
The entrance to the Park, it’s a beautiful setting.

The entrance to the Siq, about 1 mile past the entrance. It’s a narrow canyon like walkway, but it was torn apart by tectonic forces, not worn by water.

It gets narrow and wind-y, sometimes just 6ft,2m apart. They carved a water channel at the bottom to bring water to the city.

Some school girls.

My favorite picture of the Siq, I liked it when the rocks were the reddest.

You get your first glimpse of the Treasury through the Siq.

A little closer.

The Treasury of Petra — named because they thought pirates stored treasure here in later years.


The inside of the Treasury — just a small square room — it was more about the facade than anything.

I climbed the ledge opposite and had this view looking down

It was very quiet up here, I don’t know why more people don’t go up.

This is a view of the mountain I climbed (no, I did not go straight up, there is a 45 min path behind it), I was at that tippy little white bit.

Some of the numerous tombs that are everywhere in the area, Bedouin lived in them until the area was made a national park.

Besides the pink,red color, the other neat thing about the rocks is the often swirly wavy patterns.

The Roman Theatre — when the Romans conquered this area they Romanized everything — many places I’ve seen have theatres, hippodromes, cardos , and nymphaeums.

More tombs with neat patterns.

The Urn Tomb — a few tombs are very elaborate, probably for royalty.

The landscape — I took this using a super hi-tech camera filter, my pink sunglasses.

The cardo (colonnaded street) also with my filter.

The Palace Tomb.

A view of the Roman Theatre and surrounding tombs.

The Monastery, accessed by a one hour hike, with a larger facade than the Treasury, but I think not as spectacular because it’s not set in the canyon at the end of the Siq like the Treasury is.

The view from the Monastery.

The Bedouin guy that followed me, he liked to frighten me by standing at the edge of 1000m dropoffs.

Mt. Haroun — the white temple on the top supposedly marks where Aaron was buried.
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