Blogs from North, Syria, Middle East - page 2

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Middle East » Syria » North » Aleppo June 1st 2010

From Turkey into Syria, Urfa to Aleppo After leaving Cappadocia we headed south east to a small very conservative place called Kahta. It looks like some sad forgotten border town. This morning was the first time since our arrival that I saw women, two housemaids; otherwise it’s been all men and boys. Kahta is really the last place of any size to base yourself to get up Mt Nemrut to see the marvellous stone heads. It’s not big on the list of usual tourist destinations in Turkey as it is off the beaten track, so the facilities are limited. Our evening meal options were two restaurants run by the same team, on either side of the street, offering the same menu. Option one was clean, bright and busy, option two was dark and dingy and had ... read more
Mt Nemrut heads
Hotel in Urfa
Entering the Mosque

Middle East » Syria » North » Aleppo May 31st 2010

Wczorajszy dzien nalezal do bardziej wyczerpujacych, gdy chodzilismy w upale wsrod stert kamieni - wielkich wykopalisk wszelkich mozliwych religii i kultur. Rano wyruszylismy z Hama, ktore poza noriami slynie ze swoich slodyczy, zaopatrzeni w pudeleczko malych miodowo-orzechowych ciasteczek. Specjalnoscia miasta jest Halawat al-jibn, czyli de facto ser nadziewany serem, ale poza tym sa te klasyczne bliskowschodnie ogromne okragle patery oplywajace kruchym ciastem filo moczonym w miodzie i z orzechami. Udalo mi sie zidentyfikowac kilka z nich. Pistacje otoczone szalem ze skrawkow ciasta to Gniazda Slowika; ciastko zwane przez nas ‘kielbaska’ ze wzgledu na swoj walcowaty ksztalt, to Mambroomeh. Pistacje w kanapce, to Ballorieh. Znalazlam rowniez w Internecie cukiernie z Damaszku, ktora wysyla slodycze - 60 USD za kilogram. Warto. http://www.semiramispastries.com/products.html Ta... read more
Wszystko z orzechami.
Bakaliowa kielbaska.
Bakaliowe gniazdo slowika.

Middle East » Syria » North » Aleppo May 11th 2010

After a easy train ride across the the barren northern deserts of Syria, we arrived in Aleppo (Haleb in arabic). Aleppo was apparently already a powerful city by the 18th century BC, and after many changes throughout history, it may have been continuously inhabited for over 8000 years! We arrived in the early afternoon and promptly got lost on our way to the hotel area. After some helpful locals corrected our directional ineptitude and insisted on walking us unnecessarily most of the way to our hotel, we started to wander the massive souqs of Aleppo. The souqs are truly a serious assault on all five senses! A plethora of smells from the spices, olive and laurel soap and perfume shops; tonnes to look at in the way of sparkly dresses, scarves, various handicrafts, household goods and ... read more

Middle East » Syria » North » Aleppo April 30th 2010

I've been in Aleppo for a week again. Highlights: 1. Max's birthday party. Ahmed managed to suddenly produce a chocolate cake for Max in the middle of the night, and once again a good time was had by all. Too good a time by me, Absolut Vodka and Ton do not go well together. 2. Next morning, woken bij Nicole standing in the doorway (after banging on the door did not work) as I had a trip planned with some others in the hotel. Grabbed my camera, popped two aspirins and struggled down the stairs. Tried to sleep of my hangover a bit in the back of the van as we as we headed of to San Simeon and the dead cities. Mr Simeon may have been into austerity and praying and such, but you ain't ... read more
The tailors
Saladin sleeping in his shop
Miliana

Middle East » Syria » North » Al Hasakah April 23rd 2010

There is nothing to see in Al Hasake, which is why I went there. There should be a castle around somewhere, but I couldn't even find that (more my fault than the castle's, I'm hopellesly lost if it's not on my GPS). I spent about two days in Hasake, I think I spotted another tourist, but I'm not sure. On the full day I had I just wanderred around, mostly in the souk. It's a typically Arab town, around lunch most shops close till the heat dies down. Then they open up again untill late at night. It's much mure rural that Aleppo, with a different ethnic blend. Quite a lot of Kurdish. I met a man in the market who told me he studied as an argricultural engineer, but he sold vegetables in the market ... read more
It's a popular chick
The Hyena of Justice
Spice shop keeper

Middle East » Syria » North » Aleppo April 23rd 2010

Drove back to Aleppo today for Bruce's birthday party (South African/Aussie guy who's in Syria for an extended stay). Some things are just universal: when I stopped at a small gas station in the middle of nowhere I was informed of all the current Dutch soccer player who were any good, and when I said I don't follow soccer but MotoGP was more my thing, they turned out to be Valentino Rossi fans ;-) Checked into Al Jawahe, and went out with Ahmed to find materials to make Bruce a super huge birthday card. He and Nicole put the card together while I strolled around the deserted souk (friday), then it was Mr Chicken for dinner, and party time. The Syrian band was great, the Syrian booze was cheap, the Syrian cake was a calorie bomb, ... read more
In the strangest places...
The souk on fridays
Aw cute, a sheep in a pickup!

Middle East » Syria » North » Al Hasakah April 22nd 2010

Around noon I set of for Al Hasake. It looked a bit windy but I wasn't that worried. Yup. My first sandstorm! Not a huge one hamdallah, but enough to give me a proper sandblasting and respect for the real thing should I ever run into it. From one minute to the next visibility dropped to about 5 metres and I was choking on dust. It passed quite quickly, but the improved view did not offer much news: it's a long mostly straight road with some abandoned houses once in a while. About halfway to Hasake some villages started appearing and I stopped to get a drink. One of the guys there pointed out that my little extra petrol tank that I have mounted on the bike was dripping. It looks like it is just a ... read more

Middle East » Syria » North April 19th 2010

Left Aleppo today, heading east for Qalat Jabar. On the way I stopped by a nice castle at Minjeb, perched on the shore of Lake Assad. It's a wonderfull little castle, nice and quiet for a first stop after busy Aleppo. The 'man with the key' (there's always the man with the key) showed me around. I was the second and probably last visitor that day. Nice guy, who offered me tea of course. Syrians, cool guys.... read more
Arab jaccuzi

Middle East » Syria » North » Aleppo April 16th 2010

To the Citadel! I've been sitting om me arse too much, I went to see the Aleppo Citadel. And got the heck out of there asap. It's nice and all, but there's too much restoration for my tastes, and it was also busy. And bleedin' hot... Well, I can say I've seen it now :-)... read more
Near the entrance
Me like shadows
The beautifull game

Middle East » Syria » North » Aleppo April 14th 2010

I decided to hang around Aleppo a bit longer, it's such a great city. I've been hanging around the souks a lot, getting lost a lot, seeing a lot and generally having a lot of fun. I'm meeting interesting people. There's this old Iraqi businessman staying at the Zawahe hotel who's a practical joker. He wanted to swap lighter but a Nicole (Aussie, she's come to Aleppo for 2 weeks R&R) warned me: it's one of those electric shock lighters. The guy has a cheeky smile but you'd never suspect. Hung around the hotel for a while watching the guy get tourist after touris. He's got the electro shock lighter, chewing gum and pen.... Some folks he got three times in a row :-) While having a drink outside the Zawahe that evening, the yellow man ... read more
The Souk on Friday
Streets at night
Juice bars




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