Tilen Gabrovšek, scuba diver, translator and tourist guide for Slovenia, Croatia, Spain and Portugal. More...




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Domov
 

From Maribor to Ljubljana (through Libya) 2003/04

Where's the hole?

6.2.2004 | Hammamet, Tunisia

Since sleeping is still a tough job, Peter and I still wake up several times during the night, namely we still couldn't find the last hole. It's a piece of cake to patch it, but where is it hiding? We've been busy with this question since long ago. We alternate as night guards each night. This means: to sit on the empty airbed, start the engine (the air-pump takes a lot of energy to the cold battery), take the pump off the shelf, open the bed valve, insert the pump, start the pump and vegetate until the bed is fully loaded. Then turn off the pump, close the valve, turn off the engine and try to get into the sleeping bag again. For the next three hours. The one that is off-duty feels a heavenly relief as an unknown force takes him off the luggage.

Hotel chain PEPA

5.2.2004 | Tunisia

I haven't spoken yet about the hotel chain PEPA, hotels I've been using since the beginning of November and the room which I'm sharing with Peter since the beginning of January. Hotels are excellent, very cheap and fantastically located! Can you imagine sleeping in İstanbul half a minute from Aya Sofya, five minutes from the Topkapi Palace and mere two minutes from the Blue Mosque? For only two and a half million Turkish Lira per day? Or, for example, overnight on no man's land between Albania and Kosovo (where I was looking directly into the barrel of a pissed-off American police-officer's charged gun), a morning view over white pools at Pamukkale or the citadel of Haleb (Aleppo), first waterfront line (in front of all the other hotels) in Lebanon or Egypt, sleeping a few metres off the Dead Sea shore, morning view over the Giza Pyramids, Nile feluccas, sunrise in the middle of the sand… ¡Almost like Paradores in Spain!

Imagine everything you can not imagine

1.2.2004 | Libya

This is one of the slogans Libyan peoples' committee for tourism was using a couple of years ago and it best describes what Peter and I were experiencing during last days. Here we got stuck for so much time, after two hundred metres we got stuck for so many hours etc. This kind of statistics gets boring so we won't bother you with it. I could write that we slept in the middle of white sand dunes, red sand dunes, that we had dinner in the pleasant company of the driver Ebraheem and the guide Hakeem at our campfire, that we made 1.400 kilometres of off-road in six days, that we were admiring 10.000 year old wall paintings, that we enjoyed complete peace and silence in the middle of the desert, that we haven't met a single human being for a few days, that desert lizards and quails let us approach them only a few feet away, that we felt extreme heat (and it's January!), that we climbed dunes that steep that we thought the car would roll-over, that we almost had a swim in salt lakes (the water was still too cold at the end), that we… and so on and on.

Baba Sanfur

31.1.2004 | Sabha, Libya

Climbing and descending the dunes we are listening to Libyan Reggae group Al-musiqa al-Hurra, we are filling ourselves with date-pastry, imported from the U.K., we are hoping that we won't have to dig the landcruiser model '86 out again and we are happy. The photos are nice also, but as I have already written, they can only show you a small piece of the beauty we're facing.

Not for women

30.1.2004 | Sabha, Libya

Technical part of our desert trip will probably be of no interest for the majority of women so there is actually no need to even open this news or to check uninteresting photos.




Production: Innovatif