Danakil depression Tour - Zagwe Ethiopia tours and travel Tour in Ethiopia
The country's rich tapestry of history is woven with fascinating
facts and legends: the often told tale of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba;
the journey of the Ark of the Covenant; the growth of the ancient Axumite
Kingdom; the birth of Christianity; the later rise of Islam; the story of King
Lalibela; and the castes of Gondar. Recorded history goes back over 4000 years
and ancient contact with Greece, Persia and Egypt nurtured and strengthened the
culture of northern Ethiopia creating the Axumite kingdom that dominated the
vital crossroads of Africa and Asia for almost a thousand years. From the 13th
to the 16th centuries, intellectual culture continued to flourish with the
establishment of monasteries, with the writing of successive royal chronicles and
with the translation of the texts into Ge'ez. Imperial splendour grew in tandem
with these developments and eventually gravitated to the beautiful fortress
city of Gondar. At the same time Ethiopia's mercantile Islamic culture rose up
side by side with that of the Christians. The town of Harar is a fine example
of this alternative strand of Ethiopia's broad and diverse heritage and
occupies a proud place of its own along the historic route. ethiopia tour operators list
And so these were some of the places Explore would take us on our 14
day tour of the Blue Nile and Lalibela. From my notes......
"It is Africa and I am glad to be back on this rich soil. the
muezzin woke us up about 6:30 this morning with his call to prayer you are not
in Kansas anymore! We got a taxi to take us to the Mercato - the market. Billed
as the largest in East Africa - certainly bigger than anything I have seen in
East Africa. We knew it would be best to get a guide so our driver came along
with us and a chap in red volunteered to take us around. We had to direct him a
bit as we wanted to go to the food areas - spices galore and what aromas. All
women in this section with lots of giggles erupting with me encouraging them to
smile and not be afraid of my camera. Had my shoes washed - I thought they would
be polished - but the guy used hand soap and a sponge. One of the things I love
about Africa - expect the unexpected. It is a wild place and we walked around
for about 2 hours. Lots of interesting things for sale: baskets, sponge
mattresses, shawls, metal piping, bolts of beautifully colored material, and
truly more shoes than one nation needs. Ann said there must be a lot of places
to go here because there are more shoes for sale than she had even seen. Loved
just wandering around and sharing smiles.. people are very friendly and eager
to say hello. Tribal Tour Ethiopia
Dinner time came around and off we went to a very traditional
restaurant. It was built as a traditional hut with a centre pole and struts
coming up from the walls to the centre.
Beautiful paintings on the panels (between the struts) of
Ethiopian people doing traditional chores. And they had some paintings on
smaller pieces of that Egyptian papyrus paper to cover the lamps. The tables
(large hollow woven baskets) are covered with a lid and a cloth. They take the
cloth away and put down your drinks. Then a guy comes around with warm water,
soap and a tin bowl. You are to wash your hands! They move the drinks to a
small side table when the food comes. It was a large tin platter about 2 feet
across. They put down a piece of "injera" (their word for their local
bread) and then spoon out the dishes you order onto the "bread". The
food ( or "wat") was chicken ( a bit spicy ) and lamb ( a bit spicy)
and some veggie goop that I liked. You then take rolled up pieces of the
"injera" and scoop up some of the filliings or "wat", lob
it towards your mouth hoping you miss your shirt on the way to your mouth. And
when you get to the end bits you eat the bottom layer of injera as well as the
food that has soaked into it! When you are done, they come back with the water,
soap and bowl so you can wash again! With 2 Sprites, cost was $7. And when we
were finished somehow the taxis knew as they appeared back at the door to
return us to the hotel. Quite the first day. ethiopia
tour operators list
My head is spinning. And now as I type this I am listening to the
local version of Stand by Me, Green Green Grass of Home and If Loving You is
Wrong coming from the live lobby bar band. Saturday night in Addis. Does not get
much better than this.
At Bahir Dar we went for a walk to see the Blue Nile and Tississat
Falls. The falls are not nearly what they once were as the government built a
dam about 6 years ago. The neighbouring town not only lost their tourist
attraction and their water supply, the town does not even get electricity!
Shameful. Afternoon boat ride on Lake Tana to see a 13th century church built
on one of the islands. Delightful. Next town was Gondar which does not mean
much to you all but it was the main stop for many of us as that is where we
were going to experience Timkat, the celebration of the epiphany of Christ.
Every church has a replica of the Ark of the Covenant and these replicas are
all brought together by the main priests of each church. A parade heads down to
the main "bath" of the town and the "tabots" are housed in
tents; the priests and huge crowds spend the night nearby praying and
celebrating .The next day starting at 4 am the water in the bath is consecrated
and then there is a church service and communion. The" tabots" are
then paraded back through town to each church but everyone at the pools jumps
in to swim; there is singing and dancing; some people will take a bottle of the
holy water home with them in case they get sick later in the year- this holy
water will help them get better. The left over bread from communion is burnt
and the ashes are kept to bestow upon people a teaspoonful at a time next year quite exciting to be a part of it. Tribal Tour Ethiopia
A fabulous drive through the Rift Valley to the next town (
Debark) where we were to stay 2 nights. Good restaurant here - 2 of the best
meals on the trip. The day between the 2 nights in this paradise was spent in
the Simien Mountains. As we drove through the area it looked like pictures I
have seen of the Grand Canyon. Quite beautiful. For the trekkers there was a
day of walking and for the rest of us we had lunch in a meadow with 1 horse, 2
dozen goats and 6 little boys avidly watching us and trying to sell us their
woolen hats! I think we had the better time reading and writing postcards. Oh
yes, we also saw a herd of about 100 baboons digging for roots.
A very long drive the next day to the town of Axum - home of the
Queen of Sheba. Lots of stories about her and her romance with King Solomon and
the son she produced Menelik. Did she exist? Well the theorists and
archaeologists are well into their investigations and the feeling is that she
did and her kingdom ranged form Yemen to Ethiopia to southern Egypt. Axum is
considered the birthplace of Christianity and herein lies the Ark of the
Covenant closely guarded by a hermit. The eyes of only the highest priests have
seen the actual Ark as it stays guarded and wrapped and locked in a building in
the grounds of the St Mary of Zion Church.
Danakil depression Tour
Lalibela has next and was wonderful. Just to think that the people
carved 11 of these churches out of the stone hillside. You can spend 2-3 days
wandering around town visiting the churches... The church of St George (the one
they went to on the Amazing Race for those TV reality show fans) was amazing.
The reason why that church in particular was built was that King Lalibela had
built about 22 other churches in the area to honour all sorts of the saints.
Then St George (the patron saint of Ethiopia) came down to visit on his horse
and he was very sad. He asked King Lalibela why no church had been built to
honour himself St George. The king quickly realized his error and had this most
majestic one built. The Biet Giorgis Church is carved in the form of a Greek
cross and approached through a passageway that was also cut out of the rock.
Another church you can visit - by mule - is the Ashatan Maryam Church where you
are rewarded with stunning views over the highlands. All sorts of fables like
this one told here were recounted to us by our guides in each town about the
paintings etc that are inside the churches as well. Quite good fun.
Our last stop with Explore was Harar and it is truly an
"old" town. Probably one of my favourite so far as it is so alive.
Like stepping back into time.... before just about everything we know!!! We
took a walking tour this morning and everything is considered useful here...
everything is recycled - just one example is car tires that become rubber
sandals. The ladies were all smiles in the market and the kids ran after us
constantly calling us "ferengi" foreigner. In the markets here you
can buy filigree jewellery, shawls and mats as well as many foodstuffs like
spices and grains. This old walled city with 87 mosques and 300 shrines has 5 gates
only and the explorer Richard Burton snuck into forbidden Muslim stronghold in
1854 by dressing as an Arab merchant. It is considered by many to be the 4th
holiest city in the Islamic World. The mosques are filled with the whispers of
prayer and the click of the rosary beads.
Zagwe
Ethiopia Tours & travel is an exclusive tour company With a squad of
experienced professionals , we afford the best vacation holidays in Ethiopia. Trekking in Ethiopia
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