homemade camel—for sale. She continued her silence and then waited. Soon a younger girl joined her in the same manner.

The desert brings out many things. Most of them are unexpected. Most of them are glorious. Some of them are unbelievable.