The Syrian/Jordanian border is a complex network of misleading
signposts and incorrectly labeled buildings. The cubicle labeled ‘DEPARTURE TAX
TICKET PURCHASE STATION’ sells nothing of the sort and would be better signed
as ‘NEWSPAPER READING COMPLETELY UNHELPFUL TWAT OF A GUARD STATION’. Arabs and Westerners alike stagger around in
equal puzzlement.
Going from building to building, the stares Christina receives from loitering
native gentlemen, aged right the way from 12 to 90, are so potent with culturally-confused lust, it’s odd that she doesn’t conceive due collective intent. Perhaps, being in
the same general neck of the woods, the Virgin Birth occurred by the same method. When
we find the correct building, one officer has to deal with the scores of migrants on his own, whilst about seven of his colleagues sit lined-up
facing their computer monitors, all playing online snooker. Perhaps it forms
some high-concept training program. Then again, being Syrian and thus deprived
of Facebook to malinger, simulated snooker is possibly the next best/worst
thing.
Once through to the Jordanian side, the tone shifts
dramatically, both sexually and politically. The immigration staff smile and
joke with us. The pudgy beaming face of King Abdullah II is a welcome reprieve
from the malignant stare of that Syrian Assad geezer.
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King Abdullah II |
The prices though are
truly terrifying. One hour on the internet is two quid (the British Pound
matches the Jordanian Dinar) and even though we only need it for five minutes,
it’s a case of pay up the full whack or fuck-clean-off.
Amman
17 years ago, when I was 13 and on holiday at my families
place in Turkey, I was taken under the caring wing of my uncle’s nephew, Kerem.
Being a big Metallica fan such as I was at the time, my remarkable memory has meant
that I never forgot Kerem. Now living with his wife and infant son in Amman,
the capital city of Jordan, my aunt had told me that he had invited us to stay
with them whilst in the extortionately-priced city. Meeting him at the
rendezvous, he picked us up and I chatted away to him as we drove around the
city. After about an hour, he confessed to not having a fucking clue who I was.
It goes a long way to explaining the extent of Turkish hospitality and that
night the family took us to a Lebanese restaurant, the food being some of the
finest I have ever eaten.
Kerem and I, Kerem clearly uncomfortable with this oddly dressed sweaty stranger he has to look after |
Amman from the Citadel |
The Dead Sea
The next morning the family drive us an hour or so south to
the up-market Mövenpick resort on the Dead Sea. I ask Kerem if he really wants
to go there and he informs me that it’s fine as they go there most weekends.
“Oh, is it that good?” I
ask.
“No, not at all, but there absolutely
nothing else to do in Amman…,” he replies.
Entry to the resort is a flat £40 per person, even if you
just want to sit by a pool full of screaming shit-machines and Muslim women swimming in
the full-on Saracen ninja suit. Christina and I go for the £50 option which includes
entry to the spa, where a smiling Arab bedecked in traditional Bedouin attire,
stands in 50 degrees Celsius sun, constantly opening the door for the
white-robed rich bastards sauntering to and fro, from the various bathing pools
to the Dead Sea and back again, without as much as a nod in the man’s
direction.
We head straight down to the Dead Sea and get in.
Christina in the Dead Sea |
I’m not
allowed to enjoy the odd buoyancy for more than a few seconds, before the water gets inside my trunks through the clenched crack of my arse. I
was warned that at 33.7% salinity, getting the water into any shaving cuts is
abject agony, though the guide book mentioned nothing about the effect it would have on a Chalfonty ring-piece. After two whole months of intestinal maladies, my walnut has the
constitution of a flea-ridden sore on a stray cat’s neck. The pain is staggering;
I lay flat out in the thick, oily water, gently bobbing about with a face
contorted in bemused torment.
At the edge
of the water there’s a huge clay pot, filled with the daily harvest of Dead Sea
Mud, usually sold by the bucket load at expensive prices in pricey shops, due to its apparent medicinal
qualities. Being free, we cake ourselves in it, from head to toe.
Whilst doing so, a loud,
young British couple enter the water. To my amazement, the attractive young
lady bellows,
“IT’S REALLY STINGING MY ARSEHOLE FOR SOME
REASON!!!”
She seems
utterly oblivious to the idea that other tourists and non-Arabs are in the
sea at that moment. She then points at my mud-covered personage.
“HA! LOOK! IT’S SHREK! HA HA HA!” she
cries.
I bellow
back that I’m not Shrek, merely on my way to an audition for a remake of
‘Shaft’. She’s obviously not a fan of Blaxploitation movies (or mild,
lighthearted racism) as she just stares then goes,
“OH, ARE YOU ENGLISH?”
They get out of the water and we chat. When she asks me if the mud
stings, I cannot help myself.
“No, not at all. In fact it really soothes a
stinging arsehole…”
She stares
at me baffled and I carry on lathering myself, waiting for the penny to drop.
“OH MY GOD, DID YOU HEAR WHAT I SAID BEFORE?!!”
Yes dear, I
think the Israelis on the other side of the salt water also did. They wander off
back to the resort, her legs looking like they are wilting beneath her in
mortification.
We spend the
rest of the day in and around the spa resort. I find it virtually impossible to
relax and enjoy myself. Inside the spa, it’s mainly snotty westerners, waddling
around in fluffy white robes with their snouts in the air. Complimentary magazines
are scattered around the lounges, every page an advertisement for some
expensive item, invariably featuring a young well-dressed male executive
relaxing in some exclusive departure lounge showing off his TAG Heuer watch/Armani
suit/Fendi sunglasses.
At the
outside pool, a lackey races to lay a towel on an available sun lounger before the guest reaches it, like it matters, or I’d be arsed-off if I had to do it myself.
Spoilt teens click their fingers at the native employees, demanding they fetch
cooling drinks. I watch each one be brought over, hoping an array of bodily
fluids has made its way into the intended liquid. Young couples pose and pout,
glaring at others of similar age and perceived status. Christina tells me to
calm down and enjoy myself but I can’t.
Me not enjoying myself |
None of these
people have ever listened to ‘I See a Darkness’ by Bonnie Prince
Billy and reveled in the 38 minutes of utter misery. None of these people have ever tried to enjoy a pint in The Farmers Arms on Stockport Road whilst a pair of grown up siblings violently bicker and joke in equal measure about which one of them should have been placed in care. None of these people have ever accidentally taken so many drugs that they've convinced themselves they have Downs Syndrome. Christina says I am
entitled to be miserable but to stop ruining it for her. There are 'conceptual showers', such as ‘Tropical
Rain’ and ‘Amazonian Mist’ but I cannot find one with a ‘Stockport Drizzle’ setting
and the discomfort continues unabated.
Christina enjoying herself |
Later on, we
head back down to the Dead Sea for another dip.
Sun setting over Israel and the Dead Sea |
There are a couple of lifeguards on stand-by, which strikes me as
odd as it must be virtually impossible to drown. I’m proved a fool not long
after pondering this when said lifeguard has to wade in to pluck some
motionless skinny lad out of the mixture. Once at the shore, he suddenly
comes to life again, untangling himself from his savior’s arms and running off laughing.
Perhaps, like the other guests, he simply wasn’t satisfied to see an employee
enjoying but a moment’s rest.
Kerem and
his family leave early but we decide to stay on so we can redeem our £10 voucher in
one of the themed restaurants, the coupon being quite pointless as all the
establishments on site mark up the menus to render the ‘discount’ worthless. Leaving, we walk past an elderly Australian couple angrily
berating a waiter in manner a Victorian schoolmaster would a Dyslexic pupil, for
simply not pouring their wine in the manner they feel is suited to their
superior status.
The
following day, the family takes us around parts of Amman. They are right,
there’s nothing to do. I spot another couple, also travelling. They are sat on
a wall, buried deep in their Lonely Planets, confused looks on their faces as
they struggle to find something interesting to do.
Misspelt Tupac lyrics - One wonders how Gad Gadgs |
A detached nob attacking a duck from behind - There really is fuck all to do in Amman |
Petra
Saying ‘Thank
You’ and ‘Goodbye’ to Kerem, Aslihan and young Sarp, we make our way south to one
of the New Seven Wonders of the world™: Petra. Checking into the hotel
and getting ready to make the half hour walk to the site, we discover we have
lost several memory cards containing the best of Georgia and the entirety of
Syria. We try locating them but even the most exhaustive avenues prove to be
dead-ends and we are resolutely miserable.
Due to us
getting to the Petra site later than most, the bulk of the tourists are ahead of us and we are
assigned a guide for free. I had long ago realized that Petra would
have the crowds of Alton Towers on a Bank Holiday Monday, so I’m pleasantly
surprised how quiet it feels. The trip down the Siq, a huge gap through the
sandstone that leads you right to Petra’s most famous site: The Treasury.
The Siq |
Treasury |
It is truly impressive, but only completely enjoyable if you succeed in to pushing the £30 entrance fee out of your mind. The highlight of The Treasury is
an enormous camel suddenly dropping from its feet to its side, kicking its legs
up in the air and doing a fucking enormous fart. I laugh uncontrollably.
Fucking Hipster Douchebag at Petra of all places |
The
rest of the tour is wandering around largely boring relics, trying hard to be
interested. The sun is brutally hot and the 185 steps up to the monastery would
be hellish, so we bollocks that off. The Lonely Planet recommends giving the
whole site three full days, but I’d argue three full hours would be pushing it.
We spend most of the time playing with a lizard.