Journey through Jordan

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"The solider with the gun pointed in our direction says it is time for us to leave" I casually say to one of my photographer friends who, up until that point, had been ignoring my directions to get back in the van and focused on getting her photos.

Rural Jordan

A few years ago I travelled to Jordan (via Egypt during their coup, but that is another story) with some photographer friends. Over the trip we covered most areas of Jordan, including the main tourist attractions such as Petra and Wadi Rum, we also volunteered with a few different organisations.

One of the organisations we worked with is based in one of the poorest areas of Jordan, they run several youth development programs, helping young people get through school and university. They have a few small businesses they run as well, generating a small income to sustain the organisation as well as giving the students a chance to earn an income.

Working with the local kids

We volunteered with this organisation for quite a few days, but we were a few hours drive away as there is no local accommodation. The drive each day took us past the Dead Sea, on the way back one night there was an incredible sunset starting to happen so we asked the driver to pull the van over and we all poured out of the vehicle with our cameras and tripods.

Dead Sea Dusk

Glow on the Dead Sea

Our guide helpfully instructed us not to wander too far from the van and said we'd need to leave before dark. If you've ever taken photos of an incredible sunset you'll realise that the best colour is usually after the sun has set, so once the sun had set we kept taking photos. As it starts getting dark we start trying to round everyone up to get back in the van. A few of the photographers are insistent on "just one more photo", although just one more always leads to just one more.. and just one more.

Just one more photo

It is at this point I hear the rumble of a diesel 4x4 pulling up, I look over and there is a large gun mounted on the tray of the 4x4, several soldiers are looking our way with their guns pointed in our general direction. The driver of our bus comes to the guide and myself and says "ahhhh we have a soldier problem", which seemed like an odd way to phrase it.

Our guide has a chat with one of the soldiers and it turns out you can't be next to the Dead Sea in that particular area after sunset. We start rounding people up and ushering them back to the back, one photographer is quite insistent that she needed "one more shot", so I casually reply "the soldier with the gun pointed in our direction says it is time for us to leave", she turns to laugh and spots the soldiers, the guns and their no-nonsense looks and decided that she'd had enough photos for the evening.

The Jordan Valley Highway after dark

The soldiers by that point had realised we weren't trying to escape to Israel and definitely weren't coming from there across the Dead Sea. They had bemused looks on their faces as we get the last of the photographers on to the bus and immediately leave the area. We had a good laugh about it a few minutes down the road, but I think a few people were in a little bit of shock initially, it isn't every day you have "soldier problems".

Jordanian Hillside

A local goatherd moves her goats

These two asked me to take their photo

Next write up on Jordan will include the time we spent in the iconic and ancient Petra as well as some stories from camping with the Bedouin in the Wadi Rum region.

Getting our camels ready in Wadi Rum

Thanks for reading. I absolutely loved my time in Jordan and really want to head back to explore even further, it is a beautiful country with very friendly and open people. All photos were taken with people's permission.

Looking over a Jordanian hillside at dusk


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All photos posted are copyright Paul Pichugin unless otherwise stated.


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23 comments
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Fantastic stuff again, can you tell all your gifted friends what's happening here to you, and maybe we can have a thriving blog platform again!

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I've told a few... will rope some in soon.

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Such a beautiful place, and a little scary experience. But thanks for sharing. 😊

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It wasn't overly scary, they were fairly civil but stern, I'm sure it happens pretty regularly.

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Oh, I see. I'm just terrified with guns pointing at your direction. Oh no! 😢

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(Edited)

I think if you are going to have anyone point weapons in your general direction then soldiers or police are probably the best ones, as they aren't about to accidentally shoot you for the most part. I've been held up at gun point before by criminals, I was less relaxed in that situation as I'm less confident in their training on gun handling.

Plus the soldiers were careful not to point their weapons directly at us.

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Hahaha! 😁 OK, OK. 😊 Thanks for explaining.

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(Edited)

Hiya, @lizanomadsoul here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made into our Top 3 in Daily Travel Digest #638.

Your post has been manually curated by the @steemitworldmap team. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider upvoting and supporting us.


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Haha I came over from the Steemitworldmap daily digest as yours was top and the "soldier problem" (putting it lightly) would definitely be leading me to promptly have a "Trouser problem"!

Great pictures here and even more amazing story! Made my article about the adventures of Gus the Duck look pretty mundane in comparison 🤣

Well done mate on all fronts!

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Congratulations! Your high-quality travel content was selected by @travelfeed curator @for91days and earned you a reward, in form of an upvote and a resteem. Your work really stands out! Your article now has a chance to get featured under the appropriate daily topic on our TravelFeed blog.
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Amazing post. Thanks for sharing!

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Wow, you took the photography & travel sphere of Steem by storm. Stunning captures and great write ups too, goes for most of your posts, not just this one. That´s exactly the type of content I want to support. I am sorry you got my very first vote on that Snax authentication post, my voter has a bad day or something :D

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That post didn't work, so I tried deleting it... turns out you can't, so I've hidden it. Thank you for the kind comments and support. Part 2 of my Journey through Jordan is coming out soon.

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