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10 reasons to visit the Negev Desert

by Touchpoint Israel

The Negev Desert covers over half of Israel’s total land area, much of it uninhabited, but it has so much to offer to its visitors. Are you after some spectacular sites? Or ancient ruins? Maybe you just wish to relax, or you are searching for your next adventure. Look no further than the magnificent Negev that has it all. Here are ten of many reasons to include the Negev Desert in your next tour of Israel.

1. You can see the largest makhtesh in the world

The Ramon Crater is an immense erosion crater, known as makhtesh. Often mistaken for meteor craters, these geological phenomena are only found in Israel’s Negev Desert and Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula. The world’s largest makhtesh is also Israel’s largest national park, the Ramon Nature Reserve. Visit the Mitzpe Ramon Visitor Centre for interactive exhibits about the crater and the area’s flora and fauna, or go to the lookout point for phenomenal views of the crater.

Israeli desert

2. It is home to the biblical town of Beersheba

Beersheba is the largest city in the Negev, nicknamed the ‘Capital of the Negev’. It was first mentioned as the place where Abraham made a covenant with the Philistine king Abimelech of Gerar. There are quite a few tourist attractions here, including the Museum, the old Turkish town and railway station, the Bedouin market, and the amazing archaeological site of the biblical town, which is the UNESCO World Heritage Site.

3. King Herod the Great built Masada there

The isolated rock plateau is home to a UNESCO World Heritage Site – a monumental fortress and various other structures, mostly built by King Herod around 30 BCE. Watch the sunrise or sunset there, or enjoy a light-and-sound show. Ride the Masada cableway or climb up to the fortifications and explore the ruins, such as King Herod’s Palace, a Roman-style bathhouse, and the archaeological exhibitions in the Masada Museum.

4. Travel along the wine route

Can you imagine a desert covered in vineyards? Well, in the last decade, a number of enthusiastic people utilized the best drip irrigation technology and established a series of vineyards in the desert – the Negev Wine Route – where, besides the unique experience for tourists, they make a highly respectable and delicious wine.

5. You can take a camel ride

One can’t go to the Negev and not take a camel ride. It is a wonderful way to truly enjoy the unique scenery. It is not difficult to find these lovely, gentle creatures. There are many camel ranches and pit stops throughout the Negev, and you can choose from many options, such as a half-hour ride in the desert, or a full-day tour with a Bedouin lunch.

Camel ride

6. Visit the largest science and technology museum in Israel

Beersheba has something for everybody to learn and have fun at the same time. Open every day, including the holidays, it offers original exhibitions, science demonstrations, and fairs, performances, 3D films, creative arts activities, even an interactive fountain and children’s scientific playground. Explore the structures from the Ottoman period and the British Mandate, and even a modern underground facility.

7. Enjoy the famous Bedouin hospitality

Would you like to have the ultimate desert experience and live as the oldest tribes have lived for centuries? If your answer is yes, you should join a tour and visit a local Bedouin tribe. Enter their tents and learn, first-hand, how these ancient tribes survived in the desert; eat the food and experience the culture and traditions, which remain unchanged for centuries.

8. Endangered animals mentioned in the Bible are saved there

The Yotvata Hai-Bar Nature Reserve is located in the Southern Arabah where scientists breed endangered and locally extinct animals mentioned in the Bible, in hope of reintroducing them to the Negev Desert. Remarkably, the Asian wild ass has already been reintroduced to the Makhtesh Ramon. The park is home to rare desert animals, non-native to Israel, like the scimitar Oryx and the Red-necked ostrich, and is saving various other animals, such as different species of fox, wolf, cat, donkey, birds, etc.

9. You can enjoy the awe-inspiring Avdat…

Ein Avdat is a spectacular desert valley, an oasis in the Negev, a site of an ancient Nabataean city, a National Park, and a World Heritage Site. Founded in the 3rd century BCE, it was the most important city on the Incense Route after Petra, inhabited by Nabataeans, Romans, Byzantines, etc. Enjoy a beautiful hiking trail, springs that cascade into deep pools in a series of waterfalls, and incredible landscape decorated with plants like Poplars and Atriplex.

10. …And marvel at the beauty of Timna Valley

Half an hour drive from Eilat lies one of the Middle East’s most amazing attractions famous for its gorgeous multi-colored sand and awe-inspiring sandstone columns called Solomon’s Pillars, which have eroded, thanks to wind and water, into various interesting shapes, such as ‘The Mushroom’. You can explore the copper mines beneath the surface, which are 6,000 years old and probably the first mines ever built. In October, you can enjoy the fantastic Timna Park Balloon Festival.

Originally posted at Gil Travel.

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