Leah Climbs a Wall; Ein Gedi
Tuesday, January 7, 2020
The pastry shop nearby is dangerous; once again we had wonderful chocolate stuffed pastries and rugalach for breakfast. We met our guide for the day, Nafthali, in front of our building at 9 AM, and drove about 40 minutes to a beautiful nature preserve northeast of Jerusalem named En Prat. Leah’s climbing guide, Itamar, and his assistant had already been here an hour, climbing to the top of the cliff wall and dropping three lines for three climbs, each more difficult than the last. We walked into a canyon formed by a stream:
The path was lovely:
High above us, in a crevice in the cliff opposite the one Leah would climb was a monastery:
Leah got into her harness, special climbing shoes and helmet, and started up:
She was like a spider on the side of the cliff:
Here’s a video which shows the pace of the climb:
Almost there:
Made it:
She rappelled down,
rested, and started on the second, and then the third climb. By the end of the morning she was exhausted
and exhilarated. We were relieved she
was still in one piece!
We began a drive toward
the Dead Sea for the second half of our day, and stopped for lunch. We then drove down the west side of the Dead
Sea as far as Ein Gedi, a wonderful oasis, park and ancient ruin which we have
visited before. We concentrated today on
the ancient city of Ein Gedi which has been excavated. Here’s what you can see now:
The synagogue had a mosaic
floor which is now protected by a huge tent-like canvas. Here’s the floor and a detail:
Our guide was a trained
archeologist and really lit up talking with us about the history of the city
which was located here. We had a
wide-ranging discussion of archeological findings versus biblical history. He was quite passionate.
Driving back north towards
Jerusalem, Nafthali pointed out a relatively new (ten years) phenomenon, the
development of giant sink holes at the edge of the sea.
It turns out that fresh
water is newly running under the mountainside, dissolving huge salt deposits
which leads to collapse of the surface and development of the sink holes. This has ruined some of the resort hotels
along the edge of the Dead Sea.
Fascinating.
Leah was exhausted on our
return and is taking a nap as I write this.
We’ll go out to dinner in an hour or so.
More tomorrow.
Were you given an explanation of the recent influx of fresh water into the area?
ReplyDeleteNo! Needs research. Victor
DeleteApparently the fresh groundwater was always there, but was held away by the heavy salt water of the DS; as that level dropped the fresh water began moving in: https://www.nrdc.org/onearth/could-water-red-sea-help-revive-dead-sea
DeleteIs the water level of the dead sea diminishing? Leah's climb is impressive! Beautiful areas, so much history...
ReplyDeleteYes, as much as a meter/year. Dropping very rapidly.
DeleteWikipedia:
DeleteYear Water level (m) Surface (km2)
1930 −390 1050
1980 −400 680
1992 −407 675
1997 −411 670
2004 −417 662
2010 −423 655
2016 −430.5 605
Thanks for the research, Mark!
DeleteI do believe that watching was the right choice! Oy. Three climbs? Ah youth...
ReplyDeleteOmg. Leah! She’s brave...as are you. My heart was in my throat just watching the little video! 😳. Great job. I need a nap just thinking of it.
ReplyDeleteFabulous experience! One she’ll never forget. 💚