Silence of the Sahara

He was right. I felt more at ease, more content, more sated than I had in years. The desert had worked its magic, and I was definitely under its spell.

Spellbound is one thing, but seeing things is another. There are stories of crazed souls wandering lost in the desert thinking they see water in a mirage. But I was neither dehydrated nor crazed when I saw it: not water, but a plastic water bottle. It was empty, upside down and nailed to a wooden post high atop a sand dune near our camp. We were seemingly in the middle of no-man’s land when I spotted it.

Something about the way the sun gleamed off the plastic bottle caught my eye. I was about to move on when a flash again captured my attention. In the distance, a colorfully clad nomad family crossed the desert headed for the post. Were they using it as a landmark? Was it there to guide their way? Curious, I pulled binoculars out of my day pack to get a better look.

The woman and child stopped and sat down to rest within the cool shadow of the high dune. The man climbed on toward the post. Wait. Had I lost my mind? Could that be a cell phone he produced from the empty, heat-scorched water bottle?

I lowered the binoculars, rubbed my eyes, and looked again. Indeed, it was a cell phone. He checked something, perhaps its battery charge (or even worse, his voice mail), and then returned it to its desert phone booth and rejoined his family.

At camp that evening before dinner, we gathered for our daily jolt of Morocco’s true passion, the a la menthe, highly sugared mint tea. Seated on tiny canvas stools surrounding a round, low table; it had become our evening ritual to gather outside enjoying conversation under the warmth of the sun’s last rays.

Under the influence of a sugar-induced high, I regaled the others with my tale of cell phones and nomads. They questioned my sanity. Could I blame them? After all, the previous evening dubious expressions had been exchanged when I shared my shabaan epiphany.

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05.16.2009
Sandra Mullen
What an incredible story! I felt as though I was there with you, in the desert. I've traveled a bit around the world but never to Morocco. It makes me want to grab the next flight there. What a life-long memory of such a wonderful time.
05.16.2009
upupandaway
I recently did the camel trek also, among other things, on my first time to Morocco (late Mar/early Apr). What a country! Can't wait to return and think I might want to live there in retirement...it does do something "special" that captures your heart, what one below referred to as seduction. Oh, yes. I am longing for it today, so your story hit the spot, thanks.
05.14.2009
Ellen Barone
Thanks Harry! Your kind words are very much appreciated. Colorado has it's own sand dunes, yes? Cheers, Ellen
05.14.2009
Harry Dinsen
Harry here in Colorado Springs ... You described it far better than I could have. I spent a year in Kuwait just before and during the last war. I traveled between Kuwait City and Camp Doha and Ali Asaline on the Sudi border. I recall the vastness and table top flat terrain to the south of Kuwait City. The Saudi and Sahara are far different than the good old Mojave here in the States. There if nothing else you better be able to read a map and compass. # # # hed
05.12.2009
DesertFox
As a long serving desert dweller, I understand fully your seduction by the seas of sand, whether the Gulf States, the eastern desert twixt Egypt and Libya, or the Great Erg of Tunisia, the magic draws us back. Mabruk ukhti, ahlan wa sahlan.
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