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Wander in the desert: Explore Israel's unique crater

Discover why it’s worth following in centuries of nomadic footsteps to explore Mitzpe Ramon and Israel’s south

February 12, 2023 18:30
Ramon Crater2 CREDIT Dafna Tal IMOT
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5 min read

Mitzpe Ramon, 120 miles south of Tel Aviv, has been a convenient stopping-off point for more than 3,000 years. The first travellers to break their journeys here were Nabatean nomads, who needed a place to rest on their long treks from the Arabian peninsula to the Mediterranean.

Their great camel caravans carried spices along a 1,500-mile route from their homes to port cities; later, Roman traders followed the same route to export precious goods to Europe.

Today, anyone eager to escape Jerusalem or Tel Aviv and head south to Eilat follows a similar path, heading straight through the Negev Desert along the highway. The Negev takes up more than 60 per cent of Israel’s land, but less than ten per cent of the population live here.

When David Ben Gurion resigned from office he made his home in the nearby Sde Boker Kibbutz, believing that he should set an example of living in the Negev desert, but relatively few people followed him.