A blog from the mountains of the Sinai

Category: The Desert

El Gardood: the Gulf tableland

El Gardood, Sinai, Gulf of Aqaba, Go tell it on the mountain, Ben HofflerWalk inland from the Gulf of Aqaba coast – anywhere between Ras Shetan and Taba – and you’ll enter chain after chain of rugged coastal mountains. Carry on – following the wadis that snake between these mountains – and you’ll soon reach the bottom of a gigantic cliff: a huge natural foritification to the Sinai’s beautiful desert interior. Getting up it isn’t easy. Everything’s loose. There are big drops in places. If you hold your nerve and climb it though, you’ll emerge on one of the Sinai’s great natural wonders. A high desert plateau where you can gaze over the Gulf of Aqaba – the watery ribbon of blue – to the Hejaz mountains of Arabia. You can see cities like Hagl in Saudi Arabia and Aqaba in Jordan. Ocean liners look like tiny dots, never moving on the waves.

I’d been to the bottom of this plateau before. But I’d never gone up. I’d never heard anyone talk about it either. Not until a maverick Bedouin friend called Musallem called me a couple of months ago anyway, saying we should make a route over it for a new trail called the Abraham Path.

If you haven’t heard about the Abraham Path check it out HERE. It’s a new long-distance walking trail in the Middle East, lately voted the No. 1 trail in the world by National Geographic. The aim is to develop sustainable economies for local people, boost adventure tourism in part of the world that gets more bad press than any other, and get people walking, talking, and understanding the region better. It’s the most ambitious hiking project ever started in the Middle East and will be a major milestone for the region when it’s finished.

Musallem and me have been helping here and there with the Sinai part. Last year we nailed down a 200km route from Ras Shetan to St Katherine. By doing this plateau, he reckoned we could add an extra 30km too, opening up a new trekking area in the Sinai and spreading the benefits to more communities.

El Gardood, jeep, Go tell it on the mountain, Ben Hoffler, SinaiAs it turned out, Musallem had been up here before. Actually he’s been pretty much everywhere in the Sinai. At least in the desert. He goes to the places where virtually nobody else ever goes. Because they’re there. Which is one of the reasons I like him so much. He hadn’t just walked this plateau either. He’d ridden a mountain bike over it (probably the first person in history ever to even think of riding a mountain bike across it). Anyway, we arranged to do it, finding a hiking route that’d cross the plateau and connect to the route we already had further south. The first time we did it, we drove inland from the coast, circling round to the interior side of the plateau, where it’s easier to get up.

A strong wind blows over the edge of this plateau at night, rushing down to the sea. It’s nearly 1000m in altitude too, which makes it extra cold. We slept up here, waking to see frost clinging to the retem bushes and our sleeping bags wet with dew. We huddled over the fire, warming our hands before leaving the jeep behind and heading south on foot, mapping the trail.

When most people think of mountains in the Sinai, they think of Mount Sinai: a dramatic granite highlands type of landscape with bulging bronze cliffs and smooth whaleback summits. When it comes to the mountains of the Sinai, plateaulands like this are much more common though.

As mountains, or highlands, or whatever we should call them though, they cover more of the peninsula in area size. And they’re almost as high as some of those peaks of the Mount Sinai area too. Some are nearly 1500m high.

P1300375_resultOf all these plateualand mountains the most popular with trekkers is one called Jebel el Gunna. The most famous is Hadabat el Teeh: the Biblical Wilderness of the Wanderings where legend has it Moses walked for 40 years. El Gardood – as they call this plateau along the Gulf – is the most little known of these highlands. For what it’s worth (and as someone who’s walked all of these highland plateaus) I reckon it deserves much more attention than it gets though. Whatever merits the other plateaus have, standing up here and looking over the Gulf to the Arabian Peninsula is one of the Sinai’s great views. Gazing down over the sea and looking at four countries at once makes it feel like you’re standing on a gigantic map of the Middle East. It’s all there, spread out before you.

We took a whole day finding our way across the plateau that day, walking 28km through deserted basins and rugged passes until we got to its southerly edge. This was exactly where we needed to be to connect this new trail to the southerly one we’d already put down the year before. And a good path ran all the way down.

The next week – gluttons for punishment that we are – we went back to do the whole thing again, only this time with someone from the Abraham Path. And this time, there was no cheating with a jeep. We needed to find a way up onto the plateau from the sea – and a way through its foreboding cliffs – which we finally did. Actually, there are a couple of old trails; or rather, remnants of old trails. They have been damaged by repeated flash floods over the years so they’re tricky.

Ein Shefalla, Go tell it on the mountain, Ben Hoffler_resultUp on the top, walking on the flats, we took the same route over the plateau as the first time. This time though – taking notes and making route guides – we took our time with everything. We also explored a few new areas of the plateau. One of the best spots we saw was an oasis called Ein el Shefalla; just a few palms below a high cliff, but a real beauty of a spot. Nearby – where the water plunges from the high cliff into the sands after rain – is a dry hole where you can dig to get water. The Bedouin call a hole like this a themila. Start digging and after a while, you’ll smell the water, seeping through the sand. Soon, the water seeps into the hole, which you can scoop up. Or sponge it in a shemagh.

The more I walked up on El Gardood the more I liked it. It’s different to the Sinai’s other plateaus. Grander, with massive highland chunks. Its wadis are deeper. And greener. Everywhere feels much lesser trodden. There are no footprints. No litter. It’s easy to find firewood, because so few people ever use it.

It’s also like a window back to the more ancient times.

Look carefully and you’ll find blackened fireplaces and stones marking out Bedouin sitting places. There are old cemeteries with graves pointing towards Mecca and old storerooms in the cliffs. Once upon a time, El Gardood was where the Bedouin came to graze their flocks in the springtime.

Nagb Matarsha, El Gardood, Sinai, Ben Hoffler, Go tell it on the mountainThat second time on El Gardood we walked all the way out: down from the plateau, into the the sandstone desert, then out of the coastal chains to Ras Shetan. Everything said, it was mission accomplished: we’d connected the two trails. The guys at the Abraham Path are busy developing trail guides right now – along with lots of other great stuff – and I’ll update the blog when they’re ready. Look out for the trail as it’s going to be great. If you want to do El Gardood before the trail’s finished, you can. There’s a lot to explore and discover. Just be sure to go with a good Bedouin guide: my tried and tested tip is Mussalem. Take it all in and remember it too. Because once places like this get discovered and put on the map, they don’t stay secret for long…

Check out this Google Map I made of the rough area of El Gardood.

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Sinai: five beautiful oases

P1270565_resultThis blog is mostly about mountains. I love getting to the tops of mountains. I love how they represent the last point between the earth and the sky; the last place we can go and the most natural end to a journey we could ever make. If there’s a single moment though – a single, iconic moment – that rivals getting to the top of a mountain, it’s arriving in an oasis. And I mean arriving in an oasis after days in the desert. When you get to an oasis, suddenly, there’s shade. Suddenly there’s water. You can hear the birds. You can smell the fires. You get handed tea. It’s that moment of knowing you’re out of the wilderness; that, just for a moment, there’s sanctuary and you can breathe easy.

When you go to one by jeep you’ll see it; but you’ll never really understand what that little clump of green means in the wider context of a desert. Oases are made special by what’s around them and by the journey you make to them.

I’ve already talked about my five favourite wadis in the Sinai. Here are my five all time favourite oases too. What are yours?

Ein Hayalla, Ben Hoffler, Go tell it on the Mountain_result1. EIN HAYALLA My favourite of all, I first spotted this from high on Jebel Madsus; far below, it looked like an emerald gem buried in the red rocks. It’s a cluster of green palms in one of the heads of Wadi Kabrin, with deep water pools and trickling creeks. There are bamboo tunnels and fallen tree trunks you can walk across like bridges. Long ago, this oasis was on a pilgrim route to St Katherine; you can still find Byzantine pottery and crucifixes etched on the rocks. One amazing way to walk here is via Wadi Hebran, from the coast. There’s a similarly spectacular route via Wadi Sig, but it’s longer. And harder. You can also walk in via a place called Baghabugh, from St Katherine.

Ein Shefalla, Go tell it on the mountain, Ben Hoffler_result2. EIN SHEFALLA You won’t find many folks who’ve been here. Half way up a deserted wadi that drains El Gardood – a high, foreboding plateau that flanks the Gulf of Aqaba – it’s just a couple of palms below a vertical cliff. It’s not the lush jungle of Ein Hayalla. But the surroundings are much harsher. And that’s why this little patch of green means so much here. It has a themila too: a hole where you can dig down to find water. Walking to Ein Shefalla isn’t easy. You can do it from Wadi Guseib, on the Gulf of Aqaba coast near Bir Sweir. It involves a tough hike over a hard-to-navigate plateau for which, like all the oases here, you’ll need an experienced Bedouin guide.

Ein el Guseib, Sinai, Go tell it on the mountain, Ben Hoffler3 EIN GUSEIB This little oasis huddles at the end of a rugged coastal wadi, below the El Gardood plateau. It’s a haven of green with palm trees, bamboo, pools and creeks that run through the sands. It’s a beautiful spot that you can get to with a walk from the beach. From Bir Sweir on the Gulf of Aqaba coast – roughly 25km north of Nuweiba – follow Wadi Guseib inland from the beach. Otherwise, you can do it at the end of a longer trail passing three of the oases here. Start near Ras Shetan and from here walk to Moiyet Melha (see below). After this you can climb up the El Gardood plateau, crossing it to Ein Shefalla and down its rugged coastal cliffs to Ein Guseib and the Gulf of Aqaba.

Moiyet Melha, Ben Hoffler, Go Tell it on the Mountain_result4 MOIYET EL MELHA They say a ghoola – a sort of evil witch – guards this oasis, maiming or killing anybody who traps its animals, cuts its trees or tries to claim the oasis for himself. Some are scared of her; others see her as a benevolent force of nature. A guardian who protects its animals and trees against human greed. Moiyet el Melha is a long line of green palms that grow at the bottom of high cliffs, where water seeps out. Getting here isn’t too tricky: it’s at the end of a long coastal wadi called Wadi Melha, which starts near the beach camps of Ras Shetan. Half way along is Wadi Wishwashi, a spectacular ravine. The oasis is near the end of the wadi; a beautiful spot to sleep.

Ein Kidd, Sinai, Ben Hoffler Go tell it on the mountain_result_result5 EIN KIDD The only oasis in this list where you’ll find people. Sometimes, I like having places to myself. Other times, people add something. After days in the wilderness, it can be good to talk again. At least, it can with the right people. Getting stuck in an oasis with the wrong people would be a problem. Ein Kidd is in the territory of the Muzeina tribe and the Bedouin here are hospitable in the old school traditions. The oasis itself is a cluster of palms in Wadi Kidd, a long wadi that connects the St Katherine region with the coastal ranges. It’s a sort of half way house on treks between St Katherine and Sharm and it can also be tied into longer treks from the Jebel Umm Shomer area.

Check out the Google Map below, to pinpoint the oases. Remember, these spots are in remote, rugged mountain country and it’s essential to take a Bedouin guide who knows what they’re doing. Check out my Directory of the Best.

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The secret canyon: Abu Hamata

Abu Hamata Canyon, Sinai, Go tell it on the mountain, Leo LaimerOver the years I’ve been walking the Sinai and talking to the Bedouin, I’ve heard a few stories about a little-known canyon, hidden deep in one of the most remote parts of the peninsula. Some said it was the Sinai’s longest canyon. Others said it was the most beautiful. Whoever described it gave it an air of secrecy and mystique. Known as Abu Hamata – Place of the Wild Figs – it’s a spot only a few Bedouin know. Yesterday, I went to check it out with Leo – a guy who’s just returned from an epic, month-long walkabout in the Sinai – and a Bedouin friend of the Jebeleya tribe from St Katherine, who’s also a two-time Abu Hamata veteran.

Getting there isn’t easy. It’s in a little-known tract of desert below Hadabat el Tih, the gigantic table land that runs from one side of the Sinai to the other, forming the great natural divide betwen North Sinai and South.

Rain that falls north of the plateau’s edge runs down to the Mediterranean.

Rain that falls to the south – into canyons like Abu Hamata – runs either to the Gulf of Aqaba or the Gulf of Suez.

As wilderness settings for a canyon go, this is about as good as it gets.

Abu Hamata Canyon, South Sinai, Leo Laimer, Go tell it on the mountainThe wilderness that surrounds Abu Hamata makes the whole thing more of an adventure. Doing a canyon in the middle of nowhere will always be more exciting to me than doing one that’s easy to get to. And the wilderness doesn’t just add adventure: it has a sort of moat-around-the-castle effect that has fortified it against the mass tourism that has been so harmful to some of the Sinai’s other canyons. There’s a stillness and solitude and peace in this place that it’s hard to find in other spots. Entering it feels like walking into a gigantic natural cathedral or mosque.

Coming from the St Katherine or Dahab side you follow a long, winding jeep track over harsh sandstone badlands before reaching a single palm tree in a long, sandy wadi, which marks the point you start walking.

To begin, the walk-in to the canyon is nothing spectacular.

Further up, the walk is interrupted by a small waterfall cliff near some wild fig trees. The canyon takes its name from these. Scramble over this cliff and you can continue in the sandy wadi until you reach a point that looks like a cul-de-sac.

Carry on though and you’ll see it’s no cul-de-sac at all. It’s a sharp turn to the left: and when you round it the canyon stretches out ahead: Abu Hamata. 

Abu Hamata Canyon Sinai, narrow section. Leo Laimer, Go tell it on the mountainIt begins as a narrow passageway of red rock. Walk in and the temperature drops. It gets dark and shadowy. Dry polygons of sand crack under your feet. There are big dips in the floor that once held pools of water, and the canyon twists and turns, getting so narrow that you have to take a deep breath in and squeeze through in some places. You have to scramble all the way along – there’s no easy walking. At one point there’s a tricky step that counts as a rock climbing move: a vertical waterfall drop of about two metres – smooth and bereft of good holds – where a lot of hikers would need the assistance of an experienced guide and rope to pass.

One of the best things about Abu Hamata is it just keeps going.

Every time you think it’s about to end a new twist in the canyon reveals a whole new stretch, running out ahead. Towards the end the walls drop gradually in height until you clamber out of the narrow slot to enter a more open  wadi. From the wadi sides here, you can gaze over a beautiful panorama of Hadabat el Tih: the high table land stretching faraway into the distance.

This spot is also where you’ll be able to meet your driver again.

The branch of Abu Hamata we did isn’t the only one. Another one cuts off on the left side of the sandy wadi you start in, which is said to be spectacular too. We didn’t do it this time but it’s been chalked onto my ever-growing list. Anyway, check out a Google Maps image showing the start and finish points of the Abu Hamata canyon we did (bottom of this post). It’ll give you a sense of how to do it yourself. Please though, if you do go to this place, remember a few things.

Abu Hamata Canyon, South Sinai. Leo Laimer 2015, Go tell it on the mountainFirst of all, this is one of the most little-visited canyons in the Sinai. Which is part of why it’s so beautiful and precious. There’s no rubbish. No graffiti. Please don’t be the first to leave it. Don’t forget the canyon has a tricky climbing step – for which you’ll need a guide and maybe rope equipment – and make sure you have a driver who knows the way and who has both the vehicle and stomach for the ride. Youssuf – the driver I use – is a guy you can rely on in any part of South Sinai. You can find out more about him in my Directory of the Best and you can call him on 0109-717-2211. Thanks to Leo Laimer for his photos in this piece.

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