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Dinner in the desert was really late, and there was a huge tent that was the dining room, and the campfire was lit there. Buried under the bonfire are the cook's new dough and cans of stuffed mutton, and it turns out that the campfire in the desert is never just for the excitement and romance. Outside the campfire, the silence of the Sahara is still there, just find a flat sand dune to lie down, you can see the clouds in the sky slowly moving away, it turns out that time exists in the desert in such a form, and before you know it, your body has been covered with a layer of fine sand.
And I always feel that the sand of the Sahara has an expression. After walking a few steps, the shape of those fine particles changes, the expression of the sand is different when the wind is strong, the wind is small, the wind is strong, and the wind is slow. It's really magical.
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Before entering the desert, we had to drive through a section of the Gobi Desert Road, which was full of stumbles and potholes, and our car was not suitable for such a road. That's why the boss, who is familiar with the route, asked us to follow him. But although the old king had been very careful to open, he still could not escape the trap hidden under the sand.
After driving on the Gobi for nearly half an hour, suddenly Lao Wang's car seemed to have touched something, only to hear a loud "bang", and the car jumped.
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The city, like the satellite towns around Rabat, is not very modern. Narrow streets are deftly shuttled back and forth by two-wheeled motorcycles, ignoring traffic rules. Occasionally, when the road was blocked by cars, they would ring the electric bell impatiently and complain loudly.
This is how the so-called downtown begins its day with the sound of car and motorcycle horns, the complaints of passers-by, and the loud noise of the inferior engines of motorcycles.
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I lay on the ground and looked up at the night sky, where the moon still hung and the stars became less visible. I remembered the winter of 2008, when we came back from Fez, we drove on the highway at night, there were no street lights and no moon, except for the area illuminated by the headlights, and it was pitch black all around. At that time, I also stared at the night sky, and after looking at it for a long time, I could faintly see the Milky Way.
I didn't dare blink for fear that I wouldn't be able to see it again. This is the only time I've seen the Milky Way so far, and it's not magnificent, but the looming light and extinction make me feel a little deep. I thought so that I fell asleep unconsciously.
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Before dawn, we had climbed a nearby sand dune, facing east, waiting for the dawn of the sunrise. I used to watch the sunrise by the sea in Tangier, but that time it wasn't as ceremonial as it was when I watched the sunrise in the desert. I don't know exactly where this sense of ritual came from, maybe it came from the desert itself, or the vitality of the couple in front of me who were also waiting for the sunrise, or a combination of the two.
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In the Mars Lodge in the Sahara Desert, what touched my soul the most was not only the magnificent desert scenery, but also those short moments that were not disturbed, with a sand dune to trek, a sunset for me, and a tent to myself.
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After a full meal, the camp owners and cooks moved out of the African drums to sing and dance. As far as I've seen, most Moroccans are natural dancers, and even a fat guy like Amine can writhe in style when he gives Duan **. The other tourists in the camp also jumped up and down under their leadership, and the whole camp was filled with a joyful atmosphere.
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Several large tents were arranged in a circle, with a few low tables and cushions in the clearing, and an incandescent light bulb lit in the middle, which was not very bright, but it was enough, after all, it was good to have electricity in the heart of such a desert. Outside the camp were patches of camel droppings, the size of eggs, half-weathered in the dry air and smelling fishy. We sat down around a low table and dinner was a traditional chicken tajin with bread.
I love the ubiquitous meal bags in these restaurants, they are obviously not as fluffy and tasty as the ones sold in the bakery, but they are rough and simple and tasteless, but they are delicious when eaten with olive oil or gravy.
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I haven't been to or settled in Sanmao, I like Sanmao's Sahara Desert very much, and my imaginary Sahara Desert settlement is as ...... as she wrote
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In the desert, the temperature difference between day and night is too large, the day is too hot and the night is too cold, in addition, the desert is also very scarce in water, and because of the similar environment, it is easy to get lost.
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The Sahara Desert is very dangerous because it spans a very large area, so many people are afraid to enter it easily.
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Summary. The Sahara Desert is located in northern Africa, formed about 2.5 million years ago, with very harsh climatic conditions, is the second largest desert in the world, the world's largest sandy desert, and one of the most unsuitable places on earth for living organisms. The Sahara Desert attracts tourists with its spectacular desert scenery, vast sand seas, exquisite sand dunes and charming desert atmosphere.
Currently, some parts of the Sahara Desert are off-limits to tourists, but there are still some unique sites that can be visited, especially in Morocco, Tunisia and Egypt. In these areas, you can experience a trip to the Sahara Desert by lighting campfires, riding camels, and exploring by 4WD.
Hello, you are starting from **, I will plan for you.
The Sahara Desert is located in northern Africa, formed about 2.5 million years ago, with very harsh climatic conditions, is the world's second largest desert, the world's largest sandy desert, and one of the most unsuitable or lacking places on the earth for the survival of organisms. The Sahara Desert attracts tourists with its spectacular desert scenery, vast sand seas, exquisite sand dunes and charming desert atmosphere. Currently, some parts of the Sahara Desert are off-limits to tourists, but there are still some unique sites that can be visited, especially in Morocco, Tunisia and Egypt.
In these areas, you can experience a trip to the Sahara Desert by lighting campfires, riding camels, and exploring by 4WD.
The best month to go to the Sahara Desert is from March to April, the temperature during the day is very high, up to 40-50, and it is not suitable to enter the desert to take pictures, the sand does and the specific heat capacity is relatively large, which will make the temperature difference between day and night large, the best time to play is to stare at 6 to 7 o'clock in the afternoon.
I set off from Guangzhou.
Help me budget for expenses.
Here are some travelogues that you can refer to.
Are you alone?
Two people. Couple.
I want to join a tour. Can I drive with a Chinese driver's license over there?
I'll look it up, wait a minute.
Hello, all the driver's licenses you have obtained in China are common throughout the country.
It's safer to go to the desert mausoleum to report to the group, two people don't split 8000 like this, but the ticket is more expensive, and if the ruler doesn't turn around, the two people argue that Zheng has to go back and forth for 5000.
You can refer to it.
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Someone lives. There are many cities near the Sahara, such as Cairo, Tripoli and the like. In the heart of the Sahara Desert, there are many ethnic groups, such as the Bedouins.
The Bedouins are the Arabs who live a nomadic life in the desert wilderness based on their clan tribe. It is mainly distributed in the vast deserts and wilderness areas of West Asia and North Africa, and belongs to the Mediterranean type of Europa race.
Bedouins (also known as bedouins, also known as Bedouins) is an Arabic transliteration, meaning "nomads in the wilderness", "people who live in pursuit of water and grass", and are part of the Arab nation. Bedouins everywhere speak the local Arabic dialect and Arabic script.
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It is inhabited at the edge of the desert and in the larger oases in the desert.
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94% of Egypt's land is desert, and looking down from the plane, except for a little green in the Nile Valley, the rest of the vast land, except for yellow sand, is still yellow sand. Every step out of the Nile seems to require a great deal of courage, but there are also many surprises hidden in the endless sea of sand, such as star-shaped sand dunes, mirage-like oases, and incredible black and white deserts that can only be seen in Egypt.
Before encountering the Siwa Oasis, many people thought that the desert was just a dull yellow sand, but when you drive through nearly 300 kilometers of desert no-man's land, you will find how naïve your thoughts are.
Tucked away in the sandy sea of northwestern Egypt, this oasis has a very different flair from the cities on the eastern coast or any other Egyptian city, nourished by natural springs that gush from the ground, and where hundreds of thousands of palm, date and olive trees grow wildly and vibrantly green in the sand.
Home to the Monbers and more than 1,000 Egyptians, it is both the loneliest settlement in Egypt and the hardest to reach of Egypt's five oases.
But there are still many people who dare to challenge the endless sea of sand, just to see this incredible Garden of Eden, where Alexander the Great visited the prophet Amun, Cleopatra visited Siwath, and the hot springs here are famous, and this small natural hot spring pool made of stone has become famous and has survived to this day. The white desert is not only seen in the United States, Mexico, and Brazil, but in Egypt, when you cross the yellow sand, there is also a strange white desert slowly appearing on the horizon.
Just like the layer of whipped cream on top of a naked cake, when you enter the White Sand Reserve, the irregular distribution of white sand and stones appears in the yellow sand, accompanied by more surreal white rocks of different shapes, mushrooms, human figures, eagles, roosters, crouching lions, and camels.
Compared to Earth, this place is more like a different planet in "Star Wars", and bizarre stone pillars abound here, and they are never the same. These white pillars are not ordinary, they were formed by millions of years of wind erosion in the chalk rock, which stretches the historical dimension of the trip from millennia to millions of years. Whether it is a white desert or a black desert, or a sea of yellow sand, the desert after night is almost the same, looking up is a bright moon hanging high, the sky is full of stars shining, there is a gentle night accompanied by the bright Milky Way, desert camping will also become interesting.
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Personally, I think the scenery is very beautiful, and when I go there, my mood will suddenly be brightened, and many things will be thought of instantly, which is very beautiful and unique.
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The scenery of the Sahara Desert is really beautiful, but the sand there will also make you feel like you're living in the dirt.
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It has a desert-specific ethnic minority style nearby, and then the stars at night are very low, as if you can reach out and touch them.
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The scenery here is vast. Here you will feel how small we human beings are, and here you will think of the desert and the sunset.
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The endless desert has always been what tourists want to see.
Formed about 2.5 million years ago, the Sahara Desert is the second largest desert in the world after Antarctica and the largest sandy desert in the world. It is located in northern Africa, a region with very harsh climatic conditions that make it one of the most inhospitable places on earth for living things.
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Because the Sahara Desert is indeed beautiful, watching the sunrise and sunset there, we just came back from the Sahara last year, so tourists yearn for it.
The Sahara Desert, of course.
Formed about 2.5 million years ago, it is the second largest desert in the world, second only to Antarctica, and is the world's largest sandy desert. It is located in the north of Africa and has very harsh climatic conditions, making it one of the most inhospitable places on earth for living things. Its total area is about the size of the entire continental United States. >>>More
The Sahara Desert is located in northern Africa from the Mediterranean Sea in the north to the Sudanese steppes in the south. It is located south of the Atlas Mountains and the Mediterranean Sea (about 35°N) and north of about 14°N (250 mm contours). >>>More
The Sahara Desert is the largest desert in the world outside of Antarctica, located in northern Africa, with extremely harsh climatic conditions, making it one of the most inhospitable places on Earth for living things. The Arabic word Sahara means "great desert". It is located south of the Atlas Mountains and the Mediterranean Sea (about 35°N), north of about 14°N (250 mm rainfall contour), from the Atlantic coast in the west to the coast of the Red Sea in the east. >>>More
It doesn't matter, it's just a special structure formed by nature under certain specific conditions, which is not directly related to extraterrestrial civilizations.
If you can really hollow it out, you may be able to see the core of the earth, or you may be able to see the earth, and it is a miracle that you can still stand when the sand is empty.