Wadi Rum
From World travel guide
Wadi Rum is a spectacularly scenic desert valley (Arabic, wadi) in the south of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.
Contents |
Understand
Lawrence of Arabia spent a significant amount of time here in the course of the British-inspired Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire during the First World War (1914-1918). Fans of the 1962 film Lawrence of Arabia will be familiar with the landscape, not so much sand dunes, as a tumble of soaring cliffs and desert rock plateaus (jebels). The area is quite isolated and largely inhospitable to settled life - the only permanent inhabitants are several thousand Bedouin nomads and a few villagers. There is no real infrastructure, leaving the area fortunately quite unspoilt: apart from the goat hair tents of the bedouin, the only structures are a few concrete shops and houses and the fort headquarters of the Desert Patrol Corps. There are no hotels.
Get in
Wadi Rum is a short detour from the Desert Highway between Amman and Aqaba. A side road leads to the entrance to Wadi Rum, where you will find little more than a parking lot, a police office and lots of would-be guides offering camel and 4x4 treks.
Get around
By camel or four wheel drive vehicle
See
- Lawrence's Well - a small spring 2km (1.2 miles) south-west of the village of Rum. The pool is largely unprepossessing, being mostly just a stagnant puddle, but the views across the desert from there are truly spectacular
- the Nabatean temple in Rum - the surrounding area is covered in Thamudic and Kufic rock art
Do
The genuine attraction of the Wadi Rum is the desert itself, best accessed in a hired four wheel drive or on a camel. Some visitors only do a few hours in the Wadi, but it's definitely worth doing a guided trip of several days duration, staying overnight with Bedouin families or camping in the desert.
Climbing is another popular activity: Wadi Rum Rock Page
Eat & Drink
- At the entrance to the park, a small tent-cum-restaurant serves simple Jordanian fare of bread, yogurt and such. You might even be luckier than one Wikitraveller who got food poisoning here.
- You can also arrange to have a lunch prepared under a tent in the Wadi Rum. The food is delicious, and the preparation is spectacular! The local specialty involves cooking lamb underground!
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