Sure Travel Journey Vol 3.4 Spring 2017 | Page 10

DEPARTURE LOUNGE // SPRING 2017 WHERE IN THE WORLD? INSTAMUNCH PETRA, JORDAN @kobusvdmerwe Kobus van der Merwe didn’t mean to become the poster boy for the food foraging trend; it was a happy accident. Seeking a new challenge he left Cape Town to help his retired parents run Oep ve Koep, their low-key eatery in Paternoster along Cape Town’s rugged West Coast, which explodes with colour as flowers blossom wildly each Spring. At his folks’ place the young chef did away with the old menu of fish, chips and calamari and began serving diners truly local dishes using ingredients foraged from the very coastline they gazed over. “My grandmother made things with seaweed and my father farmed in the Kalahari and we’d spend winter weekends picking wild cucumbers,” he says of why he was drawn to forage up and down the Weskus. So popular was his special flavour of fresh “Strandveld” food using ingredients that were either newly discovered or had been ignored for years, that Van der Merwe found unexpected culinary fame. He then collaborated with botanist Rupert Koopman to produce the cookbook Strandveld Food and followed up with the opening of a second restaurant, Wolfgat, in a beach cottage not far away from the first. From here he goes out early each day to forage for ingredients that ensure no two meals he serves at Wolfgat are ever quite the same. While diners may not know what form their dish will take, Van der Merwe is known to favour a few ingredients. Expect bokkoms, a salty fish biltong; sea lettuce; soutslaai, leaves of a succulent plant; and strandsalie, a type of sage found along the coast. Or just follow his foraging on Instagram to see what’s cooking. 10 // MAKE MEMORIES FOR LIFE Swiss explorer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt held lofty ambitions of discovering the source of the River Niger, but dropped those as soon as he heard about another European explorer who had set out for Arabia to find the lost city of Petra and had been murdered for his efforts. Intrigued, the 27-year-old hatched a plan to disguise himself as a local and go in search of the royal city rumoured to exist somewhere in the desert lands south of Nazareth. He first went to Syria where, while smoking hubbly-bubblies with his Arab neighbour, learnt Arabic from him. The Swiss man also studied the Koran and Muslim law to pass convincingly as Sheikh Ibn Abdallah. He tested out his new identity in Syria, Lebanon and Palestine before journeying to Cairo in 1812, where local people told him about the ruins of an ancient city found through a narrow mountain pathway. Burckhardt immediately travelled to the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan and found the formidable entrance he’d been told about – a long, narrow slit carved through the sandstone mountain, looming 76-metres high and only three metres wide in some parts. As he stumbled through the darkness of what is now called the Siq (“the shaft”) into the harsh desert sunlight, Burckhardt may have thought that what lay before him was a mirage: an elaborate, monolithic temple carved into the pink-hued mountainside. He had found “The Lost City” hidden to the Western WANT MORE TRAVEL TRIVIA QUIZZES? Play the #TravelTuesday with Trafalgar Quiz every Tuesday on Facebook. Great prizes to be won. Follow us on Facebook www.facebook.com/ SureTravel for details. World for five centuries. One of the oldest metropolises in the world, Petra (meaning “rock” in Greek) is thought to have been established as early as 312 BC by the nomadic Nabatean tribe. It’s become the symbol of Jordan ever since it was declared a Unesco World Heritage site in 1985, and is the country’s most-visited tourist attraction since being named one of the New7Wonders of the World in 2007. Also called “The Rose City” for the rose-coloured sandstone it is carved out of, Petra extends over 60 square kilometres and has more than 800 individual monuments, each with its own story to tell. Like the ruin Burckhardt first saw as he entered Petra, Al Khazneh (“the Treasury”), which was really a mausoleum and crypt - you may recognise it as the fictional Canyon of the Crescent Moon from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. But all this is just the tip of the iceberg, say archaeologists, who believe they have uncovered as little as 15% of the city. The rest is thought to remain underg