Outdoor Focus Autumn 2018 | Page 14

Shepherd on the Jordan Trail, north Jordan Whilst pitching my tent I was bitten by a scorpion. “What colour was it?” Mahmoud, our Bedouin guide said. “Yellow,” I replied. “They are the worst,” he said, followed by, “What size?” “Only small,” I said. “They are the worst,” he said again with a grin. You have to like their sense of humour! I felt lethargic all the next day but it was a beautiful trek along a high escarpment with a warm breeze rising from the depths before we descended to a tourist camp near Petra which we entered the next day via ‘the back door’. This old Nabataean trail had been a narrow path across cliffs when we first walked it in the mid 1990s but had since been ‘manicured’ by the Petra Park Authority into a wide, safe, wall-edged trail, losing its history but enabling it to be promoted as an alternative entrance to the famous Petra Siq. The first glimpse of the mountain top Monastery is as surprising as the first famous view of The Treasury from The Siq. The latter is avoided on the way out by exiting Petra through a tunnel carved through the mountains by the Nabataeans to divert floodwater away from the canyon of The Siq, the main thoroughfare in ancient times as well as today. Flash floods are dangerous! The Siq is savoured early the next day before continuing past Petra’s Roman theatre then south beneath Jebel Harun, reputed burial place of Aaron, brother of Moses. The descent of wild and lonely Wadi Sabra follows past the remains of yet another Roman theatre. Then on deeper into the remote mountains of Masuda before climbing back onto the high desert plateau four days later 14 Outdoor focus | autumn 2018 through the impressive Aheimir Canyon. On our exploratory trek we had to wade a deep pool and climb a tricky boulder-jam at its head. A year later all had been swept away by a flash flood and Aheimir was obstacle free, but beware, its no place to be on a rainy day! Now visible across the desert to the east, the mountains of Wadi Rum are reached by a two day trek across the sands. Lawrence called it “Rum the magnificent... vast, echoing and God-like”. He was right! The trek then continues still in superlative desert mountain scenery for another day before entering the basalt and granite hills that border the Red Sea. Its distant waters are first glimpsed from the crest of a hill beneath which the final camp is made. A long descent and climb then lead to the final pass beyond which the Red Sea beckons temptingly. Descending a valley of pink granite boulders on the Thru-walk in early May it was hot, too hot at around forty degrees. We sought every possible shade before descending the final sandy wadi to the sea. A welcoming band were there to greet us as we ran past and plunged jubilantly into the welcoming waves. In 2018 the Jordan Trail was listed among the top 21 destinations by National Geographic. The Jordan Trail Association also received an award from His Majesty King Abdullah for its contribution to tourism development and putting Jordan on the global tourism map as well as providing jobs and improving income for communities along its route. Sometimes dreams come true.