Sunset at a Dead Sea Resort

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  1. What a fantastic adventure! One I’m sure you will keep close to heart in years to come. Floating in the Dead Sea will be something you can always close your eyes and see again.

    1. That’s the best thing about travel – the ability to go back whenever I want through my mind. Can’t get that with reading about a place from a book!

  2. Hey, I have shared that experience and this really brought it back, it was a lovely read. And talk about pain getting getting salt in your eyes – I managed to slip and cut my leg on the salt rock – that was SO painful! Great descriptions and photos, look forward to seeing more! L x

  3. Though the floating sensation was cool, I have to say my most persistent memory of the Dead Sea is that the water just felt oddly slimy…

    I also happened to have a scrape on my hand that turned bright red after exposure to the water, and has since healed into a purplish/brownish scar. Interesting side effect to high salt quantities. 🙂

    1. A lot of people hate it and spend about five minutes in the water just to say they’ve done it. Pretty awesome to be able to show someone and your scar and say “I got this at the Dead Sea.” That’s the joy of travel!

  4. Sounds like quite the experience. It always feels a little skewed when you have to pay 16x what locals pay to visit the same place, for no apparent reason other than you are foreign. Great job on being freshly pressed!

  5. Hilarious and well-written. Enjoyed it! Living in Dubai, I can totally envision him stopping the car in the middle of the road and thinking it’s normal/acceptable. Driving is definitely different in this part of the world! Congrats on being FP’d.

  6. Firstly congrats on the FP 😀
    Great post and lovely pictures – it sounds like it was quite an adventure even down to trawling through the market and stepping on toes! Next destination? 😀

    1. Currently working in England, but might squeeze in a mini-break to somewhere like Poland/Switzerland. Japan or India will be my next big trip methinks.

  7. Despite the fact that I am very buoyant and can float in ANY water, this sounds really neat. I want to try it someday. Glad to know that it’s going to take some money and some effort to get there.

  8. Great post. Brought back memories of 1979/80 when I did it. Got the usual image of a friend reading the London ‘Times’ while floating. The paper got wet and ruined and my ‘friend’ disappeared 30 years ago. . . but the memories live on.

  9. You just took us on an adventure. The experience was potent enough to cause a slight shift in the way my reality looks — much like going to a distant land and returning home; your house, your dog, the contents of your pantry all seem to have taken on a novel and incandescent appearance. Your writing has done that.

    I also find it compelling that even in the most remote or foreign or unfamiliar of places, it only takes a specific matter of time before complacency sets in, the newness wears off, and our human-ness takes over and it suddenly makes no difference whether we are in Uzbekistan or our living room; people irritate and inconvenience us. We somehow find a way of losing sight of the wonder in all things, no matter how wonderful they are. Human nature, I suppose.

    Wonderful article.

    1. Human nature indeed. I find it both fascinating and intriguing and is the reason I continue to travel, to find new places that excite me and where I don’t feel complacent (at least not immediately). Wonderful comment. 🙂

  10. Totally off topic, but still:

    What’s up with all these readers plugging their blog on your article? For what it’s worth, I find that insanely rude and immensely indicative of a person’s serious disregard for quality writing. Personally, I would never visit anyone’s site who has commented with a hyperlink and nothing of substance pertaining to the post itself. There are ample ways to raise your stats without looking like a total dueche, and more probably actually being one.

    I hope I’m never freshly pressed. 🙂

    1. Yup, they’re spam, and I should delete them.

      I’m more likely to click on someone (and go to their blog) if they’ve posted a funny/interesting/useful comment, not just a link. Good manners are attractive!

  11. those pictures are something else. My girlfriend has been, I have not, she said it was kind of hard to float comfortably/read like everyone always talks about.

    1. I didn’t actually try and read or do anything like that, but the water isn’t completely still – the second time I got salt in my eyes was caused by a surprise wave sneaking up on me. And if you just lie there, you end up drifting quite a lot.

  12. Great post! I appreciate your humour. I expect that I will think the same murderous thoughts as I am faced by elbows in my upcoming trip to India.

  13. I went on the Israeli side – so had a different experience getting onto the beach 🙂 (Though there’s no pool on the Israeli side – I would’ve appreciated a dip afterwards for sure!)

    I definitely loved the sea too though, my friends and I spent definitely spent a significant amount of time in the water! (Luckily a German girl had warned us not to shave for several days beforehand, so no cuts or nicks to get wickedly burned!)

    And congrats on the FP! 🙂

      1. Um… I believe it’s Eilat (at the Red Sea and the border of Jordan). My friends and I took a bus from Jerusalem, stopped at the Dead Sea for the day, and then continued on the bus later than night to Eilat. But there’s constant buses from Eilat and Jerusalem to the Dead Sea. It was pretty easy to get there.

      1. Time & money are the two biggest factors. The best thing I can do is book a trip once or twice a year far in advance, and hope for the best. Chicago in a month, Vegas in January!

        1. Both great cities in VERY different ways! Definitely harder to travel from America because the place is so far from everywhere else. Europe is awesome!

  14. I really enjoyed reading this post! It sounds like an awesome experience! I had the same caravan trips, but I’m Welsh so the rain didn’t keep us inside! haha

  15. ‘The world isn’t as big as we think it is.’ – Perfect closing line to a wonderful post.

    Well done, very worthy of being Freshly Pressed (now that I know what it means!)

    x

  16. Ultra new to WordPress, as in I just signed up tonight. Yours was the first blog I read and I loved it! Hooked. Think you just got yourself another fan. Great stuff!

  17. i enjoyed reading this. i’m only curious with one thing: why did the hotel owner suddenly want to take you to a day trip to the dead sea? was it part of his hospitality to the guests?

          1. congrats for being freshly pressed btw. quite all right for one time experience, i suppose. so you’re still in the middle east or already back to homeland?

  18. I chortled, you will be pleased to hear! You have a lovely way of writing Mr Wilberforce, and now that I no longer earn a City salary and will be doing my tourism vicariously, I will be a regular visitor to your blog. I have liked you on Facebook too, just to be sure I don’t miss any trips

    1. YAY a new Facebooker! It’s kind of lonely over there at the moment. Most of my trips are in the past too actually, although I did just get back from Norway. There’ll be a post about a Norwegian Halloween party and porridge in the snowy woods coming along soon!

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