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Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

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Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll,

SHOSHANNA KEATS JASKOLL

Opinion

Star-gazing in Israel's south

'The sky was filled with stars we never see'

August 21, 2020 09:14
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3 min read

I’ve always loved the stars. I took an astronomy course at a local community college aged eight and went to Space Camp in Florida at 12. I’m sure my parents thought they had a prodigy on their hands. Alas, back in the 80s and 90s, one had to be a pilot or engineer to get a spot on the Space Shuttle — and math and I do not get along. Also, the height requirement was five foot, four inches and I fall short.

But my love for the stars never waned. Every August I try to go to a dark place and see the Perseids meteor shower but I’m usually disappointed — it’s just not dark enough to see more than a few.

This year, my husband offered to go south and make a mini trip out of it so I could see the meteors for real. Southern Israel is mostly desert — but Israel has greened the desert, and throughout the sandy Negev and Arava deserts are kibbutzim and moshavim with fields of vegetables, orchards of fruit trees, green grassy lawns and towering trees.

You can surf the sand dunes, pick berries and play with ostriches. Hikes of desert oasis abound and Nabatean cities of old still stand for you to brave the hot breeze and imagine caravans of camels crossing the desert from East to West, laden with spices.