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Yusuf
Winner



Registered: Apr 2003
Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Journey Across the Sahara Desert

Journey Across the Sahara Desert

I've been away from the POTY forums for a while and I've just returned home to Malaysia after about 45 days driving a 4x4 with some friends across the Sahara Desert in North Africa. It was a fascinating journey and I've much to say about the desert and its impact on Cameras. First off, here is a picture shot at Dusk deep in the Sahara of Libya.



We shipped our vehicles to Port Sudan & Khartoum from Malaysia, and started driving from the Sudan, through Egypt, then Libya, Tunisia, and on to Oren in Algeria, from where we shipped the cars across the Mediteranean to Alicante in Spain, and then from Almeira in Spain back again across the Med to Nador in Morocco, from where we crossed the Atlas mountains and finished at Casablanca. The border between Algeria and Morocco is closed and mined. That was why we had to go to Morocco via Spain.

The Sahara is the largest desert in the world, covering about 9 million sq km of North Africa. Here's a couple of pictures of our cars crossing dunes.





The Sahara Desert stretches across Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Sudan, Chad, Niger, Mali and Mauritania. Just in Libya alone, the Sahara is almost as large as India. It is stunningly beautiful in an intimidating sort of way, with bleached bones of dead camels seen in many places. The landscape comprises mainly dry hills, bare and loose rocks, dunes and shifting sands of various grain sizes. In Algeria and Morocco the Sahara is rocky. In Libya the sand grains are large and coarse while in Tunisia the sand is powdery like flour. The dunes and the colours are also different in different places and at different times of the day.

The desert is constantly changing its landscape. Pebbles and stones on the surface are rounded as the blowing sand works like sandpaper blasting everything smooth. In the oasis, villagers need to put up fences of date palm fronds to prevent their homes from being buried. When the water runs out at an oasis, people move on, and the desert slowly but surely reclaims the oasis. This typical desert house has been abandoned because the water here has dried up. Already the sand is swallowing the houses here and in a few years all will be buried.



In many places we saw date palms buried by the sand such that only the fronds and fruit are visible and at ground level. At this time of the year the dates are ripening and I had great fun gorging myself on dates which I simply stoop down to pluck instead of climbing up the trunk...



The sky is beautifully blue. Absolutely clear with not a single wisp of clouds. With the sun directly overhead, the sand is slightly more yellow - like 18 carat gold I would think, as compared to 24 carat gold whenever the sun is lower.

We were about a thousand kilometers deep in the desert in Libya. Water and fuel supplies were running low. Our GPS indicated an oasis at a certain co-ordinate, 65 km westwards. So we head for the oasis. We arrived at the co-ordinate within an hour and a half. And this is the oasis....



There were signs of previous human life there - three scraggly date palms, some desert bushes and a few creepers in 50 Celsius heat. An oasis of green in an unending expanse of 18 carat gold.

But where is the water ?

We found a small tube well amongst the bushes. About 25 feet below the surface there was perhaps 2 inches of clear water. If you are patient and dying of thirst, you could probably fill a plastic mineral water bottle tied to a long piece of string and carefully lowered down the tube.

Lesson learnt ?

Carry a long piece of rope and a few empty mineral water bottles if you plan on going into the desert....

The fine dust of the Desert is a killer for cameras, Within two weeks of my journey through the desert, many cameras and lenses went kaput as a result of very fine sand entering the spaces and gaps in cameras and lenses. Focussing rings had a gritty feel each time they were turned. Some button switches wouldnt work. The exposure reading jumped all over the place. And needless to say sensors had tons of dust on them for those foolish enough to change lenses in the open. I now understand why the pro lenses like Canon's L lenses are a little pricey - they have better seals against the elements besides being built of better materials. The first cameras to fail were the cheapo pseudo-SLRs without interchangeable lenses. Then the low cost after-market lenses failed one after another. Fully charged batteries showed low charge in the morning after 10 Celsius temp at night and 55 Celsius at midday. None of the L lenses failed. I was smart enough to slip a long sports stocking (like a condom) over my camera and lens barrel with an opening cut at the eyepiece, so I guess that helped protect my lenses somewhat..

One of the most painful sights I saw during my exploration of the Sahara Desert, was a completely smashed Nikon D70 !!!

We were driving over loose sand. In the sand you have to drive fast - greater than 60 kph- and you have to reduce the air pressure in your tyres to as low as 18 psi and even to 12 psi to extract maximum grip and traction. If you stop, or slow down to below 40 kph, you will get into big problems. You will simply sink in the sand and you will have to be winched out. It is the momentum of speeds greater than 60 kph and the soft tyres that allow you to move forward.

While we were speeding in the sand in convoy, this friend of mine poked half his body out of the window with his D70 in his hand trying to shoot a picture of my speeding Toyota Landcruiser behind him. Unfortunately his car passed over a rut and whaddaya know ??? His bouncing vehicle caused him to drop his D70 and my car went CRUUUUNNNNNCCCCHHH over the D70 !!!!

Here's his D70, a sight that not many people will be privileged to see in real life....



I've been away from this forum for a while and I miss all you good people on the POTY forum. I shot about 6000 RAW images and maybe 95 % is crap, but I'll try and post a few of the less painful ones here to show you what a fascinating place the Sahara Desert is.

You should go and see it in person ....



16-10-2004 09:14 PM  IP: Logged  [Edit] [Reply]

GoldenHammer
Webmaster



Registered: Mar 2003
Location: Hong Kong

Cool! I really love your travel journal .... will have this published very soon....

Thank you.
GH


16-10-2004 11:07 PM  IP: Logged  [Edit] [Reply]

GoldenHammer
Webmaster



Registered: Mar 2003
Location: Hong Kong

The Journal published at:

http://www.photos-of-the-year.com/sahara-desert/


Thanks for the share.
GH


17-10-2004 12:12 PM  IP: Logged  [Edit] [Reply]

JMSetzler
Winner



Registered: Oct 2004
Location: Hickory, North Carolina

Yusuf,

Congratulations on an excellent photo essay Your journey sounds like an amazing one. I'm sorry to hear about your friend's D70. That would be heartbreaking.


17-10-2004 03:05 PM  IP: Logged  [Edit] [Reply]

Yusuf
Winner



Registered: Apr 2003
Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

quote:
Originally posted by JMSetzler
Yusuf,

Congratulations on an excellent photo essay Your journey sounds like an amazing one. I'm sorry to hear about your friend's D70. That would be heartbreaking.



Thanks.

You should go see the Sahara - she is bewitchingly beautiful - ready to swallow the careless but also eager to reveal her beauty. The Sahara is still virginally pristine in places where man find her too inhospitable to make homes, but where she has been kind by yeilding water, man has desecrated her with his rubbish. Desert dwellers do not bother to burn or bury their wastes and rubbish. It is a sight more distressing than a broken D70, to see rubbish and plastic bags of all colours indiscriminately dumped at the fringes of nearly ALL villages and townships in the desert. The arid conditions does not degrade the rubbish. Strong winds pick up the plastic bags and paper and they get stuck in whatever trees and bushes that can be found for miles around a township or village or oasis. I call them rubbish trees of many colours. It is really, really sad and shameful that these people couldn't care less.....


17-10-2004 05:50 PM  IP: Logged  [Edit] [Reply]

JMSetzler
Winner



Registered: Oct 2004
Location: Hickory, North Carolina

Yusuf,

That is unfortunate. I never really imagined encountering 'trash' in the Sahara. It just goes to show how an uneducated mind may be better in some cases My vision of the Sahara is one of beauty and endless dunes of sand. I guess being there would change that...

I still hope you had a great journey despite the occasional unattractiveness of it...


17-10-2004 06:48 PM  IP: Logged  [Edit] [Reply]

jonnyfilmboy
Winner



Registered: Dec 2003
Location: Chicago, IL

Wow. Such a great time. Sorry to hear about the garbage. I've heard similar stories. Your photos reminded me of the video I have seen on TV of the Paris to Dakar rally.

Do you have any more info about the convoy you are a part of? I saw the Petronis sponsor on one of your trucks. Anyway, it sounds like a remarkable experience. I'm really jealous. Great photos as always. I'm happy to hear that someone with your equipment and talent is over there taking some great shots.

6000 RAW?! Wow. How do you store it all? Do you transfer images to a server at night or something? Sat phone? I'm interested to hear the tech details.

Very cool write up. Can't wait to hear more.


22-10-2004 03:08 AM  IP: Logged  [Edit] [Reply]

Yusuf
Winner



Registered: Apr 2003
Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

quote:
Originally posted by jonnyfilmboy
6000 RAW?! Wow. How do you store it all? Do you transfer images to a server at night or something? Sat phone? I'm interested to hear the tech details.

[/B]


I used an Apacer CP200 standalone CD burner. I also had a CP100 as backup. Excellent burner which can read 7 different cards. The CP200 has never failed me. Used to have a 40gig PCX370 but it died on me - luckily it died at home just before the trip. That was why I bought the CP200. Highly reccomended.


03-11-2004 04:18 AM  IP: Logged  [Edit] [Reply]

Dougy
Member



Registered: Apr 2003
Location: Hong Kong, N.T

Talking Fantastic!

What a fantastic article and photos....

I 've been away from the Forum ffor a while and it was good to read something like this!!

I just wished I had the resources and time to do these trips!

thanks for sharing!

Doug


03-11-2004 04:31 PM  IP: Logged  [Edit] [Reply]

Yusuf
Winner



Registered: Apr 2003
Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Re: Fantastic!

quote:
Originally posted by Dougy
What a fantastic article and photos....

I 've been away from the Forum ffor a while and it was good to read something like this!!

I just wished I had the resources and time to do these trips!

thanks for sharing!

Doug



Thanks Doug. Glad to see you back here.
If you have the will, time and resources will be there. Try driving through the Taklimakan Desert in Xinjiang Uygur. Its equally fascinating. You can fly out to either Kashgar or Turfan and hire guides and 4x4s from there.
All our China trips (including the Old Silk Road & Tibet) were arranged by China Travel Service (Yunan Branch). If anybody wants to "do" China in a 4x4, get in touch with Vivien (callsign Sunshine and please mention me as the Biker who did China by Bike) at ctsyn@vip.sina.com



04-11-2004 06:49 AM  IP: Logged  [Edit] [Reply]

 


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